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Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Sat 14 Oct 2006, 01:05:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('quizz', 'M')onte:

In a perfect world (I mean really perfect world with Biointensive gardening or similar, eductated populations migrating to arable land, nuturing of the land, etc. etc.),what do you think the world's population carrying capacity? I'm thinking twice as many or slighty more (until it's brought back to equilibrium).


When one considers the array of ever-changing factors that must be estimated and the conditions that must be assumed, it is unrealistic to state a definitive number for the Earth's human carrying capacity.

However, according to the world's leading pherologists, who make a career of doing just that, 2 to 3 billion.

Using standards of living lower than the current North American average, estimates of carrying capacity using energy as a metric range from 1 to 3 billion people.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Sun 15 Oct 2006, 22:48:09

And to drive home my point about hydrogen:

The Hydrogen Economy - Energy and Economic Black Hole

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he laws of physics mean the hydrogen economy will always be an energy sink. Hydrogen’s properties require you to spend more energy to do the following than you get out of it later: overcome waters’ hydrogen-oxygen bond, to move heavy cars, to prevent leaks and brittle metals, to transport hydrogen to the destination. It doesn’t matter if all of the problems are solved, or how much money is spent. You will use more energy to create, store, and transport hydrogen than you will ever get out of it.


When fusion can make cheap hydrogen, reliable long-lasting nanotube fuel cells exist, and light-weight leak-proof carbon-fiber polymer-lined storage tanks / pipelines can be made inexpensively, then let’s consider building the hydrogen economy infrastructure. Until then, it’s vaporware.


Link
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby Micki » Sun 15 Oct 2006, 23:29:50

Monte,
your Black Hole article focuses on the feasibility of a large scale rollout of hydrogen technology to keep the "growth economy, happy motoring" society at a status quo.

It concludes
1) it is expensive
2) it is extremely inefficient
3) we use mainly fossil fuels in the process
4) there are technical problems. i.e. the example you made with metal becoming brittle etc.

Once again this article does not address the points I have made.
1) Developed technology normally becomes cheaper. There is no reason to conclude that hydrogen technology can't get cheaper in the future just because it is expensive now.

2) Sure it is very inefficient. But in my scenarios we never tried to replace like for like. I agree that I would not tade $10 for $1. A better eample is would you trand $10 for a $1 amount of food. Yes you would if you don't have other alternatives and you are starving.

For example, would you be willing to use energy from your photovoltaics system harnessed for a week, to get a boat motor running for 3 hours if you could use the same energy to run all your home's electrical needs for a week? Perhaps not.
Let's then say to double the size of photovoltaics system so you could run your house + get 3hr boating? If this allows me to fish, which can keep off starvation and allow some trading, then yes. The system would still be inefficient, but worth the trade off.


3) Yes. But on a smaller scale we can use biomass, water and God knows what else.

4) Can technology improve things?
We don't know today what technological development that is possible. Only by trying and having competition between organisaitons will we make some progress.
Maybe hydrogen won't come out a winner. Maybe it can become a valuable solution on a small scale where people do their own electrolysis of water etc using renewable energy.

Investment in this kind of development is of course risky (money wise). But as in other investments, I think that is up to the investor to decide if they believe in it or not.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Sun 15 Oct 2006, 23:44:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', 'O')nce again this article does not address the points I have made.
1) Developed technology normally becomes cheaper. There is no reason to conclude that hydrogen technology can't get cheaper in the future just because it is expensive now.


Then you didn't read it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he price of oil and natural gas will go up relentlessly due to geological depletion and political crises in extracting countries. Since the hydrogen infrastructure will be built using the existing oil-based infrastructure (i.e. internal combustion engine vehicles, power plants and factories, plastics, etc), the price of hydrogen will go up as well -- it will never be cheaper than fossil fuels. As depletion continues, factories will be driven out of business by high fuel costs (20, 21, 22) and the parts necessary to build the extremely complex storage tanks and fuel cells might become unavailable. In a society that’s looking more and more like Terry Gilliam’s “Brazil”, hydrogen will be too leaky and explosive to handle.


As to the the other points:

Time and scalability.

If you believe peakoil is 20 + years off, then maybe, given a crash multi-trillion dollar program starting now.

If you believe peakoil is by 2010, then it is a fool's errand.

Why?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ny diversion of declining fossil fuels to a hydrogen economy subtracts that energy from other possible uses, such as planting, harvesting, delivering, and cooking food, heating homes, and other essential activities. According to Joseph Romm “The energy and environmental problems facing the nation and the world, especially global warming, are far too serious to risk making major policy mistakes that misallocate scarce resources.
Last edited by MonteQuest on Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:16:02, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:13:06

The November 2006 issue of Popular Mechanics has an article entitled:

The Truth about Hydrogen

Some excerpts:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')m asks the perennial question of every automotive journey:

Are we almost there?

