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EAASV Members - Decision-Aid Tools ?& Fast Charging Strategies for EV-Based Evacuations by Ricardo de Castro

 

IEEE-VTS (Vehicular Technology Society) has organized a presentation of interest for EAASV.
IEEE Membership is not needed.
EAASV Members are invited to join us for:

May.19.2025? 11:30am Networking & Light Refreshments;? 12:00 Noon Presentation Start
Maker Nexus??1330 Orleans Dr?Sunnyvale, California 94087

DECISION-AID TOOLS AND FAST CHARGING STRATEGIES FOR EV-BASED EVACUATIONS

Ricardo de Castro - UC Merced

Joint IEEE-VTS &?ASME-SCVS:?

Decision-Aid Tools?& Fast Charging Strategies for EV-Based Evacuations

When:?Monday, May 19, 2025
11:30 AM PT? ?Networking & Light Refreshments;
12:00 Noon PT Presentation


Where:?Maker Nexus, 1330 Orleans Dr., Sunnyvale, CA 95089



Speaker:?Dr Ricardo de Castro. Assistant Professor UC Merced

Abstract:?California is rapidly transitioning to electric vehicles (EVs) as part of its efforts to decarbonize the transportation sector. However, the state is highly vulnerable to extreme weather events, including wildfires, floods, and earthquakes. Between 2017 and 2019, more than one million residents were ordered to evacuate due to wildfires alone. Such large-scale emergencies can disrupt the power grid, causing blackouts that limit EV charging availability. In the worst-case scenario, insufficient charging infrastructure and limited access to power could hinder the safe evacuation of EV users, particularly in situations requiring rapid departure. This highlights the urgent need for robust planning strategies to integrate EVs into emergency response frameworks.

This talk will first introduce decision-aid tools designed to assist communities and government officials in planning EV-based evacuations. Our tool provides recommendations for mobile charging placement, congestion-aware routing, and recharging strategies aimed at minimizing evacuation time. The second part of the presentation will focus on fast EV charging strategies during emergencies. These strategies are designed to reduce charging time while ensuring electro-chemical and thermal safety of battery-based EVs.

Biography:?Ricardo de Castro received his Licenciatura and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Porto, Portugal, in 2006 and 2013, respectively. From 2007 to 2008, he was the co-founder of the startup WeMoveU, focusing on developing powertrain control solutions for lightweight electric vehicles. From 2013 to 2020, he was with the German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of System Dynamics and Control (SR), where he worked on enabling technologies for electric mobility and automated driving. In 2021, he joined the University of California, Merced, as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

His current research focuses on controls and optimization for zero-emission and robotic vehicles. Ricardo holds four patents and has authored over 100 papers in international journals, conferences, and book chapters. He is a recipient of three best paper awards from IEEE and ASME, as well as the Hellman Fellowship Award, which recognizes outstanding early-career faculty within the University of California system.

Ricardo serves as an Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology and IEEE Access. He is also the Vice President for Motor Vehicles at the IEEE Vehicular Technology Society, the founding Chair of the IEEE Automated Vehicles Standards Committee (AVSC), and the General Chair of the 2022 IEEE Vehicle Power and Propulsion Conference (VPPC).



-------------------------------------
T. Kim Parnell, PhD, PE
Fellow, ASME
Life Senior Member, IEEE
Vice-President, Silicon Valley Engineering Council?(SVEC-ca.org)?

Parnell Engineering & Consulting
1150 Kelsey Drive
Sunnyvale, CA 94087
E-mail:?kim.parnell@...
Cell:? ? (408) 203-9443
?
? ? ? ? ? <-- My LinkedIN Profile

--
?
-------------------------------------
T. Kim Parnell, Ph.D.,P.E.?
Fellow, ASME
?
Parnell Engineering and Consulting (PEC)
1150 Kelsey Drive?
Sunnyvale, CA 94087
E-mail:?kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org?
Cell:? ? (408) 203-9443?
?
? ? ? ? ? <-- My LinkedIN Profile


SJEVA meeting Saturday, 5/10/2025 at Reid Hillview airport terminal

 

