Canadian Pacific Kansas City railway plans to start rolling out hydrogen-powered locomotives after its first test was a success
“Burning diesel accounts for 92 per cent of our Scope 1 emissions,” Kyle Mulligan, assistant vice-president of CPKC’s operations technology team, said.
He said the decision to try hydrogen instead of electric was made for a practical reason, which is that having fixed recharging stations for locomotives will not allow for smooth operations. Hydrogen, however, can be loaded like diesel fuel into a locomotive from a truck.
“The portability of hydrogen was immediately something of interest,” he said.
Hydrogen was also preferable to electric because recharging a large locomotive would be a time-consuming process and would have required CKPC to build additional infrastructure.
“The refueling time of a hydrogen locomotive is equivalent to a diesel locomotive,” Mulligan said.
In constructing a hydrogen locomotive, he said the company simply converted one of its diesel-powered units, which involved switching out the engine and other power components.
“We drop in these integrated, pre-assembled skids of fuel cells, batteries, power electronics and hydrogen gas cylinders,” he said.
The fuel cell uses hydrogen gas and oxygen, which react with the fuel cell to produce electricity along with water vapour and heat. The locomotive’s onboard batteries also capture energy through regenerative braking, a source of energy that is not captured on a traditional diesel-powered locomotive.
If needed, Mulligan said the fuel cells and batteries can work together when a train needs to climb a large incline.
“For high, high-intense applications, we actually blend the power of the fuel cells and the batteries,” he said.
Mulligan said CPKC made the decision to test its first hydrogen locomotive on one of its routes in British Columbia, running from the coal mines in the southeast of the province to Vancouver, since it would allow it to be tested in a number of different situations that are common across its operations in the Western provinces.
Overall, he said the new locomotive performed well while working alongside diesel-powered machines.
“We were actually pulling our weight within that train as if we were a diesel locomotive,” he said.
Currently, CPKC has only built one hydrogen-powered locomotive. But Mulligan said the company has commissioned the construction of its first production hydrogen locomotive, which is expected to be deployed in B.C. next year, with more expected to follow in the coming years.
“We’ll continue to sort of build those out at one per year,” he said.
Mulligan said CKPC is also planning to roll out lower-horsepower hydrogen locomotives across the Western provinces. Those would be primarily used to move rail cars around terminals as opposed to pulling trains.
“Over the next two years, you’ll start to see a ramp up in those conversions and deployments of those locomotives in Calgary, Edmonton, Lethbridge and Golden,” he said.
Rolling out the new locomotives should create some long-term cost savings for CPKC because they do not require as much maintenance as diesel-powered units. Another plus is that the cost of hydrogen has dropped.
“In four years, the cost of a kilogram of hydrogen for us has lowered by 50 per cent,” he said.
“Thus far, CN has announced the purchase of a battery-electric locomotive and a hybrid locomotive,” the company said in an email.
The company also said its testing of these technologies will increase its knowledge of batteries, which will help develop alternative ways of powering locomotives.
“CN anticipates this initiative will contribute to further developing this key technology while immediately reducing emissions,” the company said.
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