The Borneo Post

Toyota puts fuel-cell semi truck to test at LA port

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THE NEWEST heavy- duty truck set to operate at the Port of Los Angeles emits an unusual byproduct that California could certainly use more of: water.

Toyota’s hydrogen fuelcell truck, which will emit nothing but vapour, will begin a feasibilit­y study at the port this summer. The Japanese automaker unveiled the concept on Wednesday and will start testing it in short- distance fleets that run back and forth between the city’s docks and nearby warehouses operated by retailing giants.

Swapping internal- combustion engines for fuel- cell stacks will support Gov Jerry Brown’s efforts to cut emissions from freight movement in California. The ports of Long Beach, Los Angeles and Oakland handle 40 per cent of US container traffic, with commercial shipments generating half of California’s toxic diesel- soot emissions and 45 per cent of the nitrogen oxide that plagues L. A. with the nation’s worst smog.

“We think this is a really important step to demonstrat­e the capability of fuel cell,” Bob Carter, the president of Toyota’s US sales unit, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. Toyota developed the powertrain for the semi truck, which was built by Paccar Inc., he said.

The Class 8 truck prototype is the latest indication Toyota intends to maintain a leading position in the nascent fuel- cell vehicle market. The carmaker put its Mirai fuel- cell sedan on display on Tuesday in China ahead of the Shanghai auto show as it jostles with the likes of Hyundai and Honda in the race to dominate the sector seen as a possible new frontier in greener transporta­tion.

The concept truck’s fuel- cell system, called Project Portal, is powered by the fuel cell stacks from two Toyota Mirai sedans, according to the Toyota City, Japan-based company.

Though it’s powered by hydrogen, the fuel- cell truck Toyota will test is no shrinking violet. At 670 horsepower, it delivers at least 12 per cent more force than the biggest version of the ISX15 diesel family that Cummins describes on its website as North America’s most popular heavy- duty engine. During normal operation, the truck will travel more than 200 miles between each refuelling, Toyota said.

“The port is unable to grow at all until it can show there are no incrementa­l emissions coming from trucks or ships or whatever,” Craig Scott, Toyota’s US manager for advanced technologi­es, said in an interview. “That is a big task. And we don’t think there’s another heavy- duty vehicle on the market – with zero- emission and technology and the same performanc­e as a diesel – that isn’t a fuel cell.”

Plug-in semi trucks would require such heavy batteries that they’d have to sacrifice most of their freight- carrying capacity, Scott said. Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said last week the electric- car maker will unveil a semi truck in September.

To maximise the environmen­tal benefits of its fuel- cell tests at the Los Angeles port, Toyota also is helping to develop renewable hydrogen sources, Scott said. These could include biomethane made from manure the state may collect from farmers.

Brown wants 100,000 zeroemissi­on freight-hauling machines to be operating by 2030 under what he calls his California Sustainabl­e Freight Action Plan. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Toyota says the system, which is composed of two Mirai fuel stacks, a 12-kilowatt-hour battery, and a powerful electric motor, produces more than 670 hp and 1,325 lb-ft of torque. — Toyota photo
Toyota says the system, which is composed of two Mirai fuel stacks, a 12-kilowatt-hour battery, and a powerful electric motor, produces more than 670 hp and 1,325 lb-ft of torque. — Toyota photo

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