Hyundai Motor Company has today delivered the first of its assembly
line-produced ix35 Fuel Cell vehicles to the City of Copenhagen in
Denmark. They were handed over by Hyundai Motor Europe, Hyundai Motor’s
European sales subsidiary, during the opening ceremony of Denmark’s
first hydrogen refueling station.
The 15 ix35 Fuel Cell units are
the first hydrogen-powered vehicles manufactured on a production line
to be introduced in Europe.
Mr. Byung Kwon Rhim, President of
Hyundai Motor Europe said, “Hyundai Motor is committed to hydrogen as
the fuel of the future for Europe. Delivering assembly-line produced
ix35 Fuel Cell is evidence that we have a realistic solution to the
region’s sustainable mobility needs.”
The ix35 Fuel Cell produces
no harmful tailpipe emissions – only water vapour – and so its use will
help the city of Copenhagen achieve its aim of becoming carbon-neutral
by 2025.
Since 2011, Hyundai Motor has deployed prototypes of its
third-generation ix35 Fuel Cell in a wide range of initiatives to raise
awareness of hydrogen’s benefits as an automotive fuel; to support the
drive for establishing a pan-European refueling infrastructure; and to
demonstrate the cars’ real-world practicality to public and private
organizations.
For example, EU policy-makers have access to ix35
Fuel Cell vehicles – via the EU Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Joint
Undertaking (FCH JU) in Brussels– showing the market-readiness of
Hyundai Motor’s technology. And, earlier this year, senior
representatives from 100 European businesses learned about and tested
the ix35 Fuel Cell at a Hyundai Motor event in Berlin.
Hyundai Motor has been a world leader in the development of hydrogen
fuel cell technology ever since research into its first fuel cell began
in 1998. The company’s proprietary fuel cell technology is developed at
its Eco Technology Research Institute in Korea. Hyundai intends to build
1.000 ix35 Fuel Cell cars by 2015 at its Ulsan factory, also in Korea.
The
ix35 Fuel Cell is equipped with a 100 kW (136 ps) electric motor, and
can reach a maximum speed of 160 km/h. Two hydrogen storage tanks,
located between the vehicle’s rear axle, with a total capacity of 5,64
kg, enable the vehicle to travel a total of 594 km on a single fueling.
Filling the storage hydrogen tanks to maximum capacity takes just a few
minutes.
Courtesy of Hyundai Newsroom
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