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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2019 - Q2
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Operator

Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the Ballard Power Systems Q2 2019 Conference Call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions.

[Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Guy McAree, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead..

Guy McAree

Thanks very much and good morning everyone. Welcome to Ballard's second quarter 2019 financial operating results conference call. Today we've got Randy MacEwen, our President and CEO; as well Tony Guglielmin, our Chief Financial Officer on the call.

We're going to be making forward-looking statements that are based on management's current expectations, beliefs and assumptions concerning future events. Actual results could be materially different. Please refer to our most recent annual information form and other public filings for a complete disclaimer and related information.

So today, Randy's going to provide his perspective on the evolving fuel cell marketplace along with an update on the execution of Ballard's growth strategy. Tony will then review the Q2 2019 financial results and then we'll open the call up for question and answer.

Just a brief note that Ballard is going to be meeting with investors to discuss strategic direction and operational highlights at a couple of upcoming conferences; the Gateway Conference in San Francisco on September 4 and 5, and the H.C.

Wainwright 21st Annual Global Investment Conference in New York City on September 9 and 10 And I'll turn the call now over to Randy..

Randy MacEwen

Thanks Guy. And welcome everyone to today's conference call. In my opinion, this is the most exciting time in the history of the hydrogen and fuel cell industry. In parallel with early commercial adoption, we're seeing unprecedented developments and interest globally in fuel cell electric mobility.

The global megatrend towards electrification of mobility is accelerating and putting increased momentum behind fuel cell based power for mode of applications. There are signals, very clear signals that the hydrogen and fuel cell industry is in a defining stage in its evolution and inflection.

As I noted on our last earnings call, the abundance of commercial activities, developments in progress bubbling below the surface has yet to be reflected in our financial results. For the second quarter and first half of 2019, financial results and new contract bookings were consistent with the type of first half of the year we expected.

We delivered Q2 revenue of $23.7 million, gross margin of 23%, and adjusted EBITDA of negative $5 million, while ending Q2 with a sound financial position with cash reserves of $163.7 million. With material growth in our order book and important developments in our sales pipeline, we have a solid setup for the back half of 2019.

As we reiterate our previously stated full year 2019 outlook, we also note our expectations for strong growth in 2020 and beyond to underpin Ballard's continued leadership in powering fuel cell electric vehicles.

I’ve spoken on prior earnings calls about the impact of key global megatrends, including the electrification of mobility on the transportation industry.

Against this backdrop, there's a clear role for fuel cell power in use cases involving extended range, rapid refueling, heavy payload, and route flexibility, including for buses, commercial trucks, rail, and marine.

There is a convergence occurring between government, regulatory, and fuel cell industry development along with parallel and consequential developments from major players in the transportation industry. We've spoken previously on the favorable policy environment for fuel cells in China.

We also flag again the favorable policy environment in Europe, which in my opinion is underpinning large market opportunities for fuel cell technology. As a reminder, in February, the EU passed landmark legislation to place restrictions on trucks' CO2 emissions, setting new limits at a 15% reduction by 2025 and 30% by 2030 for heavy duty trucks.

In 2022, these rules will also be extended to medium duty trucks, buses, and trailers.

We believe that fuel cell technology is well suited for use cases that feature heavy payload, long range and a need for fast refueling, and for use cases that are enabled by centralized depot refueling or fueling corridors consistent with their current operating model.

Notably on June 14, in advance of the G20 Summit in Japan, the International Energy Agency released an influential 203-page report entitled The Future of Hydrogen, in which it states that the hydrogen and fuel cell industry is enjoying unprecedented momentum around the world and could be set on a path to fulfill its longstanding potential as a clean energy source.

The IEA report prioritizes the opportunity to use hydrogen as a fuel for fleet vehicles. We're also seeing developments over the past several quarters with major players in the transportation sectors forming defining partnerships in the fuel cell industry.

These developments are typified by large investments, and they indicate the strategic importance and conviction level that these large players now have on the future value proposition and adoption curve of fuel cell electric vehicles as part of their overall electrification strategies.

Three notable corporate transactions are indicative of the changing fuel cell landscape. The first of these was Weichai Power's landmark strategic partnership and investment in Ballard, which closed in Q4 last year.

