Posted on 02/10/2003 2:01:51 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
Over the last twenty-five years, the government has spent $1.2 billion on fuel cell research and development. During his recent State of the Union speech, President Bush proposed spending another billion for further research. Automakers have already spent millions to no avail. The simple fact is that it still costs far more money to extract hydrogen, breaking its molecule away from others in order to use it to create energy. This is a bad idea.
Hydrogen is held out as a clean-burning, virtually inexhaustible source of energy, but as a Washington Times editorial pointed out in November, others "suggest it is a gaseous dream rising on the rhetoric of environmental windbags." If enough billions are spent, it seems reasonable to expect hydrogen to become an energy source, but like most environmental pipe dreams, this one has a silent agenda of eliminating petroleum as an energy source, nor can we reasonably expect a dramatic breakthrough. Did I mention this is a very bad idea?
Oil is the Green´s number one enemy after population. The object is not to make the Earth safer, but to continue the pressure to reduce reliance on it, putting everyone at a disadvantage when it comes to utilizing this primary form of energy.
Given the fact that the Earth shows no signs of running out of oil in the near or even far future, the notion of spending billions to replace it seems odd at best, foolish at worst. The Earth´s reserves of oil have been consistently underestimated for decades since it was first discovered. To the contrary, discoveries of new reserves occur every year and the technology to get at it has improved as well.
The mere fact that Greens have fought gaining access to the estimated 16 billion barrels of oil in Alaska´s ANWR area tells you more about their real agenda than anything else you need to know. The Department of Energy estimates there are at least one trillion barrels currently available worldwide.
If the Saudis were not sitting atop huge reserves, they would still be camel drivers and goat herders. If Saddam Hussein did not control the second largest reserve of oil, we might not being going to war to wrest control from this madman?
While it is true that a hydrogen-based economy is deemed inevitable for reasons of efficiency, environmental benefit and inexhaustibility, I remain wary of this. It is true, too, that hydrogen fuel cells have the potential to be almost twice as efficient as internal combustion engines, emitting only air and water vapor, there are huge problems involved.
Three experts, Lawrence D. Burns, Byron McCormick and Christopher E. Borroni-Bird, noted in the October issue of Science that, "Viewed from where we are today, fuel cells and a hydrogen fueling infrastructure are a chicken-and-egg problem. We cannot have large numbers of fuel-cell vehicles without adequate fuel available to support them, but we will not be able to create the required infrastructure unless there are significant numbers of fuel-cell vehicles on the roadways."
Breaking a hydrogen molecule into electrons and protons, and then sending it through an electric drive motor, and recombining the particles with oxygen to produce water poses an enormous challenge. "While hydrogen is universally abundant, it´s not cheap to get at", noted the Washington Times editorial. "At the moment, fuel cells are actually energy losers, since it costs more to free the hydrogen than is earned by running hydrogen through fuel cells." In brief, it costs more energy to turn hydrogen into energy than current technology would permit.
Writing recently on the topic, Llewellyn King, publisher of White House Weekly, Noted that "In an act of political brilliance, President Bush, in his State of the Union Speech, stole the Holy Grail of environmentalism, the hydrogen-powered fuel-cell car. For two decades, environmentalists have held out the hydrogen economy´ as the pollution-free future for transportation. Unfortunately, it also has had about it the whiff of a free lunch." Five Presidents have put the federal government to work trying to achieve this goal. It remains a very bad idea.
The process involved is called hydrolysis, popularly called "cracking water." As King pointed out, "The former defeats the purpose because you still have to have oil, coal or natural gas to manufacture hydrogen." This is what the Greens like to gloss over. Why not, asks King, just run a vehicle on natural gas to begin with? Why burden a vehicle with a duel system of reforming the gas and then making electricity? This seems so obvious that one is also compelled to ask, why not just keep using gasoline? The entire, worldwide structure of extracting oil to transporting it to refining it would have to be changed. Why not just keep finding new sources of oil since there is no evidence we are in imminent danger of running out of it?
