In order for the car to
compete with
hybrid cars, such as Toyota's Prius
hybrid, or the Honda Accord
Hybrid - in terms of fuel efficiency or reducing
pollution - Ford would have to create a
hydrogen-electric hybrid vehicle.
Unfortunately, a hydrogen combustion engine alone only
improves fuel-efficiency by 25 percent. Creating a
hybrid vehicle, pushes the hydrogen-electric hybrid into
the same efficiency percentages as gas-electric hybrids
- even slightly better.
But where do I fill
up?
Of course, the looming question is, where will the
hydrogen come from?
In California, Governor Schwarzenegger in October
dedicated a hydrogen fueling station and called it
"the first stop in a hydrogen highway". The
Governator plans to have 200 more such stations by 2010,
and while this is great news, the Gov's plan is far more
aggressive than any federal plan to date.
Now Shell and GM have
opened an additional station for a fleet of a whopping 6
cars.
Therefore, it seems the 'hydrogen economy' must still be
at least a decade from reality. Yet, Detroit still drags
it's feet on hybrids, even as the hydrogen future seems
to drift so swiftly towards the same path Japan has
taken with the hybrid.
Even more distressing
is that hydrogen production still creates significant
pollution. So, it still comes to down to clean energy,
which American, oil-powered corporations continue to
ignore.
What stinks here?
And it's not as if Toyota and Honda aren't working on
hydrogen, but they are also perfecting the hybrid
vehicle powertrain and electrical system, as they
develop hydrogen.
The Big 3 can't lead and won't follow the leader.
Refusing to accept failure is worse than failure itself.
Detroit has thus far blown it on clean vehicles, and if
they wait to pursue clean vehicles until the 'hydrogen
revolution', they just might miss the revolution.
Yes, Ford has released the Escape Hybrid SUV,
but they couldn't do it without Toyota's help.
Recently, Ford vice president for power-train
operations, Dave Szczupak, said, "Hybrids are not a
panacea for fuel economy."
Yet, Szczupak has said,
"The future is hydrogen, and we are uniquely
positioned among automakers to lead the way."
Excuse me, by Ford's own admission, in order for hydrogen powered
vehicles to compete with hybrid electric cars, Ford
would have to create a hydrogen-powered hybrid electric
cars.
Simple hydrogen combustion
doesn't do it. Additionally, current hydrogen production
isn't much better than gasoline production - both are
currently derived from oil.
All that can be asked, is what is the hold up? If the
hybrid powertrain works for Ford's 1st generation of
hydrogen-powered cars, why not create gasoline-hybrid
electric cars in the short term? Just as Japan, Detroit
could replace the gasoline engine with a hydrogen engine
once stations are producing clean hydrogen.
What America would gain
The national security issues of global warming, clean
air via reduced pollution and smog, ending foreign oil
dependency would be significantly affected by an
immediate, full scaled production of the hybrid vehicle
model.
Within two-plus years, by-the-time Ford produces the
first hydrogen combustion engined-vehicles, Toyota might
have already sold more than a million hybrids. One
million hybrid cars, trucks, SUVs and minivans will have
much more affect on the world in two years than a fleet
of hydrogen vehicles without any filling stations.
Ultimately, why should we be surprised by Detroit?
GM,
for example, blames their customers for GM's lack of
leadership, as GM's Scott Fosgard has stated, "If
customers were interested in small vehicles, they'd be
downsizing their houses, and a lot of other things. What
sells is performance and what I would really call sex
appeal. That's the tried and true."
Thanks for the leadership.
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the hybrid car buyer's club to stay informed on hybrid
availability.
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