Buses powered by hydrogen by next year in Beijing
BEIJING, May.26 (Xinhuanet) -- Commuters in Beijing may be able to ride
in zero-emission hydrogen-powered buses next year.
According to an agreement signed
between DaimlerChrysler and the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology (MST)
Tuesday, China will purchase three hydrogen-powered, Mercedes-Benz Citaro fuel
cell buses from the German auto-maker in the coming year.
The three vehicles will be put
into day-to-day operation in the capital city in September next year as
demonstration vehicles to market fuel cell buses in China, Shi Dinghuan, MST's
secretary general told China Daily Tuesday.
"China is formulating its energy
strategy for the next two decades and hydrogen energy -- as a kind of clean,
efficient, safe and sustainable energy resource -- has been put on the nation's
energy development priority list, Shi said.
Statistics from MST show that a
total of US$32.36 million has been injected into fuel cell bus commercialization
-- which was started in March last year -- under the auspices of Global
Environment Facility (GEF), United Nations Development Programme and cities of
Beijing and Shanghai.
"The home-made experimental fuel
cell cars and buses are a great success and have travelled more than 2,000
kilometers in experimental trips," Shi said.
In early 2001, Dongfeng Electric
Vehicle Co Ltd headquartered in Wuhan, in Central China's Hubei Province, built
the nation's first fuel cell mini-bus with 30 kilowatt Proton-exchange-membrane.
In August last year, Shanghai
Fuel Cell Vehicle Powertrain Co Ltd unveiled a fuel cell car prototype -- named
"Start I" -- based on SANTANA 2000 in collaboration with Shanghai God Power
Company, Tongji University and other auto-producing companies in the East
China's metropolis city.
A fleet of such vehicles as well
as hybrid electric cars and other vehicles powered by clean energy are expected
to serve the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008, Shi predicted.
"Since China faces energy
shortages and environmental pollution, it is of crucial importance for the
country to develop clean and efficient energy to maintain the sustainable
development of the economy," Shi said.
"And hydrogen energy is in the
direction of future development in that China has abundant hydrogen production
with an annual production capacity reaching 8 million tons," he added.
Shi was echoed by Professor Mao
Zongqiang, of Beijing's Tsinghua University, who said that, with the daily
decrease of oil resources and surging prices, the advantages of hydrogen energy
will stand out in the future when the high cost of pollution is taken into
consideration.
However, because of immature
clean energy technology as well as the high cost on its utilization, there is a
long way to go before hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles go into large-scale
production, said Mao, who is also the chairman of the China Association for
Hydrogen Energy.
To promote the development and
use of hydrogen energy in countries worldwide, an international hydrogen energy
forum opened in Beijing Tuesday, which attracted more than 700 participants from
countries throughout the world. It will last until Friday.
"Here in China the automobile
market is developing at breathtaking pace, and the oil supplies are becoming
more and more dependent on imports. It is a challenge for us all to develop a
comprehensive energy strategy that safeguards sustainable growth of the
automobile industry and enables intensified environmental protection," said
professor Herbert Kohler, DaimlerChrysler Chief Environmental officer at the
opening ceremony of the forum.
Rather than finding one quick
solution, auto makers and energy providers need to continually explore and
develop all options available today -- from technological advances in petrol and
diesel engines, and synthetic fuels made from coal, natural gas and biogas, to
fuel cells powered by hydrogen, he added.Enditem
(China Daily)