
Hydrogen filling stations needed as UK urged to follow Europe's lead
The UK Government must support the development of a European-style Hydrogen filling station network and give drivers a genuine alternative to battery-powered EVs, say car makers frustrated by a lack of progress in the development of hydrogen fuelling options.
Speaking at a 'Hydrogen Summit' organised by BMW on 6 June, David Wong, the head of technology and innovation at the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said the UK requires the same sort of policy ambition as the EC. Across the channel, the European Commission has mandated that by 2030 there should be at least one Hydrogen filling station every 120 miles on all major routes, and in all towns with a population of 100,000 or more. 'What gets regulated, gets done', said Wong, at the same time calling for the Government to ditch the expensive car road tax supplement for all zero-emission vehicles, whether hydrogen or battery powered. Advertisement - Article continues below
Europe's backing for a hydrogen fuelling network has encouraged BMW to commit to launching its first hydrogen fuel-cell-powered production model in 2028, but currently the UK won't be on the list of countries where it's sold.
Also speaking at the summit, BMW's head of Hydrogen tech, Dr Jürgen Guldner, warned: 'We sincerely hope that the infrastructure will develop further because right now in the UK it's not in any condition where it would make sense to launch such a vehicle. 'Hopefully in the next few years, development will pick up and there will be more hydrogen fueling stations that would allow a market introduction,' he said. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
With BMW absent from the market, UK car drivers will in theory have access to only two hydrogen vehicles, the Toyota Mirai and new Hyundai Nexo. The reality is that sales of both will be effectively limited to corporate customers with their own hydrogen fuelling resources.
Yet according to Guldner, there's a broad potential market for hydrogen-fuelled cars, particularly among high-mileage drivers and those living in cities without access to off-street parking.
'We get a lot of feedback from real people saying a battery car does not work for me,' he says. 'Maybe they don't have electric charging at home, maybe they are on the road a lot and don't want to depend on charging stops. Even if we can get them down to 20 minutes at some point, we still have a (charge point) infrastructure issue. We have issues like trailering (towing), and obviously cold weather conditions where a battery car basically has to be warmed up by using the energy in the battery. Whereas in a fuel cell car, you don't lose any range.' Advertisement - Article continues below
In spite of these issues, the UK government's approach to passenger car decarbonisation is focused entirely on a forced transition to battery electric cars, supported by the Climate Change Committee (CCC), a body of environmental scientists charged with advising the government on net zero strategy. The CCC has repeatedly stated it sees no place for hydrogen in road transport, an approach some car makers say is short-sighted, and could actually slow the journey to net zero if a proportion of consumers choose to stick with ICE rather than battery-electric vehicles. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
According to Wong, the government must be more open-minded: 'Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are not the enemy to batteries. Battery-electric vehicles are not the enemy to hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles,' he says. 'The common enemy is carbon and fossil fuels, and that is why we think the two are complementary, and that demands technological openness and, for vehicle manufacturers investing in both of these technologies, commitment to a multi-pathway approach.'
Jon Hunt, Senior Manager Hydrogen Transformation, Toyota GB, also spoke at the summit to affirm that view. 'When it comes down to vehicles,' he said, 'our role is to provide customers with choice. They can make decisions that best suit themselves. Advertisement - Article continues below
'What we can't have is people dismissing technologies which are there to enable us all. So I would request that people respect the fact that bringing these technologies to market is for the benefit of all, and our job as an automotive manufacturer is to be able to make them accessible and usable for our customers.'
Having had around a dozen hydrogen filling stations a few years ago, but just one publicly accessible location today, the UK is not currently a good place to consider marketing or buying a hydrogen-fuelled car. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
Europe's drive to introduce a viable hydrogen filling station network revolves around demand for the fuel for fuel-cell-powered heavy goods EVs, because in many cases truck operators say they can't do the work required of them using battery-powered vehicles. So while the UK's first flowering of hydrogen filling stations for cars has quietly disappeared, it's not that the interest has disappeared with it, but the pathway has changed.
That's because a hydrogen filling station can be viable even if it's used by only a handful of trucks per day, whereas it might require hundreds of hydrogen cars visiting daily to be profitable. However, once installed for trucks, hydrogen infrastructure is ready at the roadside for cars to use too, potentially resolving a 'chicken and egg' situation confronting hydrogen fuel cells today. Advertisement - Article continues below
A recent Road Haulage Association (RHA) survey here in the UK revealed that while 12 per cent of HGV operators want to introduce hydrogen-fuelled trucks and buses within the next five years - and believe the vehicles will be available to enable them to do so - a third of truck operators and nearly two-thirds of coach operators think the UK won't have a refuelling network to support their ambitions. As a result, the RHA says that without rapid Government intervention to speed hydrogen delivery - and a raft of other measures - the road transport sector simply cannot meet UK net zero targets.
