Hydrogen Fuel Cells Hit the Road 530
caffeined writes "Well, it looks like Honda is doing a real test of their fuel-cell car. A family in California is renting the car for $500/mo. Honda is charging them so that they take it seriously - an executive explained that if it were free they might not get the kind of feedback they want. If someone is paying for something and they're not happy - then you're going to hear about it. This is apparently the first fuel-cell car on the road anywhere in the world, according to Honda."
Nice (Score:5, Interesting)
They need to try this in more than warm, sunny southern California. My sister has a Prius and loves it, though the battery sometimes doesn't respond well to being parked outside overnight in sub-zero. You also have to wonder what cumulative effect road salt ions will play. Seems the ions in the sea air in California like my 12v battery a lot, I do wonder how hybrids are doing with their higher voltage.
Still, it's promising. I wished they gave us a little tip off on how the trial is going rather than all the peripheral issues, but I suppose Honda wants to keep as much of that confidential as possible.
Ford had them in Vancouver first. (Score:4, Informative)
BC Transit (Score:4, Informative)
Must have something to do with Ballard...
Re:Ford had them in Vancouver first. (Score:3, Informative)
See the Milestones section of http://www.bmw.com/com/en/index_highend.html [bmw.com]
Re:Ford had them in Vancouver first. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nice (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nice (Score:2)
Unfortunately that's what our tourist brochures imply. Otherwise our real estate market might not be quite so insane.
Re:Nice (Score:2)
That reminds me of a possibly apocryphal story I heard about some of the older (as in 1960s-era) Volkswagen cars. Apparently they were designed for Germany's climate, and in the considerably warmer American Southwest, some parts would expand at different rates and just not fit together.
Re:Nice (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nice (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Nice (Score:5, Funny)
depends, celsius or farenheit?
Re:Nice (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nice (Score:5, Funny)
That's pretty funny, but what's even MORE funny is that -40 celsius is actually the exact same temperature as -40 fahrenheit! Haha! I'm glad no one noticed that before me.
Re:Nice (Score:5, Funny)
Sigh.
Re:Nice (Score:5, Funny)
So... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nice (Score:4, Interesting)
Still funny to think "maybe they should road test this on Pluto, to see what happens if the fuel freezes..."
Re:Nice (Score:3, Funny)
On the plus side, if you're a carpenter you can drive nails with your pecker.
What's so funny? (Score:4, Insightful)
We have enough posts on how people like MS aren't testing their software enough, but now we criticize someone who thinks they should be testing more?
You might think Honda would do this, but be cautious. This is brand new technology, of course, and businesses love to cut corners in order to make it to market on time.
Re:Nice (Score:3, Informative)
Low temp operation (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Nice (Score:3, Insightful)
These things don't work worth a [beep] in Minnesota, or Winnipeg, or anywhere else cold.
Fortunately with oil and natural gas prices, everyone living where there is snow will soon have to declare bankrupcy and move south. Problem solved
Re:Nice (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, say somewhere like... Pennsylvania. Now, if only we could find someone in Pennsylvania willing to do this sort of test... hmmm...
Oh, heck. For the good of the nation, I'll do it.
--- SER
P.S. For a low, low fee, I'm also available for testing the psychological effects of being given large amounts of cash; the long-term physiological effects of Segway use; and the ergonomics of ultra-high-end laptops.
Re:Hybrids are a Load of Crap (Score:3, Informative)
Getting more out of ethanol than the fuels you used is easy: just use 1990s production techniques or better.
That means on the farm you have things like diesel tractors that get better use of the fuel, hybrid crops that yield nearly twice as much. Precision fertializer application so you don't waste it where the ground is fertil.
At the plant you use a dry milling process, your total return is about 167% of the energy input. Or you wet milling, but use all the other results from wet milling, and call e
Re:Hybrids are a Load of Crap (Score:3, Insightful)
They picked this up from the software industry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They picked this up from the software industry (Score:2, Funny)
I think it's a smart idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Whose evaluation do you trust more?
Movie critic who doesn't have to pay to see films, or your friend who has to shell out hard-earned cash to see it? The movie critic will bring in all kinds of esoteric critical theory crap because they never actually directed a movie but always wanted to, and now they're just out to prove how much they know about the meta theory of film.
Music critic who doesn't have to pay to review an album, and in fact gets paid to write a review,
Re:They picked this up from the software industry (Score:3, Interesting)
Some other tidbits in this article:
- the car has an ultra capacitor -- a non-chemical ''battery" that injects electrical power when demand is high. The ultra capacitor sets Honda apart from rivals.
