14 September 2023
By
Alejandro Lazo, CALmatters
Lawmakers Strike $106 Million Deal
for Hydrogen Cars, Trucks
A customer fuels a hydrogen car at a fueling
station in Oakland. Photo by Semantha Norris, CalMatters
California lawmakers have reached a deal that would set aside 15% of
funds from a billion-dollar climate program to help companies build
fueling stations for hydrogen cars and trucks.
After months of debate, Assemblymember Eloise
Gómez Reyes, a Democrat from San Bernardino, said legislative
leaders and Gov. Gavin Newsom agreed on a compromise for the funding.
The 15% amounts to an estimated $106 million for new hydrogen fueling
stations through July 2030, according to the California Hydrogen
Coalition.
The state Senate and Assembly are expected to vote on the deal tonight
as part of a bill that
reauthorizes fees for the Clean Transportation Program, which funds
infrastructure for zero-emission vehicles. The fees are paid by car
owners — $2 car registration fees and $4 smog abatement fees.
The 15% carveout comes even though hardly anyone drives fuel cell
vehicles powered by hydrogen: Californians own only about 12,000 of
them, about 1% of the 1.1 million zero-emission vehicles on the road
today.
Only two hydrogen models are currently being sold in dealerships, the
Toyota Mirai and Hyundai Nexo, and many major automakers have said
they plan to produce only battery-powered cars.
The new stations also would be available for medium- and heavy-duty
trucks powered by hydrogen. But some experts say electric trucks are
competing heavily for that segment, so the future market for hydrogen
fueling stations is uncertain.
Teresa Cooke, executive director of the California Hydrogen Coalition,
called the deal a win. The lobbying group for hydrogen supporters and
suppliers — which includes Chevron, Shell and Toyota — originally
sought nearly three times the amount they will now receive: They
wanted about $300 million to create a statewide network of 1,000
fueling stations.
“It’s just the beginning, though, and now we have a lot more work to
do with this technology and within this policy area,” Cooke said.
A Newsom spokesman said the governor supports the funding agreement.
“This is a big deal in the fight against climate change — it’ll help
build more electric vehicle chargers and hydrogen fueling stations,
improve their accessibility and reliability, and cut air pollution,”
said Alex Stack. “Governor Newsom looks forward to it reaching his
desk.”
But Ethan Elkind, director of the climate program at the Center for
Law, Energy & the Environment at UC Berkeley Law, told CalMatters that
the set-aside is “largely a waste of money” for an “industry that has
not proved itself after well over a decade of subsidy in California.”
Elkind added that while the state may have more hydrogen trucks in the
future, there is “a much more immediate need to scale up chargers for
electric trucks, which the state is really behind on deploying.”
“It’s too bad the Legislature had to make this compromise with
hydrogen interests,” Elkind told CalMatters, “but that’s the nature of
the sausage-making.”
“This is a big deal in the fight against climate change — it’ll help
build more electric vehicle chargers and hydrogen fueling stations,
improve their accessibility and reliability.”
— Alex Stack, Governor’s Office
Since the program raises money through vehicle registration and other
fees, the funding bill needs two-thirds of lawmakers’ votes to be
approved: 54 out of 80 in the Assembly and 27 out of 40 in the Senate.
The program will provide about $1.2 billion for all zero-emission
vehicle infrastructure through 2035. Funds have explicitly been set
aside for hydrogen fueling stations since 2013, when lawmakers
approved a 20%
annual carveout for them.
But since then, electric vehicles have dominated the market for
zero-emission cars and environmentalists say the set-aside for
hydrogen technology should be dropped altogether so more money would
go toward battery charging stations instead. Only 1,767
fuel cell cars that burn hydrogen have been sold in California this
year. Last year’s sales declined 20%, although sales are up this
summer. Californians already own more than 760,000 battery-powered
electric cars, with sales increasing.
So far, the California Energy Commission has spent $202 million for
hydrogen fueling stations. The state’s funding has helped create a
network of 65
hydrogen fueling stations, 20 of them in Los Angeles County.
Driving a hydrogen car outside of California is virtually impossible:
One other public hydrogen fueling station exists in the U.S., and
it’s in Hawaii.
The Energy Commission’s staff has warned lawmakers that there won’t be
enough hydrogen cars on the roads to use new stations already
allocated state funds.
Funding for hydrogen stations is “largely a waste of money” for an
“industry that has not proved itself after well over a decade of
subsidy in California.”
— Ethan Elkind, Center for Law, Energy & the Environment at UC
Berkeley Law
Stations will triple by 2027 — resulting in four times more than the
amount needed to support even the “vehicle manufacturers’ best-case
expected volume,” the
commission said. They also warned that they haven’t received
enough bids from hydrogen station developers to spend all the money
the Legislature already has allocated.
The plan includes provisions that would make the funds available to
other projects if there aren’t sufficient bids from hydrogen
infrastructure developers.
Like battery-powered cars, hydrogen cars produce no emissions. But the
electricity to run their motors uses compressed hydrogen gas, which
the California Air Resources Board says is often
derived from natural gas, a fossil fuel.
Major oil and gas companies see hydrogen as a potential way for their
industry to remain viable in a decarbonized future. Some companies are
exploring ways of making hydrogen a green energy source by splitting
water using renewable-energy electrolyzers. But that technology
remains much more costly than today’s process using fossil fuels.
Energy companies are also experimenting with capturing emissions from
the natural gas process and then storing those emissions underground.
But those carbon-capture techniques are not yet widespread.
Electric cars are reliant on energy from carbon-emitting power plants,
but California is greening its grid. Under a state mandate, 100% of
electricity must be renewable and carbon-free by 2045, with most
coming from solar and wind.
Shell cancels plan to build hydrogen stations
The renewed funding comes after giant energy company Shell canceled a
$40.8 million deal to build up to 50 hydrogen car refueling stations
in California.
The company in July decided against requesting the state funds because
the project was not economically viable, according to an email
obtained by CalMatters through a public records request.
The email, signed by Shell employee Abhishek Banerjee, cited a number
of factors for canceling the project, including difficulties getting
permits and finding decarbonized hydrogen, construction costs and
other factors.
The email also stated that “political and economic uncertainty in the
initial stages of market deployment present a significant risk in
further investment,” Banerjee wrote. “These barriers need to be
overcome in order to enable future investment from Shell in this
segment of the market.”
Only 1,767 fuel cell cars that burn hydrogen have been sold in
California this year. Last year’s sales declined 20%.
A Shell spokesperson said the company remains “active in hydrogen in
California and around the world,” adding that it is “vital to realize
our net zero ambition and forming a future lower-carbon energy
system.”
Reyes and Sen. Lena
Gonzalez, a Democrat from Long Beach, initially tried bills that
would have completely eliminated a hydrogen carveout. But they failed
to get enough support from fellow Democrats so Reyes amended her bill
in June to designate 10% of the program’s funds — $10 million a year
through July 1, 2030 — to pay for hydrogen fueling stations. That move
did not garner enough support from fellow Democrats who advocated for
more hydrogen funding, while it was opposed by others who said it was
too much.
The controversy in the Legislature threatened to jeopardize the future
of the program, which is a key source of money for building new
electric car charging stations. The program’s funding will expire next
year if the Legislature doesn’t approve a plan this year.
The program, created in 2007, has invested nearly $1.6 billion in
alternative fuels, charging stations and other clean vehicle
technologies through March of this year. It’s considered an essential
source of funding for California’s transition. The state estimates it
will need nearly 1.2 million chargers for battery-powered cars by
2030; only about 88,000 are now installed.
CalMatters.org is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California
policies and politics.
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