Reuters: ‘The road to a greener America is littered with road-kill’

Whatever happened to Schwarzenegger’s “California Hydrogen Highway”?

In October 2004, then California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger rolled up to a pioneering fueling station at Los Angeles International Airport in a hydrogen-powered metallic blue Hummer loaned to him by General Motors Corp.

The “California Hydrogen Highway,” Schwarzenegger’s vision to ensure that every Californian would have access to a hydrogen fueling station by the end of 2010, called for the state to spend more than $50 million to help deploy up to 100 hydrogen fuel stations that would serve 2,000 fuel cell vehicles. “We got 200 stakeholders around a table, literally, and mapped out who could get stations where,” said Terry Tamminen, a top adviser to Schwarzenegger.

But nearly nine years later, California has just nine hydrogen stations open for the public, and only about 200 fuel cell cars that can use them.

Read more from Reuters.

2 thoughts on “Reuters: ‘The road to a greener America is littered with road-kill’”

  1. A “greener” America? Who says that hydrogen fuel-cell technology is necessarily greener than conventional transport fuel? It takes a lot of energy to produce the hydrogen and distribute it; that energy is likely to be “dirty”.
    Effective methane cars might be a real improvement over petroleum burners based on actual pollution — carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide, other stuff that can do real harm. Methane cars would also produce less CO2, as I understand, but they’d produce more water vapor and water vapor is actually the most significant greenhouse component.

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