Has Calif.'s hydrogen highway gone bust?
By COLIN SULLIVAN, Greenwire
Published: March 10, 2009
SAN FRANCISCO -- Soon after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) took office in
2003, he set in motion a campaign promise to build, by 2010, a "hydrogen
highway" composed of 150 to 200 fueling stations spaced every 20 miles along
California's major highways.Schwarzenegger's "Vision 2010" plan promised
that every California motorist would have access to hydrogen fuel by the end
of the decade. He has since repeatedly mentioned the highway in a standard
stump speech on his environmental accomplishments.
But the program has fallen short of expectations. With less than 10 months
until the end of the decade, 24 hydrogen fueling stations are operating in
California, most of them near Los Angeles.
The vision of a hydrogen infrastructure, with fueling stations dotting the
interstates, has not materialized, partly because the eager governor may
have set unrealistic targets.
Gerhard Achtelik, manager of the hydrogen highway program at the Air
Resources Board, admitted in an interview that the state would not hit its
150-station goal by 2010.
"That was a very optimistic guess," Achtelik said. "It's certainly been a
learning experience."
The state's hydrogen-highway experience points to a fundamental question
confronting any effort to build an alternative car market, be it powered by
hydrogen or electricity: What comes first, the vehicle or the
infrastructure?
Of the hydrogen effort, Achtelik conceded that the public has "not received
the vehicles as quickly as we hoped."
Automakers have developed test models and advanced fuel-cell technology in
labs around the world, but this test phase has not yet resulted in anything
close to a commercial hydrogen car market.
"If all the cars were there that would be needed for the infrastructure,
then the stations would be there," Achtelik said.
Vision with 'hiccups'
Roy Kim, of the California Fuel Cell Partnership, also said developing
hydrogen stations when there are not enough cars to serve them does not make
sense. The most likely candidates to build the stations in the private
sector -- the oil companies -- still see the infrastructure as a
questionable investment, while public dollars, especially in cash-strapped
California, have been scarce.
But Kim sees reason for optimism, with General Motors Corp., Honda Motor
Co., Toyota Motor Corp. and Daimler AG moving closer to putting hydrogen
cars in the hands of customers. Once the Honda Clarity or GM Equinox catches
on, the stations will come, he argued.
"It has had its hiccups," said Kim of the hydrogen highway program. "But
this is characteristic of any emerging new technology. It takes time to
realize a vision, and it takes patience to get there."
Kim compares the hydrogen fuel cell to the personal computer and likes to
reference Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates' famous prediction that he
would one day see a personal computer in every household. Hydrogen fuel
cells are getting slimmer and safer, he said, and commercial pilot projects
have shown promise.
Catherine Rips, managing director of the California Hydrogen Business
Council, puts it another way. She said the alternative car market in the
United States -- with hydrogen matching up against plug-in electrics,
hybrids and biodiesels, to name a few -- has spread itself outward rather
than imitating the internal combustion engine's more linear path. This means
the highway concept, which was adopted early in the decade, may not apply,
at least for the time being.
"What sounded like a good idea in 1999 doesn't necessarily match up with
reality a decade later," Rips said. "New technology doesn't follow a
straight path."
Joan Ogden, director of the Sustainable Transportation Energy Pathways
program at the University of California, Davis, says the 150-station idea
was a "broad-brush vision" that experts quickly realized was unlikely to be
fulfilled after the governor launched his program.
Transportation planners and policymakers, Ogden said, several years ago
stopped taking the highway concept literally. They came up with a new image
-- the cluster -- and decided a more doable pilot program would be to create
a network of 10 to 20 stations in a specific region, to fuel the cars where
they reside.
Shell Hydrogen BV, an industry leader, and GM soon advocated the same
concept in a study that called for the creation of station clusters in three
locations, including Los Angeles. So now you have, in theory, a developing
network in a region where automakers can directly market their cars.
"GM has repeatedly said the development of such a cluster is what is
needed to take their learning to the next level," Rips said.
Zero-emissions rule
Crucial to the emergence of the cluster, in Ogden's view, is California's
zero-emissions vehicle rule, which goes into effect in 2012. Under the
regulation, which was advanced by the state's Air Resources Board,
automakers will be required to make 7,500 "pure ZEVs" in the 2012-14 time
frame, and 25,000 in 2015-17.
Because pure ZEVs emit no greenhouse gas emissions from their tailpipes,
that means fuel-cell cars powered by either hydrogen or electricity. "I'm
actually pretty encouraged," Ogden said. "When I started watching this 15
years ago, it took the whole back of a minivan to hold a fuel system. You
have a very attractive car now."
The market for the vehicles and the infrastructure, Ogden added, should
"really be driven by this ZEV regulation." The automakers have announced
plans to introduce hundreds of fuel-cell vehicles into Southern California
in the years ahead, in hopes that a cluster would emerge.
"Clusters make a lot more sense at this point," agreed Achtelik, who
predicted "bridge stations" to Las Vegas and Santa Barbara, Calif., from the
Los Angeles region by 2014 or 2015.
But just who will build the fueling stations beyond the experimental stage
is still an open question.
Ogden said the oil companies, unlike the carmakers, are not regulated to
build the infrastructure or participate in the fledgling market. Shell
Hydrogen and Chevron Corp. are involved in demonstration stations, but they
have been resistant to all-out investment for a reason.
"There's some question as to how this is going to take place," Ogden said.
"What we really need is a network demo."
'It's in the mix'
To the automakers, the bumps on the hydrogen highway are emblematic of the
state of the alternative car market and the difficulties associated with
building cars during the economic downturn.
The manufacturers are developing a number of models to meet increasing fuel
economy standards, with an eye on greenhouse gas emissions reduction
policies like the one adopted in California under A.B. 32. That means
flex-fuel, compressed natural gas and biodiesel vehicles in addition to
hydrogen and electric fuel cells.
What are lacking, said Charles Territo, spokesman for the Alliance of
Automobile Manufacturers, are clear signals on stations and how drivers will
be able to drive long distances. "Our industry is committed to offering the
vehicles," he said, "but the reality is there needs to be a very significant
effort to expand the alternative fuel infrastructure."
Ultimately, Territo added, consumers will likely decide on a
region-by-region basis what technology they prefer. Some regions in the
Midwest could see ethanol-85 networks emerge, while more urban areas could
see electrification.
And hydrogen? "It's in the mix," Territo said. "Our goal as manufacturers is
to provide as many different technologies as possible."
In the short term, hydrogen advocates have applauded the federal stimulus
package, which has billions set aside for research into fuel cells and $300
million earmarked specifically for alt-vehicle infrastructure projects. In
the long term, they would like to see more public dollars to build the
stations, possibly alongside state and federal facilities in highway rest
stops.
"There's not yet a commercial case for an infrastructure provider," Rips
said. "It's going to take public support, or a mandate."
Back in California, state officials say all this is part of what they now
view, in the words of ARB spokesman Dimitri Stanich, as a "retooled"
hydrogen highway.
"It's very much alive," Stanich said of the program. "This vision is still
there. It's just being groomed."
Copyright 2009 E&E Publishing. All Rights Reserved.
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