Platinum FCEVs Showcased at Paris 2024 Olympics
Toyota aims to cut 2024 Games' emissions in half...
NEXT YEAR's Olympic Games in Paris will showcase how platinum-based
hydrogen technology can help
achieve the goal of net zero, says the World
Platinum Investment Council.
As the worldwide mobility partner of
the
International Olympic Committee and the International Paralympic Committee for Paris 2024, Toyota is
looking to provide sustainable
transport solutions for athletes, officials, volunteers, accredited media and spectators.
Overall, Toyota
aims to reduce vehicle carbon emissions at the Paris 2024 Games by 50 per cent compared to those of
previous Games, while ensuring
much of the total Toyota 'Olympic' fleet will be produced in Europe, including 37 per cent in France,
contributing to the vision of a
'locally-sourced' Olympic and Paralympic Games.
As part of its plans, Toyota
will be deploying some 500 of
its Mirai passenger fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs). In addition, it is planning to showcase up to
ten different hydrogen mobility
applications. These will range from buses and trucks to boats and forklifts – all demonstrating the
potential of a hydrogen-powered
society and resulting from Toyota's integration of its fuel cell technology with other
partners.
Among the
hydrogen applications to be displayed at Paris 2024 are two FCEV city buses, each able to accommodate an
entire wheelchair team,
having been converted specifically for the occasion, with accessibility and team spirit in
mind.
Further
demonstrating how platinum-based fuel cells can be used to power all modes of transport, Toyota is using
its fuel cell technology to
develop a light-duty FCEV truck for the mass market with its partners Isuzu, Hino and Commercial Japan
Partnership Technologies
Corporation.
Light-duty trucks are often used for distribution by supermarket
chains and convenience stores.
In addition to being equipped with refrigeration and freezing functions, they are required to drive long
distances over extended hours
to perform multiple delivery operations in one day. They must also meet requirements such as fast
refuelling. The use of
hydrogen-fuelled fuel cell technology, which produces zero CO2 emissions while driving, is considered
highly effective under such
operating conditions.
Toyota is not alone in recognising the important role a
sustainable, hydrogen-powered
mobility ecosystem can play in the transition to net zero.
Bosch's fuel-cell
power module is now in volume
production, and the company is focused on developing a circular economy model that will see the valuable
raw materials in its fuel
cells – especially platinum – recovered and recycled at the end of a fuel cell's useful
life.
Platinum acts
as a catalyst in a fuel cell, accelerating the reaction of hydrogen and oxygen, and Bosch believes that
95 per cent of the platinum in
fuel cell stacks can be recovered.