We've previously spoken about Weichai's powerful position in the commercial vehicle value chain and the elements of our strategic collaboration including Weichai's 19.9% investment in Ballard and our Weichai-Ballard joint venture in China, and we expect Weichai-Ballard JV to become the leading player for fuel cell stacks and engines in the massive Chinese market for commercial vehicles.

In the second notable transaction in April, Bosch announced to setup a new business unit called Fuel Cell Mobility Solutions that has licensed certain fuel cell technology from power cell to support the commercialization by Bosch of fuel cell systems for automotive applications by 2022.

Bosch estimates that 20% of electric vehicles will be fuel cell powered by 2030. And in the third transaction, this one just announced in June; Cummins, another bluechip player in mobility made an offer to acquire Hydrogenics.

Each of these transactions implies an investment by each of Weichai, Bosch, and Cummins of hundreds of millions of dollars in fuel cell commercialization.

These transactions, each initiated by a heavy hitter in the global transportation value chain are the clearest indication yet, of the positive future for fuel cells underpinned by the trend toward electrification of mobility in a variety of large market applications, including buses, commercial trucks, rail, marine, auto, and forklifts.

Let me now turn to a brief update on the status of Ballard activities in Europe and China, where we had a busy quarter. We'll start with Europe. In June, we announced that Ballard is a founding member of the new H2Bus Consortium, a very exciting step towards large scale deployment of fuel cell-electric buses.

Consortium members including Nel Hydrogen, Everfuel, Wrightbus, Hexagon Composites, and Ryse Energy and of course, Ballard. We're currently jointly working together towards the deployment of 1000 fuel cell electric buses and associated hydrogen infrastructure in European cities by 2023 at commercially competitive rates.

The first 600 buses are supported by a €40 million grant from the CEF program in Europe with 200 buses planned for deployment in each of Denmark, Latvia, and the UK by 2023. The consortium model was designed to offer an attractive total cost of ownership for bus operators.

Sample target pricing includes €375,000 for single decker bus, hydrogen price between €5 and €7 per kilogram, and a bus service price of €30 per kilometer -- €0.30 per kilometer.

Further, in total between, the H2Bus initiative and the JIVE funding program, we expect to see approximately 1,300 fuel cell electric buses operating on Europe's roads in the foreseeable future. This represents a significant leg up in the scaling of fuel cell electric buses in Europe.

During Q2, Ballard also announced receipt of a purchase order from Wrightbus for 20 modules to power buses with two decks and zero emissions that are planned for deployment in London under the JIVE funding program.

These 20 buses will be part of a total of 55 that are planned to service three London routes under JIVE-I, all supporting that city's world's first Ultra-Low Emissions Zone initiative that was launched earlier this year.

Subsequent to the quarter, we received a further purchase order from Wrightbus for additional 15 modules to power buses with two decks and zero emissions in Aberdeen, Scotland. Also under the JIVE program. We expect to ship all 35 modules to Wrightbus later in 2019 with the associated bus deployments expected in London and Aberdeen in 2020.

Also subsequent to the quarter, we received an order from Solaris for 12 FCmove fuel cell modules to power JIVE funded buses in Bolzano, Italy, which we expect to ship in 2020.

This brings the total number of fuel cell modules that we received POs for to date, under the European JIVE program to 92, for buses that will be deployed in Germany, France, the UK and Italy. We have a very strong position in this market.

During Q2 we also announced our collaboration with ABB and other consortium partners in the flagship's project to develop launch a zero emission river push boat to be deployed on the Rhone River in France in 2021. Using two Ballard 200 kilowatt modules that we expect to ship in 2020. The boat will push barges along the river.

This is an important demonstration project. Turning now to China, in Q2, key Chinese government influencers made strong statements regarding aggressive plans for FCEV deployments. Mr. Wong Gong is Vice Chair of China's National Advisory Board for policymaking and also known as China's father of electric vehicles. In a June interview, Mr.

Wong Gong stated about China, we should look into establishing a future hydrogen society. We need to move further towards fuel cells. Mr. Wong Gong's strong support of fuel cell electric vehicle deployment carries a great deal of weight in China. In addition, during Q2, Mr.

Huang Libin, spokesperson for MIIT in China noted that hydrogen fuel cell vehicles will coexist and complement fuel cell electric battery vehicles jointly meeting the people's transportation needs.

