Photographs: Courtesy, hyundainews.com Steve Gorman in Los Angeles
A Southern California motorist drove off the lot of a Hyundai Motor Co dealership on Tuesday in a zero-emissions car touted by the automaker as marking the commercial debut of mass-produced hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles in the United States.
State energy and air-quality officials hailed the occasion in Tustin, California, about 35 miles (56 km) southeast of Los Angeles, as a milestone in efforts to curb tailpipe pollution that accounts for about a third of California's greenhouse gas emissions.
. . .
Hyundai's hydrogen fuel-cell car makes US debut
Image: Independent industry analysts were less breathless about the announcement.Photographs: Courtesy, hyundainews.com
Independent industry analysts were less breathless about the announcement, noting that other automakers, including Honda Motor Co Ltd and Mercedes-Benz, have already put fuel cell vehicles on the road, albeit in very limited numbers.
They said the relatively high cost of building the cars and extremely low number of hydrogen refueling stations would constrain the market for such vehicles for years to come.
But they credited South Korean-based Hyundai with making a high-profile commitment to a promising technology.
"That's a big deal," said industry analyst Maryann Keller, of Maryann Keller & Associates of Greenwich, Connecticut.
. . .
Hyundai's hydrogen fuel-cell car makes US debut
Image: Hyundai's hydrogen fuel-cell car.Photographs: Courtesy, hyundainews.com
In a ceremony at Tustin Hyundai, dealer principal John Patterson handed the keys for the new Tucson fuel cell-powered crossover vehicle to its first US customer, Timothy Bush, who is leasing the car for $499 a month plus a $2,999 down payment.
As an added incentive for early adopters, the three-year, 36,000-mile lease term also come with unlimited free hydrogen refueling and free maintenance service at any of one of three participating dealerships in Southern California.
The cars are not yet available for sale, company officials said.
The Tucson fuel cell, which comes only in white, is virtually identical to the gasoline version of the CUV, a four-door automobile with a rear hatch, and is manufactured on the same assembly line at Hyundai's Tucson plant in Ulsan, South Korea.
. . .
Hyundai's hydrogen fuel-cell car makes US debut
Image: Tustin Hyundai celebrates the first Hyundai Tucson Fuel Cell customer, Timothy Bush, with a key hand-off ceremony at the dealership.Photographs: Courtesy, hyundainews.com
With a driving range of 265 miles for each fill-up and minimal cold-weather effects, the vehicle compares favourably to plug-in battery electric cars.
Refuelling takes about 10 minutes.
Showing off the car to reporters, Bush said the Tucson's range and size offer versatility similar to his current sport utility vehicle.
"I'm really excited to be able to pack up the kids and the dog and surfboards in the back and go to the beach or head up the local mountains, which we can totally do in this car," he said.
The fuel cell produces power from hydrogen gas through a electrochemical process that involves no combustion or moving parts. Its only tailpipe emission is water vapour.
Hyundai has declined to say how many fuel cell vehicles it plans to make this year, or how many have been ordered.
Potential customers must live within range of nine existing refueling stations in Southern California, most of them along the Interstate 405 corridor through Los Angeles and Orange counties.
California aims to have 1.5 million zero-emissions vehicles, which include fuel cell cars, on its roads by 2025.
article