The launch comes after Lhyfe began its first UK operation in North East England to identify opportunities to deploy production facilities to support the country's net zero ambitions.
Colin Brown, UK and Ireland country manager of Lhyfe, said the new "Sealhyfe" platform was a major step towards unlocking the huge potential of offshore wind.
Sealhyfe will operate at quay then off the coast of Le Croisic, on the offshore testing site (SEM-REV) operated by French engineering school Centrale Nantes.
Lhyfe is convinced offshore has a central role to play in bringing renewable green hydrogen production to mass market.
Producing hydrogen using offshore wind turbines could allow all coastal countries to develop green solutions for regions, industry, transport and fuel distribution. However, until now, no one has ever produced renewable green hydrogen at sea.
In 2021, Lhyfe, inaugurated the world's first plant supplying renewable green hydrogen produced using wind power to customers in western France. The Sealhyfe project aims to prove that is now possible to produce the clean energy source offshore.
Lhyfe will produce the first kilograms of renewable green hydrogen at quay and then at sea, operating automatically, in the most extreme conditions.
Sealhyfe will have to meet several major and unprecedented challenges, including:
To achieve this technological feat, Lhyfe relied on the facilities of the offshore testing site, SEM-REV, operated by Centrale Nantes. The production unit was installed on the WAVEGEM wave energy platform developed by Geps Techno.
At the end of the quayside test phase, the Sealhyfe platform will integrate the SEM-REV offshore testing area, off the coast of Le Croisic, about 20 kilometres from the coast.
The device will then be supplied with electricity by the pioneering floating wind turbine installed within the offshore test site in 2018 and still unique in France today.
The electrolyzer was supplied and optimized for these exceptional operating conditions by Plug Power, one of the market leaders that is strongly engaged in the offshore route. Together, Plug and Lhyfe have developed the first electrolyser capable of operating on a floating platform.
The project also benefited from the expertise of French offshore and marine renewable energy players:
A first six-month trial phase is being started at quay, in the port of Saint-Nazaire, to obtain initial reference measurements and test all of the systems.
At the end of this first stage, Sealhyfe will spend a period of 12 months off the Atlantic coast. It will be installed less than a kilometre from the floating wind turbine, fixed to the ground by a system of anchors and connected to the site's underwater hub using an umbilical designed and dedicated for this application (energy and data transfer).
At the end of this trial, Lhyfe will have a substantial volume of data, which should allow it to design mature offshore production systems, and to deploy robust and proven technologies on a large scale, in keeping with the EU's objective to produce 10 million tonnes a year of renewable hydrogen by 2030.
Sealhyfe has the capacity to produce up to 400 kg of renewable green hydrogen a day, equivalent to 1MW of power.
Matthieu Guesné, CEO and founder of Lhyfe, said, "At Lhyfe, we have only one aim: to leave a more breathable planet for our children.
"This is why we once again wanted to take up a major technological challenge, to prove – by producing hydrogen at sea for the first time – that it is possible to do it as of today.
"By paving the way for the mass production of renewable hydrogen at sea, Sealhyfe is fully in line with the EU's strategy to deploy an offshore hydrogen chain, and wishes to help build the energy sovereignty of countries.
"The acceleration of the development of offshore wind plants announced by the President of the French Republic will strongly contribute to the deployment of Lhyfe on its offshore strategy."