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Congress Told Hydrogen Fuel Decades from Being Practical
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=E529B6:3919ACA

Lawmakers looking for alternative ways to power vehicles that do not
rely on fossil fuels





Honda FCX fuel cell-powered vehicle seen at the third annual road
rally staged by the California Fuel Cell Partnership Soaring gasoline
prices and a growing desire for energy independence have sparked
renewed interest in the U.S. Congress for alternative ways to power
vehicles that do not rely on fossil fuels. One of the options is the
hydrogen fuel cell. Such technology is in its infancy, and significant
hurdles must be overcome before cars can be powered with hydrogen.

At a recent congressional hearing, lawmakers were eager to hear if
there is some innovative solution to America's energy needs on the
near horizon. Representative Bob Inglis of South Carolina, who sits on
the House Science Committee, seized upon hydrogen fuel cells as one
possibility.







Bob Inglis, Representative "The transition to a hydrogen economy holds
great promise on many levels. All along the way, the air will be
getting cleaner, the oil pressure could come off the Middle East,
entrepreneurs would be making money and employing people, and we will
be winning our energy independence," he said.

The concept is simple. When hydrogen combines with oxygen, it produces
energy and water. The energy can be harnessed in a chamber, or fuel
cell, to power vehicles, and the water can be released as a harmless
by-product. No pollution, no greenhouse gases. Best of all, unlike
oil, hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe.

With encouragement from the Bush administration and other governments,
research into hydrogen fuel cell technology is moving forward.

"We are very committed to a transition to an H-2 [hydrogen] fuel cell
vehicle, and then the ultimate infrastructure and economy that is
going to come together, with zero emissions, low energy consumption,
and then, finally, energy self-sufficiency," said Mark Chernoby, Vice
President for Advanced Vehicle Engineering at automaker
Daimler-Chrysler.

Daimler-Chrysler says it hopes to begin offering hydrogen-powered
vehicles to the public in the next ten-to-15 years.

But no one is predicting an easy transition from gasoline. For one
thing, massive amounts of hydrogen would have to be collected. In
nature, hydrogen is almost always found in molecules with other
elements. Breaking those molecules apart to extract pure hydrogen
requires energy. An electric current, for instance, can split water
molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, essentially the reverse of what
takes place inside a hydrogen fuel cell.

Researcher George Crabtree of Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago
says the most common means of generating hydrogen today involves the
burning of natural gas, hardly an ideal solution.

"This production route simply exchanges a dependence on foreign oil
for a dependence on foreign gas. And it does not reduce the production
of environmental pollutants or greenhouse gases," he said.

The challenges do not end there. There is also the question of how to
store hydrogen, a highly-combustible element blamed for the 1937
Hindenburg blimp disaster, safely and compactly in vehicles.







Thomas Dreumont demonstrates a gauge that measures both hydrogen fuel
levels and battery charge levels in the dash of a Nissan XTrails fuel
cell vehicle"To allow a 300 mile driving range without compromising
cargo and passenger space, we must store hydrogen at high density and
with fast release times," said George Crabtree. "Since the 1970s over
2,000 hydrogen compounds have been examined for their storage
capability. None has been found that meets the storage demands."

Several automakers have produced test models of hydrogen-powered
vehicles, at a cost of about $1 million each. The director of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology's automotive research
laboratory, John Haywood, says it could be decades before hydrogen
fuel cells become cost-effective as a viable alternative to today's
gasoline-powered engines.

"In ten, 15 years there will be trial fleets - prototypes of what
these technologies could be," he said. "But the costs will still be
substantially above what conventional vehicle costs are. Our own
estimates are that to look at when hydrogen and fuel cells could have
a noticeable impact on transportation energy consumption, we judge
that to be at least 40, 50 years away."

A 40-to-50 year wait does not appeal to U.S. lawmakers who are
searching for a solution to America's energy challenges today.
Representative Bob Inglis suggested President Bush issue a challenge
on the development of hydrogen technology similar to President
Kennedy's 1961 call to send a man to the moon by the end of the
decade. Researcher George Crabtree of Argonne National Laboratory
responded with caution.

"I think there is one difference from the Apollo program. There,
President Kennedy could say, 'Let's do it' and he had NASA do it. It
was very well coordinated," he said. "In the case of energy, cars and
hydrogen, it has to be the economy [that motivates]. It is a complex
system. It is a lot of people interacting and making independent
decisions, so you do not get that direction from the top. So, what I
think government can do is 'incentivize' [provide incentives for] that
activity."

Aside from enormous technological leaps, forging a "hydrogen economy"
would require a massive overhaul of America's, and the world's,
infrastructure. Yet proponents appear undaunted. They point to
humanity's pioneering spirit and say that what may seem insurmountable
today could be solved tomorrow. Even skeptics admit that oil
consumption cannot continue indefinitely, and eventually a replacement
for gasoline-powered vehicles will have to be embraced.