China's government also announced the Yancy River Delta hydrogen corridor program during the quarter, a watershed plant for fuel cell and hydrogen deployment. By 2030, phase 3 of this program is planned to include more than 20 hydrogen expressways, connecting key cities in the Yancy River Delta region, including more than 500 refueling stations.

And in just the next three years by 2021, phase one of the program is planned to include the first four hydrogen expressways, connecting at least seven cities and including 40 refueling stations.

Now in terms of current progress in China, as of June there were approximately 3,700 fuel cell electric vehicles in China, about 40% of which are buses and 60% of which are commercial trucks. Ballard technology is inside roughly two-thirds of these vehicles.

In addition, there are now 31 hydrogen fueling stations in the service with 36 more under construction.

To this point, heavy duty motor vehicles with Ballard technology inside both buses and trucks have almost 11 million kilometers of on road experience in China, and about 25 million kilometers worldwide, an unparalleled track record of field experience in the fuel cell industry.

In addition, some of the buses in the TFL London fleet have operated for industry leading 35,000 hours of revenue service with a major stack maintenance requirements, demonstrating the high reliability and durability built into Ballard products.

To finalize, while we continue to focus on exciting growth opportunities, and delivering on our customer promises, we also continue make good progress at Ballard on innovation, continuous improvement and relentless product cost reduction. We're also managing our controllables.

We continue to invest in EH&S, talent, research, technology, next generation products, supply chain management, production improvements, quality processes, advanced manufacturing and after sales customer service support. We also continue to prudently manage our cost structure, our CapEx spend, and our working capital.

We believe our strategic plan, anchored by a vision to deliver fuel cell power for a sustainable planet will drive significant shareholder value. And with that, I'll turn the floor over to Tony to briefly review the financials..

Tony Guglielmin

Thanks, Randy. And good morning everyone. Top line revenue in Q2 was $23.7 million down 11% year-over-year, with power products revenue down 44% and technology solutions revenue up 61%.

Within power products, heavy duty motive was down 52% or $6.8 million due primarily to a year-over-year decline in MEA product shipments to the synergy Ballard joint venture in China. Portable power UAV also declined $2.2 million, reflecting the disposition of the Protonex power manager assets in Q4 last year.

These reductions were partially offset by an increase of $1.1 million in material handling with backup power essentially flat at $400,000.

And within power products, you will recall that we had removed all MEA take or pay purchase commitments from the Synergy-Ballard JV from the order book in 12 month order backlog, pardon me, in the 12 month order book in 2018. We also indicated at that time, we were in discussions with the Synergy-Ballard JV with regard to future opportunities.

And we made excellent progress on these discussions and subsequent to Q2, we did sign an amended stack assembly license and MEA long-term supply agreement with the Synergy-Ballard joint venture. The MEA supply agreement also includes $8 million in MEAs to be delivered this year, of which we recognized $1.1 million in Q2.

Moving to technology solutions. The increase in revenue to $13.8 million in Q2 was due primarily to increased revenue from the Weichai-Ballard JV Technology Solutions program, which more than offset relatively minor declines in other projects.

Gross Margin for the quarter was 23%, a decline of 13 points from Q2 last year, although an improvement from 14% in Q1. The year-over-year decline resulted from the decrease in the high-margin revenue from the MEA shipments to China as well as the lower revenues related to the disposition of the power manager assets.

For the balance of the year, we expect ongoing improvements in gross margin in the second half compared to the first half of the year as the Weichai-Ballard JV program continues ramping up along with increases in product shipments that will positively impact overhead absorption.

Cash operating costs were down 20% in Q2 to $8.4 million, due primarily to lower product development cost as we transition resources to the Weichai-Ballard JV program along with other minor cost reduction in other areas. Adjusted EBITDA in Q2 was negative $5 million, a decline of $4.2 million compared to the same quarter last year.

Adjusted EBITDA in Q2 included Ballard share of losses in our joint venture investments in China of $2.9 million, largely related to our 49% investment in the Weichai-Ballard JV as it continue to establish operations. Net loss and adjusted net loss in Q2 were $7 million compared to net loss and adjusted net loss of $4.3 million in Q2 last year.