?
Hello All,
If you are interested in Electric Vehicles, consider attending one of our meetings.
All EVA meetings are free and open to anyone who is interested in Electric Vehicles (EVs).
The meetings are held on the 2nd Saturday of every month.
From 10 A.M. until 12 noon
The meetings are held at the Reid Hillview Airport terminal building.
Located at 2500 Cunningham Ave, San Jose, CA
Directions to the meetings are as follows.
Take Hwy. 101 to Hwy. 680 North, exit & turn right onto Capital Expressway.
Travel on Capital Expressway West for approximately 2 miles;
turn right onto Cunningham. The meeting room is in the terminal at the end of the road.
A typical meeting of the SJEVA is casual and informative. A round table is held after chapter business is
completed. Topics are typically very technical from the folks who are building and driving real world
electric vehicles today. Come attend a free EVA meeting and learn from EVA members who have been
building and driving Electric Vehicles for 50 years.
Eric Klem
Secretary, SJEVA


Re: This Thursday April 24th: Join Gen180 & Consumer Reports EV online meeting

 

Hello,

I made a typo.

The Consumer Reports meeting starts a 10 AM California time on Thursday.

Jerry?

On Tue, Apr 22, 2025 at 6:13?PM Jerry Pohorsky via <jerry.pohorsky=[email protected]> wrote:
Hello,

The Consumer Reports Magazine has become a strong EV supporter.
Not long ago, they named a popular EV as their “car of the year”.

They have been collecting EV reliability data from their members and publishing it in their magazine and buyers guide so that people can make an?informed decision when buying their next car.

Consumer Reports buys their own EVs and does their own independent tests unlike many of the YouTube EV reviewers who receive a demo EV for free from the manufacturer and are a bit biased as a result.

On Thursday April 24th there will be an online meeting with Consumer Reports hosted by the EV advocacy group Generation 180.

No cost to attend, however registration is required.
The time listed is 1 PM eastern which is xxxxxx here in California.

Jerry?

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Shakaya Cooper, Generation180 <shakaya@...>
Date: Tue, Apr 22, 2025 at 8:04?AM
Subject: This Thursday April 24th: Join Gen180 x Consumer Reports
To: <jerry.pohorsky@...>


Header_DarkNavy

EV Talk: Charging, Incentives & Action

Are you an EV owner, advocate, or EV curious? Don’t miss our?virtual ambassador meetup with Generation180 and Consumer Reports this Thursday, April 24th from 1:00–2:00 PM EST! today!

?

Consumer Reports and Generation180 will dive into key findings from the , covering everything from public charging stations to energy efficiency tips, plus the latest on tax credits and savings.

?

Everyone is welcome - invite a friend or family member whose next car could be electric!

Shakaya?Cooper

Electrify Your Life

Senior Program Associate

Header_Navy copy

Generation180

?

/?

Footer_DarkNavy-2


This Thursday April 24th: Join Gen180 & Consumer Reports EV online meeting

 

Hello,

The Consumer Reports Magazine has become a strong EV supporter.
Not long ago, they named a popular EV as their “car of the year”.

They have been collecting EV reliability data from their members and publishing it in their magazine and buyers guide so that people can make an?informed decision when buying their next car.

Consumer Reports buys their own EVs and does their own independent tests unlike many of the YouTube EV reviewers who receive a demo EV for free from the manufacturer and are a bit biased as a result.

On Thursday April 24th there will be an online meeting with Consumer Reports hosted by the EV advocacy group Generation 180.

No cost to attend, however registration is required.
The time listed is 1 PM eastern which is 11 AM here in California.

Jerry?

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Shakaya Cooper, Generation180 <shakaya@...>
Date: Tue, Apr 22, 2025 at 8:04?AM
Subject: This Thursday April 24th: Join Gen180 x Consumer Reports
To: <jerry.pohorsky@...>


Header_DarkNavy

EV Talk: Charging, Incentives & Action

Are you an EV owner, advocate, or EV curious? Don’t miss our?virtual ambassador meetup with Generation180 and Consumer Reports this Thursday, April 24th from 1:00–2:00 PM EST! today!

?

Consumer Reports and Generation180 will dive into key findings from the , covering everything from public charging stations to energy efficiency tips, plus the latest on tax credits and savings.

?

Everyone is welcome - invite a friend or family member whose next car could be electric!

Shakaya?Cooper

Electrify Your Life

Senior Program Associate

Header_Navy copy

Generation180

?

/?

Footer_DarkNavy-2


Happy Earth Day from Blink Charging!

 


Forwarding a message from Blink Charging.? The original company didn’t do well and their chargers were often “on the blink” (not working).

