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

  • Advances in milling
    July 23, 2024
    Some major machine manufacturers have introduced improved milling equipment to the market - Mike Woof reports
  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    April 24, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock
  • Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing takes shape
    February 16, 2017
    The New Wear Crossing will be the first bridge to be built over the River Wear in Sunderland, UK, for more than 40 years Raising the bridge’s 100m-tall pylon promised to be a stunning visual sight, but also a tricky operation dictated by extremely variable local weather. World Highways went to press just before the operation, but not before the pylon had arrived by barge on January 7. It had completed a two-day crossing of the often unpredictable North Sea from the Belgian port of Ghent where it was f
  • The bitumen market is changing globally and products is being transported further
    August 21, 2014
    Political and economic changes around the world are impacting on the way bitumen is supplied and used - Kristina Smith reports on the Argus Europe Bitumen conference in Rome, and highlights some of the new technologies being launched to address these changes Attendees at the Argus Europe Bitumen Conference, held in Rome on 11th and 12th June heard how the global bitumen market is changing. More refineries are expected to close in Europe; the US, with its shale oil, is dominating bitumen supply to some re