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Honda begins operation of stationary fuel cell power station on Torrance campus

Honda began operation of a stationary fuel cell power station on its corporate campus in Torrance, Calif., marking the company's first step toward future commercialization of zero-emission backup power generation. The initiative leverages Honda's hydrogen fuel cell technology expertise and contributes to the company's global goal to achieve carbon neutrality for all products and corporate activities by 2050.

Honda Stationary Fuel Cell

Now fully operational as a demonstration program, Honda’s fuel cell power station supplies clean and quiet emergency backup power to the data center on the campus of American Honda Motor Co., Inc. In the coming years, Honda will begin applying a next-generation stationary fuel cell system to Honda manufacturing facilities and data centers globally, thereby reducing the company’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The demonstration stationary fuel cell unit has a capacity of approximately 500 kW and reuses the fuel cell systems of previously leased Honda Clarity Fuel Cell vehicles, with a design that allows the output to increase every 250 kW packaged with four fuel cells.

It features the flexibility to change the layout of the fuel cell units to suit the installation environment and to accommodate cubic, L-shaped, Z-shaped, and other packaging configurations.

Future stationary FC units intended for commercialization will utilize Honda’s next-generation FC system jointly developed with General Motors and also set to power an all-new fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) based on the Honda CR-V coming in 2024.

Over the last few years, the power requirements of data centers have been growing rapidly due to the expansion of cloud computing and big data utilization, and the need for backup power sources has been increasing from the perspective of business continuity planning (BCP). The Torrance fuel cell station also serves as a proof of concept for future commercialization of the power generation unit.

We believe there’s great promise in hydrogen fuel cells for backup power and offsetting potential peak power events. By installing and utilizing our core technology, the fuel cell system, in various applications such as stationary power generation, Honda aims to stimulate hydrogen usage and provide clean energy for potential commercial customers.
—Koji Moriyama, project lead of the stationary fuel cell and principal engineer with American Honda R&D Business Unit

Last fall, Honda announced that starting in 2024 it will produce an all-new hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) based on the recently launched, all-new Honda CR-V at its Performance Manufacturing Center (PMC) in Marysville, Ohio. The company has been developing hydrogen technologies and fuel cell vehicles for more than 30 years.

In addition to the continued applications to Honda fuel cell electric vehicles and the stationary power generation, Honda recently announced it will proceed with business development in the domains of commercial vehicles and construction equipment, as well.

Stationary Fuel Cell Power Unit Specifications

Output 1 Quad Unit 288kW-DC
2 Quad Unit Combined 576kW-DC
Inverter 600 KVA 265/480V with Transformer
Dimensions POWER PLANT (2x QUADS + ACCESSORIES) L652 cm x W262cm x H255 cm, footprint 17.1 m2
Approx. 21.4ft x 8.6ft x 8.4ft, footprint 184ft2
Quad unit 255 cm X 262cm x253 cm
Approx 8.4ft x 8.6ft x 8.3ft
Mass POWER PLANT (2x QUADS + ACCESSORIES) 7,757kg, 17,101lb
Quad 3,620kg,  7,981lb
Hydrogen Liquid/Gas ISO14687-2 17-35 bar(g)
Cooling External Cooling Tower Heat Rejection:385kW (109ton), Flow rate:930lpm, 480V, 200A(Breaker)
Function Data Acquisition/Remote Monitoring/Over the Air Update Wireless 4G, Onboard SSD
Water Proof NEMA 3
Ventilation IEC62282-3
Safety Monitor Smoke, H2, Temp, Current, Voltage, Isolation Monitor, Cabin Pressure
E-Stop Plant, Cooling Tower, Grid Inverter
Code/Standards NFPA 853, IEC62282, NFPA 55,UL1741 (grid inverter)
Field Evaluated Equipment (Complied with applicable ANSI/UL or NFPA safety standards)

Comments

Davemart

In clean air environments such as data centres since fuel cells take in air to function, they have the potential to reduce fire hazard by controlling the oxygen levels of the air to below that needed for combustion.

It remains perfectly breathable!

However, there doesn't appear to have been much movement in the field for years, I don't know why, perhaps because historic costs of fuel cell power systems have been too high to make them a widespread choice in the field.

Here is a 2013 link, at least explaining how the idea works:

https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2013/07/22/equinix-using-fuel-cell-to-power-frankfurt-data-center

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