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ITM Power opens new hydrogen refuelling station at Johnson Matthey’s Swindon site

 

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Hydrocarbon Engineering,

ITM Power, an energy storage and clean fuel company, and Johnson Matthey, have announced the opening of ITM Power’s seventh public access hydrogen refuelling station (HRS) located at Johnson Matthey, Swindon on the M4 corridor, UK.

The opening is being supported by Toyota, Hyundai and Honda who will also present and participate in a Q&A session. Attendees will also be able to experience a zero emission journey in a fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV).

The Swindon HRS joins Cobham on the M25, Beaconsfield on the M40, Rainham in Kent on the A14, Teddington in London, Rotherham on the M1 and Kirkwall in Orkney, all located in the UK. Swindon is home to Johnson Matthey’s fuel cell component manufacturing facility. The Swindon HRS is now open for public and private fleets operating fuel cell electric vehicles. The station uses electricity via a renewable energy contract and water to generate hydrogen onsite with no need for deliveries.

The new HRS is the first of two stations in the UK to be deployed as part of the pan European H2ME2 project, which was funded by the European Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Joint Undertaking (FCHJU) and the Office of Low Emission Vehicles (OLEV). A further station to be deployed by ITM Power under H2ME1 will be located at Gatwick Airport and will be opened before the end of this year.

On 11 September 2018, at the ‘Zero Emission Vehicle Summit’ in Birmingham, UK, Prime Minister Theresa May outlined the UK government’s ‘Road to Zero Strategy’, which includes funding of £1.5 billion for ultra-low-emission vehicles by 2020. At the event, the Prime Minister also announced more than £100 million of funding for innovators in ultra-low-emission vehicles and hydrogen technology. The Road to Zero Strategy maps out in detail how the UK will reach its target for all new cars and vans to be, effectively, zero emission by 2040 – and for every car and van to be zero emission by 2050.

 

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