First Industrial Park To Supply Hydrogen Fuel Opens In South Carolina

Kimberly-Clark using fuel cells to power Toyota forklifts at its 450,000-square-foot distribution center.

Pittsburgh: Third-party logistics provider GENCO ATC is partnering with customer Kimberly-Clark Corp., Plug Power Inc., Air Products and the Aiken-Edgefield Development Partnership to launch the nation's first multi-use industrial park fueling station to supply hydrogen directly for industrial, commercial and government use.

The fueling station supplies hydrogen directly to Kimberly-Clark's 450,000-square-foot distribution facility managed by GENCO ATC to be used with fuel cells powering Toyota forklifts. Both the fueling station and the Kimberly-Clark facility are located in Sage Mill Industrial Park, Graniteville, SC.

"Kimberly-Clark is constantly looking for innovative ways to minimize the impact of our operations on the environment," says Rick Sather, vice president of supply chain at Kimberly-Clark. "We are pleased to partner with GENCO ATC, Plug Power and Air Products to help expand hydrogen fuel cell technology to our entire forklift fleet. This energy technology can reduce our carbon emissions by hundreds of metric tons per year, lower costs and drive efficiencies to power our operations."

The fueling station and hydrogen-powered forklifts were made possible through the use of $1.1 million of a $6.1 million cost-share award made to GENCO ATC by the U.S. Department of Energy through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

"GENCO ATC is committed to green technology initiatives that are viable, equitable and sustainable for our customers and our company," says Herb Shear, chairman and CEO, GENCO ATC. "Hydrogen fuel cells represent the best in energy innovation as a sustainable, productive and clean alternative to lead-acid batteries."

The supply chain industry estimates that annual greenhouse gas emissions created by an average 20-truck lead acid battery-powered forklift fleet can be reduced by hundreds of tons a year simply by converting to fuel cell-powered equipment. By using hydrogen fuel cells instead of lead-acid batteries, greenhouse gases can be reduced by over 90 percent, according to customer consumption estimates.

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