The Honda CR-V e:FCEV is a plug-in fuel-cell hybrid nobody asked for

Hydrogen has problems, and this isn’t a solution, but it’s a decent CR-V.

A white Honda CR-V fuel cell hybrid parked next to a static fuel cell generator

Enlarge / We still think hydrogen fuel cells make more sense for static generators like the ones in the background, but Honda decided to make a fuel cell-powered CRV. (credit: Honda)

Hydrogen as a fuel source for light passenger vehicles is a tough sell in the US. It has a woefully underdeveloped refueling infrastructure in the US, being almost nonexistent outside of California, and even there, retail hydrogen stations are closing down. And hydrogen prices fluctuate like crazy, with recent costs hitting $33 per kilogram, when you can even get it. In short, it seems like a weird time for a company to introduce a new hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, but that's just what Honda is doing with its awkwardly named CR-V e:FCEV.

The fuel cell CR-V is unique in a few ways that make it interesting, the biggest of which is that it's effectively a plug-in hybrid, only instead of an internal combustion engine being paired with an electric drivetrain, this has a fuel cell powering a 17.7 kWh battery pack and a traction motor that bears more resemblance to one you'd find in an EV than in a traditional PHEV. Cool, right?

The biggest question that we have is simply why?

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Studie: Der Mars könnte das Klima auf der Erde beeinflussen

Die Gravitationskraft des Mars könnte die starken Meeresströmungen auf der Erde beeinflussen. Andere Forscher sind von dieser Schlussfolgerung nicht überzeugt. Ein Bericht von Patrick Klapetz (Klima, Astronomie)

Die Gravitationskraft des Mars könnte die starken Meeresströmungen auf der Erde beeinflussen. Andere Forscher sind von dieser Schlussfolgerung nicht überzeugt. Ein Bericht von Patrick Klapetz (Klima, Astronomie)

Thomas Stafford, who flew to the Moon and docked with Soyuz, dies at 93

Stafford and his Apollo 10 shipmates still hold the speed record on a crew spacecraft.

Former NASA astronaut Thomas Stafford, a three-star Air Force general known for a historic handshake in space with a Soviet cosmonaut nearly 50 years ago, died Monday in Florida. He was 93.

Stafford was perhaps the most accomplished astronaut of his era who never walked on the Moon. He flew in space four times, helping pilot the first rendezvous with another crewed spacecraft in orbit in 1966 and taking NASA's Apollo lunar landing craft on a final test run before Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin set foot on the Moon in 1969.

By his own account, one of the greatest moments in Stafford's career came in 1975, when he commanded the final Apollo mission—not to the Moon but to low-Earth orbit—and linked up with a Russian Soyuz spacecraft carrying two Soviet cosmonauts. The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) planted the seeds for a decades-long partnership in space between the United States and Russia, culminating in the International Space Station, where US and Russian crews still work together despite a collapse in relations back on Earth.

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Neue Spezifikation vorgestellt: CSA führt Prüfsiegel für sichere IoT-Geräte ein

IoT-Geräte sind häufig schlecht geschützt und werden für kriminelle Aktivitäten missbraucht. Eine neue Spezifikation der CSA soll das Sicherheitsniveau erhöhen. (IoT, Sicherheitslücke)

IoT-Geräte sind häufig schlecht geschützt und werden für kriminelle Aktivitäten missbraucht. Eine neue Spezifikation der CSA soll das Sicherheitsniveau erhöhen. (IoT, Sicherheitslücke)

Daily Telescope: A colorful star trail through the largest window in space

Expect more of this later in 2024 as a veteran astronaut heads back into orbit.

Cities on Earth shine alongside distant stars.

Enlarge / Cities on Earth shine alongside distant stars. (credit: Don Pettit/reddit)

Welcome to the Daily Telescope. There is a little too much darkness in this world and not enough light, a little too much pseudoscience and not enough science. We'll let other publications offer you a daily horoscope. At Ars Technica, we're going to take a different route, finding inspiration from very real images of a universe that is filled with stars and wonder.

Good morning. It's March 19, and today's photo comes from the International Space Station. NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured it during his most recent visit to the orbiting laboratory in 2012.

After sharing the photo online this weekend, Pettit described how he captured this effect:

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