Ah but it is not I who ignore all those things. I am well aware. But I have had to come to terms with some realities.
Whilst pushing people to EV does not remove CO2 unless your grid is totally CO2 neutral to start with, it has certain benefits.
First, EV vehicles are 50%, or more, efficient than fossil burners. So even if you power your EV vehicles with Coal (just about the worst), you emit less CO2 by running an EV on coal powered electric than you do by burning petrol or diesel direct in the vehicle. Also you emit nothing at the point of use so cities become cleaner.
But the next reality is this. When you have a large portion of your vehicles on battery power, switching the grid to clean energy flips every EV vehicle on the road to an immediate clean vehicle. No CO2 emissions at all. So if it takes you 30 years to move to BEV vehicles, then you can pace your grid upgrade to become CO2 neutral in the same 30 years. It's not totally clean on the way, but it is when you get there.
Hydrogen is almost the least efficient way of using your spare renewable energy. It is horrendously profligate in energy to create it then you only get 65% of the power back (on a good day), burning it in your vehicle.
It is all about round trip efficiency.
The round trip efficiency of energy storage in batteries as shown in Table 10.3 is in the range between 70% and 95%, while in the case of a hydrogen system using a 350 bar compressed gas storage, one can expect a round trip efficiency of only 47% [2]. If one allows for the use of heat released during the conversion of hydrogen back to electricity in a fuel cell on site, the overall energy efficiency can be increased to 66% [2].
This is assuming fuel cell plant equipment. Truck hydrogen use is lower than the 47% plant but the Electricity via battery is still in the 70% to 95%.
Can you imagine just how much renewable energy you would need to produce Hydrogen which is only going to net you 47% of the energy you put in?
Believe me I have asked all these questions until the guys who live this stuff are sick of it. Then I chose to educate myself. Quite simply there are few better ways of using energy than creating electricity from renewable sources and pumping it into batteries and taking it back out again in electric motors. It's a sad fact but it is a fact.
As for the rest of it? Gas, restrictions, etc? How do I know? I drive, extensively, across the channel, through Alpine tunnels, in cities with regulations which cover this stuff. I read the signs and look at the restrictions.
The only way Hydrogen is going to be used is if we find a catalyst which allows cracking of hydrogen with minimal energy input and that, today, doesn't exist. Even then, it would have to be frozen, stored, transported, distributed in a whole new network.
I was totally invested in the "we'll never do it on the grid with batteries" and "the range we need is never going to be there with BEV". I was wrong. My specific use case prohibits all but the most expensive EV vehicles. But the other 99.9997% don't have those needs.
Even now, with current technology, if you can afford it, the Tesla Model S Plaid edition has a 500 mile battery and 750,000 mile lifetime before the average battery starts to show appreciable degradation. OK I don't have £90,000 to buy one, but the technology is there, now.
The average daily drive is 20 miles. Personally I don't have 102 years to exceed the appreciable degradation window on that battery.
This is reality. This is now. We need to accept it and stop trying to find solutions which don't exist. They are put out there by companies and people who's interest is in ensuring that people DO NOT transition away from fossil fuels, to battery vehicles, any time soon. Because they'll lose their shirts.
I've had to accept that and I just ignore anything to do with Hydrogen. It is not helped by Nikola who, basically, sold a scam around hydrogen trucks. It was a total Scam and I suspect their founder and ex CEO is going to go to jail. When the SEC gets around to dragging him into court.