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Soon after Maribel Munoz joined the trailblazing ranks of American owners
of hydrogen cars — a group that exists only in California — she began to
fear that the low price of the taxpayer-subsidized Toyota Mirai she
purchased came with a tremendous cost. “You can’t have a job and own this
car,” said the 49-year-old clothing designer from Azusa. “Finding fuel for
it becomes your job. It is constant anxiety. I told the guy at Toyota, ‘If
I have a stroke, it’s on you.’” Munoz found herself stranded with an empty
tank on the highway and stressed out by the repeated fuel shortages Mirai
drivers call “hydropocalypses.” She struggled not to scream at her phone
after driving miles to stations that a hydrogen fueling app said were
working just fine, only to find them out of order. These are the kind of
hassles that can come with being an early adopter. But in the case of
California’s \"Hydrogen Highway\" — a network of fueling stations then-Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger dreamed would lure masses of Americans to hydrogen
vehicles — even the most climate-conscious, tech-savvy motorists are
asking: What’s the point? The Hydrogen Highway was meant to stretch from
coast to coast. But after 17 years, it has yet to make it past the state
line. Environmentalists warn that the futuristic hydrogen fuel cell cars,
marketed as producing zero emissions, leave an inexcusably heavy carbon
footprint. The few automakers that have not backed away from the concept of
powering a passenger car by splitting off electrons from hydrogen ions are
struggling to persuade drivers that the vehicles are a reliable alternative
to zero-emission battery-powered ones. And other states that typically look
to California for climate-friendly transportation inspiration are taking a
pass. “It started as kind of a bad bet by the state,” said Ethan Elkind,
director of the climate program at UC Berkeley’s Center for Law, Energy and
the Environment. “Now it has become a legacy zombie technology.” California
can’t let go of Schwarzenegger's vision. In 2004, he famously got behind
the wheel of a clunky Hummer prototype that ran on hydrogen to signal that
drivers can have it all: the excess and convenience of a gas guzzler, with
none of the emissions. (It turned out that the hydrogen Hummer wasn’t so
climate-friendly and never made it to commercial production.) State
officials say the hydrogen experiment is merely experiencing the growing
pains of every transportation innovation California pushed into the
mainstream. The Biden administration is right there alongside California,
championing lucrative subsidies and demonstration projects aimed at making
hydrogen fuel an affordable and truly green alternative, one that it hopes
could complement the battery-powered electric vehicle market. “Ten years
ago, people would have come to me and said, ‘Why is California supporting
battery vehicles? There is hardly any market, and they will never be
competitive,'” said Patty Monahan, a member of the California Energy
Commission. Of course, battery electric vehicles are all the rage now.
Monahan said the state’s aggressive push to get drivers into hydrogen cars
is meant to help the technology rapidly scale up, to the point where large
fleets of trucks running on diesel and aircraft powered by jet fuel could
be retired in favor of cleaner-burning hydrogen models. Demonstration
hydrogen trucks are operational at the Port of Los Angeles, and 48 hydrogen
buses are being used by local transportation agencies. Hydrogen boosters
note that the far more popular battery-powered cars are experiencing their
own growing pains, as automakers and regulators confront supply-chain
challenges and environmental questions complicating the push to rid the
planet of climate-unfriendly internal combustion engines. The hydrogen cars
can go 400 miles on a full tank, and they don't require waiting around for
a battery to charge. Yet nearly two decades into the hydrogen experiment,
it remains a uniquely expensive gambit. The state has spent $125 million to
make its struggling network of 50 public hydrogen fueling stations
operational. That network is still so shaky — with stations frequently
malfunctioning or out of fuel — that Toyota provides free towing and car
rental service to drivers who purchase a Mirai, as getting stranded is a
constant risk. “It was a regular sight to see a car coming in on a flatbed
when I went to get fuel,” said Scott Lerner, a writing instructor at UC
Irvine who leased a Mirai until the hardship of hydrogen motoring got to be
too much. “We would often have these commiserating circles at the station,
where people would share horror stories.” The state is undeterred. At the
end of last year, as Lerner was retiring his Mirai, the California Energy
Commission was greenlighting an additional $169 million for fueling
stations. The panel hopes to help open 111 more stations by 2027, plus 13
that can also service trucks and buses. That is a subsidy from the state of
more than $1 million per station, mostly for a fleet of about 9,000 private
vehicles. They are mainly Mirais, but there are also a smattering of
Hyundai and Honda hydrogen cars on the freeways. In the latest
unencouraging sign for Hydrogen Highway evangelists, Honda this month
announced that it will soon stop selling the Clarity, the one hydrogen
model it has available. The news was met with relief by some. “Failure is
never something to celebrate, but nor is wasting money on dead end
transport solutions,” Michael Liebreich, a clean-energy analyst, wrote on
Twitter. This is not the way things usually go for California, which is
accustomed to having its pioneering policies enthusiastically embraced by
