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Image: PR Times
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World’s first hydrogen powered vending machine unveiled by Coca-Cola at Osaka-Kansai Expo

11 Comments
By SoraNews24

We all know that Japan is the land of vending machines, with automated retail terminals selling everything from hot sauce to potential marriages. They’re also sources of technological innovation as ways of serving their communities with foot-operated controls during the COVID-19 pandemic and machines that absorb CO2 from the surrounding air much like a tree does.

This thriving vending machine industry in Japan can be traced back to Expo ’70 in Osaka Japan. Vending machines existed in Japan for decades prior but were generally considered a novelty and hadn’t yet caught on with the general public.

Interest in the machines started to pick up in the late ’60s after the modern 100-yen and 50-yen coins went into circulation, but it was the drink machines developed by Fuji Electric for the Expo that really helped put the technology into the national spotlight. These machines served drinks that helped keep visitors cool during the blazing hot summer months of the event and showcased the convenience and reliability that they provided.

And now, as the 2025 World Expo in Osaka approaches, we may see another evolution in this ingrained feature of Japanese infrastructure. Fuji Electric is returning yet again, this time with beverage giant Coca-Cola, to set up the world’s first vending machine powered by a hydrogen cartridge, which is a hydrogen fuel cell that can be easily replaced as needed.

Screenshot-2025-03-21-at-13.51.29.png
Image: PR Times

One drawback of conventional vending machines is that they need to be plugged in at all times. Even those machines you can find in the most remote parts of Japan need to be wired into the grid or some other reliable power source to be usable.

Although there are power lines running to the summit of Mount Fuji, they’re very limited. These Coca-Cola vending machines are carried up there in July and taken down in August, so they are likely unique in that they run on some sort of battery or generator.

But with hydrogen cartridges, vending machines no longer need an outlet and can be placed anywhere they’ll fit. This is just me spitballing here, but with some size modifications this could even conceivably give way to mobile vending machines that walk among us in the city streets for maximum coverage.

But for now we have a stationary hydrogen vending machine and it will be on display at this year’s Expo on the north side of the Grand Ring, the large wooden structure that serves as the architectural highlight of the event.

There will also be 58 regular Coca-Cola machines there, all of which can be used the Coke ON app that’s popular in Japan. With this app drinks can be bought cashlessly and remotely, allowing people with visual or other impairments to order more easily on their own smartphones. So, no matter how you look at it, the future continues to look bright for vending machines in Japan.

Source: PR Times, Fuji Electric, Coca-Cola

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Coca-Cola’s new Coke ON subscription service makes Japanese vending machines more fun to use

-- Coca-Cola’s new vending machines don’t need electricity during the day to keep drinks cold

-- Self-freezing bottled Coca-Cola now available at convenience store vending machines in Japan

© SoraNews24

©2025 GPlusMedia Inc.

11 Comments
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Unless you can store the drinks at liquid hydrogen temperatures, I'm not sure of the advantages.

-7 ( +0 / -7 )

For a fuel cell, methanol is much more easily transported...

-4 ( +0 / -4 )

TaiwanIsNotChina

Today 06:41 am JST

Unless you can store the drinks at liquid hydrogen temperatures, I'm not sure of the advantages

All drinks sold in vending machines probably turns solid at 0 C why liquid hydrogen temps?

-1 ( +2 / -3 )

This is why the World Expo will be such a success. Many people are interested in the latest technology like this. There will be long lines at this vending machine. I hope that foreign tourists learn about the CokeOn app so that they will be able to take advantage of it. Great for foreign tourists (especially from America) who drink a lot more sweet drinks than the average Japanese.

-5 ( +1 / -6 )

ianToday 08:11 am JST

TaiwanIsNotChina

Today 06:41 am JST

Unless you can store the drinks at liquid hydrogen temperatures, I'm not sure of the advantages

All drinks sold in vending machines probably turns solid at 0 C why liquid hydrogen temps?

I was being sarcastic...

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

I still don’t understand what the expo is all about? Honest question……or was it just an excuse to use taxpayers money to fund construction projects.

5 ( +6 / -1 )

TaiwanIsNotChina

Today 09:48 am JST

ianToday 08:11 am JST

> TaiwanIsNotChina

> Today 06:41 am JST

> Unless you can store the drinks at liquid hydrogen temperatures, I'm not sure of the advantages

> All drinks sold in vending machines probably turns solid at 0 C why liquid hydrogen temps?

> I was being sarcastic...

Hahahaha so what do you really mean?

-2 ( +0 / -2 )

powered by a hydrogen cartridge, which is a hydrogen fuel cell that can be easily replaced as needed

Yes, of course, I believe everything, and the hydrogen cartridges grow free on trees, also their distribution transport and replacement is free and don't cost more than all bottles for sale in the machine altogether. ROFL

0 ( +1 / -1 )

seems 'risky' if there are 'motor' problems, wonder how the lawyers and insurance companies feel about it?!?!?

-2 ( +0 / -2 )

Dibs on territorial rights for placement of vending machines on the Moon and Mars!

Seriously, that is a really amazing direction for vending, and I'm sure there will be many other applications for the power unit design.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

But what about my winter hot vending coffee? Or has that disappeared, commoner drink.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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