3247 x 4871 px | 27,5 x 41,2 cm | 10,8 x 16,2 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
2 marzo 2016
Ubicazione:
North La Cumbre Road, Santa Barbara, California, USA
Altre informazioni:
A public hydrogen fueling station, for hydrogen powered automobiles, with two pumps in Santa Barbara, California. In 2013 California's Governor Brown signed AB 8, a bill to fund 20 million a year for 10 years for up to 100 stations. The California Energy Commission funded $46.6 million for 28 stations to be completed in 2016.A hydrogen station is a storage or filling station for hydrogen, usually located along a road or hydrogen highway, or at home as part of the distributed generation resources concept. The stations are usually intended to power hydrogen vehicles, but can also be used to power small devices. Vehicles use hydrogen as fuel in one of several ways, including fuel cells and mixed fuels like HCNG. The hydrogen fuel dispensers dispense the fuel by the kilogram. In 2000, Ford and Air Products opened the first hydrogen station in North America in Dearborn, MI. A hydrogen filling station opened in 2007 on the campus of The Ohio State University at the Center for Automotive Research. This station is the only one in Ohio. Stations in California opened by the California Fuel Cell Partnership, and under Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's California Hydrogen Highway program. Missouri's only Hydrogen Filling Station is located at the Missouri University of Science and Technology campus. A prototype hydrogen fueling station was built in compliance with all of the prevailing safety, environmental and building codes in Phoenix to demonstrate that such fueling stations could be built in urban areas. A hydrogen station was built in 2004 in Evermont in Burlington, VT. The project was partially funded through the U.S. Department of Energy's Hydrogen Program. Hawaii opened its first hydrogen station at Hickam Air Force Base in 2009. In 2012 Aloha Motor Company opened its hydrogen station in Honolulu, Hawaii.
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