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Don’t rely on just one technology

Don’t rely on just one technology

Lars-Peter Thiesen, Opel’s head of deployment strategy for hydrogen and fuel cells, has been part of fuel cell powertrain development in Germany since the start and has played a decisive role in shaping its direction. Here, in conversation with H2-international, he calls for a technology-neutral attitude to e-mobility that takes account of both battery- and hydrogen-based forms of electric transportation and makes the case for a demand- and market-centered approach rather than one dictated by directives. He also sees hydrogen as the transportable storage medium of the future for renewables and accuses those who criticize its efficiency of a narrow perspective.

H2-international: Dr. Thiesen, could you describe the advantages of a fuel cell power system in three or four points?

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Thiesen: A fuel cell vehicle is a zero-emission vehicle. It is electrically driven and the exhaust emits only water vapor. The second point is the refueling time. You can fill up the vehicles at 700 bar in three minutes. Plus, there is a standardized process that applies internationally, which isn’t the case for battery electric where there are vast differences. Then there’s the long range. And a fourth point that’s particularly relevant to our application in the Vivaro-e Hydrogen: We get the full cargo space compared with combustion engines or battery electric power units, which is no trivial matter when it comes to a fuel cell powertrain.

How do you achieve that?

Through what we call the “mid-power concept.” Here, the fuel cell is only around half as big as the maximum power output of the electric engine, with the benefit that the system fits under the hood. The hydrogen tanks located in the subframe replace the large traction battery of the battery electric power unit, and an additional smaller battery under the seats acts as a power buffer and energy reserve. Consequently neither the cargo space nor the utility of the vehicle is compromised.

And what are the disadvantages of a fuel cell power system?

Essentially we are facing three challenges: The first is refueling infrastructure. In Germany we have a globally unique system of about 100 fuel stations, but for customers who are completely reliant on hydrogen this fuel station network should be extended further. Secondly, the costs of vehicle components are still relatively high because the part volumes are still small. The key to success here is economies of scale in order to bring the costs down further. And then there is the third challenge in that we need sufficient green hydrogen in the medium term, in other words hydrogen that is produced in a sustainable, carbon-neutral way.

Why has the technology not caught on by now? You’ve been working in this area for more than 20 years. The technology seems to be fully developed or rather a calculable entity, am I right?

Yes, that’s right. We’ve overcome significant hurdles in terms of technical development. However that has taken time. Cold start capability is a case in point. The fuel cell power system produces water vapor that can freeze in subzero temperatures if it remains in the system. If you’d asked me in 1999, I’d have said: As an industry we’ll have it sorted in two to three years. In the end it took 10 years. As a result, Opel had the first fuel cell car that could be parked at an outdoor temperature of -20 °C without auxiliary units.

The other point is that the e-offensive has pushed hydrogen development into the background. In addition there has been an overwhelming need for consensus among industrial partners who each have their own interests, such as: Should the hydrogen that the fuel cell runs on be directly pumped in or made on board by reforming gasoline or methanol? How should the hydrogen be stored in the car: in liquefied or compressed form? After extensive testing of both technologies we have opted for compressed hydrogen. But then: What pressure level makes most sense: 350 or 700 bar? We were the first manufacturer to put a car with 700-bar technology on the road. That was a long-term multi-stakeholder project involving many different parties: other manufacturers, the oil and energy sector, system manufacturers and fuel station operators. Having gone on this long journey, I’m delighted that we are now able to offer the first serial-produced product – the Opel Vivaro-e Hydrogen – which is already being used by initial customers such as Miele.

You’ve been on this ride since the beginning. How was it possible to keep the fuel cell project moving forward?

In 1999 I sat down with the other manufacturers, the energy industry and the transportation ministry, and we agreed that hydrogen would be the fuel of the future. In 2002 we founded the Clean Energy Partnership, a demonstration project that ran in Berlin and other major cities in order to show policymakers, the public and customers that hydrogen is a feasible fuel for cars. We were able to convince the ministry of the benefits of adopting a holistic strategy. The National Organisation Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology (NOW) was established as a consequence in 2008 with the aim of not just promoting R&D projects, but also encouraging the ramping-up of the market with appropriate infrastructure. The next milestone was the launch of H2 Mobility in 2015 in order to solve the chicken-and-the-egg problem through the construction of at least 100 fuel stations. And finally in 2020 Germany’s national hydrogen strategy was rolled out with the aim of rapidly scaling green hydrogen.

