{"id":5186,"date":"2019-03-29T11:29:33","date_gmt":"2019-03-29T10:29:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.sustainable-bus.com\/?p=5186"},"modified":"2019-04-30T11:21:39","modified_gmt":"2019-04-30T09:21:39","slug":"up-to-25-fuel-cell-buses-will-hit-liverpool-city-regions-roads","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.sustainable-bus.com\/news\/up-to-25-fuel-cell-buses-will-hit-liverpool-city-regions-roads\/","title":{"rendered":"Up to 25 fuel cell buses will hit Liverpool City Region’s roads"},"content":{"rendered":"
Up to 25 fuel cell buses will hit Liverpool City Region’s roads. The buses will be the\u00a0Enviro400 hydrogen\u00a0double deck<\/strong> bus developed in partnership between Alexander Dennis and Arcola Energy<\/strong>. The first vehicles are expected to begin operation in 2020.<\/p>\n The Liverpool City Region is set to be the first place in the North of England to trial hydrogen buses<\/strong> following a successful \u00a36.4million bid to the government\u2019s Office for Low Emission Vehicles.<\/p>\n The bid, partners explains in a press release, was put forward by a consortium led by industrial gases company BOC <\/strong>(UK and Ireland\u2019s biggest industrial and medical gases producer), and including the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and Arcola Energy, working with bus-makers Alexander Dennis, and will be progressed in conjunction with Arriva and Stagecoach<\/strong>, as members of the city region\u2019s Bus Alliance.<\/p>\n The Liverpool City Region Hydrogen Bus Project will see the creation of a new hydrogen refuelling station at the BOC plant in St Helens<\/strong>, which produces hydrogen for industrial customers in the region and further afield. It will initially deliver 500kg of hydrogen every day<\/p>\n The project will potentially see up to 25 hydrogen\u2013powered buses on the streets of the Liverpool City Region and will contribute to the city region\u2019s plans both to improve air quality and work towards a zero carbon economy by 2040<\/strong>.\u00a0 The first bus trial is expected to take place in 2020, subject to agreement with the Bus Alliance.<\/p>\n ADL has been\u00a0working on a hydrogen double deck bus for over two years. The Enviro400 fuel cell has been developed through extensive collaboration between ADL\u2019s in-house Advanced Engineering teams and expert hydrogen and fuel cell system integrators Arcola Energy<\/strong>.\u00a0The hydrogen-powered Enviro400 has an electric driveline with axle-mounted motors by ZF<\/strong>. The on-board battery is charged by feeding hydrogen from secure tanks to a fuel cell system where it is converted to electricity. No external battery charging is required<\/strong> and the vehicle\u2019s only emission is water vapour.\u00a0A\u00a0prototype<\/strong> has successfully completed route shadowing trials in several UK cities.<\/p>\n As reported on Coach&Bus Week in October 2016, a \u00a3150,000 funding<\/strong> for\u00a0a project to build a new hybrid fuel-cell double-decker bus was awarded to a partnership between Arcola Energy, Alexander Dennis Ltd (ADL) and Warwick Manufacturing Group. The funding came from\u00a0<\/span>the Niche Vehicle Network (NVT), which is supported by the Office for Low Emission Vehicles and Innovate UK.<\/p>\n Fuel cell buses are expected to importantly grow their market share in the years to come. ZeEUS eBus Report #2 released by UITP\u00a0<\/b>says fuel cell buses are expected to have a market share of 2 per cent in 2020 and 10 per cent in 2030<\/strong>, in the segment of urban buses and in European area. Still a little \u201cslice\u201d compared to the 52 per cent forecast of battery electric\u2026 but the multiplication for five is anyway impressing and opens up interesting scenarios<\/strong> for after 2030 years. This year, European manufacturer\u00a0Solaris Bus & Coach<\/strong> (taken over by Spanish group CAF<\/a>)\u00a0will unveil the\u00a0Solaris Urbino 12 hydrogen<\/strong>, a\u00a0new generation vehicle deriving power from a\u00a0hydrogen fuel cell<\/a>. The presentation will take place at UITP Public Transport Global Summit 2019<\/a> in Stockholm (9-12 June).<\/p>\n Also Van Hool<\/strong> have long since been betting on the electric future through hydrogen. Two premieres are ready to be launched in the short and medium term<\/a>: the new A330 FC hydrogen bus\u00a0<\/strong>and the innovative Van Hool Exqui.City 18 FC<\/strong> bus, which will be on the road from the end of 2019 in Pau, France. It will be the first BRT system in Europe running on hydrogen.<\/p>\n Another competitor in the field of fuel cell buses is Toyota: its Sora\u00a0has been approved and launched on the market<\/a>\u00a0(in the picture below). And the Japanese company also started a collaboration with Portoguese Caetanobus<\/a>.<\/p>\nCLICK HERE FOR THE ARTICLE<\/a>
\nFor ADL it\u2019s time to add the fuel bus (double decker) to the range<\/a><\/h3>\n\n
Arriva and Stagecoach involved in the project<\/h2>\n
Target: zero carbon economy in Liverpool by 2040<\/h2>\n
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ADL fuel cell bus with Arcola Energy<\/h2>\n
CLICK HERE FOR THE SITE CATEGORY ‘FUEL CELL BUSES’<\/a><\/h3>\n
Fuel cell buses, a bright future ahead?<\/h2>\n