They have new owners now and this message is from them.? Among the things listed below is a story about 6 new EVs that debuted at the New York International Auto Show that will become available in 2025 or 2026. ?

Jerry?


Happy Earth Day from Blink Charging!

Today, we celebrate the power of collective action and the small choices that lead to a healthier planet. Beyond charging stations, Blink is investing in advanced energy solutions, including energy storage, the grid, and Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) technologies. These innovations are critical to long-term growth, profitability, and advancing energy independence and reliability.?By choosing to drive an electric vehicle, you’re making a meaningful impact. This year's Earth Day theme is Our Power, Our Planet”?a reminder that every charge, every mile, and every conscious decision brings us closer to a more sustainable tomorrow.
?
Blink Team in Action
?
As part of our global Earth Day efforts, Blink attended the Bowie Green Expo to connect with our neighbors and share tips on how to reduce waste and boost energy efficiency. Blink employees globally are also stepping away from their desks and participating in local cleanup efforts.?

Want to join us?
Sign up for a community cleanup in your area through organizations like:
  • Cleanup Locator
  • Your local municipality or park service
PlugShare Spotlight

With 33 check-ins and a 10-star review, the spotlight is on a charger in Ocean View, Delaware. Sign up for PlugShare to stay updated on charging stations near you. Don’t miss out — check in when charging with Blink for an enhanced experience.


Britain’s best-selling car has been transformed into an EV and offers drivers a "huge incentive" to switch. Ford hopes Puma Electric will prompt customers to switch and is launching its Power Promise to ease the transition.



Volkswagen announced on Wednesday?it plans to release an electric car for under 25,000 euros, or $27,000, to convert 80% of its brand-new sales in Europe to electric by 2030. The concept vehicle will have a range of 280 miles, or 450 km, and will be released in Europe by 2025 for under 25,000 euros.



Lease deals get all the hype, but most people still want to own the car after they’re done making all those payments on it.

Did You?Know?
Charging your EV during off-peak hours not only saves money—it also supports a more efficient and eco-friendly grid.
?? ??? ?
Charge On!
(888) 998.2546
support@...
??| ?|?
Copyright Blink Charging Co. 2024 All rights reserved.


Happy Earthday !

 

Passing on this positive message regarding the good news about the adoption of EVs and renewable energy from solar and wind.? To see it, click on the link?below.

There is an invitation to subscribe to the Clean Technica substack blog, but if you look closely you can click on the option to skip ahead to the article without subscribing. and you should see a photo of solar panels followed by the blog post.

Jerry?




With SAE J-3277, there's no reason not to test EV batteries

 

I am an SAE Member.
I thought this battery related standard might be interesting.
Anyone familiar with it?
Kim
-------------------------------------
T. Kim Parnell, PhD, PE
Fellow, ASME
Life Senior Member, IEEE
Vice-President, Silicon Valley Engineering Council?(SVEC-ca.org)?

Parnell Engineering & Consulting
1150 Kelsey Drive
Sunnyvale, CA 94087
E-mail:?kim.parnell@...
Cell:? ? (408) 203-9443
?
? ? ? ? ? <-- My?LinkedIN?Profile


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: SAE SmartBrief <sae@...>
Date: Thu, Apr 17, 2025 at 10:45?AM
Subject: With SAE J-3277, there's no reason not to test EV batteries
To: <kim.parnell@...>


