3 Reasons Hydrogen Fuels Won't Live Up to the Hype

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Materials scientists must be busy. If you take a casual stroll down internet lane, you'll find articles proclaiming the tremendous potential to use zero-carbon hydrogen fuel to displace gasoline-powered vehicles, replace natural gas for heating buildings, and store excess electricity produced by wind and solar farms. If only a low-cost and scalable process could be proven, then society would be one giant leap closer to responding to climate change. Or so the common thinking goes.

It all sounds pretty good on paper, and hydrogen does have some interesting properties, but developing workable commercial-scale manufacturing processes is just one obstacle for the fuel to overcome. There are several practical issues with using hydrogen as a fuel that strongly suggest it won't live up to the hype -- and that show why it would be dangerous for individual investors to blindly believe that a hydrogen economy is inevitable.

An empty fuel gauge.
An empty fuel gauge.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Hydrogen isn't an ideal fuel.

Hydrogen is simultaneously one of the most energy-dense fuels and one of the least energy-dense fuels. It all depends on the density metric used. When scientists tally the energy per unit mass, hydrogen scores three times better than gasoline. When scientists tally the energy per unit volume, gasoline is more than 10 times better.

The discrepancy stems from the fuel's physical and chemical properties. Hydrogen is the lightest element in the universe, which helps it sport an impressive energy density on a mass basis. However, it's difficult and expensive to squeeze a sufficient mass of hydrogen into a reasonable volume, requiring unique materials, high pressures, and/or supercooled temperatures for proper storage. That's a huge obstacle for the potential of hydrogen-fueled vehicles, which have a limited volume of space to carry fuel.

That hasn't stopped Toyota Motor (NYSE: TM) from jumping to an early lead in the race to develop fuel-cell vehicles with the Mirai. The 2019 model costs $58,500 before state and federal tax credits, scores an impressive fuel economy of 66 miles per gallon in both urban and highway driving, and sports a monstrous 32-gallon fuel tank. But it's unlikely to become the future of transportation for one simple reason: Hydrogen fuel cells require large amounts of platinum-group metals (PGMs).

PGMs serve as the all-important catalyst in a hydrogen fuel cell, which allows it to extract energy from hydrogen in the first place. However, the world doesn't have enough PGMs for transportation applications. While non-PGM catalysts could be developed, investors can't get too excited until new materials are proven at commercial scale.