Skip to main content

Switzerland set for its first public hydrogen filling station

Swiss supermarket chain Coop and Swiss-based energy company Axpo plan to open Switzerland’s first public hydrogen filling station in 2016, according to a report by the newspaper Basler Zeitung. The two companies said more stations will be rolled out. Axpo will supply the hydrogen by splitting oxygen and hydrogen from water at its water power plant using a water electrolyser, an operation that is powered by the plant’s hydroelectric power station which makes the process carbon neutral. According to Axp
April 9, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Swiss supermarket chain Coop and Swiss-based energy company Axpo plan to open Switzerland’s first public hydrogen filling station in 2016, according to a report by the newspaper Basler Zeitung. The two companies said more stations will be rolled out.

Axpo will supply the hydrogen by splitting oxygen and hydrogen from water at its water power plant using a water electrolyser, an operation that is powered by the plant’s hydroelectric power station which makes the process carbon neutral.

According to Axpo, filling a car with hydrogen costs around the same as filling it with diesel or petrol and takes two to four minutes. A car can expect to get around 800km from a tank of hydrogen.

Meanwhile, the directorate general for mobility and roads in the Swiss canton of Vaud will launch three major projects this month to improve access to the Lausanne-Morges conurbation.

The Tribune de Geneve reported that work on the Vennes-Croisettes section of la route de Berne will take place in two stages, one from now until November and then from April to November next year.

Work is also scheduled on la route de Romanel between the junctions of la Blécherette and Solitaire from April 2015 to April 2016. This section will be re-routed by 1km and will have three lanes and a two-way cycle track.

Finally, improvements will also continue on la route du Lac.

Related Content

  • New road links will cut congestion in St Petersburg
    June 20, 2016
    Road building will solve the problem of traffic jams in St Petersburg – Eugene Gerden writes The authorities in Russian city St Petersburg plan to solve the problem of traffic jams in the city during the next few years. The strategy is expected to be achieved through road building and the improvement of transport connections between different districts in the city. Implementation of these plans will take place as part of the decree 355 "Of the Strategy of St Petersburg Economic and Social Development
  • UK group moves on PAS 2080 carbon standard
    May 16, 2024
    A ‘free to use’ toolkit from the Highways Sector Council is to help public agencies and private companies meet the PAS 2080 carbon emission standards in road assets.
  • Higher productivity, lower cost asphalt plants
    February 14, 2012
    Manufacturers are producing innovative asphalt equipment, and operators are benefiting from this as Patrick Smithreports. Asphalt plant manufacturers and operators are understandably placing great emphasis on higher productivity but with lower costs. At the same time they are aware of environmental issues and the ever-increasing use of recycled material in mixes.
  • Bratislava bypass and Karpaty tunnel completion set for 2030
    June 18, 2018
    Slovakia’s national motorway company NDS expects that the Bratislava bypass on the D4 motorway together with the Karpaty tunnel will be completed around 2030. The D4 motorway is part of the trans-European transport network and will connect with the planned R7 expressway linking western and eastern Slovakia, and the existing D1 and D2 motorways”. Apart from construction works on part of the D4 motorway, another two stretches are planned on this link, including the 3.6km stretch from Devinska Nova Ves t