Horizon Fuel Cell Group has partnered with Shanghai Wuliu Automotive Technology to integrate 100 of its VL‑III Series hydrogen fuel cell systems into 42‑ton trucks made by Z Truck Automotive. Each vehicle delivers a game‑changing range of over 1,500 km per fill, positioning hydrogen trucks as a real contender in long‑haul logistics.
🔗 Read the full article on FuelCellsWorks
⛰️ Hurdles
- 🔋 High upfront costs & hydrogen pricing: Fuel cell systems and green hydrogen are still pricier than diesel equivalents. 
- 🔧 Infrastructure gap: Refueling networks remain scarce, especially outside established corridors, limiting operational feasibility. 
- ⚙️ Tech integration risk: Ensuring reliability of 1,500 km-range systems under heavy load is challenging, especially in extreme climates. 
🌱 Opportunities
- 🌍 Solves long‑haul range anxiety: Over 1,500 km capacity reduces reliance on slow charging or multiple refuel stops. 
- 📈 Operational efficiency: Quick refueling and lightweight systems lower downtime and boost payload capacity. 
- 🚛 Logistics decarbonisation: Enables clean freight over extended routes—especially in regions where battery trucks can’t compete. 
- 🔄 Tech innovation cycle: With VLS‑IV stacks on the horizon promising 20% better efficiency, hydrogen fuel cells are rapidly scaling. 
🔑 Your Move
- 🔍 Watch fleet deployments: Monitor use by logistics firms in China and expansion into corridors—early data signals adoption trends. 
- ⚙️ Engage infrastructure stakeholders: If you’re in hydrogen fuels or station build-out, this fleet ramp-up is your entry point. 
- 🚛 Fleet operator outreach: Logistics companies running long routes—start evaluating hydrogen trucks for pilot programs. 
- 🧠 Upskill on systems: Learn fuel-cell stack operations, hydrogen storage tech, or logistics integration to stay relevant. 
🦁 Muzaffar’s Comment
“This is the kind of breakthrough that shifts the heavy-haul economy. A 1,500 km range truck isn’t just innovation—it’s industrial transformation. If you’re involved in transport, energy, or infrastructure, this is no longer future talk—it’s happening now.”
🦉 Sameer’s Comment
“Exciting, yes—but I’m asking: what about fuel cell durability and operational costs over time? And can infrastructure scaling keep pace? If these trucks deliver reliably at reasonable cost, they’ll reshape freight—but that’s a big if.”