The Anonymous Widower

Toyota Announce The Hydrogen Hilux

This article on MSN is entitled Toyota Just Revealed The New Hilux And It’s Changed In Every Way, Except One.

This is a paragraph.

First thing’s first: all of this is subject to change, as Toyota has stated. Toyota has issued several worldwide press releases detailing the specifics of the new Hilux, including a Toyota Australia-designed exterior and interior package, an arrival date for the hydrogen FCEV Hilux set for 2028, and sales scheduled in Europe and the U.K. for mid-2026 with diesel hybrid and all-new BEV variants available.

The 2028 date for the hydrogen FCEV Hilux gives Toyota three years to sort out the hydrogen supply.

Who Could Develop A Network Of Filling Stations For Hydrogen-Powered Vehicles?

By 2028, there could be several groups of hydrogen powered vehicles on the market.

  • Toyota’s Hilux FCEV
  • Wrightbus will have launched a hydrogen-powered coach.
  • I suspect that JCB will have launched a hydrogen-powered digger.
  • I also suspect, that at least one hydrogen-powered truck will have been launched in the UK.
  • In an article on electrive, the Wrightbus CEO is pracmatic about hydrogen.

Someone will need to develop a network of hydrogen filling stations.

HiiROC claim they have scaleable technology to create an electrolyser, that can generate hydrogen, where it is needed from any hydrocarbon gas.

  • The HiiROC electrolyser separates the carbon out as carbon black, so HiiROC can be considered zero-carbon, if the carbon black is used or stored.
  • The long range of hydrogen vehicles probably means hydrogen filling stations don’t need to be as numerous as conventional filling stations.
  • HiiROC could probably put one of their Thermal Plasma Electrolysers at any location with a natural gas supply.
  • HiiROC is also well-backed by Centrica and others.

HiiROC is certainly one possibilities, but there may be others.

November 16, 2025 Posted by | Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Data Centre In The Shed Reduces Energy Bills To £40

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

An Essex couple have become the first people in the country to trial a scheme that sees them heat their home using a data centre in their garden shed.

These three introductory paragraphs add some detail.

Terrence and Lesley Bridges have seen their energy bills drop dramatically, from £375 a month down to as low as £40, since they swapped their gas boiler for a HeatHub – a small data centre containing more than 500 computers.

Data centres are banks of computers which carry out digital tasks. As the computers process data, they generate lots of heat, which is captured by oil and then transferred into the Bridges’ hot water system.

Mr Bridges, 76, says keeping his two-bed bungalow near Braintree warm was a necessity as his wife has spinal stenosis and is in “a lot of pain” when it gets colder.

I think this simple idea is absolutely brilliant and very technically sound.

Here are some further thoughts.

It Would Be Ideal For A House Like Mine

My house is a modern three-bedroomed house with a garage and when I asked Google AI how many UK houses had garages, I received this answer.

Approximately 38% of dwellings in England have a garage, according to a 2020 report. While a specific UK-wide figure is not available, extrapolating this percentage to the total number of UK dwellings suggests there are over 10 million houses with garages, though the actual figure may vary across different regions.

Looking at the picture in the BBC article, I feel that this HeatHub could fit in my house.

I would expect that any house with a garage, a small garden or a big enough boiler space could accommodate a HeatHub.

Obviously, the house would need.

  • A boiler, that provides heating and hot water.
  • A good broadband connection.

My house has both.

Would My House’s Heating System Need To Be Modified?

It looks like it’s just a boiler replacement, so I don’t think so, but it may need to be moderbnised with digital controllers to get the best out of the system.

Will There Be Other Systems Like Thermify’s Heat Hub?

Some of our electricity suppliers seem very innovative and the market is very competitive.

Would they just sit back and let coompetitors take their customers? I doubt it!

So I suspect there will be other systems, each with their own features.

I have already, written about heata, which uses similar principles to give affordable hot water in British Gas Partners With heata On Trial To Reuse Waste Heat From Data Processing.

The BBC article gives some examples of data centres used to provide heating, so it is worth reading the full article.

 

 

November 16, 2025 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Computing, Energy | , , , , , | 2 Comments