EV News

Fortescue operates giant haul truck on hydrogen fuel cells for first time

Published by
Giles Parkinson

Australian mining giant Fortescue Metals has operated one of its giant haul trucks on hydrogen fuel cells for the first time, as it continues trials of battery electric and hydrogen alternatives in its drive to dump diesel use by the end of the decade.

The company announced on Thursday that it hydrogen-powered haul truck prototype, dubbed “Europa”, operated off hydrogen for the first time.

The truck, developed in collaboration with Liebherr, actually contains a 1.6MWh battery (developed in-house by Fortescue WAE) and 500 kilowatts of fuel cells. The prototype can store over 380 kilograms of liquid hydrogen.

“Following the success of our battery electric haul truck prototype at site, we’re thrilled to now have Europa up and running on hydrogen,” CEO Dino Otranto said in a statement.

“This is a huge achievement for the team and brings us another step closer to having a fleet of zero emissions* trucks at our sites by the end of this decade.

“We’re aiming to transport Europa to our mining operations within the coming weeks where it will undergo further site-based testing and commissioning. The subsequent test results will inform our future fleet of zero emissions trucks that we’re delivering with Liebherr.”

Fortescue says it has already started to take delivery of the first T 264 diesel electric trucks which will be converted to zero emissions technology before the end of the decade.

It has also tested its 240 tonne electric haul truck prototype, dubbed the Road Runner, which has included laps around the testing track, ramp tests and hill starts while fully loaded.

It is also replacing its diesel excavator fleet with electric excavators, which it says are proving to be more efficient. Once completed, it will eliminate the use of 95 million litres of diesel a year.

The excavator is powered via a 6.6kV substation and more than two kilometres of high voltage trailing cable. It is currently powered partly by solar – the nearby 60 MW solar farm at Chichester – but intends it to be powered 100 per cent by renewable power as the company rolls out more solar and battery storage facilities.

 

Recent Posts

Tesla officially launches FSD in Australia, potentially changing transport sector forever

Tesla launches FSD supervised in Australia after years in the making, marking a huge milestone.

18 September 2025

Video: Elroq lands, Firefly sparks, and EV speed records shattered | The Driven Podcast

Škoda Elroq launches in Australia, how will it stack up? Plus, we discuss Nio’s Firefly…

17 September 2025

Zeekr says it receives 2,000 orders for 7X, Australia’s fastest charging SUV

Zeekr says its received over 2,000 orders for its highly anticipated 7X electric SUV, with…

17 September 2025

Dieselgate whistleblower warns VW, BMW and Mercedes risk repeating mistakes in electric shift

Ten years after the start of the Volkswagen emissions scandal, German carmakers still lack a…

17 September 2025

Real-world emissions from plug in hybrids are five times higher than official tests

A new analysis of European plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) has revealed that their real-world…

16 September 2025

Network wins innovation award for vehicle-to-grid technology trials

Essential Energy, the operator of the local electricity network in 95 per cent of regional…

16 September 2025