News - BMWBMW and Toyota tighten hydrogen tiesHydrogen fuel cell collaboration gets upgraded as BMW, Toyota study next-gen models29 Aug 2024 By MATT BROGAN BMW and Toyota are reportedly ‘upgrading’ their hydrogen fuel cell partnership as the duo works to accelerate its range of next-generation, environmentally friendlier models amid slowing growth in demand for battery electric vehicles.
According to Nikkei Asia, BMW aims to begin mass production of a hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) “within a few years”, and potentially the iX5 FCEV driven by GoAuto in Australia last month.
The report says the BMW and Toyota are set to sign a memorandum of understanding for the heightened partnership as early as next week, with an official announcement to be made on September 5.
The two companies have been collaborating on FCEV technology since June 2012. Until now, Toyota’s role in the partnerships was limited to supplying only a limited number of components, sourced predominantly from its Mirai hydrogen FCEV sedan.
GoAuto understands that under the upgraded partnership, Toyota will supply BMW with more key components for vehicles, including hydrogen tanks and related FCEV systems with which BMW will pair its own EV technology, such as drive systems and motors.
BMW has developed a concept X5 SUV that operates on fuel cell technology sourced from Toyota’s Mirai. The model boasts a cruising range of over 500km and may be refilled in less than five minutes.
The collaboration with Toyota will allow BMW to reduce development and production costs, bringing the vehicle to market at much the same price point as a battery electric equivalent.
Toyota launched its Mirai hydrogen FCEV sedan in 2014, but the vehicle has been slow to catch on with consumers largely due to the scarcity of refuelling infrastructure.
Nikkei Asia reports that a resurgence in interest in hydrogen FCEV technology is now underway, thanks in part to dwindling interest in battery electric models. However, battery electric vehicle owners face only a fraction of the issue as hydrogen FCEV owners, namely the sparsity and reliability of a recharging network.
According to the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, there are only 270 hydrogen refuelling stations in the whole of Europe (far more than Australia’s two), far fewer than the 632,000 public EV charging stations in the European Union (and 2400 in Australia) as of the end of 2023. Read more6th of August 2024 Cooling demand prompts EV rethinkGerman luxury brands, suppliers change tack amid cooling EV demand12th of July 2024 Californian rule change may derail hydrogen ICEsUS state to oppose ‘hot hydrogen’ tech, threatens carbon-free route for many OEMs9th of July 2024 2024 BMW iX5 FCEV Hydrogen Prototype ReviewBMW’s hydrogen-powered iX5 FCEV shows just how much sense the technology makes8th of July 2024 BMW gave up on hot hydrogen ‘years ago’Efficiency of hydrogen combustion engines unsuitable for passenger vehicles, says BMW26th of June 2024 Hydrogen a longer-term target: BMWFuel-cell electric vehicles will supplement EVs, offer alternative for towing, longer distances26th of June 2024 BMW Australia showcases iX5 Hydrogen pilotHydrogen-powered iX5 pilot vehicle aims to shine a light on technology, infrastructure needs18th of June 2024 Hydrogen HiLux reaches final test phaseFinal testing phase for hydrogen fuel cell HiLux with real-world trials underway |
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