The main issue I see with hydrogen is the "where do we get it?" equation. Hydrogen is abundant in water on earth but freeing it via electrolysis requires electricity... right now that would suck anywhere that has a coal fired grid.
Chicken and the egg issue.
Again, this ignores the infrastructure & distribution issues.
Let's say you live in a place that gets its electricity from a combination of fossil fuel plants (natural gas, coal, etc.) and renewable energy sources (solar, wind, etc.).
In Scenario #1 (EV), the electricity is sent through the established electric grid to the EV which stores the electricity in its batteries until needed.
In Scenario #2 (FCV), the electricity is used to generate hydrogen via electrolysis, stored in tanks, pumped (likely using electricity) into tanker trucks (which are likely powered by diesel engines), transport it to fueling stations, pump (likely using electricity) the hydrogen to the the stations' tanks, pump (likely using electricity) the hydrogen to the FCV tank, then finally convert that hydrogen back into electricity to power electric motors which drive the FCV.
What is the cost of manufacturing fuel-grade hydrogen? It's not free, that's for sure. And even if you have really, really cheap electricity, it's still going to be more expensive than transmitting electricity over the existing electric infrastructure.
EVs don't charge in five minutes. However it's not too difficult to dig a trench, drop in some electrical conductors, and put a charging station in a convenient place (like a residential garage) and recharge the vehicle overnight.
FCVs might be able to be refueled fairly quickly but you can't do it at home. Right now there are are only two places where hydrogen fuel stations are at a density that satisfies Toyota enough to market the Mirai: Japan and California.
Ultimately infrastructure will be the showstopper for FCV. Hell, my guess is that only 25% of the gas stations in my area have diesel pumps.
Electrolyzed hydrogen is combined with CO2 to make methanol, then gasoline.
arstechnica.com
this is interesting... hydrogen becomes clean gasoline...
also I read this earlier
https://www.nh3fuel.com/index.php/f...prising-details-about-using-ammonia-as-a-fuel
ammonia could be next source of fuel and better than hydrogen vs ev/gas/diesel
weird, I wonder why we haven't heard of ammonia until now...
The problem is that gasoline still generates greenhouse gases.
Porsche's synthetic gas is a PR stunt. That's fine.
In the end it will be EVs using better batteries than what we have today, fueled by more renewable electricity sources. Germany already generates enough electricity via renewable sources for residential needs.
Remember that the ultimate problem is greenhouse gases, not about generating electricity or power.