The market is finally ready for electric vehicles, powered by fuel cells, argue Honda, Hyundai and Toyota. Honda and Hyundai unveiled fuel-cell electric vehicles at the L.A. Auto Show here, pledging to produce and sell a green car that has proved difficult to move into the mainstream.
The debuts came as Toyota showed a concept fuel-cell electric vehicle (FCEV) at the Tokyo Auto Show.
The launch of the FCEV is a "pivotal moment," said John Krafcik, president and CEO of Hyundai Motor America, "the moment when our industry begins to roll out the next-generation electric vehicle."
"Today, right here, the hydrogen fuel cell is making the shift from a research project to a real consumer choice," Krafcik said.
The cars, which make electricity from a reaction between hydrogen and oxygen, do not emit greenhouse gases. Hyundai executives said that when looking at a life-cycle analysis, they are cleaner than "any other powertrain vehicle," including battery electric cars. That's true even when natural gas is used to create the hydrogen, said Michael O'Brien, Hyundai's vice president of corporate and product planning.
Source: By Anne C. Mulkern and ClimateWire, Internet.