Hydrogen has a very low energy density. It would cost more to fuel your car with it than our current system. As King notes, "The energy density of hydrogen is about one-tenth that of natural gas." Hybrid engines, available only in "demonstration" vehicles, would reduce our dependency on imported gas and this well may be the President´s interest in this power source. That does not, however, make it any less of a bad idea.
Hydrogen is the new darling of the Greens as was nuclear energy a few decades ago until they abandoned their support and now actively fight the creation of new nuclear energy plants.
Forget about some spectacular breakthrough on hydrogen as an energy source. Do not be fooled by the Green´s claims because, like everything else they propose, their primary goal is to reduce the population of the Earth and anything that can serve their agenda will be pursued amidst a flood of lies.
Nothing new under the sun! - My high school chemistry teacher predicted this foolishness 43 years ago. He said that the stability of the water molecule is such that any attempt to split it is a poor use of energy. He's still right today. (big surprise)
Hydrogen is merely a method of energy storage. Fusion could make energy cheap enough to use the storage method but until then, Hydrogen would require us to use some other form of energy source to feed the system.
Hydrocarbons are a dead end on the other hand.
Facts are so inconvenient to the socialists that wish to make us dependent on an easily controllable source of energy.
That was figured out a long time ago, and it is producing it far faster than we will ever be able to burn it. - We're going to have to find ways to increase our use of petroleum to keep it from seeping up out of the ocean floor as it is doing off the central coast of California (and has done for hundreds of years).
That's precisely my point.
The notion of a "hydrogen-based economy" is just as absurd as a "compressed air based economy".
It's just another junk-science political buzzword foisted on a dumbed-down populace.
1. Automobiles will switch en masse to hybrid power, where 75 to 85 percent of the motive power is generated by a new generation of very clean-burning gasoline engines using direct-injection fuel delivery systems and low-sulfur gasoline (with selective cylinder shutdown to reduce fuel consumption in partial load conditions) and the rest generated by a electric motor that is recharged by the gasoline engine. Think of the hybrid drivetrains pioneered by the Toyota Prius and Honda Insight/Civic Hybrid and apply it on a larger scale. The result is automobiles with 35-45% better fuel mileage than now regardless of size.
2. Larger vehicles such as minivans, SUV's and pickup trucks will switch to the next generation of clean-burning diesel engines using low-sulfur diesel fuel; the excellent low-end torque of diesel engines are well-suited for these types of vehicles, and of course they'll get 35-40% better fuel mileage than today's gasoline-powered minivans, SUV's and pickup trucks. GM's amazing Duramax engine the sign of things to come for these types of vehicles.
In short, it is within easy technological reach to have automobile CAFE be 38 miles per US gallon and minivan/SUV/pickup CAFE be 27 miles per US gallon without going to exotic hydrogen power. And we'll get lower emissions since less exhaust is emitted per mile of driving due to the need to use less fuel in the combustion process.
There shouldn't be any difference whatsoever.
The hydrogen fuel cell is merely a substitute for the battery, or solar cells, or whatever other source of electicity an electric car might use.
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Gasoline burns pretty well too. But then, we've become accustomed to the safety issues involved, and we're used to the risk. I'm certian that there are ways to make hydrogen "safer". Probably safer than gasoline, which tends to spread all over and flow in wrecks.
Hydrogen is extremely slippery--it's the smallest molecule, and it can leak out through the walls of a steel tank.
At atmospheric pressure, its energy density is very low, so it has to be compressed, liquified, or absorbed into metal hydrides. Compressed or liquid hydrogen would be EXTREMELY dangerous in a crash, much more dangerous than gasoline. Hydride storage is very heavy.
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That statement is unbelievable and hence does a disservice to the arguments against this ludricrous use of hydrogen movement. Eventually we are going to run out of oil, regardless of whether past estimate of oil availability have been wrong. The idea of arguing from a hypothetical momentum of past error belongs to students in a grade school classroom. There is no such momentum.
Enough said.
But... since one of the methods is to use electricity at night which right now is thrown away. It would seem to me that hydrogen produced by that method is basically "free".
Did your "hydrogen promoter" also tell you this falsehood?
The nice thing about hybrid cars is that they are here now. Of course, if they would also "plug in" to the grid, that would be all the more better.
OK, tell me where you get the H2 and how you get it to the car?
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