I think that this is a good idea, at the very least worth a try. Toronto transit has been hostile to new ideas and technologies for a long time, preferring always to let somebody else try it first. Well somebody has to try everything first, so why can't it be Toronto? A good interim idea would have been to look at hybrids for the recent locomotive purchase. With their frequent stops, commuter locomotives could save a lot of energy through regenerative braking.
All aboard the GO hydrogen express
In the run-up to this month's election, the premier unveiled a plan to build a clean commuter train for GO Transit. Let's hope it wasn't political smoke
Oct 21, 2007 04:30 AM
Tyler Hamilton
Business Reporter
Now that the provincial Liberals have secured another four years in office, it's fair to ask whether Premier Dalton McGuinty's recent talk of locally manufactured, hydrogen-powered GO trains was just election rhetoric or a serious, forward-looking strategy to nurture innovation and create jobs.
McGuinty revealed last month that his government was in early-stage talks with Bombardier to design and develop an emission-free commuter train propelled by hydrogen-powered fuel cells and used by GO Transit.
"It's our goal to get a prototype on the rails here in Ontario within three years of the project launch," McGuinty announced during a visit to a Bombardier manufacturing plant in Thunder Bay.
The idea, while ambitious, carries a certain attraction. Job creation. Export potential. There's also the vision of clean trains being showcased to the world as they run through Canada's largest city.
But for every wide-eyed person in the room who got giddy at the thought of building a hydrogen economy in southern Ontario, there were also skeptics in the crowd who dismissed such a vision as political theatre.
After all, we've been here before with promises of hydrogen-powered cars (see "The Hype" below).
We don't have affordable, mass-produced hydrogen cars on the road today, but from an industrial perspective hydrogen is a $282 billion global market. The world relies heavily on hydrogen for fertilizer production, fuel upgrading, food processing and a number of other applications where demand for the zero-emission gas is growing.
Niche fuel-cell markets have also emerged, costs are slowly falling, and storage technologies are improving, even if profitability remains elusive. Fuel cells running on hydrogen are gaining traction for back-up power, while micro fuel cells are poised to appear in portable commercial electronics. Ballard Power and several other companies, meanwhile, have made a strong business case for using fuel cells to power forklifts.
And then there are trains, or "hydrails," as some call them.
"Hydrogen fuel cells as an application for passenger trains is very real," says Mike Hardt, vice-president of North American services for Bombardier.
In fact, Ontario may have some catching up to do if it's serious about being a world leader in hydrails. A European consortium called The Hydrogen Train concluded a study last year that looked at what it would take to demonstrate a hydrogen train in Denmark by 2010. It has approached all major train manufacturers, including Bombardier, and negotiations are ongoing.
Back in 2001, Bombardier also applied to the European Union for funding as part of a project to develop a hydrogen-powered "Green Train," but the funding request was denied. Activity is also going on in Japan and parts of the United States, such as North Carolina.
Momentum appears to be building, as an international hydrail conference started in 2005 will regroup next June for a fourth gathering in Spain.
"A hydrogen train makes a lot of sense because, unlike a car, fuel volume isn't a problem," says Greg Naterer, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, which is studying the benefits and barriers to establishing a hydrogen rail corridor in southern Ontario.
Hydrogen and cars aren't an ideal marriage because passenger vehicles have limited space for hydrogen storage. To help save space, hydrogen gas can be pressurized in special tanks at up to 10,000 pounds per square inch, but this adds unwanted weight to a vehicle and, because hydrogen has a much lower energy density than gasoline, still provides only 300 kilometres or so of travel on a single fill.
Liquefying hydrogen through a cryogenic process is another option for saving space and extending travel distance, but weight remains a problem and the energy required to liquefy the gas adds to the cost of the fuel.
Trains, however, don't suffer from the same space and weight restrictions. It's also easier to establish fuelling infrastructure, because a train needs only a handful of filling stations along a predictable corridor. Filling stations for vehicles, on the other hand, are far more numerous and scattered.
David Scott, a former engineering professor at the University of Victoria who recently penned Smelling Land: The Hydrogen Defense Against Climate Catastrophe, says Toronto is an ideal place to demonstrate and deploy hydrogen trains.
"There is no other city in the world that's as well positioned," Scott says. "You'd be cleaning up Toronto, because the current trains run on diesel, and you'd be showing the world how to clean up their transportation."
Toronto is home to Hydrogenics, one of the world's leading fuel-cell developers and an active promoter of turning the GTA into a "hydrogen village." Bombardier also manufactures trains in Ontario, including the GO commuter trains that run past Pickering generating station and close to Darlington station, both of which could become valuable sources of clean hydrogen production.
Scott says he envisions a day when the side of every GO train reads: "GO Hydrogen!" or "H2 GO!" But it won't happen quickly, and that could be the biggest showstopper.
As more train systems are electrified, as battery technologies and hybrid designs mature, and as biofuels become more prevalent, the question is whether Ontario, even if it became a leader in hydrogen trains, could convince the rest of the world that it makes sense to follow.
And if hydrogen trains aren't the future of rail transportation, you can bet hydrogen-powered cars will never evolve beyond million-dollar prototypes.
The hype around hydrogen cars
During the 1990s much of the hydrogen hype came from Canada's own Ballard Power, a stock-market darling at the time that had us all convinced we'd be driving fuel-cell vehicles running on hydrogen by 2010 – or earlier. These cars would emit no greenhouse gases and no smog-causing pollutants. All that would drip out the tailpipe would be water.
But the fuel-cell and hydrogen industries continue to be dogged by high cost, technical challenges related to fuel storage and vehicle mileage, and the logistical nightmare of replacing the current distribution network for gasoline and diesel with a different infrastructure suited to hydrogen.
Competing technologies have evolved in the meantime, closing the advantage gap that hydrogen and fuel cell technologies may have once had. Increased reliance on carbon-neutral biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol, advancements in battery technologies that are leading to more efficiency in hybrid and electric cars, and improvements to conventional engine technologies and vehicle design have together laid out a less expensive and more near-term path to cleaner road transportation.
Hydrogen must also be created – it doesn't occur naturally. This means it must be extracted from a fossil fuel, which results in greenhouse gas emissions, or from water by using electricity, which also results in emissions if the source of the electricity is coal, natural gas or oil.
And if producing hydrogen from electricity is the future, many experts argue it makes more sense – and is more efficient – to simply store the power in batteries.
"Hydrogen is a dead-end from a climate perspective," wrote Joseph Romm, author of the climate-change book Hell and High Water, during a recent email spar with a hydrogen booster. "The sooner people realize that, the sooner we can get around to cost-effective solutions."
Romm, an assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Energy during the Clinton administration, believes government money funnelled to research and development of hydrogen and fuel cell technologies is a political delay tactic – a way to appear active today by investing in technologies that are forever around the corner.
It's an interesting theory, and the criticism is fair, albeit a tad harsh.