Plus: TI debuts lidar, radar chips | Venus Aerospace to use 3D-printed nozzle in engine test
Created for kim.parnell@...?|?
April 17, 2025
Delivering Mobility News & Trends????
ADVERTISEMENT
Need to Know
The SAE J-3277 standard introduces a comprehensive framework for leak testing in electric vehicle battery cells and packs. It enables testing of all battery cells to prevent issues such as electrolyte leakage and water ingress, which can lead to warranty costs and damage to a company's reputation.
Full Story: (4/16)?
???
Sustainable Mobility Solutions
Governors from Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri and South Dakota, along with 16 senators have urged the Environmental Protection Agency to set robust Renewable Fuel Standards starting in 2026. In letters to EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, they emphasized the importance of higher standards for the biofuel industry, citing economic benefits and energy security. "Stakeholders across the fuel value chain ... are unified in asking EPA to set the biomass-based diesel volume for 2026 at 5.25 billion gallons," says Paul Winters of the Clean Fuels Alliance America.
Full Story: (4/16)?
???
  • Smart Cities Dive (4/10)?
  • The Bridge Chronicle (India) (4/16)?
News & Trends
States are increasingly using AI and other technology to enhance road safety as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports nearly 40,000 traffic fatalities in 2024. California is developing a model to analyze and predict accident hotspots, while New York uses computer vision to prevent over-height vehicles from crashing into bridges.
Full Story: (4/14)?
???
Aerospace
Venus Aerospace created a nozzle made of state-of-the-art NASA alloys, GRCop-42 and GRX-810, using laser powder bed fusion and integrated it into its rotating detonation rocket engine for an upcoming ground test. The additive manufacturing process allowed for intricate designs, such as coolant channels and injector orifices, that traditional methods cannot achieve, demonstrating the potential of 3D printing in rocket propulsion.
Full Story: (4/17)?
???
  • AIN Online (4/16)?
  • FreightWaves (4/15)?
Automotive
(TI)
Texas Instruments has unveiled a line of automotive chips to enhance autonomous driving capabilities. The LMH13000 features an 800-picosecond rise time and integrated control signals for real-time decision-making and extended distance measurements. The AWR2944P mmWave radar sensor includes a radar hardware accelerator and automotive clocks using bulk acoustic wave technology.
Full Story: (4/15)?
???
Countdown to AeroTech
???
Heavy Duty / Commercial Vehicle
(Daimler Truck)
Torc Robotics, a subsidiary of Daimler Truck North America, has received an autonomous-ready fleet of Class 8 trucks, based on the fifth-generation Freightliner Cascadia platform. The fleet is designed to achieve SAE Level 4 autonomy, which allows the vehicle to handle all driving tasks within a defined route without human intervention. Torcs will test the trucks along the Laredo-Dallas corridor.
Full Story: (4/17)?
???
Volvo CE recently unveiled the world's first battery-powered articulated dump trucks in the 29- and 39-ton classes, offering diesel-equivalent performance with lower emissions and noise. The A30 and A40 Electric models displayed at Bauma will launch in Europe next year, and they feature fast-charging capabilities, up to seven hours of runtime, and significant lifetime CO? reductions.
Full Story: (4/16)?
???
Smart Cities
(Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
The Downtown Skyport has been unveiled in New York City as a vertiport for electric air taxis, with construction set for later this year. The Federal Aviation Administration is expected to certify electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicles for commercial operations, paving the way for New York City to launch these new services.
Full Story: (4/16)?
???
Cross-Market Collaboration
(DoorDash/Business Wire)
DoorDash has partnered with Coco Robotics to expand robot deliveries to Los Angeles and Chicago, focusing on grocery and convenience orders from DashMart. The robots, which have already completed over 100,000 deliveries, typically operate within a one- to two-mile radius.
Full Story: (4/14)?
???
SAE News
(SAE)
For safety assessment of AI-based systems in automated driving, there is a clear need to capture how well the AI behavior is aligned with the required intentions within its ODD. All the papers bring research focused on the safety assessment of AI robustness, including how the AI responds to a situation that it has not experienced.
???
(SAE)
Working in hybrid-electric powertrain development? has you covered for fast, comprehensive and immersive training across vehicle engineering concepts, theory and applications for HEV, PHEV, EREV and BEV for passenger cars and commercial vehicles. for your five-day course, live online in May.
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When astronauts see Earth from space for the first time, many of them get the sense of why we are fighting. We're all in this together.
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Copyright ? 2025 SmartBrief. All Rights Reserved.
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Full 7th Floor, .

--
?
-------------------------------------
T. Kim Parnell, Ph.D.,P.E.?
Fellow, ASME
?
Parnell Engineering and Consulting (PEC)
1150 Kelsey Drive?
Sunnyvale, CA 94087
E-mail:?kim.parnell@stanfordalumni.org?
Cell:? ? (408) 203-9443?
?
? ? ? ? ? <-- My LinkedIN Profile


Photos and Videos from Cupertino Earth Day event

 

Hello,

Here are some photos and a few videos from our EV display at the Cupertino Earth Day event on Saturday April 5th.? These files are in a folder on my Google Drive.? The folder link is below.

Double click on the file names in the Google Drive folder to view each photo or video.



