
Regards Neil
NewcastleFalcon wrote: I haven't updated myself recently on how Arnie is getting on in California, but to his credit at one time he did try to pursue a vision of hydrogen based transportation in his State.
Are tens of thousands of fuel cell electric vehicles any nearer to reality in 2015?The California Hydrogen Highway Network (CaH2Net) was initiated in April of 2004 by Executive Order under Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The mission was to assure that hydrogen fueling stations were in place to meet the demand of fuel cell and other hydrogen vehicle technologies being placed on California’s roads.
California now has 13 research hydrogen fueling stations, 9 public stations and an additional 18 that have been funded and are expected to be operational in the next few years. Hydrogen vehicle manufacturers have spent years demonstrating their vehicles and improving the technology, and some automakers will be ready to introduce FCEVs to the early commercial market around 2015 - 2017.
The combination of CaH2Net planning and continued government and industry progress has prepared California with a growing hydrogen fueling network that will be ready to support tens of thousands of hydrogen vehicles as they enter the marketplace in the next several years.
The project, which has backing from Europe, the UK Government and the Scottish Government, will deliver a hydrogen infrastructure in Aberdeen in 2014, including:
Production of hydrogen from a 1MW electrolyser
Establishing a state-of-the-art hydrogen refuelling station, Scotland's first commercial-scale hydrogen refuelling station that will include hydrogen production through electrolysis
Deployment of a fleet of 10 hydrogen buses, to be operated by First Group and Stagecoach.
The development of a hydrogen safe maintenance facility. Within an operational fleet maintenance depot
I'm sure I can remember trolley buses in Newcastle the first time I was there, sometime in the sixties.NewcastleFalcon wrote:While electrical infrastructures on our road network are in their infancy, Many of our cities and regions were pioneers in developing the necessary infrastructure and vehicles to run public transport services on electricity. Newcastle being a good example.