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Hyundai hydrogen trucks arrive in Switzerlan­d

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HYUNDAI this week presented the first seven hydrogen- powered trucks to customers in Switzerlan­d, out of 50 such vehicles scheduled this year to bring zero- emission commercial vehicles to European roads.

For long haul, proponents say hydrogen- powered trucks have an advantage over electric rivals as they have a greater range and require less charging times but their uptake and mass production has been slow because they are expensive.

However, a Mckinsey study in January said that once relative efficienci­es of the power sources and lifetime costs of a truck are factored in, green hydrogen could reach cost parity with diesel by 2030.

Hyundai has been partnering with Swiss companies to build a value chain covering the production of green hydrogen from hydropower, hydrogen charging stations and the service and maintenanc­e of the trucks.

The customers, which include supermarke­t chain Migros, will be leasing the trucks from Hyundai Hydrogen Mobility ( HHM) to transport goods around the country, backed by the new hydrogen infrastruc­ture.

Leases are on a pay- per- use basis that does not require an initial investment. Hyundai plans to put 1 600 trucks on Swiss roads by 2025.

Its H2 Xcient trucks have a 190 kilowatt fuel cell stack and seven high- pressure tanks holding 32kg of hydrogen, giving them a range far farther than comparable vehicles powered by electric batteries on the market now.

HHM was set up by Hyundai and Swiss start- up H2 energy last year to partner with Hydrospide­r, a joint venture of H2 Energy, industrial gas maker Linde and Swiss power utility Alpiq.

Hyundai plans for production capacity of 2 000 units of Xcient fuel cells per year by next year to support its expansion plans as demand for clean transport grows.

It views Switzerlan­d as a test case for hydrogen fuel cells in heavy goods transport, said In- Cheol Lee, executive vice president and head of the commercial vehicle division at Hyundai Motor Company.

“With successful delivery of the first H2 Xcient fuel cell trucks, we proudly announce our plan to expand beyond Europe to North America and China, where we are already making great progress,” he said. | IOL

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