Skip to main content

JCB’s hydrogen engine landmark

JCB has made a major step forward with its hydrogen engine.
By MJ Woof January 13, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
JCB has been awarded approval for its hydrogen engines to be used in construction machines


JCB has secured a ruling from licensing authorities allowing its hydrogen-fuelled engine to be used commercially in machines. JCB is the first construction equipment company to develop a fully working combustion engine fuelled by hydrogen and a team of 150 engineers has been working on the exciting £100 million development for over three years.

The company has confirmed that 11 licensing authorities across Europe have now given permission for JCB’s hydrogen engine to be sold across Europe – with authorities in other countries set to follow suit with certification in 2025.

JCB Chairman Anthony Bamford, who has led the company’s hydrogen engine project, said: “This is a very significant moment for JCB. To start the New Year with certification in place in so many European countries bodes very well for the future of hydrogen combustion technology. JCB has proved in recent years that it is a proper zero emissions solution for equipment. 

“This formal type approval/certification paves the way for the sale and use of hydrogen engines right across the UK and Europe.”

This is a significant development and means that JCB will be well placed to win orders for off-highway machines fuelled by hydrogen. There is increasing pressure to use more sustainable technologies in construction. The Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK has specified that there will be no diesel machines onsite and that all mobile equipment will have to be either electric or hydrogen-fuelled. The decision for the project has yet to be made in May 2025 and if it goes ahead, there will be several firms able to supply suitable electric units, JCB included. But JCB will also be strongly-placed to win orders for hydrogen equipment needed for the project.

JCB confirmed that the Netherlands’ Vehicle Authority RDW was the first licensing authority to issue official certification, giving permission for the engine to sold in The Netherlands. Other licensing bodies across Europe have followed RDW’s lead by issuing the necessary certification, including Great Britain, Northern Ireland, Germany, France, Spain, Belgium, Poland, Finland, Switzerland and Lichtenstein. Licensing authorities in other countries are set to follow with certification during 2025.

JCB has already produced more than 130 evaluation engines which are powering backhoe loaders, Loadall telescopic handlers and generator sets. Real-world testing of JCB’s hydrogen equipment on customers’ sites is now at an advanced stage and progressing well.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • JCB’s radical new wheeled excavator
    March 21, 2016
    The new JCB Hydradig compact wheeled excavator will “change the way the construction equipment industry operates in the 21st Century,” according to one senior company figure. Said to be the culmination of a three-year project born from customer demand, the new 10tonne model was unveiled this week to trade media at JCB’s World HQ in Rocester, county Staffordshire, UK.
  • JCB North America has new chief after John Patterson CBE retires
    January 7, 2014
    JCB’s John Patterson CBE, who rose through the ranks from field service engineer to Group chief executive, has retired after 43 years’ service. Arjun Mirdha is the new president and CEO of JCB in North America, where Patterson had led operations as chairman and CEO since 2008. After joining JCB in 1971, Patterson went on to work in Canada and America before returning to the UK in 1988 as managing director of JCB Service. In 1993, he was appointed managing director of JCB Sales before becoming Group CEO –
  • JCB starts production of Project 710, its Hydradig 10tonne machine
    July 7, 2016
    JCB has started full production of its new Hydradig after the machine made its international debut at the equipment trade fair bauma in Munich in April. JCB says it has already received hundreds of orders for the new 10tonne machine which is being manufactured at the JCB Heavy Products plant in Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, England. Around 85 people have been recruited for the production process, including engineers, welders and assembly line employees. The JCB Hydradig was developed in complete secrecy o
  • Hydrogen power from Liebherr
    July 4, 2024
    Liebherr has unveiled its hydrogen power technology.