| STEP on the
gas! Scotland Yard is to introduce patrol cars fuelled by hydrogen into
its fleet.
The vehicles will run on tanks of
gas stored in their bulletproof boots.
Police chases with roaring engines
beloved of fans of 1970s police television series such as The Sweeney will
become a thing of the past as the new “H-cars” run silently. Their exhausts
will leave nothing more harmful than a trickle of water.
The car is still under development
by Honda but the Metropolitan police plans to take four of the new cars
from a delivery of 70 due to go the Greater London Authority by 2010.
The pioneering move to buy the hydrogen
cars is part of a drive by the Metropolitan force to cut emissions of greenhouse
gases as conflict in the Middle East and volatility in the oil markets
has sent conventional fuel prices soaring at the pumps.
The Met already has 90 cars in its
fleet of 6,000 vehicles which use a hybrid fuel, mixing diesel and vegetable
oil, and it is to take delivery of another 128. It has also experimented
with battery-powered electric cars and others run on liquefied petroleum
gas (LPG) but these have been returned to the manufacturers.
The Honda FCX hydrogen car is a new
development, however. The gas is stored in a secure tank in a boot capable
of withstanding gunfire and crashes.
The gas is fed under electronic control
to a fuel cell where it mixes with oxygen in the air intake to create electricity
and water.
The electricity created runs a drive
unit under the bonnet. The water is piped away as vapour via the exhaust
system.
A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “We
have to wait for the specifications to see what we can do with them. They
may be used as patrol cars where the traffic flow makes sense. Nothing
goes very fast in Trafalgar Square.”
An American motoring writer who drove
a test model said the vehicle felt more like a tram than a car, “smooth
and steady, without the jolt of shifting gears.
“One oddity is a ghostly warble that
intensifies as I speed up, like bad sound effects from a Scooby-Doo cartoon.”
Other manufacturers are working on
their own hydrogen cars. The first to go on active police duty is a DaimlerChrysler
that patrols a university campus in Detroit. BMW, which makes Scotland
Yard’s fast pursuit cars, said it hoped to have a high-performance model
in operation by 2009.
Bruce Reynolds, mastermind of the
1963 Great Train Robbery, bemoaned the passing of the golden age when London
streets were empty enough for car chases.
“I look at these things much the
same as an old soldier might look at campaigns,” he said.
“The hydrogen cars are still being
developed, but obviously the police of today are highly technical and move
with the times. We had the better drivers in my day as a criminal but the
police have always had access to vehicles that are not strictly on the
agenda.”
Roy Ramm, a former head of the Flying
Squad, said: “The Met are looking for low-end rather than high performance
with these new cars. It will mean huge savings.
“Judging by the hot air that comes
out of Scotland Yard these days, they will be able to refuel them themselves.”

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