Might be worth having a look at why hydrogen fuel cells are considered (by those who have actually worked with them), to be a bad deal.
https://cleantechnica.com/2016/06/10/hy ... ll-expert/Yes it is 2016/15 but do you know what has changed since then? Not a hell of a lot.
My own research on the lifetime of fuel cells says that the catalyst in them is platinum. Because it's so ridiculously expensive, they use nanoscale coatings of platinum on top of carbon. It wears out. Worst case 2 years. Yes there is research on using specifically treated graphene, but that is exactly that, research as of late 2021.
It is worth reading the bullet point breakdown on the conceptual pro's and the real con's. Not least of which is very slow acceleration if additional batteries and booster systems are not fitted to assist.
I can see hydrogen being touted for the home heating, but I can't see the logistical reality for it unless it is blue hydrogen (steam reformed methane taken from natural gas and oil products). Hardly a CO2 saver.
So this research which shows what Hydrogen is likely to do to the ozone layer. Just one more downcheck on hydrogen. The only place I can really see it being used is in the grid power generation as a buffer. Store the excess power in Hydrogen and burn it in ccgt when renewables are low. Efficiency is horrible but it is supposed to come from excess power so efficiency is moot.
Time will tell but as the flip flopping of Nikola shows, their BEV articulated truck is being produced first. Mainly because they need to become a hydrogen fuel producer because there isn't enough fuel for their customers.
Happy to discuss why Hydrogen might be the super fuel of the future. But it will have to be a discussion which contains all the real benefits and all the real challenges. Not a bunch of perceptions made up by vehicle manufacturers who just want to sell compliance cars and a dream of some clean hydrogen cars which are never going to happen, along with fossil fuel companies who think they can switch to Hydrogen, sell non existent CCS technologies as a "good" thing and just carry on as usual.
If you thought Battery refuelling was scarce, here is the H2 refuelling map.
https://h2.live/en/Contrast the BEV map.
https://chargemap.com/mapZapMap for the UK gives you a better feel for it. And more detail. But it doesn't do Europe.
https://www.zap-map.com/live/I can see Hydrogen being a stopgap where it doesn't need to go very far or to be introduced into the gas network. But it is a short term vertical integration solution.
I recall my father in law being surprised that we would put in gas central heating for him. He remembered gas technology as old tech that was superseded by the "modern" electricity.
Times change.