Skip to main content

Next-gen Toyota Mirai confirmed despite continuing issues with hydrogen tech

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Despite low sales owing to the slow rollout of hydrogen infrastructure, the Toyota Mirai fuel cell car isn’t going away. A next-generation Mirai will bow in 2020, Toyota chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada said at a hydrogen conference in Tokyo, according to Automotive News Europe.

The current-generation Mirai first appeared in 2014, so it’s about time for a new version. The Mirai was the first modern hydrogen fuel cell car intended to be sold in large numbers, but infrastructure hasn’t caught up to Toyota’s ambitious plans. With so few places to fill up with hydrogen, United States sales are currently limited to California. Toyota sold just 1,700 cars in the U.S. last year.

Another issue with the Mirai and other current fuel cell cars is cost. The Mirai starts at $59,455, a steep price for what is, aside from the high-tech fuel cell powertrain, an ordinary Toyota sedan. While it was intended to take hydrogen to the masses, the Mirai is built in a small batch fashion that doesn’t allow it to take advantage of economies of scale. The car is built in the Japanese factory that previously made the Lexus LFA supercar, partly because the factory was equipped to work with carbon fiber. Instead of making body panels for a high-end Lexus, the plant now makes carbon fiber hydrogen tanks for the Mirai.

Toyota does expect the price of fuel cell vehicles to go down. Prices should match hybrid cars within 10 years, Matt Harrison, Toyota’s head of European sales and marketing, told Automotive News Europe earlier this year. But that means price parity won’t be achieved until the third-generation Mirai launches, Harrison said, so the second-generation model launching in 2020 will likely be another costly, low volume vehicle.

Two other automakers currently sell hydrogen cars in the U.S., and they’ve experienced similar problems to Toyota. Honda and Hyundai only sell their fuel cell vehicles in California due to lack of fueling infrastructure elsewhere, and both models carry a significant price premium over controversial internal combustion models or hybrids. That didn’t stop Hyundai from replacing its Tucson Fuel Cell with a new design called the Nexo, though.

Toyota’s interest in hydrogen fuel cells goes way beyond passenger cars. The automaker has deployed a fleet of fuel cell semi-trucks in California, and will use fuel cell buses at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Toyota is also using fuel cells to power a factory, and is even developing a hydrogen lunar rover.

Editors' Recommendations

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Mercedes-Benz G580 first drive: old-school off-roader goes electric
2025 Mercedes-Benz G580 from three quarter view.

American car buyers mostly know Mercedes-Benz as a luxury brand. But for decades, the automaker has also produced the tough, rugged G-Class (also known as the Geländewagen or G-Wagen), an SUV not afraid to get its leather upholstery muddy. And now, this iconic Mercedes is going electric.

The 2025 Mercedes-Benz G580 with EQ Technology — the final name of the SUV previously known as the EQG — isn’t the first electric off-roader. The Rivian R1S and R1T and GMC Hummer EV have proven that electric powertrains and off-roading are a great combination. But the electric G-Wagen is different because it’s based on an internal-combustion model — and a very traditional one at that.

Read more
Honda believes hydrogen semi trucks will make the case for fuel cells
Honda hydrogen fuel-cell semi truck.

Honda remains committed to hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles, but the market for those vehicles remains limited. So Honda is looking at other uses for fuel cells -- including commercial trucks.

To show how that could work, Honda converted a semi truck to fuel-cell power, replacing its diesel engine with three fuel-cell modules. Together, the three modules produce a combined 321 horsepower, and can propel the truck to a top speed of 70 mph. There's enough onboard hydrogen storage capacity for a 400-mile range with a full load, Honda claims.

Read more
Mercedes-Benz G580 vs Rivian R2: Is the much cheaper Rivian actually better?
2025 Mercedes-Benz G580 from three quarter view.

Mercedes-Benz has finally taken the wraps off of the new "Mercedes-Benz G580 with EQ Technology." Yeah, it's a mouthful, but it's basically a new electric G-Wagon. It looks a lot like the G-Wagon you know and love, but with an electric powertrain and a battery. It's not the only electric SUV out there, however, and there are some great ones -- like the Rivian R2.

Both the Mercedes G580 and the Rivian R2 have a lot going for them, but they also approach the electric SUV slightly differently. Is one better than the other? I put the two head-to-head to find out.
Design
The approach that the two vehicles take to design is quite different -- and you might like one better than the other.

Read more