Skip to main content

Hydrogen electric bus hits streets of Moscow

Vehicle can cover a distance of 250km and only needs refuelling once a day 
September 20, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Moscow bus features hydrogen power plants and can carry up to 80 passengers (image credit: Mosgortrans)

The Government of Moscow is to test a hydrogen electric bus on the streets of the Russian capital next year in collaboration with Kamaz and Rusnano.

Maksim Liksutov, deputy mayor of Moscow for Transport, says Moscow is open for cooperation with various organisations that produce zero-emission vehicles.

“So, we have approved a plan for the development and testing of the first Russian hydrogen electric buses–- this is a symbiosis of the already existing Moscow Kamaz electric buses and Runano hydrogen power plants,” Liksutov continues. 

“During the year we are waiting for the first sample of such an electric bus – its manufacturing companies, with the participation of Mosgortans employees, will test it on the territory of the already existing Kamaz assembly plant in Moscow at the Sokolniki Car Building Plant, and after we are convinced of its complete safety, we plan to start testing it on the streets of Moscow.”

The bus will feature hydrogen power plants instead of lithium-titanium batteries and is expected to help low-mobility passengers and those with young children.

Bus operator Mosgortrans says the power reserve of the bus at full charge is more than 250 km and it only needs to be refuelled once a day with hydrogen or ordinary water. 

According to Mosgortrans, the generation of electricity using a hydrogen fuel cell is accompanied only by the release of water vapor and heat, which in winter can be effectively used to heat the interior of the bus.

The bus can carry up to 80 passengers and has space for 33 seats.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Jenoptik red light system earns approval 
    April 23, 2021
    Enforcement solution for signal-controlled junctions is expected to work with all signal heads 
  • UK Government Air Quality Plan – call for funding for FCEVs
    July 27, 2017
    Following the release of the UK Government’s final Air Quality Plan, in which it announced that it will ban all petrol and diesel vehicles (including hybrids) from 2040, ITM Power says this represents an historic first step towards cleaner and greener transport in the UK. However, it is calling on the UK Government to provide equivalent financial support for fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEV) infrastructure as it has already provided for plug-in battery electric vehicle (BEV) infrastructure. The company, wh
  • Moscow planning improvements to city’s ITS system
    March 17, 2016
    Buoyed by the success of its recent ITS introductions, the authorities in Moscow are planning additions to the system as Eugene Gerden discovered. The government of Russia’s capital, Moscow, plans further improvement to the city’s transport systems, partly through the introduction of new ITS technologies and the modernisation of existing systems. At the beginning of 2015 the Moscow government completed the introduction of a new ITS infrastructure in the city, which, according to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin
  • Gridserve unveils 'mass charging' EV forecourt
    December 11, 2020
    Company says it can charge 36 EVs at once, adding 200 miles of range in 20 minutes