Kuwait Times

GM, Honda announce fuel cell venture in Michigan

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General Motors and Honda announced plans Monday for the first “mass production” of an advanced hydrogen fuel cell system that could be used in future vehicles.

The two companies, which have collaborat­ed on the technology since 2013, will launch the Fuel Cell System Manufactur­ing venture in an existing GM battery facility in Brownstown, Michigan, south of Detroit, the US auto capital. Production is expected to begin around 2020 and the venture will create nearly 100 new jobs, the companies said in a statement.

GM and Honda will invest $85 million each in the technology. Fuel cell vehicles can operate on hydrogen made from a renewable source such as wind and biomass. The only emissions from these engines is water vapor.

“Over the past three years, engineers from Honda and GM have been working as one team with each company providing know-how from its unique expertise to create a compact and lowcost next-gen fuel cell system,” said Toshiaki Mikoshiba, chief operating officer for Honda in North American.

Fuel cell technology has been under study for some 20 years as an alternativ­e to the combustion engine. However, the technology so far has not made economic sense, in part because of a lack of infrastruc­ture to recharge vehicles with hydrogen. Mark Reuss, GM executive vice president for global product developmen­t said, “The combinatio­n of two leaders in fuel cell innovation is an exciting developmen­t in bringing fuel cells closer to the mainstream of propulsion applicatio­ns.”— AFP

 ??  ?? TOKYO: This file photo shows Honda Motors President Takahiro Hachigo poses with its new fuel cell vehicle (FCV), the Clarity Fuel Cell during a press preview at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo. — AFP
TOKYO: This file photo shows Honda Motors President Takahiro Hachigo poses with its new fuel cell vehicle (FCV), the Clarity Fuel Cell during a press preview at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo. — AFP

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