Two recently shared facts from senior car maker executives have revealed the size of the mountain that hydrogen fuel cell EVs have to climb before they can fall in alongside battery EVs.
Both are eye-opening but also from vehicle makers determined to make a go of the technology, not pure battery advocates putting the mockers on a potentially rivalling power source.
The first fact is from BMW Group CEO Oliver Zipse, who told journalists during the company’s third-quarter earnings briefing that FCEVs were “about 10 to 15 years behind the development of battery-driven cars”.
The second fact was from Xavier Peugeot, the head of Stellantis’s commercial vehicles unit, Pro One. who told Autocar that the true cost of the new FCEV version of the stalwart K-Zero midsize van range (think the Vauxhall Vivaro) was more than €100,000, compared with £27,985 for the diesel and £41,105 for the BEV.
Despite these seemingly massive hurdles, both BMW and Stellantis are putting investment into hydrogen fuel cells as an alternative to battery power.
BMW is currently selling a very limited run of an BMW X5 SUV powered by a Toyota-sourced fuel cell, while Stellantis will next year build its FCEV vans on the same line as its BEV vans instead of converting them in a special shed.
“Hydrogen is the missing part of the puzzle,” said Zipse. “Our narrative has always been that there will have to be a drive form that is emission-free when there's no charging infrastructure.”
Despite being comprehensively outstripped by battery technology in terms of investment, development and sales, hydrogen technology retains its key advantage of theoretically quick refills for busy commercial vehicle operators and the potential for a refuelling infrastructure in remote areas beyond the reach of thick electricity cables.
Future investment in hydrogen and associated drivetrain technologies formed part of the UK government’s Advanced Manufacturing Plan, announced last week, which aims to install 10GW of low-carbon hydrogen production capacity by 2030, half of which will be ‘green’ hydrogen (produced by renewable energy, rather than created from gas with the carbon captured).
The government reckons there are now around 200 companies working on hydrogen and fuel cell technologies in the UK and the sector could support more than 12,000 jobs and up to £11 billion in private investment by 2030.
Autocar recently heard from one such company, Bramble Energy, which wants to bring down the cost of the fuel cell stack by applying printed circuitboard technology.
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When oil companies are ripping put hydrogen fuelling stations on the M25/M40 junction you can safely assume that H2 is dead. No matter what the usual suspects may wish to believe.