Introduction
Distributed generation refers to producing electricity close to where it’s used—often using small-scale systems like solar panels, wind turbines, or hydrogen fuel cells. It contrasts with centralised power stations.
🔗 Read more
How Distributed Energy Resources Are Changing the Grid – World Economic Forum
🧠 What It Means
Hydrogen fuel cells can power buildings, vehicles, or remote areas locally.
Reduces reliance on long-distance grid infrastructure.
Boosts resilience during grid outages and supports renewable integration.
❗ Key Challenges
Coordination with the existing grid can be complex.
Needs smart control systems and storage to manage supply and demand.
Regulatory and financial barriers can slow adoption.
🦁 Muzaffar’s Comment
“Distributed generation flips the script—you’re not just a consumer, you’re a mini power plant.”
🦉 Sameer’s Comment
“It’s decentralised energy democracy—clean, local, and powerful. Hydrogen plays a key role here.”</span>