An employee assembles a fuel cell system in the module final assembly at Fuel Cell System Manufacturing LLC, GM and Honda's fuel cell joint venture in Brownstown, Michigan.
BROWNSTOWN, Mich. – General Motors and Honda Motor have begun commercial production of hydrogen fuel cell systems in a step toward offering alternative zero-emissions solutions beyond battery-electric vehicles.
The fuel cell systems are produced through a 50-50 joint venture between the automakers at an $85 million facility in suburban Detroit.
The companies, which are marketing and selling products separately, are calling the "large-scale" production at the joint venture the first of its kind in the U.S.
And now we can start to move it into these segments where before it wasn't really feasible," Charlie Freese, executive director of GM's "Hydrotec" fuel cell products, told CNBC during an event at the plant.
Persons:
We're, Charlie Freese
Organizations:
Cell System Manufacturing, GM, –, Motors, Honda, Fuel Cell System, CNBC
Locations:
Brownstown , Michigan, BROWNSTOWN, Mich, Detroit, U.S