Originally posted by chuckChuck
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Is that a market based solution?
BC has 61000 registered heavy commercial vehicles. In fact, the number has gone up substantially since the CO2 tax was enacted, so it didn't work to dissuade truck traffic for the low emissions canoe alternative.
If it took 16 years to replace 6 of those 61,000 trucks, by 2050, at this rate, if the government continues to fund 100+% of the cost, BC may approach 0.026% of their fleet being zero emissions. Assuming the plant gets built, and the hydrogen doesn't continue to come from fossil fuels. And assuming that no fossil fuels are used to build the refilling infrastructure, and assuming that the trucks are manufactured without using hydrocarbons. And assuming that the total number of trucks in BC doesn't continue to increase much faster than the zero emissions trucks. And assuming that every ribbon cutting ceremony (for milestones such as reaching 10 hydrogen trucks) by executives and bureaucrats isn't attended by those travelling in fossil fuel motorcades and jets. Assuming the trucks last actually that long, and don't meet the same fate as the hydrogen buses, already being sold off. And assuming the company doesn't follow the same path as that other Vancouver hydrogen darling Ballard Power systems. Stock now at $3.69, down from an all time high of $189.
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