Asian
automakers are opening up a new front in the contest to define the
future of cars in California, fielding a flock of cars powered by
hydrogen in a bid to woo green car buyers from Tesla Motors Inc, the
battery electric vehicle leader.
Toyota,
Honda and Hyundai used the opening days of the Los Angeles auto show,
which draws thousands of car enthusiasts in one of the world's richest
vehicle markets, to tout new fuel-cell cars. These use hydrogen in a
process that creates electricity but not carbon dioxide. Automakers plan
to offer these cars in California, although the rollout will be
limited.
Hyundai says it has
already leased its fuel-cell Tucson to about 85 customers, and Toyota
says it has received expressions of interest from more than 2,000
people. Honda’s Clarity sedan will only be available in late 2016.
Fuel-cell technology is expensive, and hydrogen fueling stations are
still rare. Hyundai's Tucson can be leased for $499 per month and sold
only in Southern California, where there are about nine fueling
stations.
Toyota's new Mirai can
run for 300 miles between charges. Bill Fay, general manager for Toyota
brand sales in the United States, told Reuters that a concerted
public-private push is needed to build more refueling stations.
"We
need the government to support the investment in this and we hope that
Honda and Hyundai will be coming in and provide some support," Fay said.
"Then I think we have some critical mass to build from and take off
from there."
California provides as
much as $100 million a year to fund alternative fuel and vehicle
projects, including hydrogen refueling stations.
Tesla Chief
Executive Elon Musk and other Tesla executives have taken shots at fuel
cells and the tax-funded subsidies used to promote them. Fuel cell
vehicles compete with Tesla's electric cars as generators of credits
that could help conventional automakers meet California's complex zero
emission vehicle quotas.
Tesla has
benefited from, and repaid, government loans. It sells clean car
credits. Tesla has also built its own recharging network.
“Fuel
cells are dependent on public infrastructure in a way electric vehicles
will never be,” Tesla’s vice president for business development,
Diarmuid O’Connell, said Friday at an appearance before the Automotive
Press Association. And because much of the hydrogen used in fuel cell
vehicles will be derived from fossil fuels, he said, “fuel cell vehicles
are not even zero emission vehicles.”
Battery electric
cars rely on an electric grid that in many regions of the United States
is fueled by coal and gas, but O’Connell said the U.S. grid is getting
cleaner.
Public subsidies and
regulations are the key forces driving the competition between fuel cell
vehicles and battery electric vehicles in California, where state
regulators have mandated that up to 16 percent of vehicles, or 1.5
million cars, sold in the state by 2025 be zero emission. Currently,
about 2 percent of the vehicles sold in California are electric cars.
Both fuel-cell cars and battery electric cars have limitations that discourage many would-be buyers.
Most electric
battery-powered cars on the market run for fewer than 100 miles between
recharging stops. Tesla’s Model S sedan and Model X sport utility can
run for more than 200 miles between charges, but the average Tesla sells
for over $70,000.
Low gas
prices undermine demand for both technologies. Only about 67,700
electric vehicles were sold in the United States last year - about 0.4
percent of the 16.5 million new cars and trucks sold.
"The
electric car that has earned one dime for its maker hasn't been created
yet," said Johan de Nysschen, president of General Motors Co 's
Cadillac luxury brand, on the sidelines of the show.
Still,
GM plans a new electric Chevrolet model with a projected 200-mile
range, and is experimenting with fuel cell technology.
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