BMW Manufacturing announced today the successful expansion of the
company’s hydrogen fuel-cell material handling equipment across its 4.0
million square foot production facility. In 2010, BMW completed the
installation of a hydrogen storage and distribution area near the
plant’s Energy Center to power about 100 pieces of fuel
cell material handling equipment. Since that time, the company has more
than doubled its hydrogen-fuel cell fleet to approximately 230 units to
service the entire plant’s production and logistics functions.
“BMW continues to complement its sustainable production model by
adding alternative, efficient technology, said Josef Kerscher, President
of BMW Manufacturing. “Successful implementation, and ultimately
expansion, of our hydrogen fuel cell material handling fleet has
provided a sustainable energy source that exceeds our expectations.”
The additional usage of the hydrogen fuel cell system was executed by
adding two new higher-capacity compressors, new storage tubes and
distribution piping, and eight new hydrogen dispensers. The expanded
system will deliver at least 400kg of Hydrogen per day. BMW estimates
that the expanded system will avoid 4.1 million kw/hours per year, up
from 1.8 million kw hours/year for the initial hydrogen fuel cell
system.
BMW also released a project update to the Landfill Gas-to-Hydrogen
Pilot Project. The first phase of the study, that validated the economic
and technical feasibility, began in July 2011. The project has now
successfully moved to the second phase of methane-to-hydrogen
conversion. The project team, led by South Carolina Research Authority
(SCRA), is implementing and testing equipment that will monitor the
hydrogen purity. To do this, BMW has installed a clean-up system that
takes a stream of landfill gas (post-siloxane removal), removes the
sulfur and trace contaminants and, ultimately, produces hydrogen via a
Steam Methane Reformer (SMR).
“BMW is very pleased with the progress we have been able to achieve
in the last 18 months, said Cleve Beaufort, BMW Group’s Energy Manager
for the U.S. and Canada. “The objective of generating renewable hydrogen
from methane is proving to be a possible option for BMW and will be
transformational for the fuel cell industry.”
Throughout this project, SCRA has been a leading funding and
implementation partner. The U.S. Department of Energy has also provided
both technical and funding support for the project.
The final phase of this project is scheduled to begin in late 2013.
At that time, BMW will conduct side-by-side trials of material handling
equipment fueled by landfill gas derived hydrogen versus commercially
sourced hydrogen.
For their efforts in on-site energy production, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency recently named BMW Manufacturing the
second largest Green Power
Partner. Green Power rankings recognize U.S. businesses and communities
that are making investments in on-site power generation. BMW’s U.S.
plant currently produces 38% of its electrical requirements on-site,
mostly from its landfill gas-to-energy program.
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