Page added on March 27, 2006
Hydrogen has been getting plenty of hype as a potential replacement transportation fuel, for cutting carbon dioxide emissions and reducing dependence on fossil fuels. But methanol would be far better than the more reactive and volatile hydrogen, argues George Olah, a chemist and Nobel laureate, in a new book, Beyond Oil and Gas: The Methanol Economy.
Olah notes that methanol, a clean-burning liquid, would require only minor modifications to existing engines and fuel-delivery infrastructure. And manufacturing it could even make use of carbon dioxide, a source of global warming. Methanol’s benefits have long been understood — now recent advances in methanol synthesis and methanol fuel cells could make this fuel even more attractive.
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