A Toyota Fuel Cell Concept Vehicle Is
Displayed During Press
Event At The
Mandalay Bay Convention Center For
The 2014 International CES On
January 6,
2014 In Las Vegas, Nevada.
Toyota said Monday it plans to
launch a fuel-cell car in the United States next year, declaring the hydrogen
vehicle with zero emissions "the car of the future."
Toyota Motor Sales vice president
Bob Carter said the initial market will be California, together with an
initiative to establish hydrogen refueling stations in key regions of the
state.
"In 2015, we will bring this
car to market," Carter said in the announcement at the Consumer Electronics
Show in Las Vegas.
The vehicle, yet to be named, would
be a "zero-emission, electric-drive, mid-size, four-door sedan."
"Functionally, this is a
regular car," he added.
The streamlined design is to
maximize oxygen intake for the fuel-cell process. It will be able to travel 300
miles (480 kilometers) on a single fueling, which would take three to five
minutes.
While car makers have long touted
the advantages of fuel cells, high production costs and a lack of fuel stations
have held back the technology.
Carter said however that Toyota had
been getting results from its major investments and added that "we believe
we can bring it in at a very reasonable price for a lot of people."
Government initiatives in California
were making progress in getting hydrogen fueling stations in needed areas, he
added.
"The issue of infrastructure is
not so much about how many, but rather location, location, location," he
said.
"Fuel cells will be in our
future sooner than many people believe... and in much greater numbers than
anyone expected."
Toyota unveiled a prototype last
year at the Tokyo auto show, but on Monday offered more details for its plans
for the US market.
Honda is also expected to roll out a
fuel-cell car in the US market in 2015, and other automakers are working on the
technology, which emits only water vapor as exhaust.
Honda already has a fuel-cell car,
the FCX Clarity, available on a small scale in a limited number of markets.
Carter said that Toyota and
California officials plan to add 20 new fuel stations by 2015 to the 10
existing ones. The goal is to have about 100 in the state, and to have a
station within a six-minute drive of an owner's home or business.
"This infrastructure thing is
going to happen," he said.
"I believe this vehicle will be
the car of the future."
It is expected to launch in Japan at
about the same time.



No comments:
Post a Comment