Jerry Pohorsky
Electric Vehicle Association?
Silicon Valley Chapter President


Re: Clean Technica: BP’s Exit Is Part Of A Broader Collapse In Hydrogen For Transportation Among Majors

 

On Sun, Apr 6, 2025 at 11:04?PM Arthur Keller via <arthur=[email protected]> wrote:



BP’s Exit Is Part Of A Broader Collapse In Hydrogen For Transportation Among Majors


Arthur, thanks very much for posting that solidly fact-based, well written and well reasoned article.

There has never been any real question about whether or not hydrogen can or will become a practical alternative fuel with widespread use in any sort of transportation.? (Use in large rockets is not and never will be "widespread use".)? The only real question has been just how long some people are going to continue to pretend, or in some cases to delude themselves into believing, that the future might hold some sort of magical tech breakthrough which will allow that to be a real possibility.

That's not ever going to happen, due not only to *very* basic, immutable laws of physics (aka thermodynamics), but also due to basic economics.? We would literally have to repeal basic laws of physics for that to happen.? It would be just as easy to invent a working perpetual motion machine, which is prohibited by thermodynamics for exactly the same reasons.

It's a tragedy that some Federal and State (mostly in California) politicians continue to throw tax money away on what remains at best a delusion, and at worst merely Big Oil propaganda attempting to distract from the ever-more-obvious fact that the future of widespread transportation is electric vehicles in an increasing variety of types.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Death to Big Oil!
David Sooby


Clean Technica: BP’s Exit Is Part Of A Broader Collapse In Hydrogen For Transportation Among Majors

 

开云体育




BP’s Exit Is Part Of A Broader Collapse In Hydrogen For Transportation Among Majors

BP quietly??recently, and almost no one noticed. No flashy press release. No somber CEO video explaining a pivot to shareholder value. Just an internal memo, a few reassigned employees, and the slow realization that the company was backing away from its hydrogen transport dreams. This wasn’t a pivot. It was a retreat under cover of darkness.

To anyone still clinging to the idea that hydrogen has a future in transportation, this should be a sobering moment. BP wasn’t exactly a first mover in the??space. It dabbled, announced partnerships, promised 25 hydrogen refueling stations for trucks by 2030, joined the usual suspects in hydrogen corridors and mobility alliances. But when it came time to put real money behind those promises, the enthusiasm ran out faster than a Mirai’s tank on a February morning. The hydrogen mobility team shrank from 30 people to 9 before getting dissolved entirely. The internal quote that surfaced said the quiet part out loud: “We need to revert to the old BP — more oil and gas — and old-fashioned retail — petrol, diesel.” Translation: the hydrogen future is not profitable, not scalable, and no longer interesting.

This isn’t just about BP. Shell has also thrown in the towel, only a little more dramatically. The same company that once plastered its brand across hydrogen stations in California, partnered with Toyota and Honda to evangelize fuel-cell cars, and promised a cleaner mobility future for everyone with a driveway and a desire to be an early adopter, finally read the spreadsheet. In 2023, Shell disbanded its hydrogen light mobility unit. In 2024, it closed all of its hydrogen stations in California. Not mothballed. Not paused. Shut down. Permanently. The official excuse? Supply chain issues and external factors. The real reason? There’s no business model here.

The simple truth is that light-duty hydrogen transportation has always been a fantasy wrapped in a grant application. Fuel cell vehicles are expensive to build, expensive to refuel, and operate in a fueling ecosystem that might charitably be called patchy and more accurately described as “haunted wasteland with one open pump between Los Angeles and San Francisco.” The California experiment, once a shining beacon of hydrogen hype, has become a cautionary tale about what happens when infrastructure precedes demand and demand never materializes. Shell, to its credit, cut its losses.

Chevron is still playing the game, albeit cautiously. It didn’t jump into hydrogen until 2021. Now it’s building out 30 stations in California with Iwatani, a Japanese hydrogen supplier with actual technical chops. Chevron’s strategy is deeply tethered to California’s subsidy machine. The state pays to build the stations, Chevron gets to look innovative without taking on much risk, and everyone plays along as if hydrogen passenger cars are still coming. Spoiler: they’re not.