And earnings per share and adjusted earnings per share were negative $0.03 in Q2 compared to negative $0.02 in Q2 2018. Both net loss and earnings per share included the same $2.9 million loss in our JV investments in China.

Cash provided by operating activities was positive $1.7 million in Q2 consisting of working capital inflows of $2.8 million, partially offset by cash operating losses of $1.1 million.

In terms of liquidity we ended Q2 with cash reserves of $163.7 million a 365% increase from the same time in 2018 and down just $1.3 million compared to the end of the prior quarter. Finally, we ended Q2 with an order backlog of $211.6 million, an increase of $23.2 million from the end of Q1.

And our order book for deliveries in the following 12 month period stood at $126.7 million, up 66% or $50.7 million from the end of Q1.

Importantly both the order backlog and order book do not include any expected orders under the H2Bus program in Europe that Randy discussed earlier or orders from Wrightbus and Solaris for 27 modules to power buses in Europe announced after the end of Q2. So with that, let me turn the call back over to the operator for questions. .

Operator

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions]. The first question comes from Rob Brown with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead. .

Rob Brown

Good morning..

Randy MacEwen

Good morning, Rob..

Tony Guglielmin

Good morning, Rob..

Rob Brown

First on the Synergy deal, it sounds like that's come back nicely, is that indicative of the Chinese market ramping back and maybe what's sort of your expectations now on that business into 2020?.

Randy MacEwen

Thanks for the question, Rob indeed. I would say it's representative of the new parties that are coming to the China hydrogen fuel cell industry because what's happening there is, there’s a new investor that has announced, I think it's about RMB180 million to RMB200 million financing into synergy.

That company is called Meijin Energy which is a very large coal producer in China. They see lots of opportunity for coal gasification to hydrogen, and the use of the hydrogen in the near term.

They are investing heavily in renewable energy to hydrogen in the future and also have made an acquisition of Feishi Bus in Guangdong Province as well, which is one of the leaders in my opinion at this point in hydrogen fuel cell bus deployments.

So they are making a number of investments in the hydrogen and fuel cell industry, and this investment in the joint venture is effectively -- or actually in Synergy is effectively to support the future funding of the JV. They view the stack as many do in the industry as a key part of the value chain and wanted to make sure they had exposure to this.

So that financing is expected to close in the very near term, and I think it positions Synergy and the Synergy-Ballard JV very strongly going forward. We did ship some MEAs actually in Q2 to the JV.

We have a new $8 million purchase order for which we expect going forward, we expect to see some additional deliveries in 2019, so that's, frankly -- wasn't something we had expected earlier in the year just given the level of uncertainty, but we'll have to wait, of course, to see this financing close.

But I'm very excited about these developments at Synergy bringing in such a strong player. And I've had the opportunity to meet the top executives, including the CEO of Meijin Energy. I'm very impressed with their commitment in the hydrogen fuel cell industry. So I think you have got it right.

It's an indication of the level of interest as well as the quality of the counterparties continue to step up, including in China..

Rob Brown

Okay, thank you.

And then in general, I guess moving to the European market, the JIVE program has been no shipments, but what’s sort of your view on the European bus market opportunity? What sort of penetration rate do you see that that can get to and how does that play out? Is it more programs like JIVE or is it switching to a traditional kind of supply model?.

Randy MacEwen

Yes. So we've seen a really significant cost reduction in the offering for fuel cell electric buses in the European market. And so this consortium, where we're looking at offering a single deck bus, through Wrightbus of €375,000, green hydrogen delivered at €5 to €7 per kilogram, and a service cost of €0.30 cents per kilometer driven.

This represents a compelling total cost of ownership that in my mind is, if not at par, probably better than best in class pricing for battery electric buses, of course, with superior performance, though for fuel cell electric buses.

And if you contrast the cost of fuel cell electric buses two or three years ago, where maybe the cost of a bus was more in the range of €650,000 and say five years ago, closer to €1 million, the cost reduction this represents is fairly significant.

I think what you're going to see is there will be some continued support in the very near term in terms of deployments.

This 1,000 fuel cell bus program obviously has some support from the CEF fund and we're very appreciative of that, but we are moving to a model where even at volumes that I would consider relatively small, i.e.1,000, we are able to offer as a consortium leaning forward together on costs, a compelling value proposition to transit operators and transit authorities.