- the hydrogen fueling plant in Pomona uses solar energy to produce hydrogen
- the car in the above story is
Re:They picked this up from the software industry (Score:3, Insightful)
If a reviewer gets something for free, they're more likely to think well of it than if they pay for it. Look at all the "hardware review" sites out there run out of someone's parents' basement. They don't generate actual useful information, it's just a giant web of marketing jizz about how awesome the newest ATI/Nvidia/whatever card is. That's great for PR, but not for the engineers who want to understand
Don't hold your breath (Score:3, Interesting)
It would certainly be nice, but I do think 2010 is a bit soon.
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:2)
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:2)
That's GM, not Ford. Ford has been very quiet on the whole thing, but is still working on the technology.
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:3, Funny)
That's only because air is mostly made up of nitrogen, so hydrogen is naturally lighter. HA!
Okay, look, someone had to say it.
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:2, Interesting)
There's too much money to be made in Oil, and no matter what anyone says, the profit potential for Hydrogen - or any alternative fuel type for that matter - is just too big an unknown for any company focused on the bottom line to be bothered. The only exceptions are essentially glorified skunkworks projects or "We're doing that too" soundbyte generato
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:4, Informative)
Hydrogen Is Not An Alternative Fuel Source.
Hydrogen is an energy storage mechanism, not an energy source (unless you're talking about fusion
What is it that hydrogen brings to the automobile that makes people want it so much (apart from hype)? A few things.
One, hydrogen vehicles are electric vehicles; thus, regenerative braking and other efficiency issues become much simpler. Two, the fuel is easy to come by (if gasoline were to dissapear, we'd have to use ethanol**) and can be made disjoint from the petroleum industry (relying on grid power), although inefficient by most means of production (for example, generating electricity, then performing electrolysis). Three, the efficiencies of using hydrogen are very high - 70-80% or so; if you produce your hydrogen efficiently (say, from nuclear power thermolysis), you have an overall extremely efficient fuel cycle.
** - To preemptively head off this tinder box before it ignites, ethanol is A) not a net negative energy balance, and B) even if it was, it wouldn't matter. As for (A), only Pimentol (and those he works with) claim this, and his numbers are extremely questionable (relying on archaic conversion efficiency numbers, making unreasonable assumptions about fertilizer and irrigation, etc - I can get into this more if need be). Essentially everyone else who has studied the issue comes up with a very positive energy balance. As for (B), even if it was negative, that's irrelevant. The Nazis turned coal to oil extremely inefficiently, burning far more coal to power it than they produced oil's worth of energy, and yet it drove the Nazi war machine. Most ethanol production today uses natural gas, but that's just because it's currently cheap. If it wasn't, they could use coal heat, nuclear heat, any waste power plant heat - they could even burn ag waste. You're turning something that you can't put into your gas tank into something that you can.
Re:Don't hold your breath (Score:5, Informative)
Ugh. You are confusing a gasoline fuel cell with a [fuelsafe.com]hydrogen fuel cell [wikipedia.org]. You'll find they are very different things.
GMC is the only one who refuses to go along with fuel cells.
That is blatantly false. For one thing, GMC is a division of GM. For another, if you actually researched you'd find that GM is footing the largest part of the hydrogen fuel cell research. Honda is busy putting cars out and getting PR, GM is busy investing money in figuring out how to deliver hydrogen to the world efficiently.
Also it should be mentioned that the oil industry owns stock in these American automobile companies so they have a financial incentive to create gas guzzlers.
I don't know about this first-hand, but given the track record of your post I wouldn't take only your word for it.
Theifs.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Theifs.... (Score:5, Funny)
Unless they can find another hydrogen refueling station somewhere on the way across the border, probably no one.
Re:Theifs.... (Score:3, Funny)
Remember, smart people don't resort to auto theft.
Smart criminals become accountants or energy firm executives.
Re:Theifs.... (Score:2)
Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:4, Funny)
Oh the humanity!
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:2)
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:5, Informative)
The Hindenburg went up so fast because the canvas was treated with substances that also happen to be used in rocket fuel. Even so, the passenger compartment itself was unharmed and the passengers survived.
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:2)
Interesting... I'm sure the families of the 13 passengers, 22 crew and 1 member of the ground crew believed to be dead all this time will be relieved to hear that news.
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:3, Insightful)
Gas tanks don't spontaneously explode. A few liters of gasoline will burn quite nicely, but it doesn't explode.
Think of all the car wrecks you've seen. How many were burnt up?
The Hindenburg went up so fast because the canvas was treated with substances that also happen to be used in rocket fuel.
Debatable...
Even so, the passenger compartment itself was unharmed and the passenge
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:5, Informative)
You are correct however about the death toll on the passengers. From the Wiki:
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:4, Informative)
Stop and think for a minute here: Hindenburg, like most derrigables at the time, had been struck by lightning several times in the past, and had large holes burned in the skin by it. If the skin was so flammable, why didn't it (and other craft) catch on the first bolt, instead of only when it (and others that burned) were venting hydrogen? Only when the hydrogen was mixed in stochiometric ratios did it (and others go up).
