Unsurprisingly, the answer is a resounding no, in keeping with Betteridges’ Law
someotherguytyping on
…uh hard hard no. No to the extent that I’m geniunely confused that anyone is still talking about this at all.
sault18 on
Man, the oil industry would sure like people to think hydrogen is the next big thing and battery-powered EVs are just a fad.
Disco_denzel on
These speculations are perfunctory. 20yrs ago if you asked anyone about EVs being the future you would’ve come across similar answers.
As money pours in, you’ll have smaller and more efficient batteries and just like that delivery of hydrogen would also get easier. It has to do with where governments and orgs will put their money.
iqisoverrated on
No. Not a snowball’s chance in hell.
Advanced_Ad8002 on
From the article:
„Can hydrogen overtake batteries in cars? “The answer is no,” said Liebreich, without a moment’s hesitation. Carmakers betting on a large share for hydrogen are “just wrong”, and heading for an expensive disappointment, he added.“
6 Comments
Unsurprisingly, the answer is a resounding no, in keeping with Betteridges’ Law
…uh hard hard no. No to the extent that I’m geniunely confused that anyone is still talking about this at all.
Man, the oil industry would sure like people to think hydrogen is the next big thing and battery-powered EVs are just a fad.
These speculations are perfunctory. 20yrs ago if you asked anyone about EVs being the future you would’ve come across similar answers.
As money pours in, you’ll have smaller and more efficient batteries and just like that delivery of hydrogen would also get easier. It has to do with where governments and orgs will put their money.
No. Not a snowball’s chance in hell.
From the article:
„Can hydrogen overtake batteries in cars? “The answer is no,” said Liebreich, without a moment’s hesitation. Carmakers betting on a large share for hydrogen are “just wrong”, and heading for an expensive disappointment, he added.“
Damn right.