A UK start up, put together in the Summer, called Enoda, has raised a seed round and come out with its first product – Hera claiming to “crush” the price of harnessing hydrogen – and it says it is also looking for an A round of about £15 million early next year. The company is led by serial entrepreneur CEO Paul Domjan, and backed by Chairman Lindsay Whitelaw, a founder of Artemis Investment Management, also one of the seed funders. The company also has Chuck Watson, founder of US utility Dynegy, on the board. Hera is effectively a way of harnessing what the company calls waste electricity – which is not electricity made from waste – but waste from the…