Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hydrogen trucks in Navistar’s plans

- TOM KRISHER

DETROIT — In about three years, Navistar plans to start selling low-emission hydrogen-powered heavy trucks under a partnershi­p with General Motors and a small distributi­on company called OneH2.

Trucking company J.B Hunt, based in Lowell, Ark., will use test trucks in a pilot program starting toward the end of next year. Navistar says its trucks will be able to go more than 500 miles on a single charge and can be refueled in less than 15 minutes.

The venture announced last week is an early commercial deployment of the technology in U.S. long-haul trucking. Navistar hopes it will start widespread use of hydrogen-electric trucks, which will reduce greenhouse gas emissions that come from burning diesel fuel.

GM will provide fuel cell “power cubes” to Navistar, while OneH2 will set up fueling stations either by trucking hydrogen to terminals or through small hydrogen generation units, the companies said in a statement.

None of the companies would give financial details of the collaborat­ion. GM, which has been researchin­g hydrogen fuel cells for 50 years, has stated in the past it wants to develop markets to sell its new technologi­es to other companies. Navistar said it would take a minority stake in Longview, N.C. based OneH2.

The companies said the cost of running Navistar’s Internatio­nal RH fuel cell electric vehicles is expected to be comparable to diesel in certain markets.

They are expected to be commercial­ly available sometime in 2024 to run routes with OneH2 refueling stations along the way.

“It is going to be opened and expanded to other companies,” said Navistar CEO Persio Lisboa. “There’s been a lot of interest from our customers.”

J.B. Hunt wouldn’t say where the trucks would run in the test program.

“It can be anywhere. We have a lot of flexibilit­y as we roll this out,” said Nick Hobbs, the company’s chief operating officer.

Hydrogen fuel cell trucks have an advantage over battery-electric powered trucks, with longer range pulling heavy loads, and because they can be refueled faster, said Charles Freese, executive director of GM’s fuel cell business.

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