articleScienceJun 23, 2005Closed access

Cleaning the Air and Improving Health with Hydrogen Fuel-Cell Vehicles

Stanford University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Converting all U.S. onroad vehicles to hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles (HFCVs) may improve air quality, health, and climate significantly, whether the hydrogen is produced by steam reforming of natural gas, wind electrolysis, or coal gasification. Most benefits would result from eliminating current vehicle exhaust. Wind and natural gas HFCVs offer the greatest potential health benefits and could save 3700 to 6400 U.S. lives annually. Wind HFCVs should benefit climate most. An all-HFCV fleet would hardly affect tropospheric water vapor concentrations. Conversion to coal HFCVs may improve health but would damage climate more than fossil/electric hybrids. The real cost of hydrogen from wind electrolysis may be below…

Citation impact

1,020
total citations
FWCI
19.70
Percentile
100%
References
46
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Environmental science
  • Natural gas
  • Waste management
  • Gasoline
  • Coal
  • Hydrogen vehicle
  • Fossil fuel
  • Fuel cells
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Climate action
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