other Democratic-led states. In this case, however, many California
transportation visionaries are ready to move on and focus all efforts on
battery-powered zero-emission passenger cars, which accounted for 1.1
million of the more than 14 million cars sold nationwide last year. But the
big business interests invested in hydrogen are harnessing their influence
to preserve the status quo. Among those lobbying Gov. Gavin Newsom to
vastly expand California’s investment in the Hydrogen Highway are Chevron,
Shell, Toyota, Hyundai and BMW. Within their ranks is Henry Perea, the
former assemblyman who wrote the transportation bill mandating funding for
hydrogen stations. He is now a lobbyist for Chevron. The firms assert that
the fuel is green, yet the “100% renewable” hydrogen sold at California
fueling stations is made with natural gas. It gets branded as renewable
through a scheme in which hydrogen companies pay to trap
greenhouse-gas-intensive methane from landfills and farming operations
elsewhere in the country. The companies don't use the resulting biogas,
which gets pumped into natural gas pipelines, except to generate carbon
credits they rely on to claim their fuel is green. \"You are still avoiding
those greenhouse gases and getting all the benefits from an environmental
point of view,\" said Shane Stephens, founder of the hydrogen fuel company
True Zero. Some environmental groups, including the Sierra Club, see it
differently. “It is not renewable,\" said Sasan Saadat, an analyst at
Earthjustice. \"What they are doing does not make sense.” There is so much
natural gas involved in the fuel production process, he said, that calling
it sustainable is indefensible. While hydrogen could ultimately prove the
most effective method to cut emissions from trucks and planes, the Hydrogen
Highway concept for cars just isn’t penciling out, Saadat said. The Energy
Commission aspires toward truly renewable fuel for hydrogen cars, a goal
achieved by the engineers who run the fueling station at Cal State Los
Angeles. The caveat is that this costs a fortune — double or triple the
price of making other hydrogen fuel, which is already so costly that Toyota
provides $15,000 fuel cards to lure drivers into Mirais. “It’s still a long
ways off,” said Michael Dray, who runs the Cal State station. He mocks
assurances from hydrogen producers and the state that all the fuel on the
Hydrogen Highway will be green within the decade. “Think very carefully
before investing in this technology,” said Dray, adding that the \"party
line\" is deceptively upbeat. \"Do not be deceived by these people,\" he
said. \"Big corporations are having a hard time with this. Major oil
companies are having trouble making the stations run. The auto
manufacturers are having trouble with the cars.\" Toyota officials take
exception. They argue that the ridicule of hydrogen car technology — Elon
Musk calls the fuel cells “fool sells” — resembles what they encountered
when the wildly successful and widely copied Prius hybrid debuted. “We
think in terms of decades, not one cycle,” said Craig Scott, a manager at
the company’s Electrified Vehicles & Technology Office. In Europe, where
some 2,000 hydrogen cars and vans are scattered across the continent, both
BMW and Jaguar Land Rover are mulling over the launch of a hydrogen model.
In the U.S., there are plenty of Mirai drivers who share Toyota’s outlook.
These true believers can be found on Mirai owner Facebook pages, warring
with drivers posting rants about getting stranded, waiting intolerably long
for fuel and struggling to get the pump nozzle unfrozen from their fuel
tank. It is a volatile corner of the World Wide Web. \"The car was almost
free,\" said Feridoon Aslani, 61, an actor and writer. \"I am happy with
it.\" He praised his 2017 Mirai even as he waited two hours for fuel in
Diamond Bar. The station was overwhelmed by desperate Mirai drivers seeking
a fill after one of the scant fueling stations in the nearby Inland Empire
went down. One car arrived by flatbed. But Aslani, who lives in Santa
Monica, said the $15,000 in free fuel Toyota is giving hydrogen pioneers
was too good a deal to pass up, and the vehicles work fine for Angelenos on
the Westside, where there is a critical mass of fueling stations. Eunjin
Hana Joo’s enthusiasm for the Mirai she rents to the hydrogen-curious in
Los Angeles was tempered after she took two journalist clients to fill the
tank at Dray’s station. It was disappointing, the 30-year-old artist said,
to learn that most of the fuel she had been using was made with natural
gas. “The point is to reduce our carbon footprint,” she said. “Why are we
creating it?” Joo, who had been in a rush to make her next appointment,
found herself stuck an extra 20 minutes at the station, because fuel pumps
had shut down in the heat, another recurring challenge. Maribel Munoz knows
all about that. She pulled into the Diamond Bar station during the June
heat wave to find that the app had deceived her again. The station was down
— too hot. She had to wait three hours until it was cool enough to pump
fuel — and the pump stopped dispensing at half a tank. Munoz vented on
Facebook as she waited. The next day, she drove to the Toyota dealer to
demand that it buy back the vehicle. “There were so many problems that kept
me from using the car,” Munoz said, “that I called it my lawn ornament.

On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 8:07 AM Lawrence Rhodes <primobass...@sbcglobal.net>
wrote:

>  From the LA Times:
>
>
> https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2021-08-10/hydrogen-highway-or-highway-to-nowhere
>  Lawrence Rhodes
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