Okay, I'm kinda curious about the idea of hydrogen powered cars, and I wonder if they're all they're cracked up to be. It seems that there are some basic questions that either are not being applied, or, they've been answered and I'm in the slow lane and not picking up on some things.
So I'm appealing for some help, here, from the knowledgeable, since every article I read on hydrogen cars doesn't address my curiosity.
This is what I don't understand about hydrogen cars. It may seem like a basic and stupid question, but I am wondering about future aggregate effects.With great fanfare, Honda’s first-ever zero-emission, hydrogen-powered car rolled off the automaker’s production line earlier this month. But don’t look for one on a highway near you anytime soon.
The FCX Clarity, which runs on hydrogen and electricity and emits only water as a byproduct, will be available for lease starting July to a very, very limited number of customers in California. Among the first drivers — hand-chosen by the automaker — are movie star Jamie Lee Curtis and filmmaker Ron Yerxa.
Honda’s Clarity may sound like a breakthrough for drivers struggling with the high price of gasoline, but it’s just one of a wide range of potential solutions being tested to wean the auto economy off costly, polluting crude oil. The prospects of hydrogen as a solution are far from certain, observers say, as it could take several decades until hydrogen-powered cars are widely available.
“If you were to take a poll of automotive journalists I think about half of them would say the future is hydrogen,” said Tom Appel, associate publisher of Consumer Guide Automotive, which offers buying advice to car consumers. “It’s clean, and it looks like it will be available at a low cost at some point in the future. So it looks like it should work when the infrastructure is put in place, but that’s going to be some time from now.”
First off, while it may seem strange to ask, where does hydrogen come from? I know it is one of, if not the, most basic elements but I'm wondering where/how does it get made for fuel in cars?
The emissions are water-- doesn't that mean that water molecules are bonded with hydrogen, and then released? So we have to use more water to create fuel, right? Now technically, the Earth doesn't "lose" water, there's not really a water "shortage" but there are problems with distribution. Water is in various pools (oceans, rivers, etc), in vapor, in animals' bodies, but it seems there's never enough where we need it to counter droughts. Agriculture soaks up a lot of the stuff. Now we're going to put it in our cars on the same scale we use gasoline?
Isn't that going to be troublesome?
...The vehicle certainly looks promising on paper. Honda says the vehicle is twice as energy-efficient as a gas-electric hybrid, such as a Toyota Prius, and three times that of a regular gas-powered car.
Honda has designed the car to be as driver-friendly as possible. The vehicle does zero to 60 mph in 10 seconds, has a top speed of 100 mph and runs for 280 miles on a single tank of compressed hydrogen gas — all acceptable specifications for a regular car, notes Appel. But a number of obstacles remain before hydrogen cars can be considered a viable alternative.
...
Hydrogen-powered cars like the Clarity run on power generated by mixing oxygen with hydrogen in a fuel-cell stack, where the elements react in the presence of an electrolyte. Fuel cells are heavy and difficult to make, fragile and not completely reliable in freezing temperatures, according to Appel.
Other hydrogen-fueled cars are now undergoing controlled testing on U.S. roads, including Chevrolet’s midsized Equinox sport utility vehicle and the federal and state governments are working to jump-star a hydrogen fuel infrastructure. California, Florida and a number of European nations are working on building “hydrogen highways” that would allow such vehicles to travel and refuel.
These highways are not yet established, and at present there are only 15 hydrogen fuel stations that the Department of Energy has set up with private partners in California, Florida, New York, Washington, D.C., and Michigan. By comparison, the National Petroleum News says there are currently around 164,000 regular gas stations in the United States.
The number of hydrogen stations is expected to grow, but very slowly. In California, for example, there are plans to add 24 more fueling stations by 2010 under the California Hydrogen Infrastructure Project — a joint venture of major automakers, the Energy Department and hydrogen producers.
Okay, next-- if hydrogen is going to be the next gasoline, and people are going to want hydrogen and water, and there'll be an "aftermarket" for water for other purposes, will this, in fact, potentially spur commercial interests in space? After all, if there's one thing there's plenty of in space, it seems to be hydrogen and ice. Whoever wants to be the next J. Paul Getty will jump at the chance to exploit energy from space... right?