Chevron’s hydrogen bet isn’t really about cars anyway. Like everyone else, it’s pivoting to the newest niche that still sounds futuristic enough to sell to investors: heavy-duty trucking. The problem, as always, is physics. Battery-electric trucks are already on the road, already hauling freight, and already undercutting hydrogen on operating costs. You don’t need to invent a new fueling infrastructure if you already have a grid and wires. The Tesla Semi, which was once dismissed as vaporware, is now hauling loads across state lines. In contrast, hydrogen trucking is still hosting ribbon-cutting ceremonies for refueling stations and pretending that the economics will work out eventually. They won’t.

TotalEnergies is the last true believer in this space. The French major is aggressively building hydrogen infrastructure in Europe through its joint venture with Air Liquide. They’re planning more than 100 hydrogen stations for trucks, focusing on freight corridors and logistics hubs. On paper, it looks strategic. On the ground, it looks like another overbuilt solution waiting for vehicles that will never roll up. The EU loves to fund these corridor projects, and TotalEnergies loves to cash the checks. But the fundamentals haven’t changed. Hydrogen is still less efficient, more expensive, and harder to scale than battery-electric alternatives.

TotalEnergies also dabbles in maritime shipping fuels, especially ammonia. Ammonia is toxic, corrosive, and carries less energy per unit volume than methanol or diesel. Bunkering it requires specialized infrastructure and additional training for crews. Any spill becomes an emergency. The best case scenario is that ammonia gets used in a handful of niche shipping applications where no other fuel is viable. The worst case is that it becomes another blind alley for capital investment, tied up in subsidies and regulatory loopholes instead of actual demand.

ExxonMobil has taken a different path. It’s not building hydrogen stations, not rolling out trucks, not investing in transport infrastructure at all. Instead, it’s going all-in on hydrogen production. Baytown, Texas, is the site of what Exxon claims will be the world’s largest blue hydrogen facility. Blue hydrogen, for the uninitiated, is just fossil hydrogen with a layer of carbon capture frosting on top. Exxon plans to produce hydrogen at scale for industrial customers, which is reasonable, and maybe someday sell it into synthetic fuel markets. It has a partnership with Porsche for synthetic gasoline. It’s talking about low-carbon aviation fuels. But it’s not touching hydrogen mobility with a ten-foot pole. That, at least, is economically honest.

Equinor followed a similar trajectory. It had grand plans for a hydrogen pipeline from Norway to Germany. Billions in investment, hydrogen-ready gas infrastructure, CCS to clean it up — and then it quietly shelved the whole thing in 2024. Why? Nobody on the other end wanted to buy the hydrogen. Demand wasn’t real. Commitments weren’t signed. The math didn’t work. Now Equinor is focusing on smaller regional hubs and keeping its hydrogen ambitions tied to industrial decarbonization and maybe a little shipping. But it’s not rolling out refueling stations, it’s not buying fuel-cell trucks, and it’s not pretending hydrogen is a transportation fuel for this decade.

When the oil majors start pulling back from hydrogen transport, it’s not because they lack capital. It’s because they’ve finally done the math. Light-duty hydrogen was always dead on arrival. Heavy-duty hydrogen is just the next transportation market that’s going to be crushed by cheap batteries. Shipping and aviation might tolerate hydrogen-derived fuels at the margins, but the economics will never rival direct electrification or drop-in biofuels. The infrastructure costs are astronomical, the energy losses are unacceptable, and the operational complexity is a nightmare. Hydrogen for transport is a distraction, not a solution.

This isn’t a case of market immaturity. It’s not that the technology needs more time. We’ve had hydrogen vehicles on the road for over two decades. The infrastructure has been piloted, the grants have been written, the alliances have been formed. And still, no one wants the product. Hydrogen doesn’t have a scaling problem. It has a fundamental viability problem.

The oil majors aren’t stupid. They know how to read a balance sheet. They’ve played along with the hydrogen narrative because it kept investors happy and politicians off their backs. But now the charade is wearing thin. BP dissolved its hydrogen mobility team and didn’t even bother issuing a press release. Shell shut down its California stations and blamed the supply chain. Chevron is clinging to California subsidies. TotalEnergies is building corridors no one drives. ExxonMobil and Equinor are standing off to the side, producing hydrogen and waiting to see if anyone actually shows up to buy it.

This isn’t strategy. It’s inertia. And it’s slowly giving way to reality. The only rational play left is to stop pretending. Low-carbon hydrogen is absolutely required to displace gray and black hydrogen as an industrial feedstock for refining oil and making ammonia for fertilizers and mining explosives. It might have a role in green steel, although steel majors keep walking away from it because hydrogen didn’t get cheap. But as a transportation fuel? It’s over. The oil majors know it. The smart money knows it. The only people still pretending are the ones with grant deadlines to meet.