This too flies in the face of advice to the Government from the Climate Change Committee, which sees 'no role for hydrogen in road transport'. So should the CCC have less influence over the government's transport agenda? Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
Chris Jackson is CEO of Protium, a hydrogen infrastructure SME that is leading on the government-backed project HyHaul project, which will see 30 fuel-cell trucks operating on the M4 corridor supported by three new filling stations by 2026.
'I think a lot of people are concerned that if you see battery electric vehicles as effectively not being able to do all the things that people want to do, that just creates a delay in the move away from fossil fuels as people wait for technology that will allow them to decarbonise,' he says. 'I don't think the CCC sees a role (for hydrogen) partly because they're not seeing vehicles on the road with demand picking up, but also because they're looking at 33 million vehicles and figuring how to convert the bulk of that.
'Many people would say even if 20 or 15 per cent of passenger vehicles go hydrogen, that's still a customer segment that wouldn't otherwise be able to decarbonize with battery electric, that needs a product.
Jackson is also concerned about a strategy that puts all the UK's transport solutions at the mercy of global forces: 'If you close out all out technology pathways and the only option left for people is bad, because CNG (compressed natural gas) is out, HVO (hydrogenated vegetable oil) is out, hydrogen's out, you're basically betting the entire hopes of the largest-emitting sector in the UK, which is transport, on one technology which is batteries, on a supply chain that is predominantly in China. And from a political perspective, a national economic perspective, a broad society perspective, how comfortable are we betting the house on that?'
Now you can buy a car through our network of top dealers around the UK. Search for the latest deals…
Find a car with the experts New Kia Sportage breaks cover and it's sleeker than ever
New Kia Sportage breaks cover and it's sleeker than ever
Full specification and details have been announced for the UK version of Kia's big-selling mid-size SUV Car Deal of the Day: Get the Range Rover look for (a lot) less with the Jaecoo 7 for £244 a month
Car Deal of the Day: Get the Range Rover look for (a lot) less with the Jaecoo 7 for £244 a month
Jaecoo is another Chinese brand that has recently arrived in the UK, and its 7 SUV has made a bit of a splash. It's our Deal of the Day for 3 June. Nissan Qashqai alternatives: cars you could buy instead of Nissan's big-selling SUV
Nissan Qashqai alternatives: cars you could buy instead of Nissan's big-selling SUV
The Nissan Qashqai has been a hit since the first generation launched in 2006, but if it's not quite your cup of tea, we've rounded up the best of the… Best cars & vans
3 Jun 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
America's queen of jams savages Meghan Markle's latest 'As Ever' fruit spread: 'There's no excuse for this'
The Duchess of Sussex may have set the tills ringing with the latest 'As Ever' merchandise, but her new apricot spread has been savaged by critics – within hours of going on sale. Champion jam-maker Donna Collins said: 'It's a real disappointment that Meghan is selling a fruit spread, which is what you make when your jam fails. In the jam industry a spread is what we call something that didn't work. 'It can have the best ingredients, but if I had a jam that was too runny, I'd slap a label on it and call it a spread. There's no excuse for this. It should be perfect.' Ms Collins, who owns Jelly Queens jam company and has won more than 40 world championship honours in jam-making competitions, also queried the ingredients in Meghan's spread. The jars, sold in keepsake packaging for £10 or plain for £7, list conventionally grown apricots, dried organic apricots, organic pure cane sugar and fruit pectin. 'Why should she include conventionally grown apricots, which will have used pesticides?' said Ms Collins. 'And why is she using pectin, which is a gelling agent, unless it's because her spread was too runny? Most spreads don't use pectin.' Meghan launched her 'As Ever' brand in April with a raspberry spread, which critics attacked for being ill-suited for spreading on bread or toast. Many fans who jumped online the moment Meghan's 'As Ever' products went up for sale on Friday were disappointed to learn the apricot spread had sold out. Ms Collins added: 'Her apricot spread sold out in minutes, just like her earlier raspberry spread, which may mean they only made a small batch. 'I don't know who's making her spread, but we all know it's not Meghan. It sounds like they really don't know what they are doing.' Maureen Foley, owner of Red Hen Cannery near Montecito, said she suspected Meghan wanted to make a spread to take advantage of marketing opportunities. 'She may be smart trying to fill a niche,' said Ms Foley. 'Spreads can be sweet or savoury, and used on dishes for all meals, so perhaps it's just clever marketing.'


