The other potential use for electrochemistry is direct reduction of iron ore to iron metal. Why yes, I did happen to listen to the Volts podcast this week, but I did know about the idea just not how far it has come.
Boston Metal seems to be leading the game at the moment and has significant investors. The hard part seems to be making electrodes that can handle the extreme temperatures. They also refine other ores, not just iron, and expect their first commercial plant to start operating this year in Brazil, refining precious metals, and their first iron plant in 2026. They can also work with lower quality ores than traditional blast furnaces can, including existing spoil heaps. Hopefully this works out as well.
This begs a question. The two main uses envisioned for green H2 is to replace fossil gas in ammonia production and to replace coke when reducing iron ore to iron. Will green H2 hype be a bust? All the other use cases envisioned seem to be relatively minor in comparison, with the just maybe exception of seasonal energy storage.