Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 4,11 Aug 2010,30 mins

Hydrogen for Transport

Frontiers

Available for over a year

Vehicles powered by hydrogen fuel cells promise pollution free transport as their waste product is water. The idea of using hydrogen has been around for decades but has not so far gone much beyond a few experimental projects. Gareth Mitchell explores if hydrogen can ever realistically replace oil as the fuel for mass transport. So far there have been a number of demonstration projects of buses in a number of European cities, including London and Oxford, and at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver. But now there is an increasing interest in using hydrogen. Gareth visits researchers in Birmingham and in Germany who have designed fuel cells that are already powering cars that can travel for 100 miles at up to 50 mph. He discovers that there is a growing network of hydrogen stations around the world and many of the German based manufacturers are working on vehicles that are powered in full or partly by fuel cells. Does hydrogen have a future? Producer: Deborah Cohen.

Programme Website
More episodes