HEA Hydrogen Bytes – A 30-minute ‘Lunch-time Byte’ with Wild Hydrogen, unravelling the hydrogen opportunity

December 10, 2025
12:30

13:00
Event Type: Webinar
Location: Online
We are delighted to announce the next guest on our webinar series ‘Hydrogen Bytes’ : A 30-minute 'Byte', unravelling the hydrogen opportunity. These short sessions focus on an aspect of the hydrogen economy, showcasing how hydrogen is delivering against net zero, clean growth and energy resilience objectives, and shining a light on the depth and breadth of pioneering hydrogen activity across our membership.
On Wednesday 10th December at 12:30pm, we will be catching up with James Milner, CEO at Wild Hydrogen,  a pioneering clean tech company on a mission to transform the energy landscape with carbon-negative hydrogen and biomethane.
James will focus on the role of carbon-negative hydrogen and biomethane in accelerating industrial decarbonisation, and how Wild Hydrogen’s technology unlocks new pathways for clean gas production, waste valorisation, and circular economy solutions, all at cost parity with fossil fuels. He will also highlight their work with industrial partners and their plans for commercial deployment.
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Lee Juby

Lee is currently CEO of Fuel Cell Systems Ltd (FCSL). Industry insiders often talk about Hydrogen’s Chicken and Egg problem: Vehicle manufacturers cannot sell hydrogen vehicles without a refuelling infrastructure; Infrastructure & fuel network providers cannot recoup their investment if there are not enough vehicles using hydrogen. The result is Gridlock! Our approach has been to redefine the Chicken and Egg problem as simply “Refuelling Infrastructure is too expensive”. Now that’s an engineering problem we can fix!


Prior to FCSL, Lee spent eight years at UK Fuel Cell manufacturer Intelligent Energy, completing his time there as Chief Sales Officer. Leading the global commercial team and launching Intelligent Energy’s low carbon hydrogen products in to three market sectors: automotive, power generation and aviation. Lee’s involvement with the hydrogen industry started back in 1995 when among other projects he supported the field trials of SOFC CHP.