As if to emphasise the growing shift to
electric vehicles (EVs), General Motors and Honda have set up the auto industry’s first manufacturing
joint venture to mass produce an advanced hydrogen fuel cell system that will
be used in future products from each company with SOP set for 2020.
Fuel Cell System Manufacturing, LLC will operate
within GM’s existing battery pack manufacturing facility site in Brownstown,
Michigan, south of Detroit and intensifiers the growing interest in fuel cell
technology.
Mass production of
fuel cell systems is expected to begin around 2020 and create nearly 100 new
jobs. The companies are making equal investments totaling $85 million in the
joint venture.
Honda and GM have been
working together through a collaboration agreement announced in July 2013. It
established the co-development arrangement for a next-generation fuel cell
system and hydrogen storage technologies. The companies integrated their
development teams and shared hydrogen fuel cell intellectual property to create
a more affordable commercial solution for fuel cell and hydrogen storage
systems.
“Over the past three
years, engineers from Honda and GM have been working as one team with each
company providing know-how from its unique expertise to create a compact and
low-cost next-generation fuel cell system,” said Toshiaki
Mikoshiba, chief operating officer of the North American Region for Honda Motor
Co., Ltd. and president & chief executive officer of American Honda Co.,
Inc. and Honda North America, Inc.
“This foundation of
outstanding teamwork will now take us to the stage of joint mass production of
a fuel cell system that will help each company create new value for our
customers in fuel cell vehicles of the future,” he added.
The Fuel Cell System
Manufacturing (FCSM) joint venture will be controlled by a board of directors
consisting of three executives from each company that will include a rotating
chairperson. In addition, a president will be appointed to rotate between each
company.
Leaders in the field?
GM and Honda claim to be leaders in fuel cell
technology with more than 2,220 patents between them, according to the Clean
Energy Patent Growth Index. GM and Honda rank No. 1 and No. 3, respectively, in
total fuel cell patents filed in 2002 through 2015.
“The combination of two
leaders in fuel cell innovation is an exciting development in bringing fuel
cells closer to the mainstream of propulsion applications,” said Mark Reuss, GM executive vice president, Global Product
Development, Purchasing and Supply Chain. “The eventual
deployment of this technology in passenger vehicles will create more differentiated
and environmentally friendly transportation options for consumers.”
Fuel cell technology
addresses many of the major challenges facing automobiles today: petroleum
dependency, emissions, efficiency, range and refueling times. Fuel cell
vehicles can operate on hydrogen made from renewable sources such as wind and
biomass. Water vapor is the only emission from fuel cell vehicles.
In addition to
advancing the performance of the fuel cell system, GM and Honda are working
together to reduce the cost of development and manufacturing through economies
of scale and common sourcing. The two companies also continue to work with
governments and other stakeholders to further advance the refueling
infrastructure that is critical for the long-term viability and consumer
acceptance of fuel cell vehicles.
GM is currently
demonstrating the capability of fuel cells across a range of land, sea and air
applications. The company has accumulated millions of miles of real-world
driving in fuel cell vehicles.
“With the next-generation
fuel cell system, GM and Honda are making a dramatic step toward lower cost,
higher-volume fuel cell systems. Precious metals have been reduced dramatically
and a fully cross-functional team is developing advanced manufacturing
processes simultaneously with advances in the design,” said Charlie Freese, GM executive director of Global Fuel Cell Business.
“The result is a lower-cost system that is a fraction of the size and
mass.”
Honda began delivery
of its all-new Clarity Fuel Cell vehicle to US customers in December 2016
following a spring 2016 launch in Japan. The Clarity Fuel Cell received the
best driving range rating from the EPA of any electric vehicle without a
combustion engine with a range rating of 366 miles and fuel economy rating of
68 miles per gallon of gasoline-equivalent combined.
“The expertise Honda
has established that led to creation of the first-generation Clarity fuel cell
system is valuable experience that we are leveraging in the joint development
of the next-generation fuel cell system with GM,” said
Takashi Sekiguchi, managing officer and director and chief operating officer of
Automotive Operations, Honda Motor Co., Ltd. “Our
collaboration is an opportunity to further utilize the strengths of each
company to popularize fuel cell vehicles at the earliest possible time.”
GM and Honda
collaborated in a powertrain cross-supply arrangement in 1999 under which Honda
manufactured 50,000 V-6 engines for the Saturn VUE and Honda received diesel
engines from GM’s Isuzu affiliate for use in Europe.
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