And the inevitable answer from the front seat: No. The promises of a thriving hydrogen economy-one that supports not only cars and trucks, but cellphones, computers, homes and whole neighborhoods- date back long before this presidency, and the road fulfilling them stretches far beyond its horizon.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut without critical infrastructure, there will be no hydrogen economy. And practical employment of hydrogen power involves major hurdles at every step-production, storage, distribution, and use.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')nce the technical hurdles are crossed, hydrogen's huge price tag may still make the technology prohibitive. A recent analysis by the DOE projected that a supply network adequate for even 40 percent of the light-duty fleet could cost more than $500 billion.

One of the reason all long-term R&D has been cut for hydrogen research by the US DOE.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd this leads to the classic chicken-and-egg problem: How do you get millions of Americans to buy hydrogen powered vehicles before there's an infrastructure in place to fuel them? And how do you get energy companies to build that infrastructure before there's a potential customer base?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U')ltimately, hydrogen may just be one part of a whole suite of energy alternatives. Anyone of them will involve investing heavily in new infrastructure.

Cost to produce hydrogen to replace fossil fuel use in cars by 2040:

Solar photovoltaics =$22 trillion 113 million 40-kilowatt systems
Coal=$500 billion 1000 275 megawatt plants
Biomass=$565 billion 3300 gasificatin plants
Wind=$3 trillion 1 million 2 megawatt turbines
Nuclear=$840 billion 2000 600 megawatt next-generation plants
Natural gas=$1 trillion 777,000 facilties
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby Micki » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:16:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he price of oil and natural gas will go up relentlessly due to geological depletion and political crises in extracting countries. Since the hydrogen infrastructure will be built using the existing oil-based infrastructure (i.e. internal combustion engine vehicles, power plants and factories, plastics, etc), the price of hydrogen will go up as well -- it will never be cheaper than fossil fuels.


Once again, we are looking on a large scale.
But I don't think we are going to keep the economy at status quo.
Hydrogen is not for everyone.

Secondly the statement that hydrogen infrastructure is based on existing infrastructure and therefore will never be cheaper than fossil fuels, doesn't make any sense.
First of all, infrastructure costs is not equal to fuel cost. The fuel is a part of the cost.
Secondly, it seems to make some assumption that hydrogen industry is somehow run using fossil fueled trucks etc., That is only true if you indeed depend on fossil fuels and hydrogen is SOO inefficient that you can't replace fossil fuel withoin the industry.
Fossil fuels in materials, like plastics etc is negligable compared to fuel used for transportation and I don't see how it would make a huge difference in cost if we re-use metal/plastic infrastructure.
This statement simply seems to be based on the assumption that fossil fuels will be such a significant part of the hydrogen industry that the cost increase in one will equally impact the other.

No doubt though, retail price will be impacted (unless you can do your own electrolysis etc) as supply-demand changes in one fuel will change demand for the other.



$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you believe peakoil is 20 + years off, then maybe, given a crash multi-trillion dollar program starting now.

If you believe peakoil is by 2010, then it is a fool's errand.


Only if you are trying to keep the economy at status quo.
My vision is to have an alternative transportation fuel in place to handle Necessary transportation only.

Monte, you don't seem to want to respond to my complete posts.
You pull out a statement and give some fuzzy quote like the above. In understand if you don't have the time, but if you do, I would very much appreciate if you took the effort to look through my questions and respond to them. Don't have to of course, but that would sort of leave the discussion un-ended.
THANKS

PS, if you haven't already read it this doc is quite comprehensive;
hydrogen.pdf
It is however ALSO focused on the challenges of a LARGE SCALE migration to Hydrogen Economy as an alternative to today's fossil fuelled.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby Micki » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:19:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow do you get millions of Americans to buy hydrogen powered vehicles before there's an infrastructure in place to fuel them? And how do you get energy companies to build that infrastructure before there's a potential customer base?


AGAIN....totally focusing on large scale hydrogen economy.

The discussion started off;
Can 1 car run with hydrogen fuel cells no not.
Next this lead to the question, can we use private renewable energy to charge up hydrogen fuel cells.

If 1 person can do it, more people can do it. But not necessarily everyone.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:23:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', ' ')My vision is to have an alternative transportation fuel in place to handle Necessary transportation only.


And a powerdown and restricted per capita energy use would not accomplish that?

