Dispatch Energy LLC announced the energization of its Bridgeport fuel-cell project at the Bunnell Block, delivering non-intermittent baseload power from a redeveloped brownfield site in Bridgeport, Connecticut. The project was developed with United Illuminating Company and targets reliable, on-site generation in a dense urban area where large clean-energy projects are difficult to deploy.
Located within a former industrial property now operating as an industrial park, the facility supplies low-carbon electricity to an estimated 3,393 homes and is designed to cut historical site emissions by about 50 percent. Dispatch Energy positions the project as a model for integrating fuel cells into downtown grids to improve resilience and provide local generation close to load, including residential, commercial, and industrial customers.
The project advanced under Connecticut’s Shared Clean Energy Facility (SCEF) program, which supports clean-energy deployments tied to economic development and grid reliability. Fuel cells for the site were manufactured locally, aligning the build with domestic manufacturing goals while adding baseload capacity in an underserved area.
- Project: Bridgeport fuel-cell facility at Bunnell Block
- Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
- Power profile: Clean, non-intermittent baseload generation
- Estimated impact: Power for ~3,393 homes; ~50% emissions reduction at the site
- Program: Connecticut Shared Clean Energy Facility (SCEF)
- Development partners: Dispatch Energy and United Illuminating
- Site context: Redeveloped brownfield/industrial park
“I want to thank the dedicated team whose collaboration made this project a success,” said Frank Reynolds, President and CEO of United Illuminating. “Together, we’ve delivered an innovative energy solution that will bring economic opportunity and long-term energy savings to the Bridgeport community.”
🌐 Analysis
Urban fuel-cell deployments continue to gain attention as utilities and municipalities look for firm, low-carbon capacity that can be sited close to load. Dispatch Energy’s Bridgeport project arrives as data centers and AI workloads increase pressure on distribution grids, reinforcing interest in on-site baseload resources that complement intermittent renewables and storage.





