As
reported in the July 2003 Hydrogen Safety Report, The U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE), in conjunction with the National Labs and National
Code bodies, has developed the first modules in a family of documents to aid in
the permitting of hydrogen energy systems. The Overview and first two modules
of the Regulators Guides to Permitting Hydrogen Technologies have been published
and are available for all interested parties online: Regulators'
Guide to Permitting Hydrogen Technologies: Overview (150Kb PDF) The Overview
provides an introduction to hydrogen and hydrogen safety including hydrogen properties,
leak containment and a glossary of hydrogen terms. The two available modules are
the first two of a series of Guides designed to help code officials and enforcers
to become more knowledgeable about the tools available for permitting hydrogen
projects and systems. Module
1: Permitting Stationary Fuel Cell Installations (4781Kb PDF) As stated
by the Guide, the purpose of Module 1 is to facilitate the acceptance of stationary
fuel cell technologies for buildings. The module provides information on the building
regulatory processes and provisions of relevant codes and standards that will
have an impact on the design, deployment, approval, installation, operation, and
maintenance of fuel cell technologies. The module covers fuel cell installations
on buildings other than one- and two-family dwellings and for energy functions
other than industrial processes. It is intended as a tool for determining the
codes and standards applicable to stationary fuel cell installations that may
provide electricity as well as heat to the structure.[1]
Module
2: Permitting Hydrogen Motor Fuel Dispensing Facilities (487Kb PDF) Module
2 is very similar in structure, but with obvious differences in the subject matter.
Module 2 is designed to guide permitting officials, code enforcement officials
and other parties involved in approving the implementation of hydrogen motor fuel
dispensing facilities. Specifically, the module identifies:
- issues
in permitting a fuel dispensing facility as it progresses through the approval
process
- specific requirements
- applicable codes
and standards to determine if the specific requirements have been met.
Module
2 also identifies a fuel dispensing facility as one that receives hydrogen from
offsite, stores it on-site, and dispenses it to vehicles. In general, the facility
is analogous to a gasoline service station, but with hydrogen instead of gasoline
or diesel fuel.[2] All of the Guides were developed
through a collaborative effort involving the National
Fire Protection Association (NFPA), the International
Code Council (ICC), Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) and the National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). They are currently available here:
www.pnl.gov/fuelcells/permit_guide.stm Notes
[1] Adapted from Module 1: Permitting Stationary Fuel
Cell Installations [2] Adapted from Module 2:
Permitting Hydrogen Motor Fuel Dispensing Facilities.
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