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Japan government pledges to buy fuel cell vehicles
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JAPAN: April 29, 2002


TOKYO - Japan's government last week pledged to buy eco-friendly fuel cell vehicles from next year in an effort to promote the fledgling technology.


"We decided at today's cabinet meeting that the government would start buying fuel cell vehicles from next year if car companies are able to market them," Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi told a news conference to mark his first year in power.

Fuel cell vehicles, which use hydrogen to create electricity and emit only water, may one day replace the internal combustion engine and major automakers are racing to put the first vehicles on the market by 2003 and 2004.

But with the technology so new, costs for the vehicle are too high for the ordinary consumer and the cars are not expected to go mainstream for a couple of decades.

In Japan, Toyota Motor Corp, the nation's largest automaker and second-ranked Honda Motor Co are leaders in the field.

"This is going to have a huge impact on the world because they are useful in terms of our environmental and energy measures as well as improving our industrial competitiveness," Koizumi said.

While fuel cells promise a pollution-free source of energy using renewable fuels, high costs, a lack of industry consensus on how to transport or store a hydrogen fuel as well as on the development of a hydrogen supply infrastructure, stand in the way.

Japanese automakers are also aggressively promoting gasoline-electric "hybrid" vehicles which combine a battery-powered motor with a gasoline engine, which are expected to fill the gap before fuel cell vehicles come into their own.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE



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