US Energy Department Stopping Research On Hydrogen Fuel Cells For Cars
By Jim Kingsdale on May 10, 2009 | More Posts By Jim Kingsdale | Author's Website
Here is very good news: The U.S. Department of Energy will stop researching hydrogen fuel cells for cars. Hydrogen fuel cells might be feasible if there were gigantic supplies of cheap wind and solar power available to make hydrogen. It was never a near term concept. In fact, when George Bush proposed a “moon shot” in transportation technology based on hydrogen, my take at the time was that it was being trotted out because of the desire of both Bush and some Detroit executives to defer the inevitable transition to electric power for cars. So hydrogen became a red herring - an excuse for not doing anything with a realistic chance of having a near term impact on the internal combustion engine.
Team Obama is putting an end to that fairy tale promptly. That doesn’t mean the Energy Department will prove greatly effective in defining a practical new energy future for cars. For example it is still mired in the illusion that corn based ethanol can be useful - it cannot. But getting rid of the hydrogen boondoggle is at least a decent start in the right direction.
Energy Secretary Chu seems determined to focus on battery technology and to pursue pure science, basic (theoretical) research focused on batteries by establishing a set of new research centers. That seems consistent with his background as a scientist. It can’t be bad, but it is also not a sure thing. I would not want to bet that such an approach will best the Chinese who are determined to dominate the next generation of transportation power. They are employing a far more developmental approach than a theoretical one. This is an interesting game.
Here’s a New York Times report on the hydrogen decision:
U.S. Drops Research Into Fuel Cells for Cars
By MATTHEW L. WALD
Published: May 7, 2009
WASHINGTON - Cars powered by hydrogen fuel cells, once hailed by President George W. Bush as a pollution-free solution for reducing the nation’s dependence on foreign oil, will not be practical over the next 10 to 20 years, the energy secretary said Thursday, and the government will cut off funds for the vehicles’ development.
Developing those cells and coming up with a way to transport the hydrogen is a big challenge, Energy Secretary Steven Chu said in releasing energy-related details of the administration’s budget for the year beginning Oct. 1. Dr. Chu said the government preferred to focus on projects that would bear fruit more quickly.
The retreat from cars powered by fuel cells counters Mr. Bush’s prediction in 2003 that “the first car driven by a child born today could be powered by hydrogen, and pollution-free.” The Energy Department will continue to pay for research into stationary fuel cells, which Dr. Chu said could be used like batteries on the power grid and do not require compact storage of hydrogen.
The Obama administration will also establish eight “energy innovation hubs,” small centers for basic research that Dr. Chu referred to as “Bell Lablettes.” These will be financed for five years at a time to lure more scientists into the energy area.
“We’re very devoted to delivering solutions - not just science papers, but solutions - but it will require some basic science,” Dr. Chu, who won a Nobel Prize for his work in physics, said at a news conference.
He said he would probably reverse another Bush administration decision and restore funds for FutureGen, a program to build a power plant prototype. The plant would turn coal into gas, separate out the carbon dioxide - a major contributor to the greenhouse gases that cause global warming - and pump it underground. Then it would burn the hydrogen, which is nearly pollution-free.
An international partnership had selected a site in Mattoon, Ill., for construction of the plant, but the Bush administration decided that the costs were too high and that the money should be spread among more projects.
The Obama administration will also drop spending for research on the exploration of oil and gas deposits because the industry itself has ample resources for that, Dr. Chu said.
While the budget request for the Energy Department is $26.4 billion, an increase of less than 1 percent, actual spending will actually be far higher because some projects will be financed by the economic stimulus package, said Steve Isakowitz, the department’s chief financial officer.
While Dr. Chu emphasized the allocations for research, a former Energy Department official, Robert Alvarez, pointed out that the budget still includes $6.4 billion for nuclear weapons and $4.4 billion for naval reactors, nuclear nonproliferation activity and safe storage of surplus plutonium. “Weapons still make up the largest single expenditure,” he said.
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Finally!
Darryl McMahon
Author, The Emperor’s New Hydrogen Economy