Frage zu den neue Aktien bei Hexagon Purus
Warum auch?
Sollten allerdings weitere Zylinder undicht werden bekommt HP mit Sicherheit die entsprechende mediale Aufmerksamkeit .
HEXcomposits hat jedenfalls heute in Oslo schön performt. +6,89 % oder 28,54 NOK
Erkenne gleiche Naivität wie bei Saga ...
Über das Sagastöckchen darfst Du gern selber springen. Off Topic Ende!
Bleibt cool. Grüße KOR
..denn zumindest bei "Everfuel" scheint das Problem inzwischen schon gelöst zu sein.
"In enger Zusammenarbeit mit unserem Wasserstoffanhängerlieferanten und dessen Ventillieferanten wurde ein Plan für die Umbaukampagne erstellt.
In Woche 34 werden die ersten umgebauten Wasserstoffanhänger ihren Betrieb wieder aufnehmen, beginnend mit der Prags Blvd-Station in Kopenhagen."
(aus dem Everfuel Board)
werden die Aktionäre generell ruhiger :-)!
Spekulationen bringen Unmut, Unsicherheit, Volatilität!
hat sich auch bis heute nicht erholt - trotz zeitnaher Kommunikation und
regelmäßige updates...
HPUR lässt das einfach so laufen...
Ich war in der Automobilindustrie beschäftigt und wenn ich hier aufzählen würde, wie viele Zulieferteile zu Rückrufaktionen geführt haben, würde ich den Rest des Tages nur eine Liste erstellen. Da waren natürlich auch sicherheitsrelevante Bauteile dabei.
Die Suche nach der Fehlerquelle wird durch den Brand erheblich erschwert und somit besteht auch in anderen Fahrzeugen weiterhin ein größeres Sicherheitsrisiko bzw. Unsicherheiten. Der Bereich H2-Zylinder ist bei HPUR kein kleiner Unternehmensbereich und in verschiedenen OEM's (LKW, Busse und andere HeavyDuty Applikationen) werden diverse HPUR Zylinder verbaut.
Das ist eine kleine Konso und sollte nächste Woche mit Schwung über die 2 € gehen
M.M.
https://www.hydrogeninsight.com/transport/...-netherlands/2-1-1490669
Ich rechne mit weiteren Unsicherheiten in den kommenden Tagen | Wochen und kann Beitrag #1018 nur bestätigen.
In the early hours of 18 July, a hydrogen fuel-cell bus operated by Golden Empire Transit (GET) in Bakersfield, California, caught fire as it was being refuelled, and then burned until at that was left was a charred shell.
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Hours later, GET issued a press release stating that: “Explosions were heard and seen from the tanks on the bus that had just been filled.”
At some point this week, that statement was removed from the company website, and today [28 July], GET told Hydrogen Insight it was retracting that statement.
Engulfed in flames | Fuel cell bus in California destroyed as hydrogen tanks explode during refuelling
“We (Golden Empire Transit) retract our earlier public statement regarding “hydrogen tanks exploding” as this is merely speculation,” GET explained. “Explosion-like sounds were heard, but until the investigation is complete the source of the explosion-like sounds cannot be confirmed.”
Hydrogen Insight understands that both the manufacturer of the hydrogen cylinders used on the bus, Norwegian company Hexagon Purus, and the bus maker, Canada’s New Flyer, requested that GET’s statement should be withdrawn, pending an official investigation into what had happened.
Hydrogen Insight published an article this week stating that Hexagon Purus’ Type 4 compressed H2 cylinders had been on the destroyed bus, and were also on Danish supplier Everfuel’s hydrogen trailer, which was found to have leaked in the Netherlands on 10 June.
Everfuel has revealed that the cause of that leak had been a valve on a Hexagon Purus cylinder that had been improperly tightened during assembly by a third party supplier, and the Norwegian company has told Hydrogen Insight that this could not have caused the California incident as the bus used a completely different valve system.
EXCLUSIVE | Hydrogen cylinders that 'exploded' on California bus were same make that leaked in Netherlands
GET CEO Karen King had stated on the original press release: “It is too early to speculate what happened and the Bakersfield Fire Department [BFD] is conducting an investigation.”
Confusion over investigation
But while GET said in its 18 July statement, GET said that the BFD was investigating the incident, the BFD itself told local press it would not conduct an inquiry, as there was no evidence of malicious activity.
And when BFD asked for a copy of a video that captured the fire, in order to help train its personnel, GET refused, arguing that it could not be released until an investigation had been completed.
When asked by local newspaper The Bakersfield Californian who would be carrying out that investigation, a spokeswoman for GET said “multiple agencies”, but declined to name a single one.
So three questions remain:
Why was a press release issued stating that fuel-tank explosions had been “heard and seen” if that was not true?Which agencies are carrying out an investigation into the fire?Why would GET not hand a copy of a video showing the fire to the local fire department?
Hydrogen Insight has sent these questions to GET, but has yet to receive a response.
Several days ago, this publication asked New Flyer if the fire would have any impact on the rest of its hydrogen fuel-cell bus fleet, but we have not yet received a response to that question.
GET has reportedly withdrawn its nine other hydrogen buses from service, telling The Bakersfield Californian that it “could be a while” before its damaged hydrogen fuelling station returns to operation.
ein Glück dass kein Mensch bei diesem Brand zu Schaden gekommen ist.
Auf jeden Fall sehr unschön so kurz aufeinander bei Everfuel und jetzt
der Busbrand Bakersfield, und beide Mal HPUR Produkte mit im Fokus.
Da hilft es nichts, dass bei Everfuel "nur" ein undichtes Ventil / defekter O-Ring die Ursache war.