Critics would counter that by saying you shouldn’t combust green hydrogen in private vehicles; rather you should put it to industrial use instead.

Quite true. It’s then also said that we need it primarily for certain branches of industry, for instance the steel industry. I completely get that too. Only in that case it might require a certain price per kilogram of EUR 1 or EUR 2. But much higher prices can be realized in the transport sector. Our stance is quite clear: You should leave it up to the market to decide which sector gets green hydrogen rather than dictating it via directives. That’s the only way things are going to work.

Is that realistic without state funding?

After 20 years we’ve now reached the most exciting point. We’re no longer at the demonstration stage but we haven’t quite reached mass production yet. We’re working on scale-up. The volumes are still relatively low and the components are still expensive. That’s why state support is still needed at this stage to ensure market entry. The funding, which entirely benefits the end customers, allows us to offer them attractive leasing rates.

But your fuel cell technology is competing with batteries, right? Or do you not see it as competition?

It’s not an either-or situation; you can have both. For customers and for us as a company, we need both – the technologies are complementary. Here’s one example: We have many customers with a business model that centers on the employee taking the car home, for instance installers or service technicians, as is currently the case at Miele which is using the Vivaro-e Hydrogen. Often these employees aren’t homeowners; they have no way of recharging. The car is parked in the street and the next morning they are off again. This is where you need the traditional fuel station model. What I’m trying to say is: If we want transportation to be 100 percent emission free in future, then there are a lot of customers who can’t be served by battery electric but for whom a fuel cell vehicle would be highly suitable. That’s why we need both technologies, because there are commercial sectors that can’t go about their business using battery electric vehicles.

So it’s batteries for private individuals and fuel cells for business?

As battery electric vehicles continue to proliferate, we are getting a clearer idea about how they are used – as well as their limitations. We know, for example, that 44 percent of Stellantis delivery van customers do not travel further than 300 kilometers (186 miles) in a day. Conversely this means, however, that 56 percent do travel further. And in those circumstances it’s important you don’t spend ages stopped at a charging station. Even if charging speeds can be increased in the foreseeable future, it’s still possible that lots of people will be there before me at the charging point. This is where a three-minute refill of hydrogen has a clear advantage – something we know very well from previous fuels.

When will fuel cells for cars be produced in significant numbers?

At the moment we are focusing initially on the key delivery van segment. A larger model will also be brought out in two years’ time. In addition, we intend to ramp up the production capacity from the current 1,000 vehicles to 10,000 vehicles in 2024. In terms of cars, we’ll have to see how the market and the situation develops.

The political mainstream at the moment favors battery electric mobility, not least with regard to the better efficiency it offers compared with hydrogen. How do you respond to your critics?

If I want to recharge at the same moment that a wind turbine happens to be turning, provided I have the time and the opportunity, it makes most sense to use that energy for battery electric transportation. In terms of practicality, there are, though, as I’ve already mentioned, sectors where it doesn’t work. What’s much more crucial is the bigger picture: In the future we’re going to need far more renewable energy because Europe and the wider world have set themselves the goal of becoming carbon neutral. But this energy won’t be produced on our doorstep; it’ll be produced where it is cheap to do so. For instance in Australia, where the generation costs for wind power are between one and two cents per kilowatt-hour. That’s well away from the place of consumption so it has to be transported somehow. It’s here that hydrogen will play an important role as a storage medium for renewables. And if I’ve first converted this energy into hydrogen using electrolysis to make it storable and transportable, then it makes perfect sense to use the hydrogen in that same form in fuel cell vehicles and not to convert it back into electricity to charge up a battery car.

This is why the efficiency discussion about the refueling and recharging of an individual vehicle is far too restricted. You have to see the big picture rather than just take a narrow view of things, like what the efficiency is on my doorstep. In this context it’s far too simplistic to rely on just one technology. We’ve developed the Vivaro-e Hydrogen because we recognize that it’s an appropriate choice for certain groups as well as for the future.

