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I have a friend out on one of the islands in Puget Sound who runs his home on hydrogen. He has a shed-based hydrogen generator that is powered by a small solar array. The scant solar power he can cook up in that rainy environment generates enough hydrogen to power the house year round, day and night at the same capacity any of us draw from the grid. The most expensive part of the project was the install of the tanks, which had to be buried well underground to mitigate the explosion potential (building inspectors had never had to deal with a home hydrogen installation, so they were interpreting the code on the safe side). The only carbon footprint is manufacture of the generator, solar array, and tanks and transport of these items, the cost and environmental impact lifespan of which easily beats fossil fuel grid draw. Scaled down, the tech has great promise though it would be challenging to place in urban settings unless the storage tanks are roof-mounted on buildings and bullet proof.
Better make sure there's no chlorine in that water!
I'll have to ask, but all likelihood says it's well water. It is on a friggin' island.
The idea of using such a system on a railroad locomotive seems a bit far fetched. It would take a lot of hydrogen to haul a modern train the distances that modern trains currently travel. Putting that hydrogen in tank cars (think like auxiliary tenders) makes them susceptible to the crashes that modern freight trains tend to have. And, then, there is "terrorism" to consider: how vulnerable would these trains be to attack, compared to diesel-fueled trains?