by Omnitir » Thu 28 Jun 2007, 21:09:03
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'o')nce again Omnitir, for a self-proclaimed smart guy, you display a complete and systematic lack of
human-scale, earthly commonsence (or if you prefer I couch that in academic language you may understand---. . a complete and systematic lack of
thermodynamic contemplation)
Plastic junk is buried in landfills next to all sorts of non-plastic stuff such as prehistoric hotdogs, dog carcasses, and even dog dollies. Not to mention aluminum cans the bad, bad, bad, recyclers forgot. This crap would need to be dug out, trucked, separated, identified, graded, processed into fuel and then collected, containerized, shipped, distributed, and purchased by mom and the kids for their SUV.
guess what all that work requires? and I don't mean plastic bags and stuff. I mean petroleum. which is running out so there won't be any more plastic bags and garbage and stuff.
sheesh. talk about a bad eroei

But you are talking about getting the plastics from possibly the worst source available - existing garbage landfill. What about the other sources? Throughout the world there a giant deposits of pre-separated plastics, giant collections of used car tyres, giant collections of "autofluff" as they call it - the useless crap left over from shredding cars. All this stuff would take little energy to recycle with the appropriate technology (such as this), and could provide large energy returns.
And more importantly, what about further waste? Sure, some people might think that civilization is about to collapse and therefore there won't be any more consumption and hence no more waste, but in the real world we still need to plan for the future - and that is one where cities will continue to churn out massive amounts of garbage and waste. Even during a major economic breakdown, there is still going to be a lot of waste generated. And being able to recycle the hydrocarbons from that waste offers a large, previously untapped source of energy.
Maybe in Mad Max land people might sort through landfill piles for scraps of oil to power their Thunderdome machines, but in the here and now, we've got huge amounts of oil and gas just sitting there, waiting for the appropriate technology to recycle them.
My city has been saving all of it's plastic for decades, how about yours? What about in the future, as oil becomes increasingly valuable and recycling becomes easier?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'D')ave, there really is no reason to spend our last days on the petroleum teat analyzing its whithered desiccated state.
Yeah, lets just assume that a new potential source of energy is not going to help any and just keep on dumping all of our waste into the earth.