Huge hydrogen trucks on their way to Queensland

Hyzon's hydrogen trucks
Image: Hyzon Motors

Hyzon Motors, the New York-based global supplier of zero-emissions hydrogen fuel cell-powered commercial vehicles, will deliver five of its ultra-heavy-duty hydrogen trucks to the world’s largest zinc, lead, and silver producer, based in Queensland, according to The Driven.

The five 154-tonne hydrogen trucks—the world’s heaviest zero-emissions trucks, weighing in at twice the weight of an empty Space Shuttle—will be used in road train configurations by Korea Zinc subsidiary Ark Energy and its sister company Townsville Logistics.

The order is part of the efforts by Korea Zinc to turn the Townsville-based Sun Metals zinc refinery into the first in the world to produce “green zinc”.

Related article: H2H Energy to build Hyundai FCEV refuelling station in NZ

Sun Metals became the first major energy consumer in Australia to build a solar farm near its premises to help decarbonise its electricity supply, and has since turned its focus on hydrogen to further reduce emissions.

The five 154-tonne hydrogen trucks will be deployed in road train configurations, replacing diesel equivalent, and are expected to reduce CO2 emissions by more than 1,400-tonnes per year.

“When we scoured the world for fuel cell trucks, we found that Hyzon Motors was the only hydrogen mobility company that could manufacture fuel cells stacks with a sufficient power density to meet our requirements including the ultra-heavy payload and built to Australian Design Rules,” Ark Energy CEO Daniel Kim said.

“In addition, Hyzon Motors was the only OEM that was interested in supplying the Australian market in the next 18 months.”

Sun Metals and Ark Energy have already built their own hydrogen refilling station, and with support from the Queensland government’s Hydrogen Industry Development Fund, is looking to build the state’s first maor renewable hydrogen supply chain.

Related article: CSIRO to lead $5m international hydrogen RD&D program

In late-2020, Sun Metals Corporation, the second largest single site consumer of electricity in Queensland, announced that it was joining the global RE100 initiative and committing to power its entire operations with 100% renewable electricity by 2040.

“At Sun Metals, we’re proud to join RE100 and make this commitment to powering our operations with 100 per cent renewable electricity,” Sun Metals CEO Kiwon Park said.

“We have already started our renewables journey. As the first major energy user in Australia to build its own large scale solar farm, we’re already getting 22 per cent of our electricity from solar and based upon our development pipeline we will easily achieve 100 per cent renewable by 2040.”

Previous articleAEMO sets ambitious 100% renewables target for 2025
Next articleOn the clock: Overtime increased in 33% of Australian workplaces last year