Cities get push toward other fuels
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Alicia Robinson
Although hydrogen-fueled vehicles are several years from being widely
available to consumers, they’re the buzz of the transportation world
today.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has pledged to create a network of
hydrogen fuel stations by 2010. And Rep. Christopher Cox has
announced his sponsorship of provisions in the Energy Policy Act of
2003 that would offer tax incentives for the construction of hydrogen
fueling stations and the purchase of fuel cell vehicles as well as
repealing the mandated percentage of ethanol in California’s
gasoline.
The act was passed by the House but is being held up by a
Democratic filibuster in the Senate, Cox spokeswoman Kate Whitman
said. Public opinion on the viability of hydrogen-fueled vehicles
also seems to be pending.
Cox’s proposals seem promising to the South Coast Air Quality
Management District, the agency responsible for air pollution control
in a 12,000-square-mile area that includes Orange and Los Angeles
counties.
“We support that concept of accelerating the use of fuel-cell
vehicles and the infrastructure that goes with it,” district
spokeswoman Tina Cherry said.
The district has worked with Cox and other legislators to gather
more funding for hydrogen fuel initiatives, she said.
Most of the district’s authority is over stationary air pollution
sources such as factories, but in 2000 it issued “fleet” rules
applying to large vehicles such as transit and school buses and
street sweepers.
Another district spokesman, Sam Atwood, said that about 80% of air
pollution today comes from mobile sources such as cars, trucks,
planes and boats.
The district’s fleet rules try to combat this pollution. They
require operators of fleets with more than 15 vehicles -- both public
and private -- to buy alternative fuel vehicles when they replace old
vehicles or add to their fleets.
As they exist, the rules can be a burden for fleet operators to
follow. Several diesel manufacturers and oil companies challenged the
rules in court and the state Supreme Court is scheduled to hear the
case in January.
Dave Niederhaus, fleet manager for the city of Newport Beach, is
in charge of the state’s largest fleet of electric vehicles and he’s
also on a technical advisory committee for the South Coast Air
Quality Management District.
The city has had its electric Toyota RAV4s for six years now but
will be looking for alternatives now that auto manufacturers are
discontinuing electric models.
“We see the end of the full-size electric vehicles,” Niederhaus
said. “We had hoped that the hydrogen vehicle would be ready to take
its place, but those are maybe five to 10 years away.”
While other alternative fuel vehicles are out there, such as those
with compressed natural gas or propane engines or hybrids, Niederhaus
said, they’re generally more expensive, and he’s heard from other
cities that some types of vehicles don’t run reliably.
“The alternatives are too expensive or nonexistent,” Niederhaus
said. “[The fleet rules are] just a thing that got mandated a little
ahead of its time, and it’s just kind of a financial bombshell for
all the cities.”
Costa Mesa has a melange of alternative-fuel vehicles, including a
natural gas-powered dump truck, some gas/electric hybrid vehicles and
a new propane street sweeper, Maintenance Services Manager Bruce
Hartley said.
The City Council has chosen to go beyond the fleet rules, and the
city belongs to a coalition that promotes alternative fuel use, he
said.
The city is seeking funding for a compressed natural gas fueling
station that could be converted to serve hydrogen vehicles in the
future.
Cox’s legislation promoting hydrogen vehicles may be premature
because fuel cell technology is still in its infancy, Hartley said.
“I think he’s putting the cart before the horse in that right now
,there’s not a lot of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles out [on the
market],” he said.
Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles may be as much as a decade away from
being widely available, but initiatives such as Cox’s could help
speed their progress, Atwood said.
“Certainly, tax incentives will help,” he said. “Basically, we
need every encouragement out there to develop these zero-polluting
vehicles.”
Looking at the technology that’s available today, Niederhaus was
more skeptical about the future of hydrogen-fueled vehicles. Some
consider them dangerous because the highly pressurized fuel tanks can
explode in certain circumstances, he said.
“I’m not convinced that they really are the panacea for the
future,” he said. “I wouldn’t put my family in one of those.”
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