| | DECEMBER 20256Copyright © 2025 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof. DECEMBER 01, 2025, Vol 08 - Issue 24 (ISSN 2832-3963)Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to Energy Tech ReviewVisit www.energytechreview.com EDITOR'S DESKAs 2025 draws to a close, Europe's clean energy sector moves beyond its pitch deck era. Technologies that spent a decade in demonstration projects are now manufactured at industrial scale and procurement commitments carry weight across the continent.Hydrogen fuel cells are crossing a genuine commercialisation threshold. Progress stems from materials engineering, which rarely receives attention. Lightweight composite bipolar flow plates with advanced coatings and precision manufacturing now withstand continuous duty cycles in heavy transport and industrial heat. European steelmakers and logistics operators begin to integrate hydrogen not as a pilot but as infrastructure.Renewable installations shift from standalone assets to networked intelligence layers. AI driven monitoring and predictive maintenance transform solar, wind and storage systems into self optimising entities that autonomously manage variability. Grid operators from Iberia to the Nordics no longer scramble to balance intermittent energy sources. They dispatch renewables as baseload with a level of confidence that would have sounded reckless three years ago.Market momentum supports this shift. Europe's hydrogen economy is projected to reach £4.8 billion by 2033 at a compound annual growth rate of 16.7 per cent, while green energy infrastructure solutions across the EU and UK track towards £1.8 trillion at 9.2 per cent.Clean energy enters 2026 in a different posture. It is engineered, financed and installed faster than permitting can keep pace. The only question now focuses on deployment velocity.The magazine features thought leadership articles from Antony White, Client Delivery Manager at UK Power Networks Services and Leslie Myers, Product Manager, Renewables at Puget Sound Energy.We also spotlight innovators pushing hydrogen technology towards industrial scale. One such company, Cell Impact, is redefining what high performance flow plates can deliver through its patented high speed forming technology, offering precision and cost efficient scalability.We hope this edition offers insights for hydrogen technologists, OEM leaders and energy transition decision makers working to scale clean power systems with greater precision. In a sector where engineering rigour defines competitive advantage, this issue celebrates the innovators turning advanced manufacturing and sustainable design into real progress for the hydrogen economy.Let us know your thoughts!Charlotte SmithManaging Editoreditor@energytechreview.comInnovation and the New Blueprint for Clean Energy Scale*Some of the Insights are based on our interviews with CIOs and CXOsVisualizersMichael WayneChris LynnManaging EditorCharlotte SmithEditorial StaffAaron Pierce Ava GarciaVian IsaacAbner LawrenceEmailsales@energytechreview.comeditor@energytechreview.commarketing@energytechreview.comJoshua Parker Kenny Peruzzi
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