Author: Frank Wald


Image: Lars-Peter Thiesen, Source: Opel

DZM concept under revision

DZM concept under revision

Uncertainty still remains about what will become of the proposed mobility center in Munich. The German transportation ministry (BMDV) only had the following to say to H2-international: “The BMDV has, as agreed in the coalition treaty, put the concept of the German Center for Future Mobility (DZM) from the previous legislative period through a comprehensive review and realignment process. A concept for the realignment of the center is currently being consulted upon. […] The activities of the ITZ [hydrogen technology and innovation center] will be pursued by the BMDV, independently of the German Center for Future Mobility (DZM).”

The one piece of new information, which came out in February 2023, was that the town of Gera in Thüringen would not be considered as a new location. Transport publication Verkehrsrundschau reported that the town is allegedly “no longer in the running as an external site and test area for the planned Munich center whose areas of research are expected to include digitally interlinked logistics.”

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It had previously become clear that Munich was no longer likely to be considered as a location, but the idea of a nationwide mobility center itself was still being retained. The Munich-based Tageszeitung newspaper reported in April 2022: “The end of the German Center for Mobility (DZM) in Munich seems to be a done deal. Our newspaper understands from the chairman of the CDU/CSU in the German parliamentary budget committee, Florian Oßner, that the coalition government has dropped Munich as a location. ‘Today, colleagues have not only rejected our application for increased funding, but have also decided to withdraw Munich from the overall concept,’ says Oßner.”

The German transportation minister at the time, Andreas Scheuer (CSU), had initially promised support to the tune of EUR 400 million (see H2-international, August 2021), only for this to be subsequently taken away by the coalition. The message since then remains unchanged: The concept is being reworked in line with the coalition agreement.

Environment in ecological discourse

Environment in ecological discourse

At the turn of the year, the Biennale Internationale Malerei took place in Hamburg under the patronage of Michael Westhagemann, then economy senator for the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. In Bergedorf Castle from November 8, 2022 to January 31, 2023, 47 paintings created using various techniques were displayed – on the theme “Umwelt im Ökologiediskurs: Wasserstoff” (the environment in ecological discourse: hydrogen). According to Cornelia Schmidt-Hoffmann, leader of the district Bergedorf, the event, which had been postponed several times because of the pandemic, enjoyed an “incredible response.”

The cultural exchange non-profit Hamburg-Übersee e.V., which chooses a new banner every two years, lauded together with its own gallery Galerie KAM (formerly Kunststätte am Michel) “das Supermolekül H2”, as formulated by press speaker Sven Jösting, this year. And so it says for example in the description of the above painting from Alexander Franklin Jagelowitz, translated: “Hydrogen in the eye ‘drops’ of the beholder. Green it will ultimately be, but all the other colors associated with the energy form for the production of hydrogen have their merits. And the water for the production will be gotten mainly through desalination of sea water all around the world… here is the framework for the all-sides-seeing hydrogen eye. Almost Masonic!”

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Jagelowitz, a painter, set designer and graphic artist from Lithuania, said about it, “Chaos is for me the beginning of all things and of my creative work. We know a lot and then nothing at all.” His many-times distinguished works have presence in numerous museums and private collections at home and abroad.

The cover picture of this edition of H2-international also came from this exhibit. It is a mixed media on canvas from Liliane Orlinski and bears the title “Am Ende wird er grün sein – der Wasserstoff” (it will be green in the end – hydrogen). The artist stated, “What an energetic dynamic there is in hydrogen! I’ve chosen here a weighting in the color spectrum of hydrogen, where the proportion of each color corresponds to the future development of the respective type.”

www.galerie-kam.de/wasserstoff-8-int-malerei-biennale-hamburg/

Hydrogen as Messe highlight

Hydrogen as Messe highlight

From April 17 to 23 this year, the largest industrial show in the world is taking place in Hannover. In 2023, the Hydrogen + Fuel Cells Europe event, which had started out as a small group stand at Hannover Messe, may be one of the draft horses of this technology show. The fair at the fair has developed over the course of three decades into a highlight of the H2 and FC industry. In an about 10,000 m2 gross area this time, it will offer a comprehensive overview of the newest developments and the greatest variety of technology paths.

The theme of this year’s Hannover Messe is “Industrial Transformation – Making the Difference.” This refers to the changes in the industrial sector that are required in order to noticeably and substantially reduce CO2 emissions on a large scale. Numerous leading international companies from the machine building, electrical and digital industries as well as the energy sector – in total over 4,000 exhibitors – want to respectively show visitors their solutions for resource-efficient, climate-neutral and robust production.