I could easily go on here. The fact that completely differently constructed WWI blimps (with different materials in the skin) burned in exactly the same fashion (the outer skin acts like a glow lamp to the inner hydrogen, which slowly burns from sucked-in oxygen). The fact that the combustion can be visibly seen in the pictures burning along cell lines [altfrankfurt.com], despite the fact that the skin was continuous across cells. Etc. I suggest you read up on the subject - the Addison Bain Incendiary Paint theory has been widely debunked.
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:2)
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Effects of Hydrogen? (Score:2)
If there was a huge rupture of the tank the hydrogen would simply escape as one giant ball of gas rather than a continuous stream of gas if there was a leak.
However, this does not mean that the damage would be worse than a conventional fuel tank since the hydrogen would burn all at once rather than in a gasoline situation where the fuel
Its a bit pricy (Score:3, Funny)
Spallino was at the wheel of his silver Honda FCX, a car worth about $1 million that looks like a cross between a compact - say, a Volkswagen Golf - and a cinder block.
For that sort of cash I'd like to get more that than a Volksie Golf, at least a Passat.
Photo links via Google... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.honda.co.jp/FCX/ [honda.co.jp] (Flash in Japanese)
http://www.greencarcongress.com/2005/10/hondas_mo
http://world.honda.com/news/2005/4050629.html [honda.com] (with family)
http://www.hondanews.com/CatID2045?view=p&page=1&
Enjoy!
Fishing for ... complaints? (Score:5, Funny)
So if you want honest feedback on your sexual prowess from your girlfriend then you should charge a fee, eh? Hmmm. I am intrigued by this concept and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
Re:Fishing for ... complaints? (Score:5, Funny)
Paying for feedback? (Score:2)
If someone is paying for something and they're not happy - then you're going to hear about it.
Yes, tell that to every Office Space worker who's watched management throw good money after bad. God forbid that we admit we're unhappy with the results of all that spending....
Bummer of a name... (Score:2)
Electric car, yeah right... (Score:5, Insightful)
Only 28% of the electricity is created using nuclear or hydro power sources.
So if more and more people start driving electric cars in California we'll have to burn even more fossils and quite a bit of it is the good old polluter named coal.
Not that I have anything against a better car runs on renewable energy, but I think it would be better to start with creating more electricity that doesn't come from fossils.
-- Sir! I'm only telling you once, step down from the soap box. This is your last warning...
Source for Hydrogen (Score:3, Insightful)
Incremental electric demand comes from oil & natural gas.
Using hydrogen cars will just shift the fossil fuel burning to the power plant rather than the car.
So I'm wondering, other than sounding like cool space age technology, where is the benefit?
Re:Source for Hydrogen (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally, it is relatively easy to shift the source of electrical energy from carbon to nuclear and perhaps solar and wind. It is IMPOSSIBLE to do that if cars stay the same, i.e. gasoline-based.
Moving from gasoline to fuel cell is an enabler, it allows for a shift from polluting to non-polluting technology. If you don't have that enabler, you will never be able to do the shift.
Political ramifications (Score:5, Insightful)
* The price of the occasional war
* The price of terrorism sponsored by some OPEC states
* The price of dependency on oil importing stations (e.g. New Orleans)
Really, I'm not trying to start a flame war here over the necessity of the Iraq war or to cast blame on any state in particular. But if the US reduces its dependency on a fossil fuel from a very volatile region it may do more good than just the immediate environmental and economic effects.
Re:Source for Hydrogen (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, and very importantly, producing electrical energy in any powerplant, is much more efficient than transforming the thermal energy into motion, in cars.
Do you have some numbers to support this? Because I'm not sure it's true. Sure, the turbines in power plants are more efficient than the piston-based automobile engines, but in a power plant you go through two conversions, from potential to kinetic and then from kinetic to electrical, and there is a significant loss in the second stage, too. Not onl
Re:Source for Hydrogen (Score:5, Insightful)
Because all the CO2 that is produced from this is produce in bulk quantities at a central location, rather than by millions of individual automobiles, it is practical to collect the CO2 and pump it back into the ground. On top of that, pumping CO2 into an oil reserve reduced the viscosity of the oil, allowing it to be pumped at a greater rate, creating an economic benefit and our foreign oil dependency is reduced in two different ways.
So, the benefits are both in the environment, the economy, and in national security.
- Thomas;
Hydrogen will only last 10 years, it is a dead end (Score:3, Interesting)
Ft article :
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/97b0b9ce-edbb-11d9-9ff5-
Sure current Fuel cells require a lot and advancements in the technology may reduce the amount needed but this will just spin it out a bit - it will only be decades at the most.
So we will have to change everything again if Hydrogen is adopted.
Why not Biodiesel? A Carbon Neutral technology that requires little change to the current Infrastructure and will work with current Diesel engines.
