Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Red ICE and Blue: The Hunt for a Hydrogen Truck Engine Part 1

At ACT Expo 2024, Bosch and the Southwest Research Institute showcased the industry-wide push to develop hydrogen-fueled heavy truck and industrial engines by the end of the decade.

June 14, 2024
Close-up of an experimental liquid-hydrogen truck engine.

SwRI used a Cummins X15N as the base platform for its hydrogen engine. New, hydrogen-specific engine components are painted blue in order to be readily identified by viewers.

Photo: Jack Roberts

5 min to read


International RH tractor with a liquid-hydrogen engine.

More than 20 major trucking and industrial companies have joined forces to develop an liquid-fuel hydrogen engine by the end of the decade.

Photo: Southwest Research Institute

Hydrogen is one of the most abundant substances in the universe. It is also an incredibly powerful, energy dense fuel. A gallon of hydrogen contains three times the energy content as a gallon of gasoline. That’s why it’s been used as rocket fuel since the earliest days of the Space Age.

Hydrogen is a clean fuel, too. Water is the only by-product of the hydrogen combustion process.

Ad Loading...

At a glance, hydrogen seems like the perfect fuel for a modern, transportation-dependent society threatened by climate change.

But there are significant problems with hydrogen, as well.

It’s a very expensive, and energy-intensive fuel to produce in large quantities. It’s also unsafe. The fuel is so volatile that it can ignite, without a spark, at much lower air temperatures than fossil fuels. It’s also odorless and colorless. When ignited, it burns with an intense blue flame that cannot be seen in daylight.

Ad Loading...

Obviously, those realities also make hydrogen a difficult fuel to store, transport and carry on vehicles.

But those hurdles notwithstanding, there is widespread hope that hydrogen will prove to be the Holy Grail for modern transportation systems. Work is being carried out all over the world now to find ways to make hydrogen safe and reliable to use in everything from container ships, aircraft, passenger cars and – yes – trucks.

And Bosch has taken an early lead in that technology race.

An All-New Energy Economy

At the CES 2024 (formerly the Consumer Electronics Show) Bosch announced that it was working on a liquid-hydrogen internal combustion engine. The German technology company even ventured that it might every well have a prototype engine ready for public viewing at the IAA Truck Show in Hannover, Germany, in the Fall.

At ACT Expo in Las Vegas, on May 22, Bosch engineers gave journalists an overview of their progress. This included a look at an early prototype engine built in collaboration with the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI).

Ad Loading...

Peter Tadros, regional president for power solutions at Bosch began by saying that the company believes that hydrogen fuel can help achieve a “climate neutral state” for transportation in the near future. Which is why Bosch is involved in all stages of this hydrogen value chain.

Tadros said to date, Bosch has already invested $530 million in hydrogen research and development. By 2030, the company expects to have hydrogen internal combustion engines ready for global markets. And it expects revenue streams of around 5 billion euros from hydrogen technologies once they have matured.

These technologies obviously include the hydrogen fuel cell system Bosch developed for Nikola, Tadros added.

But the next step is a hydrogen internal combustion engine. And for that portion of the presentation, Tadros turned things over to Ryan Williams, spark-ignited engine research and development for SwRI.

Williams began by outlining a few of the reasons it has been so difficult to develop hydrogen ICEs. “The first reason is there's simply not enough hydrogen available at scale,” he noted. “Although we think the time is approaching when it is becoming more readily available.”

Ad Loading...

A more pressing issue from an engineering standpoint is developing a robust fuel system that can deal with hydrogen, Williams added. To address this issue, he said that Bosch is working on two parallel development paths. One is a direct-injection fuel system. And the other is a port-injection system.

“We are all in with both of them,” he said. “We believe we have a faster-to-market solution with the port fuel injection system. And we're planning to go into production with some OEM customers within two years with it.”

It’s Still an Engine

Just a few feet away from the Bosch booth on the ACT Expo show floor was the SwRI booth, dominated by an International RH tractor. The truck was covered in corporate logos – much like a NASCAR stock car – with companies actively supporting SwRI’s hydrogen ICE research.

The RH model’s hood was pitched forward, revealing an oddly colored red and blue engine. The powerplant was immediately identifiable as an ICE. Although it did have some unusual-looking components – particularly on the top portion of the engine.