SJEVA meeting Saturday, 4/12/2025, at Reid Hillview Airport, 10-12AM

 

Hello All,
If you are interested in Electric Vehicles, consider attending one of our meetings.
All EVA meetings are free and open to anyone who is interested in Electric Vehicles (EVs).
The meetings are held on the 2nd Saturday of every month.
From 10 A.M. until 12 noon
The meetings are held at the Reid Hillview Airport terminal building.
Located at 2500 Cunningham Ave, San Jose, CA
Directions to the meetings are as follows.
Take Hwy. 101 to Hwy. 680 North, exit & turn right onto Capital Expressway.
Travel on Capital Expressway West for approximately 2 miles;
turn right onto Cunningham. The meeting room is in the terminal at the end of the road.
A typical meeting of the SJEVA is casual and informative. A round table is held after chapter business is
completed. Topics are typically very technical from the folks who are building and driving real world
electric vehicles today. Come attend a free EVA meeting and learn from EVA members who have been
building and driving Electric Vehicles for 50 years.
Eric Klem
Secretary, SJEVA


Re: Cupertino Earth and Arbor day Festival

 


Hi Jerry, sorry I just checked my mail. Hope someone got pictures to post on the ev club facebook.?

Thanks,
Joseph R.?

On Friday, April 4, 2025 at 03:56:16 AM PDT, Jerry Pohorsky via groups.io <jerry.pohorsky@...> wrote:


Hi Joseph,

Yes, ?bring your e-bike.

Jerry?

On Tue, Apr 1, 2025 at 2:35?AM j_rajakaruna_77 via <j_rajakaruna_77=[email protected]> wrote:
I can bring my e-bike if there is any extra space??

Joseph Rajakaruna

On Sunday, March 30, 2025 at 11:23:09 AM PDT, gstuckert1@... via <gstuckert1=[email protected]> wrote:

Hi Jerry, sorry I just checked my mail. Hope someone got pictures to post on the ev club facebook.?

Thanks,
Joseph R.

?
?
?


Re: Cupertino Earth and Arbor day Festival

 

Hi Joseph,

Yes, ?bring your e-bike.

Jerry?

On Tue, Apr 1, 2025 at 2:35?AM j_rajakaruna_77 via <j_rajakaruna_77=[email protected]> wrote:
I can bring my e-bike if there is any extra space??

Joseph Rajakaruna

On Sunday, March 30, 2025 at 11:23:09 AM PDT, gstuckert1@... via <gstuckert1=[email protected]> wrote:


?
?
?


Re: Cupertino Earth and Arbor day Festival

 

I can bring my e-bike if there is any extra space??

Joseph Rajakaruna

On Sunday, March 30, 2025 at 11:23:09 AM PDT, gstuckert1@... via groups.io <gstuckert1@...> wrote:


?
?
?

IMG_0653.jpeg


Have room for a few more EV's for the American Veterans Autorama Car Show

 

开云体育

?
?
?
Still need a few more?EV's for the show.? Looking for conversion and older EV's
?
Hello All
?
The Silicon Valley Electric Vehicle Association Chapter has been invited to display some Electric Vehicles at there Autorama Car Show.? We have room for 4 more cars.? We are looking for conversions as well as early production EV's
If you still have one of the cars on the below list and would like to display it at the show, please reply to this e-mail to let me know you are interested.? You will need to leave the car at the show for the 3 day event.? The building will be locked and secured, so no problems. You do not have to be with your car for the whole event.
?
George Stuckert
VP SVEVA
?
Display cars we already have.
?
1.? 1953 Studebaker Champion Conversions
2.? 2000 Rav 4 EV
3.? 2000 Ford Ranger EV
4.? Cobrin Sparrow
5.? 1996 Lotus Elise Conversion
6.? Fiat 500e
?
?
?
?
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Cupertino Earth and Arbor day Festival

 

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Re: As California transitions trains from diesel, questions emerge about use of hydrogen fuel

 

On Tue, 2025-03-25 at 22:14 -0500, David Sooby via groups.io wrote:
On Tue, Mar 25, 2025 at 1:53?PM JoeS. via groups.io <siudzinski=
[email protected]> wrote:


We should not even be thinking of hydrogen as a propulsion system
for our
California trains. Just look at its track record.
Nor hydrogen as a propulsion system for anything other than large
rockets.