You are trying to meet demand, not reduce it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')onte, you don't seem to want to respond to my complete posts.
You pull out a statement and give some fuzzy quote like the above. In understand if you don't have the time, but if you do, I would very much appreciate if you took the effort to look through my questions and respond to them. Don't have to of course, but that would sort of leave the discussion un-ended.


Asked and answered ad naseum. All of this has been covered in detail and laid to rest over two years ago in prior debates. I won't rehash it again.

Hydrogen is a dog that will not hunt.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:28:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', '
')AGAIN....totally focusing on large scale hydrogen economy.

The discussion started off;
Can 1 car run with hydrogen fuel cells no not.
Next this lead to the question, can we use private renewable energy to charge up hydrogen fuel cells.

If 1 person can do it, more people can do it. But not necessarily everyone.


No, only the millionaires. Hardly a viable solution.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oday, it takes 700 square feet of photovoltaics (god knows what they must cost) operating for one week to produce enough hydrogen to drive a fuel cell car costing about $1 million dollars, 160 miles.


Decades away.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby Micki » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:34:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')ost to produce hydrogen to replace fossil fuel use in cars by 2040:

Solar photovoltaics =$22 trillion 113 million 40-kilowatt systems
Coal=$500 billion 1000 275 megawatt plants
Biomass=$565 billion 3300 gasificatin plants
Wind=$3 trillion 1 million 2 megawatt turbines
Nuclear=$840 billion 2000 600 megawatt next-generation plants
Natural gas=$1 trillion 777,000 facilties


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ydney, 11 April 2006 - Australia's digital lifestyle market exploded in 2005 with consumers splurging $3.6 billion on digital products according to the latest Canon Digital Lifestyle Index (CDLI)

http://www.canon.com.au/home/story_1485.html

Think there is room to tighten the belst and spend on necessary development instead?


Furthermore, I don't think you have answered my questions, but accept if you choose not to continue the debate.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 00:48:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', ' ')Furthermore, I don't think you have answered my questions, but accept if you choose not to continue the debate.


Your questions have been answered ad naseum.

You have just chosen to not do a search and read them.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby rdberg1957 » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 01:31:13

It is clear to me that hydrogen is a very expensive diversion (financially, waste of time, diminishing returns). We will be better off if we spend our human energy 1) reducing population; 2) developing sustainable agriculture; 3) developing energy efficient public transportation; 4) producing bicycles both human and electric powered for private transport.

It would be nice if we as a race (human) would power down before catastrophe hits, but I see no signs that a significant portion of the population has a clue of what will hit us in the next 10-20 years. I really want to be wrong. But we don't seem to very good as a species at getting ourselves out of deep trouble.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 02:02:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rdberg1957', 'I')t is clear to me that hydrogen is a very expensive diversion (financially, waste of time, diminishing returns). We will be better off if we spend our human energy 1) reducing population; 2) developing sustainable agriculture; 3) developing energy efficient public transportation; 4) producing bicycles both human and electric powered for private transport.



Exactly, this is what Miki fails yet to grasp.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby The_Toecutter » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 02:18:40

This water fuel nonsense is just that.

Energy can change form, but it cannot be created nor destroyed; in all transactions of energy, if energy leaves or enters a system, the potential energy of a state will be less in quantity than the amount of energy present at the initial state.

Remember this.

Some of you know of HHO, also known as Braun's gas. It takes electrolysis to produce, a process which at best is ~75% efficient, but usually around 30% efficient. This gas has its uses, in welding and others; it is not exactly a fraud. But will it save us or is it the significant advancement it's hyped up to be? No.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')) reducing population


Lest we have a quick dieoff, this can only be accomplished long term goal. Whether or not trying to achieve this as a long term goal will lead to immediate dieoff remains to be seen. We have to attempt it first.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '2')) developing sustainable agriculture


Already have it, it's healthier, it's much more efficient, it's even cheaper, but factory farms are much more subsidized and make much more profit.

Getting rid of the infinite growth economy we have in place and telling a few oversubsidized wealthy businessmen acting as farmers to go fuck themselves, is a necessity to achieving this goal.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3')) developing energy efficient public transportation


We certainly have the technology and capability to do this.

Getting rid of the infinite growth economy we have in place and telling a few oversubsidized wealthy businessmen who lobby to prevent this from becoming a reality in places where it is needed, and who wish to force onto us an auto-intensive lifestyle so that revenue can flow from us to them, to go fuck themselves, is a necessity to achieving this goal.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '4')) producing bicycles both human and electric powered for private transport.