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The chairman of the managing board for trade fair operator Deutsche Messe AG, Dr. Jochen Köckler, stated: “Corporations, smaller companies and startups as well as academia, policymakers and society are all called upon. Only by joining forces can we succeed in sustainably securing industrial production, and thus our prosperity and future, while advancing climate protection.”

Establishing a global H2 economy

In preparation for the industrial show, Deutsche Messe organized for the hydrogen community – like before in 2022 – a networking event in Berlin. On January 23, 3023 in the Vertretung des Landes Niedersachsen beim Bund, ten representatives of different companies presented their current projects and solutions around hydrogen and fuel cells in three-minute pitches. The theme of the 3minutes2talk event was “Building a global hydrogen economy” and was opened by Olaf Lies, the economy minister for the German state Niedersachsen.

Besides Dr. Jochen Köckler as the host, in attendance were, among others, representatives from the FEST Group, from Iberdrola Energie Deutschland, from ThyssenKrupp Nucera and from Ørsted. Furthermore, Indonesian Ambassador to Germany Arif Havas Oegroseno gave a welcoming speech as a representative of this year’s Hannover Messe partner country. The president of Indonesia, Joko Widodo, has confirmed he will personally be a participant at Hannover Messe 2023; he will speak at the opening ceremony on April 16 as well as participate in the walkabout with German chancellor Olaf Scholz on the Messe Monday.

Hydrogen will then be one of the five themes this year – next to CO2-neutral production, artificial intelligence, energy management and industry 4.0 (digitalization of manufacturing). According to information by Deutsche Messe, “more than 500 companies” will be presenting hydrogen and fuel cell technologies at the fairgrounds in Hannover this year. At the specialized fair for it, Hydrogen + Fuel Cells, alone, for which the number of exhibitors as well as the area has expanded by 25 percent, around 270 institutions are expected. This will then occupy about half of hall 13.

H2Eco Award given once more

After the positive response from the previous year, there will also be an H2Eco Award in 2023 – again under the sponsorship of the German economy minister. The German hydrogen and fuel cell association (Deutsche Wasserstoff- und Brennstoffzellen-Verband e.V.) and Deutsche Messe AG will jointly present this award to companies that demonstrate outstanding commitment to an H2 market economy – particularly with regard to economic efficiency, sustainability, security of supply and climate protection.

The ceremonious awarding of this 5,000-euro prize by German economy minister Robert Habeck will occur on April 18, 2023 at the Public Forum in Halle 13.

Strongly represented again will be the electrolyzer business – with likely over 20 companies. The organizer, Tobiaz Renz, is especially pleased that “the Chinese are back again.” From the People’s Republic alone, around 20 industry players, including Refire and several electrolyzer makers, will be represented on the orange carpet. In addition, there will be a 145-m2 Norwegian pavilion with companies like Nel, Teco 2030 and Yara.

Emerson showcasing automation technology

Emerson Electric Co., an American specialist for automation technology, is exhibiting in Hannover – for the second time after 2022 – and will present its entire product portfolio. It includes, among other things, set up of complete production plants for electrolyzers and fuel cells. The company, founded in 1890, is originally from the oil and gas industry, but now devotes itself to more sustainable topics. In Germany alone, the globally active corporation employs over 3,500 people.

Based on information from Tassilo Gast, development manager at Emerson Process Management GmbH & Co. OHG, provided to H2-international, the Langenfeld-based company offers a much more comprehensive range of services than comparable competitors – so Siemens, ABB, Honeywell, etc. – as upstream and downstream production steps are also incorporated, including all of the process documentation.

Free Fachbesucher-Tickets

As a media partner of Deutsche Messe, Hydrogeit Verlag is again offering tickets for industry professionals at no cost so that interested parties can obtain comprehensive information about hydrogen and fuel cells. Tickets for free entry can be ordered via the following link: https://www.hannovermesse.de/de/?open=ticketRegistration&code=4ZkXp

Author: Sven Geitmann


Fig. 2: Hannover Messe 2022

Hannover-Messe-2022.jpg

DZM concept under revision

Further delay to ITZ kick-off

In September 2021, Andreas Scheuer, the then German transportation minister, announced the chosen locations for the four planned ITZ technology and innovation centers for hydrogen technology (see H2-international, May and August 2021). One and a half years on and the competition winners are still waiting for permission to get started. The high degree of eagerness and motivation in Chemnitz, Duisburg, Pfeffenhausen and the Hamburg-Stade region has now turned to frustration, since government funding has yet to materialize.

