International Association for Hydrogen Energy

International Association for Hydrogen Energy
Formation1974 (1974)
TypeScientific society
Legal statusnonprofit organization
HeadquartersMiami, Florida
Location
Membership>1,000
Key people
Ayfer Veziroğlu (President); Bruno Georges Pollet (Executive VP); Frano Barbir (Executive VP); Giuseppe Spazzafumo (Executive VP)
Websiteiahe.org

The International Association for Hydrogen Energy (IAHE) is a learned society and professional association based in the United States that supports scientific, technology and engineering inquiries in the field of hydrogen science and technology. The IAHE was founded in 1974 by Turhan Nejat Veziroğlu and other scholars such as John Bockris who coined the term hydrogen economy. The IAHE membership comprises over 1,000 scientists, technologists and engineers in over 110 countries at all degree levels and in all fields of hydrogen and related technologies.

The IAHE is a non-profit organization.

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy is an official journal of the IAHE. HEPLLC is the publisher, and Elsevier is the publishing house. The IJHE on Elsevier encompasses over 200,000 peer-reviewed papers since its creation in 1976.

The IAHE has nine topic interest area divisions namely, the IAHE Biohydrogen Division, the IAHE Codes and Standards Division, the IAHE Fuel Cell Division, the IAHE Green Hydrogen Division, the IAHE Hydrogen Energy Systems Division, the IAHE Hydrogen Safety Division, the IAHE Hydrogen Storage Division, the IAHE Nuclear Hydrogen Division and the IAHE Young Scientists Division from different regions of the world sections. Over seventeen IAHE student chapters are located in major universities in Mexico, Egypt, Turkey, India, UK, USA, China, and Armenia, Europe.

The IAHE founded the World Hydrogen Energy Conference (WHEC) in 1976 and the World Hydrogen Technologies Convention (WHTC) in 2005 to provide a platform for the Hydrogen Energy community, including scientists, engineers, technologists, environmentalists, decision-makers, policy-makers, industrialists and visionaries.