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Green bus 'exhaust water' a breakthrough

By Cheng Yu | China Daily | Updated: 2025-06-27 09:08
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A view of a liquid hydrogen plant in Zhangjiagang, Suzhou, Jiangsu province. CHINA DAILY

Drinking "exhaust water "from a city bus wasn't how I imagined starting my week. Yet here I am, in Zhangjiagang, Suzhou, Jiangsu province, holding a small paper cup filled with liquid that just moments ago came out of a bus tailpipe.

My brain is sounding all the alarms it's evolved over millennia — Don't drink this. It's exhaust water. But the moment I take a tentative sip, the only feeling is that it tastes just like water — clean and warm.

This surreal moment — a reporter drinking bus "exhaust water" — isn't part of some science museum exhibit or viral TikTok challenge. The water is from a hydrogen-powered bus running every day in Zhangjiagang.

It's real, and it's one of the clearest metaphors I've encountered for the hydrogen revolution happening in this quiet but determined corner of China. In Zhangjiagang, hydrogen isn't a buzzword. It's an engine of daily life.

Over 220 hydrogen-powered vehicles roam this city's streets — buses, logistics trucks, even port tractors. They've collectively traveled more than 15 million kilometers, displacing over 14,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide. Five hydrogen refueling stations keep them running, offering 3.2 tons of hydrogen per day. Recharging one of these vehicles takes 10 to 15 minutes, and off it goes for another 300 to 500 km — leaving nothing behind but a whisper of water vapor.

Zhangjiagang is emblematic of a broader national strategy. China produces about one-third of global hydrogen output. Though much of it still comes from fossil fuels, green hydrogen made via solar and wind is rapidly gaining traction. The government's plan calls for over 1,000 hydrogen refueling stations before 2030. As of now, China has over 800 — compared to fewer than 100 in the United States and around 250 across Europe.

But Zhangjiagang isn't just a statistic in Beijing's energy policy. It's moving by its own logic, its own industrial DNA. Jiangsu Guofu Hydrogen Energy Equipment Co Ltd has built out an entire supply chain — from storage tanks to liquefaction systems — and now exports to over 20 countries and regions.

A quarter of all hydrogen stations in China use their equipment. They recently debuted China's first civilian-grade 10-ton-per-day hydrogen liquefaction system, breaking a foreign monopoly that had lasted for decades.

And the city's ambitions keep growing. Last year, local officials launched a three-year hydrogen development plan aiming to scale up to 100 companies, 300 hydrogen-fueled vehicles and 10 stations by 2026. Hydrogen port tractors have already entered use. There's even a plan to build oil-hydrogen-electric hybrid fueling stations and a citywide hydrogen data platform to monitor all refueling, usage and emissions reductions in real time.

As a reporter, I've covered technology and new energy stories. But nothing felt quite as personally strange — or quietly hopeful — as drinking water emissions from a bus. In that tiny act, I evinced something bigger: a clean-energy future that doesn't need to be flashy to be revolutionary. It just needs to work — and here in Zhangjiagang, it does.

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