Title: California Fuel Cell Partnership Emergency Response Guide
1California Fuel Cell Partnership Emergency
Response Guide
- First Annual Safety Summit
- October 4th, 2005
Bill Summers Monterey R. Gardiner
2Todays Presentation
- Introduction
- History
- Present Activities
- Workbook
- Training Video
- Supplemental Materials
- Future Direction
- National Organizations
- Help and Hammer
- Train the Trainer Package
- Summary
3The CaFCP is
CaFCP
Full Members
Associate Members
AC Transit Santa Clara VTA SunLine Transit Air
Products Hydrogenics ISE Corporation Praxair PGE
Proton Energy Systems Ztek ITS UC Davis
4Current fleet and station locations
Today
Davis
- 98 cars and 5 buses
- Up to 300 FCVs by 2007
- 17 refueling stations open
- 14 new stations in 2005
- www.cafcp.org
Richmond
San Francisco
West Sacramento
San Jose
Diamond Bar
Los Angeles
Thousand Palms
Oxnard
LAX
Palms Springs
Torrance (Honda)
Torrance (Toyota)
Chula Vista
Irvine
5N. Cal. fleet and station locations
Today
6History ERG Development
- Participants ERG 1.0
- Participants ERG 2.0
- First Responders Trained
7ERG 1.0
History
- Purpose Provide emergency responders with
critical fuel cell vehicle information in order
to safely extract passengers and secure the
vehicle. - Developed through the cooperation of all eight
auto-manufacturers (DaimlerChrysler, Ford, GM,
Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, Toyota, Volkswagen) - Focused on several fuel storage options
- 5000 PSI Compressed Hydrogen
- Methanol
- Sodium Boro-Hydride
- Outside Input
- California Fire Marshall's office
- Extrication.com
Courtesy of Jesse Schneider (DCX)
8ERG 1.0
History
- Started from Existing Materials Base
- The California Emergency Response Guide for
Electric Vehicles - The California Emergency Response Guide for
Natural Gas Vehicles - Toyota Prius Hybrid ER Guide
- Honda Insight Hybrid ER Guide
- DaimlerChrysler Emergency Response Materials for
Fuel Cell Vehicles LH2, Methanol, CH2 FCVs - Several Levels of Approval Before Release
Courtesy of Jesse Schneider (DCX)
9ERG 2.0 Team Members
History
- Office of the State Fire Marshal
- Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority
- SunLine Transit
- ISE Research
- Volpe Center U.S. DOT
- South Coast Air Quality Management District
- AC Transit
- UTC Fuel Cells
- NREL
- Riverside County Emergency Services
- Ballard Power Systems
- DaimlerChrysler
- Gillig
- CaFCP
- California Air Resources Board
- California Energy Commission
Jennifer Allan (CEC)
10ERG 2.0 (Reorganization)
History
- Essential Information
- How fuel cells work
- Hydrogen information
- How to identify a fuel cell vehicle
- Light Duty Fuel Cell vehicles
- Electrical
- Safety Systems
- Equipment recommendations
- Fuel Cell Transit Buses
- References
- Vehicle Diagrams
11ERG 2.0 (Training Outline)
History
- Brief introduction to fuel cell vehicles (FCV)
- (Why, when, where, and how many during the next
several years) - Hydrogen
- History
- Properties Comparison to gasoline, natural gas,
and propane - Storage options
- 20 min safety video (H2 The Matter of Safety)
- Fuel Cell Vehicles (FCV)
- How does a fuel cell work
- FCV characteristics
- FC bus characteristics
- Low and high voltage systems
- Integrated safety systems for FCVs and Buses
- Emergency Response to FCVs and FC Buses
- ER procedures
- Recommended safety equipment
- What to do during a hydrogen vehicle fire
- Hands on walk around of a FC Vehicle with Auto
manufacturer Engineer available to answer
questions.
12Present ERG Activities
- ERG 3.0 Content
- Format Changes
- Upcoming Meetings and Training
- Material Availability (Website, Stakeholders,
etc.)
13ERG 3.0 (New Content)
Present
- Background Content
- California status
- Station types
- Station components
- Station identification
- Personal protection equipment
- Responding to station accidents
- California Station Cross-Reference List
- Station Diagrams
- Liquid hydrogen
- Electrolyzer
- Steam methane reforming
- Mobile refueler
- Scenario Guide
- Response Checklist
- Hazard Evaluation (Low, Medium, High)
- Update ERG 2.0 content
14ERG 3.0 (Format Changes)
Present
- Change size and layout of diagrams
- Reduce size from 8.5 X 11 to 8.5X 5.5
- Change Information Layout to fit on 1 double
sided page (currently requires 2 pages with title
slide) - Physically separate information
- Tape or spiral bound background information
- Laminated first responder information sheets
- (Key-Ring distribution)
- Cheaper to produce, easier to distribute, more
likely to be used -
15Upcoming Meetings
Present
- Nov. 9th Los Angeles Meet with the Northern and
Southern California Fire Prevention Officers - Meet Ca. OSFMs new Director of Training
- Advertise Train the Trainer Package and Updated
Materials
16Material Availability
Present
- ERG 2.0 without Cutsheets is available on our
website - http//www.cafcp.org/pdfs/ResourceDocs/ERG_11_2004
V2.pdf - Training available to communities with fuel cell
vehicles or hydrogen stations - Requires one of the CaFCP members to request the
training
17Future ERG Activities
- Train the Trainer Package
- Continued Relationship with Auto Manufacturers
and Energy Providers - Coordination with State and National Programs
18Train the Trainer Package
Future
- 10 Minute training video CaFCP training slides
- Workbook (ERG 2.0)
- Supplemental materials
- MSDS (LH2, CHG)
- Fuel cell animations
- Ballard
- UTC
- Softcopy (DVD or CD)
- Hard copy
- Full size color training slides
- Diagrams via key ring to FRs with station or
vehicle in neighborhood
19Working with OEMs and Energy Providers
Future
- Vehicles change rapidly, therefore material must
be tracked and updated systematically - Stationary production and storage technologies
are also changing - Companies developing the technology have
information that can help first responders - There must be sensitivity in distribution
20Material Hand Off
Future
- Goal
- Training and education becomes similar to
alternative fuels and gasoline - Currently working with Hammer, HELP, CaOSFM
- Long term goals include possible certification
and integration with existing FR training
materials (accredited programs)
21Summary
- Cooperation is essential when developing these
materials - Existing materials are available and considerable
work is being done to improve them - Station response guide and format change
- Looking for comments changes, additions,
distribution advice - Continue coordination with national, state, and
local ERs - Training, materials
- Work towards future possibilities for
institutionalization and certification -
22THANK YOU!
- Email mgardiner_at_CaFCP.org
- www.CaFCP.org