A hydrogen hub is a cluster of local hydrogen production, storage, utilization, and demand. Hydrogen hubs provide the infrastructure to match the increasing demand to meet our energy needs. The US Department of Energy (DOE) defines an H2Hub as a “network of clean hydrogen producers, potential clean hydrogen consumers, and connective infrastructure located in close proximity”. The Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs program, also known as H2Hubs, includes up to $7 billion to establish six to ten regional clean hydrogen hubs across America. These hubs will create networks of hydrogen producers, consumers, and local connective infrastructure to accelerate the use of hydrogen as a clean energy carrier that can deliver or store tremendous amounts of energy. The development of hydrogen hubs is an integral step towards the creation of different types of energy networks, and the use of hydrogen helps reduce our carbon footprint, which supports climate change efforts.