Pulsenics accelerates energy diversification in the Middle East

November 3, 2025
5 min read
Pulsenics Leadership from Left to Right: Essam Elsahwi, CEO at Pulsenics Inc, Benjamin Maxwell, CTO at Pulsenics Inc, and Mariam Awara , COO at Pulsenics Inc

Middle Eastern countries, long reliant on oil and gas revenues, have identified green hydrogen production as a strategic driver for economic diversification. Green hydrogen can integrate with existing infrastructure for both domestic use and export, offering a unique opportunity for the region to expand its energy portfolio.

Regional publication Oil and Gas Middle East wrote about Pulsenics and how electrochemical impedance spectroscopy can help hydrogen projects generate predictable returns.

Pulsenics sees a fruitful long-term future in the Middle East. Our team aims to reduce financial and operational risks for hydrogen and battery energy storage systems (BESS) projects, compress deployment timelines, and help organisations transition from pilot initiatives to full commercial-scale operations more quickly.

Pulsenics Co-Founder and COO Mariam Awara said, “Green hydrogen operators can save money by connecting directly to solar farms and adjusting electrolyser operation based on available energy. Our solutions close the gap by predicting how these cells degrade under dynamic operation, helping make renewable hydrogen production more reliable.”

→ Read the article in Oil and Gas Middle East now.