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Carbon280 launches pilot plant

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Global Hydrogen Review,


On 18 August 2025, Carbon280 announced the launch of its Hydrilyte® Technology Pilot Plant in Kwinana, Western Australia. The company raised over US$16 million to accelerate its liquid hydrogen storage solution, Hydrilyte.

The pilot and laboratory facilities were funded through a US$10.6 million seed investment led by Woodside Energy, with support from a UK-based renewable energy company, Hive Energy, and a Singaporean family office, alongside a forecast US$5.5 million in R&D rebates from the Australian Government.

Australia’s hydrogen ambitions face growing headwinds, with rising costs, technical complexity, and a number of high-profile projects stalled or cancelled. Carbon280’s multi-patented Hydrilyte® technology addresses a major bottleneck in the hydrogen supply chain, enabling hydrogen to be stored safely at ambient temperature and pressure. This makes the storage and transport of hydrogen safer, more efficient, and more economically viable.

Mark Rheinlander, Founder and CEO of Carbon280, said: “Rather than transporting a highly flammable gas, you are storing and transporting a safe, low-cost liquid that stores hydrogen under ambient conditions. Low-cost and ease of handling will simplify and speed the implementation of hydrogen projects globally, enabling hydrogen use in applications and geographies with less sophisticated infrastructure.”

The Hydrilyte Technology Pilot Plant – a 100 kW TRL6 prototype – will prove the Hydrilyte technology at an industrially relevant scale, delivering critical performance data for partners and investors. A successful outcome will validate Carbon280’s technology, reducing the cost for existing hydrogen users, improving the economics and speed the implementation of future projects, including production of green iron, synthetic aviation fuels and methanol.

Hydrilyte’s ability to separate hydrogen from helium, and store the hydrogen ready for transport, gives it the potential to advance natural hydrogen projects in Australia and globally. Natural hydrogen occurs mixed with other gasses that need to be separated. Helium is one of these gasses and very hard to separate from hydrogen because of their similar molecular size. Hydrilyte enables separation and storage, ready for transport, in a single step, facilitating the monetisation of both hydrogen and helium for natural hydrogen developers.

“Natural hydrogen in combination with Hydrilyte will be gamechanging for the use of hydrogen across all industries, including energy, by slashing costs and simplifying handling,” continued Mark Rheinlander.

Steps Forward for Carbon280

As a safe, pumpable liquid, the hydrogen-containing Hydrilyte can be stored and transported using existing liquid fuels infrastructure, including pipelines, tankers, and ships. More broadly, the technology has the potential to deliver a hydrogen transportation method that costs less, is inherently safe, energy efficient, and ultra-scalable.

The launch of the Hydrilite pilot plant marks a pivotal step towards de-risking hydrogen investments in Australia and accelerating the sector’s growth. Carbon280 is committed to delivering a secure, sustainable, and economically viable hydrogen future.

Read the article online at: https://www.globalhydrogenreview.com/hydrogen/19082025/carbon280-launces-pilot-plane/

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