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Source: Research and Markets

Global Market for Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles Report 2017: 2015-2020, 2021-2026, and 2027-2032

Dublin, July 12, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Global Market for Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles, 2017" report has been added to Research and Markets' offering.

This is a comprehensive market research report on the global market for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles

Cumulatively, over 22.2 million hydrogen fuel cell vehicles be sold or leased worldwide by 2032. These sales will generate collective revenues upwards of $1.1 trillion for the auto industry by 2032. Information Trends projects that by 2050, hydrogen fuel cell vehicles will become the fastest growing segment of the global automobile market.

With only three major competitors in the market, Toyota generated over 80 percent in sales in 2016. Hyundai had second highest sales, followed by Honda. The market will become more competitive as Mercedes-Benz rollouts out a fuel cell vehicle in the second half of 2017, followed by several other automakers over the next few years.

Current customers of these vehicles include vehicle fleets, government agencies, and early adopters. Until a critical mass of customers is reached in the 2020's, the market will remain confined to early adopters and affluent segments of society.

The following developments point to a bright future for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles:

- Widespread deployments of hydrogen fueling stations in several regions of the world.
- Emergence of public-private partnerships to support these deployments and to drive the uptake of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles
- Serious spending on R&D to drive component costs and fueling infrastructure costs down to make hydrogen fuel cell vehicles cost-competitive with other vehicles.

By 2020, sufficient hydrogen fueling infrastructures will be in place in several regions of the world, giving an initial boost to the market for these vehicles. As fueling infrastructures further expand during the 2020's, hydrogen fuel cell vehicles will begin to garner even greater market acceptance.

Key Topics Covered:

1 Executive Summary

2 Scope of the Report

3 Fuel Cell Technology
3.1 Early Fuel Cells
3.2 Modern-Day Fuel Cells
3.3 Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell
3.4 Platinum as a Catalyst
3.5 Fuel Cells and Batteries
3.6 Durability of Fuel Cell Systems
3.7 Hydrogen Storage

4 Cost Factors
4.1 Cost of Fuel Cells
4.2 Costs of Production and Delivery
4.3 Cost of Platinum Catalyst

5 Fuel Cell Vehicle
5.1 Fuel Cell Vehicles vs. Gasoline-Powered Vehicles
5.2 Fuel Cell Vehicles vs. Battery-Electric Vehicles
5.3 Fuel Cell Vehicles vs. Plug-In Hybrid Vehicles

6 Pros and Cons of Fuel Cell Vehicles
6.1 Pros
6.2 Cons

7 Growth Factors
7.1 Regulatory Requirements
7.2 Availability of Hydrogen
7.3 Single Standard
7.4 Hydrogen Station Costs and Availability
7.5 Government Support

8 Industry Collaboration
8.1 Hydrogen Council
8.2 Toyota and Mazda
8.3 Toyota and BMW
8.4 Renault-Nissan Alliance and AFCC
8.5 Volkswagen and Ballard Power Systems
8.6 Honda Motor Co. and General Motors
8.7 H2USA
8.8 Collaborative Initiatives in Europe
8.8.1 European Union
8.8.2 Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Joint Undertaking
8.8.3 HyTEC Project
8.8.4 HyFive Project
8.8.5 H2ME

9 Asia Pacific: Deployments
9.1 Japan
9.2 South Korea
9.3 China
9.4 Rest of Asia Pacific
9.4.1 Australia
9.4.2 India
9.4.3 Taiwan
9.4.4 Other Asia Pacific Countries

10 EMEA: Deployments
10.1 Nordic Region
10.2 Germany
10.3 The U.K.
10.4 France
10.5 Rest of EMEA

11 Deployments: The Americas
11.1 U.S.
11.1.1 Vehicle Rollouts
11.1.2 Federal Incentives
11.1.3 State Incentives
11.2 Canada
11.3 Rest of The Americas
11.3.1 Brazil
11.3.2 Other Latin American Countries

12 Automaker Strategies
12.1 Toyota
12.1.1 Introduction
12.1.2 Deployments by Brand
12.1.3 Rollouts by Region
12.1.4 Strategic Direction
12.2 Hyundai
12.2.1 Introduction
12.2.2 Deployments by Brand
12.2.3 Rollouts by Region
12.2.4 Strategic Direction
12.3 Honda
12.3.1 Introduction
12.3.2 Deployments by Brand
12.3.3 Rollouts by Regions
12.3.4 Strategic Direction
12.4 Tata Motors
12.4.1 Vehicle Rollouts
12.4.2 Other Initiatives
12.5 Daimler AG (Mercedes-Benz)
12.5.1 Introduction
12.5.2 Initial Rollouts
12.5.3 Commercial Rollout
12.5.4 Other Initiatives
12.5.5 Strategic Direction
12.6 Kia
12.6.1 Introduction
12.6.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.6.3 Strategic Direction
12.7. Volkswagen Group (Audi)
12.7.1 Introduction
12.7.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.7.3 Strategic Direction
12.8. Ford
12.8.1 Introduction
12.8.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.8.3 Next Generation Fuel Cell Vehicle
12.8.4 Strategic Direction
12.9 Nissan
12.9.1 Introduction
12.9.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.9.3 Other Initiatives
12.9.4 Strategic Direction
12.10. Renault
12.10.1 Vehicle Rollouts
12.10.2 Other Initiatives
12.10.3 Strategic Direction
12.11 General Motors
12.11.1 Introduction
12.11.2 Initial Rollouts
12.11.3 Strategic Direction
12.12. BMW
12.12.1 Introduction
12.12.2 Vehicles Rollouts
12.12.3 Next-Generation
12.12.4 Strategic Direction
12.13 Mazda
12.13.1 Introduction
12.13.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.13.3 Strategic Direction
12.14 SAIC
12.14.1 Introduction
12.14.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.14.3 Other Initiatives
12.14.4 Strategic Direction
12.15 Mitsubishi
12.15.1 Introduction
12.15.2 Vehicle Rollouts
12.15.3 Strategic Direction
12.16 Suzuki
12.16.1 Vehicle Rollouts
12.16.2 Other Initiatives
12.16.3 Strategic Direction
12.17 Other Automakers
12.17.1 Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
12.17.2 PSA Peugeot Citroën
12.17.3 Volvo
12.17.4 Mahindra & Mahindra

13 Market Sizing and Forecasts
13.1 Market Size and Market Share
13.2 Revenue Forecast

14 Future of Fuel Cell Vehicles
14.1 Prerequisites to Market Growth
14.2 Adoption Drivers
14.3 Comparative Strengths
14.4 Fuel Cell Vehicles Availability
14.5 Fuel Cell Vehicles Ecosystem
14.6 Availability of Hydrogen Infrastructure
14.7 Role of Fuel Cell Vehicles in Zero-Carbon Mobility

15 Key Findings

16 Recommendations

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/4735k8/global_market_for