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Good read. Thanks!
-Greg "Terry Spragg" wrote in message ... bowgus wrote: My opinion ... for long term hydro (I'm in canada eh), wind, solar make sense (usually lotsa wind, solar, and water around boats by the way). But for the short/near term, it's looking like mainly natural gas ... e.g bld has some units selling in japan, fcel units here and there. All I know is, somebody better start building that hydrogen infrastructure (and finish it) while we still have the fossil fuels to do the work. The sticky point with hydrogen is that it takes so much energy to produce. Where are we going to get all this energy, which we're already short of? There is no shortage of energy. There is a shortage of power conditioning technology, like refineries, battery manufacturers, or solar collectors. There will be no actual oil shortage for at least 10 years. Longer, if we each take personal responsibility for reducing energy wastage and usage in a big way. We are being weaned, ever so gradually, by the oil guys who want to orchestrate the last 10 years of oil to be a pricing frenzy. They are consolidating their garrotte on the refinery industry, now. Someone should start up a company to build a modest refinery on a big old slow ship with tanker hose connections, perhaps an obsolete single skinned tanker? You could anchor it anywhere, and empty it if a storm threatened. A refinery is just a big old still, after all. You can make a moonshine still from an old coffee maker. Think of hydrogen as part of a battery system, a refillable battery, if you will. The hydrogen gets "charged" at a hilly wind or desert sun site, and tanked or pipelined to users, who "discharge" it to create a substitute for transpiration, where we cut down trees to build this city. It's not rocket psciance, it's rock and roll. If Vegas's sewers went to a solar lagoon, the water extracted by Zenon (TM) Zeaweed (TM) could provide hydrogen without having to pipe in special water, or poison the ditch to the sea. Is there a runoff from Vegas, a river, or something? Some of the hydrogen produced by solar power and electrolysis and stored under a tarp could even be used to provide peak load electricity in a turbine or internal combustion super clean "steam" engine, bonus exhaust: pure water. The dried crap, sterilized by the sun, would make good odourless fertilizer for corn to make corny diesel, gasahol, and livestock feed, for the rabbits or goats under the sunshade solar collectors. Trangenic goats can be used to produce very fancy medical drug feedstock, and would never escape death valley, whatever, unaided. Serendipity? Problems, or solutions? It's really all in our attitude. We want lotsa cheap durable solar shingles, and the right to sell excess power back to the hydro company, even at 15 percent efficiency, or windmills where we can't hear them and where there are no birds or bats! Low pressure H2 pipelines would not depress permafrost, and could even float on cables above the ground or river crossing using low pressure anti static plastic pipes, greenhouse ventilation tubes actually. Such a pipeline could be unreeled from a helicopter, and anchored in rock, filling with gas as it is installed in the air. Crews could use very simple straight clamps to essentially close the low pressure line wherever needed. Occasional ground valves could contain mishaps, like Caribou antler entanglements. We need lightweight, flexible solar cells to print on the tops of the gas bags, along with the telemetered pressure gauges, like the ones they are going to print on solar powered electro-deflective-gel fleshed orthinopter high altitude balloon launched surveillance robot birds, like they demo'd on Discovery last week. Ain't war technology great? What do you think they use to lift big balloons, H2? Helium? Don't make me laugh! Who do you think sabotaged the Hindenburg, and why? Who promotes expensive, inefficient helium to preserve their old technology? Yup, shipping magnates, the oil guys, the heavy pipeline guys, and wildcat drillers. That is the future, but don't look to the oil guys to put themselves out of business real soon, yet. I said it about tungsten, of which I have a now near worthless collection recycled from incandescent bulbs over the years, and I optimistically say it about oil, Like some one said about buggy whips. Horses might still be popular if it wasn't for the horse muck. Oil is becoming obsolete, just like coal did. There are energy wars being conducted internally, by rich traitors and poor scientist-enterprenuer heroes. Set the army engineers on it, if you want to see a peace dividend. Remember that quaint term "Peace Dividend?" There is lots more coal in the ground, we just don't need it right now, because oil is easier and more profitable. There is no shortage of energy, only of imagination. Terry K Iceland is blessed with practically unlimited geothermal energy. So they can produce hydrogen for their own use as well as export. Matt O. |
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