Climate Adaptation

Europe Debuts Hydrogen Passenger Trains in Zero-Carbon Push

The trains will ply a regional line between Buxtehude, outside Hamburg, and the beach town of Cuxhaven

An Alstom Coradia iLint hydrogen fuel cell powered train operates in Lower Saxony, on April 20.

Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
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The first hydrogen-powered passenger trains built by Alstom SA are set to debut in Germany and establish a toehold for the technology in Europe.

After a lengthy trial period on a 123-kilometer (76-mile) track in Lower Saxony, Germany, commercial operations will begin next March, according to Carmen Schwabl, managing director at rail operator LNVG. Alstom’s 14 Coradia iLint passenger trains will ply a regional line between Buxtehude, outside Hamburg, and the beach town of Cuxhaven.