True Zero has opened a hydrogen-fuel station in California, US.
Snipping the ribbon in front of the True Zero dispenser at Conserv Fuel, 150 S. LaCumbre Road, included: Aeron Arlin-Genet, District Director & Air Pollution Control Officer, Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District; Tyson Eckerle, Deputy Director of Zero Emission Vehicle Infrastructure, Governor's Office of Business & Economic Development; Brad Cole, Hydrogen Unit, California Energy Commission; Chief Pat McElroy, Santa Barbara Fired Department; Peter Adams and Salud Carbajal, District Supervisors on the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors; Sigrid Wright, Executive Director and CEO, Community Environmental Council; Stephen Ellis, Manager of Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles Marketing, Honda USA, and Dr. Tim Brown, First Element Fuel Chief Operations Officer.
FirstElement Fuel founder and COO Tim Brown said: "With Phase one of the True Zero network taking shape fuel cell vehicle customers are able to get around California seamlessly.
"Soon, a short stop for a four-minute charge of True Zero at stations like this one in Santa Barbara, will enable drivers to confidently get to their destination without the worry of range anxiety."
Phase one of the True Zero Network (photos at www.truezero.com/images/), including the one here at Conserv Fuel, was brought online at an unprecedented speed and scale throughout the Silicon Valley, the greater Los Angeles area, the Lake Tahoe area and the San Joaquin Valley.
The projects are funded in large part by grants from the California Energy Commission, South Coast AQMD and Bay Area AQMD, as well as partnerships with automotive firms Honda and Toyota who are first to market with fuel-cell electric vehicles.
Brown said: "We owe a special thanks to the State of California and to the automakers committed to fuel-cell vehicles for their persistence and support.
"It goes well beyond the financial assistance; the technical assistance has also been critical. We knew building this network was going to be challenging. Having completed 15 stations in 18 months is an unprecedented achievement."
This generation of electric vehicles powered by fuel cells will be able to travel more than 300 miles on a single charge and a "fill up" of True Zero will take four minutes or less.
"The Santa Barbara True Zero station serves not only the local market, but also as a destination and connector for fuel cell customers have access throughout California, through the Central Coast area and beyond, just like they drive a gasoline-fueled vehicle," added Brown.
The brand name True Zero speaks to the benefit that fuel cell vehicles will achieve.
Brown explained: "True Zero symbolizes the ultimate goal - a vehicle fuel with zero pollution, zero use of fossil fuels and zero greenhouse gases in both its production and use.
"It's about the drive towards zero emissions from well to wheels; towards zero impact on the environment from a motor vehicle."
As a fuel, hydrogen is similar to electricity in that it is produced from a variety of sources. In California one third of the hydrogen produced today comes from renewable sources, with the remaining two thirds incorporating natural gas and water.
An electric vehicle powered by hydrogen uses its fuel cell to convert the hydrogen into electricity to run the motor. The only emission coming from the vehicle is water.