The New York Times reports on the launch of a hydrogen fuel station on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles, and the chicken-or-egg conundrum facing the development of a fuel-cell vehicle future. The paper calls the station “a futuristic experiment posing as an ordinary fuel station [that] may be bringing the world one step closer to the hydrogen age.”
Carmakers have argued that without a network of hydrogen filling stations they couldn’t roll out fuel-cell vehicles from the research lab to the dealership. Energy companies, on the other hand, said that without large numbers of fuel-cell cars available at reasonable prices, they saw little point in building a costly new fueling infrastructure.
This classic chicken-or-egg dilemma has long hobbled the development of most alternative fuels and has assured the supremacy of oil. Thanks to low prices and abundant reserves just a few years ago, energy providers and automakers simply had little incentive to end the petroleum age. But, faced with the perils of global warming and soaring prices, automakers and oil companies have begun a hasty search for alternatives and have been working together to break the hydrogen logjam. Their answer is to introduce both cars and new fuel stations, clustering them in urban centers like Los Angeles, Berlin and Tokyo.
“The game now is about clustering; it’s the only way to take this next step,” said Duncan Macleod, vice president of Shell Hydrogen.
Not really. Home-based hydrogen refueling, via a system like this one being developed by Honda which converts natural gas to hydrogen, would seem to be a potentially viable option.
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Source: Bill Hobbs