A
hugely important announcement was made this weekend by
Ulf Bossel at the
Lucerne Fuel Cell Forum,
which is a very highly respected technical fuel cell conference.
Ulf Bossel promotes the more efficient "electron
economy",
covered here, which, for vehicles, is twice as efficient as the hydrogen
economy. Hydrogen is quite energy intensive. If you drive 35km per day in a fuel
cell car, that car will consume roughly
6000kWh/year. This is equivalent to the
per capita electricity consumption in Germany. If you drive 35km per day in
a battery car, that car will require 3000kWh/year, the per capita electricity
consumption of Poland.
There is not much doubt that northern North America (US and Canada) can afford
to use hydrogen, and could do so with only small efficiency increases,
considering that Canada uses 16000kWh/person/year and the US consumes
12000kWh/person/year. But the worry is the other 95% of the world that lives
outside of North America.
Also, it's really the lifecycle energy intensity of vehicles that we must
consider, not the well-to-wheel efficiency. Lifecycle energy intensities are not
well understood though and for the time being, well-to-wheel is the best
information we have. But one thing is for certain, a battery car or a fuel cell
car cannot come close to the 200,000+ miles that a diesel engine can drive, and
so for every 1 diesel car built, we would have to build at least 2 battery or
fuel cell vehicles.