by Whitecrab » Wed 24 Aug 2005, 22:47:44
I don't think you guys are giving this book enough credit. Yes, it's pretty utopian and only deals with business as usual conservation. Yes, the plan still takes a few decades to get rolling. Yes, Lovins doesn't really say how everyone is going to get their own personal H2 generator. But there is some really good ideas in here, ideas I haven't seen anywhere else in the PO literature. Stuff I pilfer and use in letters to politicians.
Specifically, some of the great ideas were:
-Promote vehicle efficiency through light-weighting with carbon fibre materials. Reducing the weight while retaining the strength is a very dramatic way to save fuel and reduce construction complexity (and paint use!). The Lovins report does account for the petro used to make the fibre, and suggests a loan method to give the automakers the financial strength to do this. Alternatively, start it as a military or aerospace app. and let it trickle into cars once it's worked in those areas
-There is some GREAT numbers about military fuel waste. How the military ignores all logistics costs for fuel. How tanks could be made more efficient by taping Honda generators on the bank. How mid-air refuelling that costs $200/gallon is treated like $20/barrel oil
-Use rubber tire crumbs in pavement. The patent for this recently expired. This saves oil and maintenance and recycles rubber, reducing tire yards (tires are a problem)
-Some financial incentives programs, including ways to to give cars to the poor, and most important of all - feebate programs. This is where you set a standard, and everyone above the standard gets money off the sticker price and everyone below has to pay extra. You set the standard so that the feebate is revenue-neutral or positive, and move the standard as technology improves. This loads fuel prices right into the time of purchase and draws efficiency out constantly. This idea could be applied to homes, fridges, almost anything! Not just cars. And it makes money for the government! Great idea
-Suggestions that the hydrogen storage problem goes away once you lightweight enough. That's one problem gone. (Among many...yes his H2 hype is pretty out there. But solving the storage is worth noting)
This is really worth a look. Although skim read. Some of the stuff, particularily the light-weighting, gets repetitive at times.
"Our forces are now closer to the center of Baghdad than most American commuters are to their downtown office."
--Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, April 2003