So, I think we'll see a much higher penetration as we move to 2023, 2025 and obviously, through 2030. And I think the two options for zero emission buses, and of course a number of European cities are clamoring for zero emission buses. We can see very high adoption of zero emission buses occurring.

I personally believe we're going to have very high penetration for fuel cell buses, you know, in the 2025 time frame, I expect it to be circa 25% in key cities..

Rob Brown

Great. Thank you for that overview.

And then as we move into the pipeline of new opportunities, how can you characterize that and how does that sort of turn into the order book over the next 18 months?.

Tony Guglielmin

Rob, it's Tony here. So you can just, we don't of course disclose our total pipeline dollars. We've discussed the backlog, which is quite significant.

But as we mentioned, in the next 12 months, we have about $126 million to deliver; you think about, maybe about as we said we've kind of confirmed our outlook for the year, so maybe about half of that for this year and the next year.

And then, in addition to the backlog that we have beyond the order book, we see a fair bit of that converting next year. We have -- some of that, of course, is the Weichai-Ballard JV. So we do see a fairly high conversion rate going into 2020.

But beyond that, more into the pipeline, we do have a very significant pipeline of opportunities that we do see moving into the backlog through the balance of this year and into the next year.

We will certainly have more to talk about probably in Q3 and certainly as we go into next year, but very high conversion rate, we would expect to see going into the latter part of the year..

Randy MacEwen

Yes, Rob. I just to add to that the pipeline, Tony obviously has characterized the order book and backlog, but the pipeline, in my mind is very attractive from a number of ways. Obviously, we're seeing growth in the pipeline tickling key markets. But there's a lot of diversification developing.

So we see contribution of the pipeline, not just from bus, but now a lot of activity on the commercial truck side, much more activity on the rail side, much more activity on marine, even say six months ago. So these medium and heavy duty markets, were seeing a lot of activity.

We do expect to see some conversion, potentially in the auto space from pipeline to order book. And I think forklift is another market, we expect to see over the next 12 months, some significant developments that will migrate from pipeline into order book.

So I'm pretty excited about the quality of the opportunities with the pipeline, I'm excited about the conversion rate that we're seeing. And excited about the diversification in terms of the market applications, as well as a geographic market, diversification in China. We're seeing lots of opportunity for the JV there as well. .

Rob Brown

Great. Thank you for that overview. I'll turn it over..

Operator

The next question comes from Amit Dayal with H.C. Wainwright..

Amit Dayal

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Randy, for you, maybe to begin with you. You indicated there's a lot of global activities and a lot of the surface happening right now.

What signals or what solid development should we be looking for to see how this is all progressing? And then when should some of this activity reflecting your financials, is this a 2, 3-year period or is it a little sooner than that? Any color on that would be helpful..

Randy MacEwen

Yes. Amit, good morning, and thanks for the question. So there's a lot of activity occurring in different parts of the value chain and indeed in different market applications as well. I did highlight three corporate transactions that we think are indicative of the conviction level that a number of the strategic now have in fuel cell.

That's three of many companies, there are a lot of other companies looking for collaboration opportunities. Whether it's in commercial truck, whether it's in pass car, whether it's in forklift, there's just a number of players that now are seeing the opportunity for hydrogen fuel cells.

In a way frankly, I didn't -- I don't think they saw 12 and 24 months ago. It will take some time for some of these to percolate through from discussions to collaboration to ensuring we have the right product offering to getting into programs and deployment.

So in terms of impact, there may be some modest impact earlier than you're highlighting, but I think 2023, forward, we will see a very steep growth curve in the industry and we think Ballard is at the center of this. .

Amit Dayal

Understood. Thank you for that. And then in relation to the H2Bus opportunity up 1,000 buses.

How should we view Ballard's sort of opportunity set here? Are you potentially going to participate in all of these 1,000 buses or a portion of these? How will that play out indeed?.

Randy MacEwen

Yeah. So just to be clear, the consortium has come together for the deployment of 1,000 fuel cell electric buses in Europe. 600 of them already have secured funding, we expect 200 of them to be deployed in Latvia, 200 in the UK, and 200 in Denmark of course, where we have our European head office as well.