Williams explained that all the red components were exactly the same as on the Cummins X15N CNG engine that SwRI engineers modified to run on hydrogen. For demonstration purposes, all new, hydrogen-specific components on the engine had been colored blue to differentiate them.

Ad Loading...

“You can recognize that this still an engine,” Williams said. “And about 90% of its parts are going to stay the same as if this were a diesel engine. In fact, everything below the head gasket is going to stay the same. We're only adapting the air system and the fuel system of the engine to run on hydrogen.”

That means, Williams explained, that hydrogen engines can use the existing engine manufacturing base and all the human capital that supports them.

“With a hydrogen engine, you’re still going to need a crankshaft specialist, camshaft designer, an expert in engine blocks, and so forth,” he said. “And that extends all the way into production and when products are out in the field. So, if you have a service issue, it’s going to be well understood. Because servicing a hydrogen engine is very much the same as servicing a diesel engine.”

In Red, ICE and Blue: The Hunt for a Hydrogen Truck Engine Part 2, learn the differences between a diesel engine and one powered by hydrogen, as well as some indications as to how they'll perform in real-world fleet operations.

More Fuel Smarts

Illustration of exhaust aftertreatment system on an AI-inspired blue background and a green fuel pump nozzle in the foreground.
Maintenanceby Deborah LockridgeJune 15, 2026

New Agentic Predictive Maintenance Report Demonstrates How Degraded Aftertreatment Systems Waste Fuel

Questar analyzed a large mixed-class fleet and discovered it was wasting as much as $30 in fuel per vehicle, per day, because of mechanically degraded aftertreatment systems.

Read More →
Amazon electric cargo bike on New York City street
Fleet ManagementJune 15, 2026

New York City's Microhub Project is Delivering Results

Trucking, last-mile delivery companies, and environmental advocates like what they are seeing so far with New York's microhub program.

Read More →
Red Kenworth truck pulling Paper Transport trailer
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeJune 2, 2026

Lessons Learned About Alternative Fuels: Start Small, Stay Flexible

Practical advice on adopting alternative fuels and ZEVs from HDT's 2026 Top Green Fleets, from renewable diesel and natural gas to electric trucks.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Composite image of different angles of the Kempower charger
Fuel Smartsby News/Media ReleaseMay 29, 2026

Kempower Adds Flex EV Charger to Help Support Transition to Megawatt Charging

The Kempower Mega Satellite Flex has both a CCS and MCS connector, allowing operators to serve both types of heavy-duty vehicles.

Read More →
White Hino Le electric tractor on show floor
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseMay 26, 2026

Hino Adds Electric Class 6/7 Truck

Hino says the Le Series is an important step in the company's efforts to reduce environmental impact and support its customers’ sustainability goals.

Read More →
Sigma Powertrain BEV transmission.
Fuel Smartsby Jack RobertsMay 26, 2026

Can Multi-Speed EV Transmissions Solve Heavy Trucking’s Biggest Electric-Vehicle Problems?

A startup called Sigma Powertrain believes purpose-built multi-speed gearboxes can boost efficiency, reduce battery size and improve gradeability for heavy-duty battery-electric trucks.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Red Hendrickson e-axle at ACT Expo booth
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseMay 22, 2026

Hendrickson Debuts Electraax E-Axle for Medium-Duty Trucks

Developed with Driventic, Hendrickson's new integrated e-axle is designed to improve efficiency, reduce weight, and extend range in Class 6-7 EV applications.

Read More →
Fueling trucks.
Fuel SmartsCover Storyby Deborah LockridgeMay 18, 2026

50 Ways Fleets Can Cut Fuel Costs Now — Without Buying New Trucks

Fuel savings don’t come from one big change. They come from dozens of small ones. Here’s how leading fleets are stacking gains across drivers, routing, maintenance, and more.

Read More →
Collage of HDT Top Green Fleets with logo
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeMay 18, 2026

Top Green Fleets 2026: How Fleets Are Reducing Emissions in the Real World

What works in sustainable trucking today? Heavy Duty Trucking's Top Green Fleets are finding practical ways to cut fuel use, reduce emissions, and keep freight moving.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Tesla Semi electric truck on display at ACT Expo
Fuel Smartsby News/Media ReleaseMay 13, 2026

California Launching $1 Billion Electric Truck Rebate Program

CARB says the California Clean Fuel Reward program will begin offering point-of-sale rebates of up to $120,000 for electric commercial trucks starting June 26.

Read More →