A project aimed at promoting the adoption of hydrogen fuel throughout London's transportation sector and expanding the city's hydrogen fuel infrastructure.
A UK demonstration project that deployed a network of hydrogen refuelling stations to support fuel cell vehicle rollout in London and the South East.
The London Hydrogen Network Expansion (LHNE) project was a UK government-supported initiative to create one of Europe’s first integrated hydrogen refuelling networks for fuel cell electric vehicles around London and the South East of England.[10][4] Led by Air Products with multiple industry and public-sector partners, the project installed new hydrogen refuelling stations and upgraded existing sites to back early fleets of fuel cell cars and vans.[10][1][9] LHNE aimed to prove the technical and commercial viability of hydrogen transport infrastructure, providing learning on station performance, user behaviour and supply logistics to inform wider hydrogen mobility deployment.[10][9] It formed part of a broader set of initiatives including HyFIVE and Hydrogen London to accelerate low‑carbon transport in the UK capital.[7][9]
The London Hydrogen Network Expansion project is an early, high‑profile deployment of hydrogen refuelling infrastructure supporting fuel cell vehicles in London and the South East of England. It provides practical lessons on network design, station operation and user adoption that remain relevant to current hydrogen mobility and infrastructure build‑out efforts.
For the hydrogen and fuel cell industry, LHNE is a foundational case study in developing an urban and corridor‑based hydrogen refuelling network at commercial scale. The project combined public funding with private investment to install multiple stations, integrate them with retail forecourts such as Sainsbury’s, and support early fuel cell vehicle fleets.[10][1] Its experience on siting, permitting, safety, supply modes and customer interface informs today’s policies and business models for scaling hydrogen mobility infrastructure and supports current debates on how quickly cities and regions can transition road transport to low‑carbon hydrogen.[7][9]
Although LHNE itself is a completed demonstration, its infrastructure, operational data and institutional know‑how are likely to continue influencing UK hydrogen mobility over the next 12–24 months as new regional hydrogen hubs and refuelling corridors are planned. Policymakers and developers can draw on LHNE experience to refine station technical specifications, optimise siting with retail partners, and structure blended public‑private funding models for larger networks. As fuel cell vehicle offerings remain limited but heavy‑duty and fleet applications gain traction, lessons from LHNE’s early light‑duty focus may be translated to higher‑throughput station designs and integrated into broader UK hydrogen transport and storage network planning efforts.[4][7][9]
As an early‑stage demonstration network, LHNE faced typical risks around technology maturity (station reliability, compression and dispensing equipment performance), limited fuel cell vehicle uptake, and uncertainty about long‑term policy and funding support for hydrogen mobility. Integration of hydrogen stations into existing retail forecourts also added permitting, safety case and community acceptance risks, while the absence of established commercial demand created challenges for achieving sustainable utilisation and operating economics.[1][10][7]
LHNE operated within the UK’s early 2010s low‑carbon transport policy framework, benefiting from Innovate UK (then Technology Strategy Board) co‑funding for demonstration projects and the Greater London Authority’s Hydrogen London initiative promoting hydrogen for air‑quality and climate goals.[10][7][11] The project had to comply with UK hazardous substances planning rules, pressure systems and fuel standards applicable to gaseous fuels, while also aligning with EU‑level clean transport and alternative fuels infrastructure strategies that encouraged deployment of hydrogen refuelling stations in major urban areas.[9]
Last updated on Jun 12, 2026
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