THE Government is facing a
battle with leading car manufacturers over the
car of the future after deciding that fossil
fuels will not be phased out for at least another
50 years. Ministers have rejected a proposal
to convert Britains cars to hydrogen by
2025, and called on manufacturers to develop more
efficient models powered by petrol or diesel.
However, several manufacturers, including BMW,
have invested hundreds of millions of pounds in
developing emission-free cars that run on
hydrogen.
Environmental groups say that a rapid switch
to hydrogen is essential if Britain is to meet
its commitment to reducing the production of
carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas. Road
transport accounts for 22 per cent of Britains
greenhouse gas emissions and its share is
growing.
The Royal Commission on Environmental
Pollution wants a 60 per cent reduction in
Britains carbon emissions by 2050. The
Carbon Trust, a government-funded body that
promotes low-carbon technology, has advised
ministers that to meet this target they should
ensure that hydrogen is widely used to power cars
by 2025.
But David Jamieson, the Minister for
Transport, Local Government and the Regions, said
that BMW had failed to acknowledge the energy
savings of hybrid vehicles, which have an
electric motor as well as a petrol engine. Hybrid
vehicles made by Toyota and Honda are already on
sale in Britain, but BMW said that its hydrogen
car would not be available in showrooms until
2007.
Mr Jamieson said that renewable sources of
hydrogen would not be available on a large enough
scale for road transport until after 2050. He is
therefore refusing to support a national network
of hydrogen filling stations.
Mr Jamieson recently borrowed a Toyota Prius,
a hybrid car, for a weekend and said that he was
very impressed by its fuel efficiency. I
was getting just under 60 miles to the gallon.
Comparable cars would be lucky to get 35. A
Toyota Prius costs £16,000, about £4,000 more
than a conventional car of a similar size.
But Helmut Panke, the chairman of BMW,
criticised hybrid cars as a compromise. He said:
Hybrid engines . . . only shift the burden
of dealing with emissions and we dont think
they are a very important alternative. He
added, however, that motorists would have to pay
a premium for the hydrogen-powered BMW 7 series,
on top of the price of up to £57,000.
Professor Garel Rhys, the leading car industry
analyst based at Cardiff University, said that
hybrid vehicles were a short-term solution on the
part of the Government which would delay the move
to hydrogen. He added: A hybrid car is 15
to 20 per cent more expensive than a vehicle with
one engine. People want to be environmentally
responsible but they cant afford to be.
Prototypes of BMWs hydrogen powered
7-series have driven 100,000 miles during
development without problems. The engine can run
on both hydrogen and petrol, meaning that cars
could be driven before a network of hydrogen
filling stations was established. BP is to open
Britains first such station in London next
year, when a small number of hydrogen-powered
buses will be introduced.
Mr Jamieson admitted that hybrid vehicles
would always be more expensive than conventional
cars, but he said that they offered the best
chance of an early reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions.