The Mercury News

Industry expert clears the air on hydrogen

- By James Raia CORRESPOND­ENT

Nineteen months ago, Chris White did something no one else in Northern California had done. She leased a new car that operates only on hydrogen.

Honda, Toyota and Hyundai are manufactur­ers offering hydrogen-only vehicles. Mercedes-Benz and GM also have plans for hydrogen-only vehicles, the emissions of which are water. The 2017 and 2018 Honda Clarity Fuel Cell are available for lease only in only 12 dealership­s in California. Five locales are in the San Francisco Bay Area, one is in Roseville.

The long-time communicat­ions director of the California Fuel Cell Partnershi­p in West Sacramento, White also lives in West Sacramento. But she often travels to San Ramon on business and Truckee to visit relatives. Hydrogen stations are located in both cities.

Question: What kind of reaction have you received when people notice your car?

Chris White: It’s kind of funny, as soon as it got warm this spring and people had their car windows down again, I had about three days in a row when every time I was at a stoplight or a stop sign, the person next to me asked me about my car.

Q: The Honda Clarity is eligible for a single driver sticker for High Occupancy Vehicle lanes. Have you had any unusual experience­s using the lane?

CW: One experience I had in the HOV lane while I was coming home from the Sacramento airport at night. I was tired. The car in front of me just stopped for no reason. Even though I was depressing on the brake, I couldn’t have stopped in time. The car’s collision mitigation system depressed the brake further and it steered a little bit crooked and so I was at a 45-degree angle. Therefore, the car behind me didn’t smash into the back of my car.

Q: There are detractors to the hydrogen car industry. Do you find yourself justifying the kind of car you drive or are you over that?

CW: I am personally over it. I am personally very committed to clean air and reducing our petroleum use. I really believe to get there we need to drive battery electric vehicles and fuel cell electric vehicles and use more fuels made from bio-wastes like natural gas. We need to ride our bikes more and ride the bus. It will take a combinatio­n of factors.

Q: You mentioned there are some really angry people who dislike hydrogen cars. What’s the issue?

CW: It’s not like football. It’s not like my team is better than your team and only my team can win the Super Bowl. It takes a combinatio­n of factors. But some people

are very passionate about only one kind of technology. They’re passionate about wooden boats as opposed to fiberglass boats. I do admire the passion some people have.

Q: It’s complicate­d, right?

CW: What I usually tell people is you can think of gas in a gas car like a beach ball and electricit­y in a battery car and hydrogen in a fuel cell car like a golf ball and a ping-pong ball. One of them is slightly bigger than the other, but does it make any difference when you compare them to the beach ball?

Q: Are you an alternativ­e fuel vehicle user because of your environmen­tal beliefs or because of the financial considerat­ions or both?

CW: I am going to say neither of those. I was driving a Chevy Equinox. I loved it. It was a 2008 and it had a lot of miles on it. It had leather seats and the leather got a crack. It was starting to need a lot of repair work. It was time for a new car and when I started looking, it seemed a little silly as a single person who lives by herself to need an SUV.

James Raia, a syndicated automotive columnist in Sacramento, publishes the website theweeklyd­river.com and its correspond­ing podcast.

 ??  ?? Chris White and her 2017 Honda Clarity Fuel Cell.
Chris White and her 2017 Honda Clarity Fuel Cell.
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