MUNICH -- Battery power may be the frontrunner to become the car technology of the future, but major German automakers such as BMW and Audi are not ruling out the underdog hydrogen.
Both automakers are developing fuel cell passenger vehicle prototypes alongside their fleets of battery cars as part of preparations to abandon fossil fuels.
They are hedging their bets, calculating that a change in political winds could shift the balance towards hydrogen in an industry shaped by early-mover Tesla's decision to take the battery powered road to clean cars.
Global auto hub Germany is in sharp focus. It is already betting billions on hydrogen fuel in sectors like steel and chemicals to meet climate targets, and closely fought elections this month could see the Greens enter the coalition government and further push the technology.
BMW is hydrogen's biggest proponent among Germany's automakers, charting a path to a mass-market model around 2030. The company also has one eye on shifting hydrogen policies in Europe and in China, the world's largest car market.
The BMW brand has developed a hydrogen prototype car based on its X5 SUV, in a project already partly funded by the German government.
Jürgen Guldner, who heads up BMW's hydrogen fuel cell car program, told Reuters the brand would build a test fleet of close to 100 cars in 2022.
"Whether this (technology) is driven by politics or demand, we will be ready with a product," he said, adding that his team is already working to develop the next-generation vehicles. "We are on the verge of getting there and we are really convinced we will see a breakthrough in this decade," he said.
Volkswagen Group's premium Audi brand told Reuters it had assembled a team of more than 100 mechanics and engineers who are researching fuel cells on behalf of the whole VW Group and had built a few prototype cars.
Hydrogen is viewed as a sure bet by the world's biggest truckmakers, such as Daimler unit Daimler Truck, Volvo Trucks and Hyundai, because batteries are too heavy for long-distance commercial vehicles.
Yet fuel cell technology - where hydrogen passes through a catalyst, producing electricity - is for now too costly for mass-market consumer cars. Cells are complex and contain expensive materials, and although refueling is quicker than battery recharging, infrastructure is scarcer.
The fact that hydrogen is so far behind in the race to the affordable market also means even some champions of the technology, like Germany's Greens, favor prioritizing battery-powered passenger cars because they see them as the fastest way to reach their main goal of decarbonizing transport. The Greens do, however, back the use of hydrogen fuel for ships and planes and want to invest heavily in "green" hydrogen produced solely from renewable sources.
"Hydrogen will play a highly important role in the transport industry," said Stefan Gelbhaar, the party's transport policy spokesperson in the Bundestag.
Politics can be unpredictable though - diesel went from saint to sinner following VW's diesel emissions-cheating scandal, which came to light in 2015.
Some automakers view hydrogen technology as an insurance policy as the EU targets an effective ban on fossil-fuel cars from 2035.
Last year Daimler said it would wind down production of the Mercedes-Benz GLC F-CELL, a fuel cell SUV, but a source familiar with company plans said the project could easily be revived if the European Commission or a German government with Green participation decide to promote hydrogen cars.
"We are focusing on [battery] electric first, but we are in close cooperation with our truck guys," said Jörg Burzer, Daimler's head of production, when asked about that approach. "The technology is always available."
For years Japanese automakers Toyota, Nissan and Honda, and South Korea's Hyundai, were alone in developing and pushing fuel cell cars, but now they have company.
China is expanding its hydrogen fueling infrastructure, with several automakers now working on fuel cell cars, including Great Wall Motor, which plans to develop hydrogen-powered SUVs.
The EU wants to build more hydrogen fueling stations for commercial vehicles. Fitch Solutions auto analyst Joshua Cobb said the bloc was only likely to start pushing hydrogen passenger cars in two to three years' time, given it was still figuring out how to pay for its battery-electric car push and how to obtain enough "green" hydrogen from renewable sources.
But he added: "It's not out of bounds to think if the (German) Greens come into power they could accelerate the push to adopt regulations favoring hydrogen fuel-cell cars."
BMW's Guldner acknowledged hydrogen technology was too expensive to be viable for the consumer market today but said costs would come down as trucking companies invested in the technology to bring fuel cell vehicles to market at scale.
To demonstrate BMW's hydrogen X5 prototype, Guldner took Reuters for a drive at 180 km (112 miles) per hour on the autobahn near the automaker's Munich headquarters and, in a few minutes, gave it enough fuel to run 500 km using a hydrogen gas pump at a Total fuel station.
Guldner said BMW saw hydrogen fuel-cell cars as "complementary" to its future battery electric model range, providing an alternative for customers who cannot charge at home, want to travel far and refuel swiftly. The motor in the hydrogen X5 is the same as BMW's all-electric iX.
"When the future is zero emissions, we believe having two answers is better than one," he added.
Yet Fitch Solutions' Cobb said that it would still take years before any European policy support for hydrogen-powered cars translated into significant sales.
Indeed, auto consultancy LMC forecasts that various uses of hydrogen - in commercial vehicles, aviation and energy storage - would spur its adoption in passenger cars, but over the longer term.
"We are just not going to get there any time soon," said LMC senior powertrain analyst Sam Adham. LMC estimates in 2030 hydrogen fuel cell models will make up just 0.1 percent of sales in Europe, and sales will only take off after 2035.
There remain divisions about the technology's prospects in the global car industry, and even within auto groups.
Audi might be researching fuel cells, for example, but VW Group CEO Herbert Diess has been scathing about hydrogen-powered cars.
"The hydrogen car has proven NOT to be the solution to climate change," he said in a tweet this year. "Sham debates are a waste of time."
Stephan Herbst, general manager of Toyota in Europe, has a different view.
Speaking in his role as a member of the Hydrogen Council business group, which forecasts that hydrogen will power more than 400 million cars by 2050, Herbst said he was confident that now that governments had set ambitious carbon-reduction targets, they would push hydrogen alongside battery electric cars.
"We strongly believe this is not a question of either or," he added. "We need both technologies."
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BMW, Audi among German automakers still betting on fuel cell cars - Automotive News
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