It is truly astounding to me that here in 2025, there are *still*
those
proposing and seriously considering using hydrogen as a fuel.? It's
profligately wasteful at all stages of production, transport,
storage, and
use in a vehicle; nearly all of it is made from fossil fuel; and
it's
absurdly expensive when compared to using battery-electric
propulsion.

Talk about beating a dead horse!

I can only assume it is constant propaganda from Big Oil that
*still* has
people talking about hydrogen as if it could ever be a practical or
affordable fuel for cars, trucks, buses, trains, boats, ships,
aircraft, or
any type of vehicle other than a large rocket.


Hydrogen makes high performing rocket engines, but is very hard to
work with, bulky, etc. Perhaps that's a reason more new big rockets
are using Methane as a fuel instead.

And yes, it's the oil industry continuing to push Hydrogen as a red
herring to delay getting us off oil. And most hydrogen comes from
fossil fuels.

Jeff C.


Re: As California transitions trains from diesel, questions emerge about use of hydrogen fuel

 

On Tue, Mar 25, 2025 at 1:53?PM JoeS. via <siudzinski=[email protected]> wrote:

We should not even be thinking of hydrogen as a propulsion system for our California trains. Just look at its track record.

Nor hydrogen as a propulsion system for anything other than large rockets.

It is truly astounding to me that here in 2025, there are *still* those proposing and seriously considering using hydrogen as a fuel.? It's profligately wasteful at all stages of production, transport, storage, and use in a vehicle; nearly all of it is made from fossil fuel; and it's absurdly expensive when compared to using battery-electric propulsion.

Talk about beating a dead horse!

I can only assume it is constant propaganda from Big Oil that *still* has people talking about hydrogen as if it could ever be a practical or affordable fuel for cars, trucks, buses, trains, boats, ships, aircraft, or any type of vehicle other than a large rocket.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Death to Big Oil!
David Sooby


Re: As California transitions trains from diesel, questions emerge about use of hydrogen fuel

 


There is 100+ years experience using electric trains for big and small trains.? It's not a big mystery how they work, or that they can work, or that they can do a good job.

Why should there be any doubt?

Hydrogen has obvious flaws.? I recall a California Fuel Cell Partnership booklet from 15 years ago that in a footnote said that hydrogen uses 2-3x the total energy of an electric vehicle.

The only advantage for hydrogen is possibly the refueling time, but that requires having a fueling system with a high enough pressure.? Fueling the train at each end of a run, or at each station, means there's no need to build electric wires for the whole length of track.? But, the electric system is easy to install and operate.??

+ David Herron


On Tue, Mar 25, 2025 at 8:53?PM JoeS. via <siudzinski=[email protected]> wrote:
Arthur, thank you for this.

The article is quite good in identifying some the issues with hydrogen fuel-cells being used for propulsion.

To further supplement this, articles by Michael Barnard have addressed the issues with hydrogen and its repeated failure in fuel cell busses:





Issues such as overall inefficiency, non-green ultra-pure hydrogen sourcing, hydrogen transport and storage, and maintenance costs higher than diesel counterparts (just to mention a few) should sour anyone in the decision-making process, despite the massive onslaught by fossil-fuel-funded backers.

We should not even be thinking of hydrogen as a propulsion system for our California trains. Just look at its track record.

JoeS.

On Mar 24, 2025, at 16:56, Arthur Keller <arthur@...> wrote:



Re: As California transitions trains from diesel, questions emerge about use of hydrogen fuel

 

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Arthur, thank you for this.

The article is quite good in identifying some the issues with hydrogen fuel-cells being used for propulsion.

To further supplement this, articles by Michael Barnard have addressed the issues with hydrogen and its repeated failure in fuel cell busses:





Issues such as overall inefficiency, non-green ultra-pure hydrogen sourcing, hydrogen transport and storage, and maintenance costs higher than diesel counterparts (just to mention a few) should sour anyone in the decision-making process, despite the massive onslaught by fossil-fuel-funded backers.

We should not even be thinking of hydrogen as a propulsion system for our California trains. Just look at its track record.

JoeS.

On Mar 24, 2025, at 16:56, Arthur Keller <arthur@...> wrote:


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