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03 Nov 2020

Volvo & Daimler Launch Fuel Cell Joint Venture

03 Nov 2020  by electrive.net   

The Volvo Group and Daimler Truck AG have signed the binding agreement to establish the announced joint venture for the development, production and marketing of fuel cell systems ready for series production.

The Volvo Group will acquire 50 per cent of the shares in Daimler Truck Fuel Cell GmbH & Co. KG for the sum of approximately 600 million euros, Daimler stated. The partners expect to complete the transaction in the first half of 2021.

Daimler Trucks and the Volvo Group reached a preliminary, non-binding agreement. They had taken first steps to formalise the cooperation earlier this year as reported. The then newly founded Daimler Truck Fuel Cell GmbH & Co. KG bundles the Group’s fuel cell activities, including the former Mercedes-Benz Fuel Cell GmbH, which developed the drive system for the Mercedes GLC F-Cell passenger car model, among other things.

“For us at Daimler Truck AG and our intended partner, the Volvo Group, the hydrogen-based fuel-cell is a key technology for enabling CO2-neutral transportation in the future,” said Martin Daum, Chairman of the Board of Management of Daimler Truck AG and Member of the Board of Management of Daimler AG. Martin Lundstedt, President and CEO of the Volvo Group, added: “In the future, the world will be powered by a combination of battery-electric and fuel-cell electric vehicles, along with other renewable fuels to some extent. The formation of our fuel-cell joint venture is an important step in shaping a world we want to live in”.

The joint venture will focus on use in heavy-duty trucks, and the systems will also be offered for other applications, but so far, there has been no word on use in passenger cars. “Based on the demanding conditions in heavy-duty truck applications, the joint venture’s products are also ideally suited for other use cases such as stationary power generation,” the communication states.

Specifically, the joint venture intends to develop a system with several performance levels. One of these will be a “dual system with 300 kW continuous output for heavy long-distance trucks”. In about three years, both companies want to test fuel cell trucks in customer use. They plan to start series production in the second half of the decade.

In September, Daimler Trucks presented the GenH2 Truck, the concept vehicle for a fuel cell truck that is to go into customer trials in 2023. Here, too, they cite “the second half of the decade” as the period for series production. The unique feature of the concept vehicle is that the hydrogen will not be stored in gaseous form, but in liquid form at -253 degrees Celsius.

For the Swedish company, the joint venture with Daimler is not the only collaboration on electrified commercial vehicles. The Volvo Group has also entered into another strategic commercial vehicle alliance with Isuzu, which also includes electric vehicles. In addition to a technology partnership, it also sees Isuzu takeover the Volvo subsidiary UD Trucks. This cooperation has a focus on the Asian markets.

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