The NEXO hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle (Courtesy of Hyundai Motor)
Hyundai Motor Group is set to develop technology to produce clean hydrogen from food waste as the world’s third-largest automaker aims to cement its global dominance in the fuel cell electric vehicle sector.
Hyundai Motor Co., Kia Corp. – carmakers in the group – and their construction affiliate Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co. on Tuesday agreed with South Korea’s state-run Sudokwon Landfill Site Management Corp. on the joint development of eco-friendly hydrogen technology utilizing biogas and related businesses.
Biogas, a mixture of methane and carbon dioxide, is produced when microbes decompose organisms in oxygen-free environments. Fermentation of food waste usually generates biogas with methane as the main component, which can be refined to produce high-purity clean hydrogen.
Hyundai Motor Group and Sudokwon Landfill Site Management plan to work on a system that manufactures 216 kilograms of eco-friendly hydrogen a day based on biogas produced by the state body, which handles waste generated in the greater Seoul area, over the next two years, according to the conglomerate.
The daily output is enough to charge more than 34 units of the NEXO FCEV.
The group aims to develop technology for electrofuels, by-products generated from clean hydrogen manufacturing process to apply them to internal combustion engine cars. It also plans to seek technology for eco-friendly plastic materials by synthesizing clean hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
“We will develop high value-added technologies including those for electrofuels and eco-friendly plastic interior materials in the future to lead the global carbon neutrality sector,” said Hong Seung-Hyun, Hyundai Motor’s head of materials research and engineering center.
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