Anyone who has seriously looked at hydrogen, knows it doesnt work for passenger cars. Its just FUD that seems to be spread by the fossil industry to muddy the waters around EV's. Our hydrogen predominantly comes from cracking natural gas, so great for the fossil fuel industry and isnt really "green" at all. It can be made in other ways, but those cost too much and are even more inefficient.
Maybe they will become a reality? But the cost differences will remain huge. After all, taking electricity and putting it into a battery then driving the wheels will always be cheaper than taking that electricity, turning it into hydrogen, pumping it into a tank, running it thru a fuel cell, charging a battery and then driving the wheels.
A hydrogen car is an EV with more steps, and those steps will ALWAYS cost more, both in manufacturing the car in the first place, and ongoing costs in fuelling.
It may see some use in heavy vehicles, long haul HGV's and the like, but its likely it will remain fairly niche, with the majority of trucks using batteries, simply due to cost.
I dont live in a city, and have put around ~50k on my EV over the last 3 years. Significantly above the average UK mileage, and really its not an issue at all. The problems are mostly imaginary, come from inexperience, or blown out of proportion for a juicy media story. Ofcourse, home charging is a must currently, public charging is too expensive.
There are a few folks on here who seem to regularly do massive mileages, but seem to also forget how unusual what they are doing is? A typical car does less than 10k a year in the UK. Very few people are regularly driving more than 200miles a day. You cant take that niche and say "EV's dont work". They work fine for the vast majority of drivers. Even on a long trip, my car (it has the smaller of the two battery options) has around 180miles range on the motorway. Thats enough for a good 2-3hours of driving, at which point i want to stop, stretch my legs and take a piss anyway. While i do that, the car fills itself back up and its ready to go again for the next leg. Unsurprisingly enough, even driving an ICE car with 300+ miles of range, i'd still stop at the same locations. If i was driving my P38, i'd be scrabbling around every 200miles looking for an LPG station, which are rapidly vanishing!!
Most of the downturn in sales of EV's is because everyones skint, and they are still a little more expensive than fossil cars, and theres constant bad press putting folks off. But theres a lot less in it than some seem to think (seen the price of a petrol golf these days?), and the fuel savings very quickly dwarf the initial purchase cost.
For some figures, 1000miles driven in an EV, charged at home at 7.5p, at 3mi/kwh (fairly inefficent) that costs £25.
1000miles driven in a petrol car at 40mpg (i've never achieved this, but lets make it look better for the ICE) costs £170
Personally i do around double that, so i'm saving around £300 a month in fuel costs alone. That was more than the monthly payment on the first EV i had... I went from driving a 10 year old motor, to driving a new car for "free". If i had already been leasing a new car, then i would have saved loads going EV.
The main problems currently are folks that cannot charge at home due to a lack of driveway etc, and folks regularly doing longer journeys, there are still some areas with patchy coverage of charging, though its expanded massively over the last couple years and will continue to do so. unfortunately for now, that rapid expansion and little competition means high costs.
1994 Range Rover 4.6 HSE - Rough, but has an MOT!
2000 Audi A4 1.8T Quattro - Long term weekend car, 'slightly' modified...
2022 Skoda Enyaq - EV daily driver.