Amogy, GreenHarvest target ammonia-to-power deployment in Taiwan
By Julian Atchison on July 28, 2025
Demonstration project to feed industrial-scale electricity consumer

Via a new partnership with GreenHarvest, Amogy will deploy its ammonia-to-power technology in Taiwan.
Together, the pair will deploy and demonstrate the first-ever ammonia-to-power system in Taiwan. Amogy will provide the ammonia-to-power system while GreenHarvest will lead local integration as the power generation and distribution partner. After installation in late 2026/early 2027, the pilot system will provide power at a “selected large industrial electricity consumer facility”, aiming to then scale and rollout across Taiwan’s significant high-tech and manufacturing sector.
We are proud to bring our ammonia-powered technology to Taiwan with a forward-looking partner like GreenHarvest. This project not only represents the first deployment of our technology in Taiwan, but also a critical step toward decarbonizing industrial energy use in one of the world’s most important digital infrastructure economies.
Seonghoon Woo, CEO at Amogy, in his organisation’s official press release, 21 July 2025
GreenHarvest has long been committed to rooftop solar development, providing industrial electricity users with a reliable and user-friendly source of green power. At the same time, we are actively deploying next-generation green electricity technologies. Through our 2024 collaboration with H2U in Australia on a green hydrogen project and this deployment of Amogy’s ammonia-to-power energy solution at customer sites, it further reinforces our confidence and momentum in ammonia-based energy applications.
KH Chen, Chairman of GreenHarvest, in Amogy’s official press release, 21 July 2025
Ammonia fuel is included in the Taiwanese government’s transition roadmap (Taiwan’s Pathway to Net-Zero Emissions in 2050), with a particular focus on the utility-scale power generation sector. Amogy’s technology offers a more distributed generating approach, enabling individual consumers to address Scope 1 and 2 emissions. The demonstration also aligns with Taiwan’s developing carbon trading framework, which provides industrial electricity users with a solution to reduce operational carbon footprints.