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Roland Berger Strategy Consultants told the Tokyo wire that "the four automakers have already spent a combined 100 billion yen on the technology." That would be a little over a billion $, and I believe that number is low.
Prototypes and test vehicles have been driving around for years without exploding. 2015 is the date several carmakers name for the first commercial launch of fuel cell vehicles. Satoshi Ogiso, Toyota's man in charge of new technology, thinks that the only challenge is affordability. During an interview with TTAC last year, he likened the challenge to what had faced him during the launch of the first hybrids in 1995. Just like hybrid powertrains in the 90s, current fuel cell powertrains are big, bulky, heavy and expensive. Ogiso and his colleagues at other carmakers are working on the problem. The solution to many ills in the auto industry is scale: Make and sell enough cars with the new technology, and you can spread the price of development over many units. Also, with mass production, the price of components can come down drastically. Even the largest automakers don't want to wait until they achieved the necessary scale effects themselves. They forge alliances with other automakers.
Says The Nikkei:
Observers familiar with the matter expect more tie-ups. The Roland Berger consultancy predicts that Toyota will enlarge its circle of fuel cell partners. It will be a few years until fuel cell cars can compete in the marketplace. In the meantime, there is a fierce and sometimes uncivil competition for government grants. When the U.S. government did bet heavily on EVs in 2009 and decided to shift funding away from fuel cell vehicle research, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu said that fuel cell vehicles "will not be practical over the next 10 to 20 years." In the meantime, he had a change of heart. "The development of America's tremendous shale gas resources is also helping to reduce the costs of producing hydrogen and operating hydrogen fuel cells," Bill Gibbons, a spokesman for the department, told the New York Times in May. If an investment into fuel cell vehicles would be successful at last, past investments into EVs would not go to waste. A fuel cell is just another battery. Except that it can be charged in minutes than hours, and except that it lasts 400 miles instead of 100. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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