this is true, my fiance and I are considering going half in half on a cheap little Kia or Ford that gets about 60 mpg highway (the UK models get about 60 mpg, just fyi for American consumers who eyes might boggle at this number) and they are really cheap to buy. plus we will be able to go everywhere without hindrance or planning charging times, which is a massive bonus. We would never be able to afford going half in half on an EV, and buying new batteries for it in 9 years or so (sooner if its the Nissan Leaf, which I read some batteries needing replaced after 6 years on that)... plus we get limited vacation time... so if we have a 4 day weekend to sight see, we don't want to be wasting any of that time stuck at a charger for 3 hours, when we could fill up for 30 seconds and be on our way.
imo hydrogen is the only way forward. or some kind of universal battery swap system that would take 30 seconds to swap, but I doubt engineers or greedy corporations ever become that innovative in American markets.
This is your thread, but it sounds like you haven't been reading it particularly closely. Hydrogen as an energy source has massive challenges that are non-trivial to overcome, and they all stem from the nature of hydrogen itself: Extremely low density, and extremely high reactivity. We're still on petroleum fuels because they score high where hydrogen scores low: Availability, density and stability.
Availability. While it's getting harder to find and extract as time goes on, petroleum is ultimately just hanging out waiting to be distilled into useful forms, forms it will stay in without much trouble. All H2 is bound to other molecules, and it
really doesn't want to let go, and also
really wants to hook back up with something as soon as possible (which is of course why FC tech even works). What this means is that we spend a lot more energy per unit of stored energy to produce H2 fuel than petroleum fuel. This is due to the nature of molecular chemistry and, barring a huge shift in our understanding thereof, will not change.
Density. Liquid petroleum fuels have significantly higher recoverable energy per unit mass and volume than H2, even taking combustion losses into account. This could conceivably change with advancement in tech, however.
Stability. Petroleum fuels, while definitely volatile, can be stored and transported easily. You can keep petrol or diesel in a container in your garage at atmospheric pressure. Gaseous fuels like NG require compression for efficient storage, but nowhere near the pressures required to make H2 viable. H2 also wants to bond with everything it touches, so it's not even easy to make a vessel to contain it.
We can hypothetically work around the density and stability problems, but not in an as easy or inexpensive way as you seem to think. It's convenient to blame greed or social inertia (and that's certainly a potential factor), but a guiding principle in my life of late is thus: If a problem hasn't been solved, it's most likely because that problem is
really difficult. Hydrogen as a motor vehicle fuel is absolutely one of those problems, if for no other reason than it's devilishly hard to efficiently produce.