$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'I') like your title for this forum. Think outside the system. I think that hydrogen is the darling of the Bush administration because it's in the system. The idea of running cars on hydrogen and having filling stations appeals to them.
The fact is that to think outside the system requires us to scrap most of the infrastructure we have built in the past 100 years.
Richard Komp, solar energy pioneer, said yesterday that the present system of delivering electricity is already obsolete. After thinking about it I had to agree. I would add that our transportation system is also obsolete.
People may have had a sentimental attachment to horses, but their numbers still dwindled into the middle of the 20th century.
This whole mess we've made won't be worth much very soon.
We won't be able to feed the electric grid, and maintenance will be an increasingly difficult problem. Will hydrogen save us from that? I don't think so. Fuel cells might be a great way to store energy, but they don't make any.
Our cars and SUV's will be useless if gas goes much above $5 a gallon. Right now a lot of them are selling for around the scrap metal price.
The car of the future weighs around 350 pounds, and has a range of around 30 miles between electric charges. The house of the future is around 500 square feet and is oriented to the sun, for heating and cooling. The house provides at least half of it's own energy, from passive and active solar. The person of the future will use far less of everything than us. If they are lucky!



