
The unnamed customers is using the generators to provide electricity for production sets and related mobile infrastructure.
Charbone said the use of hydrogen was demonstrating a “concrete pathway” to reducing emissions, noise, and “fuel logistics complexity” in an industry typically reliant on conventional diesel generators.
It adds to the growing number of fuel cell generator deployments in film and TV applications.
Sky is trialling a self-developed fuel cell-battery system in the UK; GeoPura has powered productions for the BBC, PGA Championships and more; and France’s EoDev powered a nighttime Netflix shoot with its fuel cell generator.
Dave Gagnon, CEO of Charbone, hailed the sale as demonstrating the commercial viability of hydrogen systems.
“[It] is no longer a concept – it’s becoming an operational solution,” he continued.
Specifics around the sale’s volumes, duration, or financial terms of the sale have not been disclosed.
It comes after the Canadian firm brought its inaugural green hydrogen project online in Quebec last December. It has subsequently secured orders for the molecule from the US and Canadian customers.
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