SubsequentBadger

SubsequentBadger t1_iy7ryfu wrote

The key reasons I say it's not dead are twofold

  1. Major companies are still investing in hydrogen as a fuel for other uses. Rolls Royce in jet engines for example.

  2. Japan generates a lot of hydrogen as a byproduct of other industries, so there are situations in which it becomes cheaper and the Japanese manufacturers have always kept it in the system as a concept for this reason.

Now I'm no great hydrogen evangelist, I know it has some fundamental flaws, but it's not yet dead. If there is a solid reason to build large scale hydrogen infrastructure it may yet come back for cars, or possibly commercial vehicles. However the next 20 years will certainly be the age of battery EVs for personal transport.

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