We certainly have the technology and capability to do this. In fact, such vehicles exist.

Electric cars, while more energy intensive than the above, would achieve the same effect, while being more paletable to uncompromising gluttons both middle class and wealthy.

Getting rid of the infinite growth economy we have in place and telling a few oversubsidized wealthy businessmen who lobby to prevent this from becoming a reality, and who wish to force onto us inefficient and costly methods of transit so they can pocket more of our hard-earned money, to go fuck themselves, is a necessity to achieving this goal.


I've had a bit to drink tonight. It will be fun checking back tomorrow to see if my posts are still readable if I made them while drunk or not.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby sch_peakoiler » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 02:47:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rdberg1957', '
')
1) reducing population;


unmount from thy steed, man! Reducing my back! First we have to SLOW THE GROWTH OF POPULATION. It is 200 000 per day;) After that we have to STOP THE GROWTH OF POPULATION.

And then we will proceed with your plan:)


Please do not take my ubersarcasm to yourself. It is an emotional outcry :)
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby The_Toecutter » Mon 16 Oct 2006, 03:02:47

I don't know what his plan may entail, but mine would entail trying to dramatically reduce poverty.

Basic sociological axiom: the more impoverished a people, the more they will reproduce.

Why? Children not only have a high mortality rate, but can be an economic asset in a poor nation. Parents wish that at least some of their children will live long enough to care for them in old age, when they can no longer physically do labor. In wealthier countries, children are an economic burden that drain finances for things such as medical care, education, luxuries, and basic sustenance needs like food. Therefore, people in wealthier nations have much less of them. It is not uncommon for first world nations to see native couples having 1.2-1.8 children per couple, below the replacement rate. Would it not be for demographics and immigration, population of many of these countries would be declining and/or have a negative change in the RATE of population growth(mind you, I'm for making all the borders open).


The way first world societies are structured, high standard of living goes hand in hand with high energy consumption and an unsustainable ecological footprint. This need not be. This is where increased energy efficiency along with those renewables that are currently viable come into play. Problem is, doing these things would reverse economic growth and cause contraction; those who are making money off of primarily being owners/producers instead of consumers and those governments who thrive on the revenue generated by such an economic system do not want this. I'd even go so far as to say that they would use force to keep such a system in place until collapse(as we are seeing in Iraq and elsewhere), no matter how many people are killed and no matter how many more are thrust into poverty. Their profit, to them, outweighs everything else.

Conflict of interest, just as it has always been. It doesn't have to be this way, but it probably won't change, either. Work for the world you want to see, and don't forget the vision you have, but at the same time, keep a sense of realism in perspective without letting it discourage you.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby Micki » Tue 17 Oct 2006, 03:29:11

MonteQuest
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he importance here is that hydrogen can help mitigate negative impact during a transition period.



The US Dept of Energy doesn't think so. It just cut all long-term funding for hydrogen research and development.


Oct 11 - 2006
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')oth the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of Energy appeared to be steadfast in their promotion of renewables.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')odman also said that renewable fuel development is not solely focused on ethanol, but the two agencies are also busy sponsoring research and development for biodiesel, aviation biofuel, hydrogen, solar and wind power.

http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=24667

OCT 12
President Bush Discusses Energy at Renewable Energy Conference
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd the federal government's job is to continue to research so that we provide our consumers, the American people, with more options. And one of the great options that's coming down the road is hydrogen. That's a longer-term project.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U')ltimately, in my judgment, one of the ways to make sure that we become fully less dependent on oil is through hydrogen. And we're spending $1.2 billion to encourage hydrogen fuel cells.
It's coming, it's coming.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')h, I'm sure there are some people out there saying, well, you know, he's just dreaming. Well, I'm just listening to the dreamers who happen to be good, smart, capable people who know what they're talking about
Article

Looks to me like there is funding and support for Hydrogen R&D.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby budeone » Thu 19 Oct 2006, 09:27:16

I just watched a dvd sent out from Ford and they talked about using hydrogen fuel.

They have a car driving on a course with it all over the doors.
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Re: Anybody here see this about water as fuel?

Unread postby NeoPeasant » Thu 19 Oct 2006, 10:41:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('budeone', 'I') just watched a dvd sent out from Ford and they talked about using hydrogen fuel.

They have a car driving on a course with it all over the doors.


So what, I could build one in my garage and produce the fuel from my electrical outlet and my water faucet. I won't, because it would be an incredible waste of money. I don't think Ford considers building hydrogen demos as an R/D expense. They consider it a PR expense. "Look everybody, we're working on it." They know the hydrogen dog won't hunt.
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