Manfred Poschenrieder from Hynergy told H2-international: “It hasn’t been held up in the municipalities or in the consortium. The mayors are on board. The residents are on board and are already asking where they can apply as the region lost a large supply company in 2020.” But there can be no handshakes until official approval is given, otherwise the promised funding will be forfeited.

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When H2-international questioned the German transportation ministry BMDV, a spokesperson responded: “The follow-through of the hydrogen innovation and technology center (ITZ) is not in doubt; indeed the BMDV is in regular contact with the site representatives. The discussion particularly revolves around the details of the site designs and their adjustment to fit funding conditions. The necessary budgetary resources for the ITZ are already allocated in the 2023 government budget. The BMDV is working closely and collaboratively with the relevant site representatives. The aim is for approvals to be given for the ITZ within the current year 2023.”

The ministry continued: “The feasibility study for the ITZ was concluded in May 2022 and provides a rough draft for the planned center. Since then, the BMDV and the sites have been working on substantiating the concept. Furthermore, initial coordination meetings about the planned construction work were held last year. On the subject of funding conditions and legal issues concerning grants, the BMDV is in discussion with the EU Commission. The corresponding draft proposals have also been developed further by the sites.”

Go to where the market is

Go to where the market is

This Hannover Messe will go down in history – I can already tell. At the world’s largest industrial show, in the capital of Niedersachsen, this year will be, according to the organizer, around 500 institutions exhibiting products and services for the hydrogen economy – more than half will also be represented at the Hydrogen & Fuel Cells Europe event running in parallel.

Hannover Messe and its companion H2 and FC fair are celebrating a record year. Never before has interest in these topics been so big. Never was the exhibition space so huge. After nearly three decades, the words of founder Arno A. Evers are finally finding confirmation: “Go to where the market is!”

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Evers started the fair in 1995 with a total of ten exhibitors, as he had already recognized the enormous potential hidden in this technology back then. Although interest continuously grew in the course of the development of the technology, it wasn’t until today that, out of the short hydrogen hypes, a proper transformation process for the energy sector came about – and worldwide.

Evers’ successor, Tobias Renz, who had assisted in establishing the joint hydrogen and fuel cell unit of Hannover Messe in the early days before it became its own fair, is now witnessing how hydrogen has become a major focus of the giant international trade show and how still more exhibitors are requesting a spot to showcase at these events – from all over the world.

This year, H2FC Europe alone will fill about half of hall 13 of the Messe.

Elsewhere, it is no different: More and more H2 events are filling large halls, because it is now obvious that renewable energies and hydrogen are displacing the fossil energy age – and now seemingly faster than many initially thought possible. With new speed, production capacities for electrolyzers are now being built up, new companies are being founded and cross-industry cooperations started.

Certainly, a transitional period is still needed while LNG terminals (H2-ready – see p. 28) are installed and production lines for FC trucks are established. But later this decade, we will see more and more H2 trucks on the road, just as now several cars can be see that have license plates with an E at the end.

For this, it doesn’t help that the eternally outdated are trying to maintain the power structures of the past with blue hydrogen and e-fuels. But no one is resisting the hydrogen wave anymore – and that is, at least from an environmental and climate perspective, also a good thing.

Indispensable is still the immense expansion of renewable energies so that hydrogen only needs to be used where defossilization is not possible otherwise. And exactly this establishing of an alternative energy supply system for the country, in which increasingly more players are participating, is showing what a socioecological transformation could look like.

Germany, which brought the term Energiewende into the world, – and spread the idea of a massive transformation to other nations – can exemplify how an energy economy oriented toward sustainability and generational fairness can be established in a socially tolerable manner and without sacrificing prosperity.

Interesting insights can be found in this issue and of course the industrial show in Hannover.

We’re curious how big the Hydrogen & Fuel Cells Europe next year will be – stay tuned!

Bildquelle: Sven Geitmann