So we see 600 of those, as moving forward, all of them, this 600, plus all of the additional 400. And there's lots of work going on to identify these cities and countries for those additional 400. We expect all 1,000 of those to have Ballard fuel cell engines inside.

And the way the consortium was structured was that the pricing and the lean forward together, the consortium members was based on, again, what I'd characterize is relatively modest volume. So we're very excited about this development. It took a lot of work for the consortium to come together and approach cities and countries for these deployments.

So we're very pleased with how this consortium has come together. We've got some great partners there and a very powerful opportunity that will showcase again Ballard's leading fuel cell engines for bus applications and pretty significant scaling compared to where Europe has been historically. .

Amit Dayal

Understood. Thank you for that. With respect to Weichai-Ballard plant.

Any changes to the timeline or are you still expecting commissioning in early 2020?.

Randy MacEwen

Yeah, you've hit it correct. So we made excellent progress in the second quarter and in fact year-to-date. We continue to ramp up on staffing, a lot of staffing that's occurred in the first half of the year. Facility construction is underway. I'm getting daily pictures from China some visits when I'm there as well.

A lot of the -- all of the long lead production equipment has been procured and is under manufacturer construction at the supply base. The product development and technology transfer program is going very well ahead of plan. There are some sensitivities from Weichai in terms of making announcements on when certain activities will happen.

As you can expect, this has high, high visibility in China. This is a major program that's underway in the whole industry and not just Shandong and Beijing have attention on this but indeed that the whole hydrogen fuel cell industry are tracking this with significant interest.

So again, we won't get into details about when product -- what product will be produced when. But we're very bullish on the progress that's been made. And very confident again in the quality of the counterparty we have here, the relationship with Weichai is very strong..

Amit Dayal

Understood. Just one last one for Tony maybe.

The cash flow, are you still expecting $50 million for 2019, Tony?.

Tony Guglielmin

As we kind of burned about $30 million in the first six months of the year, that included an investment into the Weichai-Ballard joint venture in Q1. And so we're looking, we would expect the burn in the second half of the year, roughly the same as the first half.

And that would -- that includes by the way another roughly $7 million investments into the joint venture in Q4. So I would suspect to burn not this similar first and second half.

We also have and it's just the other point I'd make, we're also -- well, we had a very good quarter on working capital, we expect to see a little, some fairly significant items flowing through, but we're also investing a bit in CapEx in the second half on expansion in MEA in advanced manufacturing.

So when you put it all together, think about a similar burn in the second half to the first half. .

Amit Dayal

Got it. Thank you. That's all I have. I'll take my other questions offline. Thank you..

Randy MacEwen

Thanks to Amit..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Jeff Osborne with Cowen & Company..

Jeff Osborne

Excellent. Good morning. Couple questions on my end. Is there still discussion about Broad Ocean investing in the Weichai JV? I might have missed that but I didn't see any reference to it in the MD&A and your prepared remarks..

Randy MacEwen

Good morning, Jeff. And thanks for the question. We did have discussions to invite Broad Ocean to participate in the Weichai-Ballard JV. They've decided not to do that. So we're quite happy with the outcome because we gave them the opportunity to participate.

And, we liked having the 49% position, we think the JV is going to have very high value in the future and want to own as much of it as possible. .

Jeff Osborne

Got it. That makes sense. And then I saw in the filing that I think it was Weichai was around $6.2 million, Tony? And then you flag, if that's right, but you flag that the gross margins would expand throughout the year.

Can you just give us a sense of what's driving that margin expansion? I assume Weichai goes up, but is there any other programs or is it the mix towards bus? I'm just trying to get a sense of the moving pieces on the top line that drive to the margins. .

Tony Guglielmin

Yes. Certainly the TS, technology solutions more generally, but certainly the Weichai contribution is going to have an important impact. I also just -- I briefly alluded to overhead absorption that, as we're -- we expect to move more product through the pipeline and into revenue in the second half of the year.

So we could see a couple of points of improvement on overhead absorption as well. So I'd say those are the really the two key drivers. .

Jeff Osborne

Got it. That's helpful. And then, certainly, Randy, I agree with your enthusiasm on the broader sort of developments in the space. Is there -- and certainly investors that I speak to are confused around sort of pairing fuel cells with batteries together.