Daily Mail
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Gloom grows in UK boardrooms as bosses lament 'hostile' economy
Pessimism is deepening in boardrooms across the UK as bosses prepare for economic conditions at home and globally to worsen, a new report suggests. Around 70 per cent of boardroom leaders expect worldwide economic conditions to worsen in the year ahead, while just 5.4 per cent believe they will improve, according to a survey by The Chartered Governance Institute UK & Ireland. By contrast, only 22.2 per cent in 2024 anticipated a deterioration in global economic conditions, and exactly double that percentage forecast them getting better. Nearly two-thirds of respondents also think the UK's economic circumstances will weaken further, compared to just a quarter asked the same question last year. CGI said executives are concerned UK competitiveness would not improve in the months ahead, due to factors like US trade tariffs and UK Government policy. President Donald Trump has slapped a 10 per cent baseline tariff on most US imports, as well as a 25 per cent import tax on car parts and a 50 per cent levy on foreign steel and aluminium. The tariffs have heightened anxieties about economic growth slowing, both in the UK and internationally, and inflationary pressures for consumers and businesses magnifying. Meanwhile, the proportion of boardroom leaders who said their firms plan on cutting capital expenditure over the next year rose to over a quarter, while none are forecasting a 'considerable' increase. 'The results remind us that boardroom decision-making has rarely been more challenging,' said the report. 'Organisations of every type are operating in a fluid, and often, hostile environment that (this year particularly) offers few certainties and elevated risk,' it added. The biggest concern for most boards is cybersecurity, with 71 per cent of governance professionals predicting cyber risks will grow this year. However, a smaller proportion of boards - 66 per cent - intend to raise spending on IT security, against 80 per cent in 2024/25. Among significant worry is regulation; most quoted governance professionals believe rules are 'slightly excessive'. Peter Swabey, policy and research director at CGI UK & Ireland, said: 'Governance professionals, always in tune with board sentiments, reveal a boardroom mood of caution and recalibration. 'While AI and cyber resilience are climbing the agenda, confidence in the UK's economic outlook and regulatory environment remains fragile. 'The Government's industrial strategy will need to address these concerns if it is to unlock long-term investment.' Having originally set to be announced this spring, Britain's industrial strategy is now set to be published in the last week of June. Defence, digital infrastructure, clean energy and advanced manufacturing comprised the top four priorities for the industrial strategy among the CGI survey's interviewees. The strategy is also set to include details on the creative, financial services, life sciences, and professional and business services sectors. CGI's survey was based on the full responses of 96 participants from organisations either based in or operating in the UK. Governance professionals in private businesses and members of quoted firms each comprised 35 per cent of the responses. The remaining 30 per cent were from representatives of the public sector, charities and other ownership structures.


Daily Mail
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
A future master of the universe? Wes Streeting sips champagne with elite at 'world's secret government'
It is the shadowy gathering of the global elite which has been described as 'the world's secret Government' – and this year Wes Streeting joined for the first time. The Health Secretary's appearance at the Bilderberg Meeting in Sweden, sipping champagne in the company of billionaires, bankers and power brokers, is likely to spark fresh speculation about his ambitions to succeed Sir Keir Starmer. Both his political mentors Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson have attended the event. The group, which has been the subject of numerous conspiracy theories since it first met in 1954, was established to foster dialogue between Europe and North America and prevent another world war. However, it is now defined as 'bolstering a consensus around free market Western capitalism and its interests around the globe' – not something that is likely to endear Mr Streeting, who is tipped by some as a future Labour leader, to the Left of his party. The 42-year-old was spotted chatting to Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary and Goldman Sachs chairman José Manuel Barroso on a boat taking them to a lavish banquet at a palace on the Stockholm archipelago, owned by the hugely wealthy Wallenberg family. He also met major CEOs, including Pfizer's Albert Bourla and Microsoft's Satya Nadella, in addition to Borge Brende, the president of the World Economic Forum; Sir John Sawers, the former head of MI6; Mark Rutte, the new head of Nato; the Greek Prime Minister; and four EU Commissioners. After the Saturday dinner, the group returned to the five-star Grand Hotel at around 11pm in a convoy of coaches flanked by a motorcade. Streeting mingling with power brokers at the shadowy gathering of the global elite which has been described as 'the world's secret Government' Mr Streeting left after lunch the next day. A Labour source said: 'Bilderberg regards itself as a spotter of rising talent – Wes would certainly include himself in that category.' A spokesman for Mr Streeting said: 'The Government sends a representative to Bilderberg each year and this year Wes was the Government's representative.'