Ford Focus Fuel Cell Vehicles Delivered to California
30 car program to gain real world feedback
Press Release
30 car program to gain real world feedback
- Ford Motor Company is handing over the keys to five hybrid Ford Focus Fuel Cell vehicles to the Sacramento Municipal District (SMUD) as part of a five city 30 car program to gain real world feedback on the cars
- The Ford Focus FCV uses hybrid technology that has benefited from the company's experience engineering the Ford Escape Hybrid and Mercury Mariner Hybrid
- Ford is actively engaged in serious development on four fuel technologies – gasoline-electric hybrids, clean diesels, hydrogen-powered internal combustion engines and fuel cells.
Ford Motor Company is handing over the keys to five hybrid Ford Focus Fuel Cell vehicles to the Sacramento Municipal District (SMUD) as part of a five city 30 car program to gain real world feedback on the cars.
The Ford Focus Fuel Cell Vehicle (FCV) represents Ford's commitment to advancing the use and development of alternative fuel technologies. It is one of the industry's first hybridized fuel cell vehicles combining the improved range and performance of hybrid technology with the overall benefits of a fuel cell.
Knowledge gained engineering Ford's Escape Hybrid and Mercury Mariner Hybrids has been shared between the FCV vehicle engineering team and the people working on both Ford gasoline powered hybrids on the road today as well as future gasoline hybrids Ford will sell.
"The engineers who work on the Focus FCV work hand in hand with those developing our gasoline hybrids," said Mary Ann Wright, Director of Sustainable Mobility Technologies and Hybrid Programs for Ford Motor Company. "The knowledge we gain by delivering these cars to
Ford is actively engaged in the development of four promising future alternatives to today’s gasoline engines including, clean diesels, gasoline-electric hybrids, hydrogen internal combustion engines (H2ICE) and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles (FCV).
The Focus FCV is the most sophisticated environmental vehicle Ford has ever developed and its success is an important milestone in Ford's long-term strategy to move toward hydrogen and alternative-fuel powered cars and trucks as viable consumer transportation options.
The Focus FCV looks and drives like other Focus sedans on the road today, but appearances can be deceiving. Although it is designed to look like any other car on the road, under the hood of the Focus FCV is a sophisticated hybrid electric powertrain. Tucked under the floorpan is a hydrogen fuel cell and auxiliary energy system that supplies electricity to the powertrain. And in the trunk is a hydrogen tank that carries the car’s renewable hydrogen fuel.
The Ford Focus FCV uses a fuel cell powertrain supplied by Ballard Power Systems, the world leader in proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell technology. The FCV is hybridized with the addition of a nickel metal–hydride battery pack and a brake-by-wire electro-hydraulic series regenerative braking system. The fuel cell engine converts chemical energy into electric energy using hydrogen fuel and oxygen from air. The electric energy then powers the vehicle's electric drive motor, producing only water vapor and heat as by-products.
This year, Ford is delivering evaluation fleets of Focus FCVs for placement in demonstration programs in the










