Spring has been a busy period for hydrogen fueling stations, with five stations recently opening worldwide.
Hydrogen stations are springing up everywhere!
Sandra Curtin | FuelCells.org
Spring has been a busy period for hydrogen fueling stations, with five stations recently opening worldwide. |
Hydrogen stations are springing up everywhere! |
Sandra Curtin, www.fuelcells.org |
In April 2007, the second hydrogen station in Nevada opened at the Las Vegas Valley Water District's main campus. The station generates hydrogen onsite, using solar-generated energy to drive the electrolysis generators. The station will be used to fuel several Water District vehicles that have been retrofitted to operate on hydrogen.
Also in April, Illinois' first hydrogen station opened at the Gas Technology Institute in Des Plaines. The station is publicly accessible by arrangement, with credit card access. The facility is capable of producing hydrogen from natural gas, ethanol, or electrolysis of water, and in the future, could produce hydrogen from the gasification of coal or biomass. The project was funded by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and Gas Technology Institute (GTI). Chevron and Southern California Edison (SCE) opened a hydrogen station at SCE's headquarters in Rosemead, California in May 2007. An alkaline electrolyzer is used to produce the hydrogen onsite. The station serves a small demonstration fleet of Kia and Hyundai hydrogen fuel cell vehicles operated by SCE meter readers. The Chevron Hydrogen energy station is one of up to six stations that Chevron plans to build and operate under a DOE contract. A mobile Linde hydrogen station was also placed in service in May at Hamburg, Germany's airport. The station will fuel two fuel cell tractors and a people-carrier at the airport. Since the vehicles operate at different pressures (the tractor at 350 bar and the people-carrier at 200 bar), two separate hydrogen tapping systems are provided.
Also in the U.S., the University of Texas, Austin, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and Gas Technology Institute will debut a hydrogen station in summer 2007 that will support operation of a fuel cell-hybrid bus.
At least 50 additional hydrogen stations are planned in the next few years in the U.S., Canada, China, Denmark, India, Italy, Norway, Spain and Sweden. If you would like to stay up-to-date with hydrogen station openings, or view the listing of currently operable stations, be sure to check out Fuel Cell 2000's frequently-updated Worldwide Hydrogen Fueling Stations chart at: http://www.fuelcells.org/info/charts/h2fuelingstations.pdf |
|
The content & opinions in this article are the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of AltEnergyMag
Comments (0)
This post does not have any comments. Be the first to leave a comment below.
Featured Product
