1 MW Flying Pig hydrogen energy system unveiled in the USA

American tech company VIVIFY Technology has officially announced a 1 MW containerized mobile energy system called Flying Pig. This unit is designed as a fully independent and scalable power source, free from traditional electrical grids. Developers note that the modular architecture allows for rapid capacity expansion by linking multiple containers into a single chain. According to Ixbt.com reports .
The primary target markets for the new system include AI data centers, remote industrial sites, and disaster-stricken areas. The Flying Pig generator is based on the company's flagship HOG (Hydrogen Oxygen Generator) platform. A key feature of the system is its closed-loop operation.
Unlike traditional hydrogen units that require compressed or liquefied gas logistics, the Flying Pig is filled with approximately two tons of water at the factory. The internal Pulsar array then produces hydrogen directly on-site, which is burned in high-efficiency multi-stage turbines to generate both electricity and heat simultaneously. The company claims this process is 99 percent 'green'.
According to VIVIFY Technology, five-year operating cost projections show that Flying Pig is significantly cheaper than systems connected to the central grid or industrial diesel generators. In the long term, such scalable technologies could form the basis for power systems for lunar bases as part of space exploration programs.













