-
Recent Posts
- Porsche Motorsport and Iron Dames in WEC
- GM to Sell Lansing Battery Plant to LG Energy Solution
- Steering Loss – Toyota Recalls Corolla and Corolla Hybrids
- Recalls – Hyundai Motor America Backup Cameras
- Mercedes-Benz USA Recall – Sunroofs Flying Off
- Carlos Tavares Out as Stellantis CEO
- Bernie Ecclestone Selling His F1 Car Collection
- F1 – Qatar Investment Authority Buys Into Sauber
- Battery Electric Vehicle Sales In EU Slumping
- U.S. November New Vehicle Sales – 16M SAAR
- Annals of Marketing – Broad Arrow Auctions and BMW
- Honda – Global Expansion of Electric Motorcycles
- Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles – Japan vs Korea
- EPA – US Fuel Economy Record High. CO2 Record Low
- General Motors via Cadillac F1 Bound in 2026
Recent Comments
- Stellantis on Carlos Tavares Out as Stellantis CEO
- NHTSA Fines Ford $165M for Flouting Recall Law | AutoInformed on Ford Recalls Defective Rear-view Cameras on 620,246 Vehicles
- Alfa Romeo Returns to Formula 1 in 2018 via Sauber on Alfa Romeo Returns to Formula 1 in 2018 via Sauber
- American Airlines and JetBlue Alliance Blocked | AutoInformed on Justice Sues to Block JetBlue’s Purchase of Spirit Airlines
- UAW President Shawn Fain on 2024 Presidential Election on Donald Trump is a Scab – UAW Endorses President Biden
Archives
Meta
Tag Archives: Fuel Cell Electric Trucks
Japan Inc: Toyota and Hino to Pioneer Light-Duty Fuel Cell Electric Trucks with Seven-Eleven, FamilyMart, and Lawson
The five companies are also making efforts to promote the establishment of an environment for the popularization of fuel-cell vehicles, not only of light-duty trucks, but also of commercial and passenger vehicles. Continue reading
GM to Sell Navistar Hydrotec Fuel Cell Power Cubes for EVs
The GM move is the latest in what is shaping up to be a headlong rush by commercial truck makers to drop dirty diesel and gasoline fueled vehicles in favor of fuel cell powered truck and heavy equipment. Proposed regulations – globally – are providing the incentive to change product lines to more sustainable ones. It’s the price of survival. The Japanese – thus far – appear to be leading the way. Continue reading →