Beijing-based SinoHytec and Pengfei Group have formed a strategic alliance to scale up production and deployment of hydrogen fuel-cell systems for heavy-duty trucks, focusing on a Luliang, Shanxi hub and deployment targets of 100 heavy-duty hydrogen trucks and 250 hydrogen-powered logistics vehicles.
Beijing-based SinoHytec and Pengfei Group have formalised a strategic alliance to scale up production and deployment of hydrogen fuel-cell systems for heavy-duty commercial vehicles in China. In a WeChat statement, the partners said they will combine their in‑house technologies to accelerate R&D and establish facilities in Luliang, Shanxi, aiming to make the city a national hub for hydrogen-powered heavy trucks. The plan foresees large-scale production of high-quality fuel-cell systems alongside coordinated development of hydrogen infrastructure and service ecosystems.
SinoHytec will supply its core fuel-cell technology while Pengfei Group will expand hydrogen refuelling capacity and develop a digital platform to validate the performance and reliability of hydrogen-powered commercial vehicles. The initial phase targets deployment within Pengfei’s own terminal fleet: 100 heavy-duty hydrogen trucks and 250 hydrogen-powered logistics vehicles, with wider rollout dependent on production capacity and refuelling infrastructure. Pengfei already operates a full hydrogen supply chain and an estimated fleet of around 70,000 heavy-duty trucks, underlining the scale of opportunity for hydrogen adoption in the region.
Regional momentum is evident. In late May, three hydrogen-powered trucks completed a 700-kilometre journey from Xiaoyi to Tianjin Port, a milestone for hydrogen freight in the area. Pengfei has secured an order for about 500 hydrogen trucks and plans to deploy at least 1,000 units per year from 2025 through 2028, reflecting a clear ramp-up that aligns with provincial efforts to expand hydrogen mobility on fixed routes. Officials note that fixed-route operations and burgeoning refuelling infrastructure help improve the economics of hydrogen trucks, even as hydrogen production, storage and transport costs remain a challenge.
The technological context supporting the partnership includes SinoHytec’s new M30+ engine. The M30+ is rated at 300 kW, with a peak around 360 kW and up to about 380 kW in extreme conditions. It uses a China-made, fully localised stack and achieves a mass power density above 900 W/kg, with rated efficiency around 52% and peak efficiency over 50%. The unit supports both high-pressure gaseous hydrogen and low-pressure liquid hydrogen via a single injector and employs a wide-temperature fuel-cell stack design to manage cooling up to 95°C.
Shanxi’s broader strategy reinforces the potential scale of this initiative. Coal-rich provinces in Shanxi are investing heavily in hydrogen to diversify energy sources and drive economic growth. Xiaoyi and other localities are building hydrogen production, refuelling stations and R&D facilities with substantial investment, aiming to create an integrated hydrogen industry cluster that supports vehicle deployment across industries. Pengfei’s hydrogen park—linking hydrogen production, vehicle manufacture and refuelling networks—is cited as a major element of the province’s hydrogen ambitions.
Industry observers caution that the economics of hydrogen remain sensitive: production, storage and transport costs are still significant barriers to rapid scaling. Nonetheless, government and industry investment, demonstrated operational pilots, and a defined Luliang hub strategy suggest the gap between technology development and commercial deployment may narrow for heavy-duty transport in northern China. OEMs, fuel-cell suppliers and service providers could benefit from a growing ecosystem that encompasses deployment, maintenance, training and aftermarket supply chains aligned with hydrogen infrastructure rollout.
For aftermarket and service-sector players, the SinoHytec–Pengfei alliance signals potential demand for fuel-cell powertrains, balance-of-plant components, hydrogen storage and refuelling equipment, and related diagnostic and software platforms. As regional pilots mature and scale, workshop networks will likely require hydrogen-specific training, maintenance protocols and spare parts inventories to support an expanding fleet of fuel-cell trucks. While broad commercialisation depends on continued cost reductions and infrastructure expansion, the Luliang hub concept and Pengfei’s near-term deployment plans provide a concrete blueprint for how manufacturing, logistics and energy players might align to accelerate hydrogen adoption in heavy transport.
Source: Noah Wire Services