BMW to Sell Hydrogen Cars in Partnership With Toyota

Production to Start in 2028
Oliver Zipse and Koji Sato
Oliver Zipse (left), chairman of the board of management of BMW AG, and Koji Sato, president of Toyota Motor Corp., with hydrogen vehicles. (Toyota Europe)

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BMW AG plans to start selling hydrogen-powered vehicles in four years in a bid to establish the technology as an alternative to battery-electric cars.

The German luxury carmaker will develop a new generation of fuel cell powertrains with partner Toyota Motor Corp., it said Sept. 5. Series production will start in 2028, with a hydrogen variant of an existing BMW model available that year.

While BMW has for years pursued the technology, cars with a fuel cell are struggling to take off because of high costs and a lack of fueling infrastructure. There’s also very little choice, with Toyota’s Mirai and Hyundai Motor Co.’s Nexo among the few models available. Global sales of hydrogen cars declined to just 9,000 units last year, according to BloombergNEF.



Proponents of fuel cells point to long driving ranges and argue the technology can prove effective in regions where battery-charging infrastructure isn’t strong enough to support a transition to EVs. They burn hydrogen to produce electricity and emit only water.

BMW and Toyota plan to make hydrogen powertrains together for use in models from both carmakers. They expect that joint development and parts procurement will help drive down costs and make the technology more competitive. BMW declined to comment on prices for its future hydrogen cars.

BMW has operated a small test fleet of hydrogen-powered iX5 sport utility vehicles since 2023. CEO Oliver Zipse has previously said that hydrogen drives might be an option for BMW’s “Neue Klasse” line of EVs due to launch next year.

“We are convinced that hydrogen will play a more important role in the future,” Michael Rath, who heads BMW’s hydrogen-vehicle program, told reporters during a call on Sept. 5.

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