If you were stuck in an elevator and had to describe the value proposition of pairing the two together, is there any metrics that you can give as you've worked with potential partners around weight savings for trucks by pairing the -- you can -- and also what the battery size reduction would be? I can use a 50% smaller battery paired together with two fuel cells or one fuel cells or on a tank.

You net those out, you get to x percent weight and what the impact is to cost, either upfront cost or cost per mile.

Is that anything that you've put together that you could share?.

Randy MacEwen

Yeah, I think every use case is quite different.

And we've looked at a number of use cases and have capability in house here to look at what's the right mix of fuel cells and battery? So without having a specific metric to give you what I would say in an elevator environment is really what you're doing is you're taking power density and energy density.

And you're optimizing a solution for the duty cycle and providing the customer with optimized solution that's going to meet the market requirements, I think very strongly. So, I don't think there's one metric we'll talk a little bit more about that to see if something we could help you on that front. But, we've modeled a number of different use cases.

And, I've seen different outcomes on those depending on what the use cases are.

But I think the opportunity for driving long range, keeping costs as low as possible, and in my mind, one of the key aspects of this Jeff is you really have the ability to operate the fuel cell at the right power output, so that you're not having a wear and tear on the fuel cell.

You have the ability to have the appropriate level of state of discharge on the battery. So you can avoid deep discharge on the battery, so you can preserve the durability of the battery.

So I think there's a mix of ways to view this and one of them is to make sure you're mitigating the pressure points for both the fuel cell technology and the battery technology to have high durability of both components in an optimized solution..

Jeff Osborne

Got it. That's helpful. Is there a way of maybe just in broad structure rank ordering the applications, it sounds like trucks were weight as a penalty, because there's limitations legally on that plus range. So trucks are first, buses are second and maybe passenger cars are third in terms of the value proposition today.

But obviously things improve and pass cars in the mid-2020s might make more sense or am I wrong?.

Randy MacEwen

Yeah, exactly. No, that sounds right. And for us, you say pass cars in the mid-2020s. Of course, pass cars such a large market. You only need a small portion of market share there.

But what we're really excited about is the longer term outlook, as you've described in your own publications for the opportunity for digital connected autonomous vehicles that have high power requirements on board plus have high utilization.

And there we see the, future growth of fuel cells, while we'll see it in 2025 timeframe for sure, we expect to see very high adoption a post-2025 as we move to 2030 and 2040..

Jeff Osborne

Got it, that's helpful. And then the last one and I might have missed it again trying to speed-read the filing, but can you just give us an update on anything going on or lack thereof with Hyster-Yale and CRRC, those are two partners that you've talked about in the past and didn't hear any reference to those. .

Randy MacEwen

Yeah, there's quite a bit of activity going on in the rail industry in Europe and in China. We're seeing activity with CRRC. And in fact, again, the CSR Sifang tram line that was supposed to be operational about a year or two ago had major construction delays is the first. There are 10 engines we delivered there.

Just a couple of days ago, we got the first videos of the first trams actually in on the Gaoming line in Guangdong Province, actually testing. So that's great to see. And the line is supposed to be operational late this year. So that's a very encouraging signal.

In my mind, that's a key next step in the gating item for future activity with CSR Sifang and CRRC. But there is also some activity going on in Tangshan and continue to do testing there and see opportunities with TRC, another division of CRRC. So I think there's certainly lots of activity going on. It hasn't translated to new revenue yet.

But we do see significant rail opportunity in the China market long term. And in Hyster-Yale, they continue to move forward.

They'll make their results are coming out if they maybe it came up yesterday or coming on the next day or two, I have forgotten when their sequence is, but they'll comment on the number of deployments they have, obviously in the fuel cell space.

I think they're -- from what we've what they've commented on in prior quarters, I think their ramp rate has been a little slower than expected and that's what we've seen as well..

Jeff Osborne

Makes sense. Appreciate it. Thank you..

Randy MacEwen

Thank you. .

Operator

This concludes the question-and-answer session, I’d like to turn the conference back over to Randy MacEwen, CEO, for any closing remarks. .

Randy MacEwen

Well, thank you for joining us today, we look forward to speaking with you again at the end of October, when we will discuss third quarter 2019 results. Thanks again, everyone. .

Operator

This concludes, today’s conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating and have a pleasant day..

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