Back Next
Toward the Hydrogen Economy
A Fuel Cell
Pure hydrogen fuel doesn’t just come from thin air
Hydrogen fuel can be created two ways
The California Roadmap to Hydrogen
Eight Steps on the Road to Hydrogen
Partners in California’s Road to Hydrogen
Taking the Steps to California’s Hydrogen Economy

The Future 500
Westin St. Francis
335 Powell Street, 14th Fl
San Francisco, CA 94102
415-294-7775
Erik Wohlgemuth,
Project Director ewohlgemuth@future500.org
Alison Wise,
Director of Public Policy awise@future500.org

“We must convert the oil economy to one that thrives on the unlimited supply of wind and hydrogen; that encourages consumers to demand hydrogen cars and invest in renewable energy sources.”

Randy Hayes, founder, Rainforest Action Network.
Advisor to Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown
Rex Newsletter, August 2002

“(F)ar more than any other automaker, GM has articulated a radical vision of what freshly engineered cars built around fuel-cell propulsion systems could look like … wild and interchangeable bodies … "drive by wire" … brimming with a critical component that is both weightless and shapeless: software.”

”GM Rethinks The Car—Completely”
Fortune Magazine, April 15, 2002

“(O)ur ultimate goal is to reinvent the automobile. Eventually, that would mean doing away with the internal combustion engine altogether. Effectively, remove cars and trucks from the environmental debate.”

Beth Lowery, VP, Environmental Health & Safety
General Motors
Los Angeles Tech Tour, 2004

"We are at one of the more fundamental opportunities in our history because we have run out of time with this fossil fuel oil oriented energy economy of ours.  And we either are going to get on a cleaner path, which is hydrogen - as though our lives depended on it - or we are going to get in more and more trouble."

David Freeman SCAQMD    Diamond Bar, California    July 25, 2003

 

Copyright 2004 Fututre500.org