

More Progress On Hydrogen-Air Fuel Cells 14
blamario writes: "Check out this article from Ottawa Citizen. It describes one particular fuel cell design by Ballard Power Systems and includes several quotes from various other institutes and companies, all racing to produce the engine of the future (and then collect the royalties):."
Bzzzzt! WRONG! (Score:1)
impressive goals (Score:2)
Fuel cell improvements may also be critical for space development - particularly for a lunar base where the 14-day "night" means you need some kind of large-capacity energy storage system. Fuel cells using in-situ oxygen and in-situ or imported hydrogen could solve that problem very nicely!
who cares WHERE the CO2 gets produced? (Score:2)
This actually produces an 'out of sight - out of mind' problem. If people don't see the polution that their vehicle/energy use is causing, they consider it 'clean'. This might lead to them using more ('clean') energy and then we get bushwacked when the CO2 that's being (remotely) produced still messes up our environment and contributes to the global warning that we're trying to stop (beyond the localized city pollution).
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Pollution at a distance... (Score:1)
There was also a remarkable amount of almost useful detail in the article!
One Point (Score:3)
This is an excellent article, however there is one point I have to make. It seems the media are heavily biased against coal power generation, believing it is heavily polluting. While burning coal generates more CO2 than most other forms of power generation, it does not necessarily release large amounts of other pollutants.
The quantities of SO2, NO2, metals and other pollutants depend heavily on the quality of coal used. Where I live (NSW, Australia) most electric power is generated from black coal, which has low amounts of pollutants. In addition, modern power stations equipped with filters capture most of the pollution which would enter the atmosphere. In fact much of the waste can be converted to fertiliser or inert filler. Carbon monoxide emissions are close to zero due to the efficient, high-temperature combustion.
While coal-fired power stations are a non-optimal solution, it makes no sense to simply rule them out without any investigation of the facts. For the media to do this is particularly bad, as the public will be against coal power in their ignorance, and another option to improve generation capacity will be lost.
What about the tanks? (Score:1)
Forgive me my ignorance if I'm asking a question that's already been answered, but wasn't the problem with hydrogen that the molecules are so damn small that they simply leak through the tanks? Has that problem been solved or am I seeing problems that don't exist?
I read about fuel cells quite some time ago and I must say, it looks promising. This would be an interesting addition to the diesel discussion [slashdot.org] here on /. earlier this week.
It seems that the natural gas option is the best one, but I think it could be a lot better. Windmills were mentioned, but I think that's not all. There are great projects going on for pollution-free energy. Think about what great place the Sahara desert could be if it would be stuffed with solarpower stations! Blazing sun all day long, enough to provide the entire world of hydrogen.
Think about the oceans, they can be used to generate enormous amounts of energy. Think of all those tons and tons of water, moving steadily from A to B in tides and gulfstreams. Put a few big watermills in it and you have both water to convert to hydrogen and energy to do so. I'm not talking bullshit here, I read articles about these ideas. I remember one about giant balloons some place near the seashore: they rose at high tide and sank back at low tide, thus generating energy.
Sadly, that's going to take a while. First off, there's the problem of millions of cars using petrol/diesel that will not be traded in for new ones with fuel cells in one day. Neither will gas stations be provided with hydrogen pumps overnight. So what I foresee is that we're going to have hybrids: vehicles that have a fuel cell but can also run on regular fuel. And from this point, I think we're going to need the government to invest a whole lot of money in providing the infrastructure needed to make hydrogen available all over the country (I'm talking about the entire world here, so this is something every government in the world would have to do). Once that's completed and fuel cells can be used without too many problems, it's time to cash in on the investments by increasing taxes on fossile fuels bigtime. I think we should start by sending George W. Bush on the first manned mission to Mars, he wouldn't understand anyway.
You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one. It would take years, but I think it would certainly be worth the effort.
Re:impressive goals (Score:1)
MY TWO BITS 0&1
If people can connect to one another even the smallest of voices will grow loud.
Re:The dilemma: pollution vs. bootstrapping (Score:1)
Re:impressive goals (Score:1)
U.S. government page on hydrogen research (Score:1)
The dilemma: pollution vs. bootstrapping (Score:1)
A better illustration between virtue and practicality would be harder to find. I suppose one could have the worst of both worlds, where the company tries to go the off-vehicle reformer route and consumers stick with internal combustion engines, causing no improvement in either respect.
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You didn't read the article, did you... (Score:2)
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You should. It makes all the difference. (Score:2)
In principle, the CO2 output of a stationary gas reforming plant could be combined with certain minerals or pumped into spent oil or gas wells; this CO2 would get to the atmosphere very slowly if at all. What do you think this would do to the planetary ecology, exactly?
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This is not Hydrogen-Air (Score:2)
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