Hydrogen for cars is clearly a dead duck, why then is it being foisted upon us ?
Re:Hydrogen will only last 10 years, it is a dead (Score:5, Insightful)
Cart Before Horse (Score:4, Informative)
All we need now are H2 wells (Score:3, Informative)
So if even a small fraction of US cars convert to another energy source, this would considerably lower the strain on the gasoline supply chain and probably lower the oil price -- at least until OPEP tightens the supply.
Naturally, you need that other energy source. If all you do is generate H2 from oil (or natural gas), then you accomplish nothing. You need nuclear power plants. They are not cheap (at almost $2 per watt, they are more expensive than natural gas plant), but they are considerably cheaper than solar arrays ($5/Watt), and they operate 24 hours a day whereas solar plants don't (a solar plant would need triple generating capacity and energy storage to be able to supply electricity at night -- generate 3x the energy during the day, store it, release 1x the energy at night, roughly).
More nuclear power plants would allow emerging countries to bootstrap their economy faster. Costly oil is really harming them right now. Mundane things like irrigation programs require pumps that run on electricity, which itself comes from oil. Expensive oil means no pumps, no irrigation, no crop.
So next time you meet a well-fed person opposing nuclear power, remind him/her that because of this attitude, millions of people are starving and rotting in abject poverty.
You don't seem to understand (Score:3, Insightful)
The French and the Dutch reprocess their nuclear waste and convert the waste's plutonium into short-life radionucleides. The technology exists. It's there, it's working, it's available for licensing.
I'd much prefer working at a waste reproc
Re:You don't seem to understand (Score:3, Interesting)
They say that if you ground up all the waste from a nuclear plant and blew it into the air as dust, the overall radioactive discharge would be less than a coal plant.
Pretty scary.
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:5, Insightful)
You're right, we should stick to powering our cars with a nice, non-volatile, non-explosive substance like gasoline.
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:3, Informative)
Now there's a line of hyperbole if I've ever heard it. I imagine that they've done crash tests on this car to determine the exact dangers of this happening. At the very least, I've seen the early crash tests done to decide if hydrogen was feasible or not. The result of the tests was that *if* the hydrogen were to ignite, its direction (up) would be safe as long as the passengers weren't sitting on it. It actually ended up
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:2)
Not everything can be tested in a laboratory or computer model...
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:5, Funny)
I think you have your car manufacturers mixed up.
This is Honda, not Ford [fordpinto.com]
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:2)
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:5, Informative)
For hydrogen to explode, it needs oxygen.
If the tank ruptures, the gas as light as it is would expand throughout the air very very quickly.
This isn't like lighting a balloon filled with hydrogen with a candle and watching the brief poof of flame.
This is like having a candle five feet away from a balloon filled with hydrogen and popping the balloon. That is, if there is a fire involved in the collission.
How often do collisions result in fire? I did a little bit of research into this, but the best I could find was that "crashes with fires are relatively rare" (http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/rules/regrev/evalu
To explore this a little further:
What causes a fire in an automotive accident? Faulty gas tanks and fuel lines. This results in leakage. The vapors (which are MUCH heavier than hydrogen) then get sparked by something. This ignites the vapors, leading back to the fuel tank which then catches fire. I've witnessed car fires before (a few months ago, a car in the parking lot of my apartment complex caught fire). The fire burned for 10 minutes before fire response arrived. In that time, the fire spread from one car to the two cars on either side. It took fire response about five minutes to put the fires out. During this 15 minute time period, the materials that were burning included the interior of the car, under the hood, and the tires. The only violent explosions that occurred were the tires exploding.
I'm theorizing the reason the gas tanks didn't ignite is that gasoline requires a very oxygen rich environment. Gasoline requires a 1.4% - 7.6% concentration in air for it to be explosive. Any less than this and it will merely ignite; any more than this and there isn't enough oxygen for it to explode. It will simply ignite. The pre-existing fire probably used up most of the oxygen near the fuel lines. There was probably a phenomenon similar to what you see with an oil well - a jet of flame from the fuel line. Hollywood car explosions just don't happen.
Now, on to hydrogen.
Hydrogen, being much lighter than air (as opposed to natural gas or gasoline vapors), dissipates very quickly in air. At concentrations of less than 10%, it would require the same ammount of energy to ignite as would natural gas. The main point here, is that hydrogen dissipates so quickly that the concentration would very quickly reach less than 4% (the lower limit of explosivity). The likelyhood of explosions is much less likely than with even gasoline because of this.
Hydrogen Fuel Cells do not use any sparking or arcing componants. Similarly, the engine is a simple electronic engine. If something shorted, it could spark - but there is no combustion inherent in a fuel cell car. This limits the chances of even igniting the hydrogen in the case of a leak.
Fuel cells are also equipped with automatic shutoffs in case a leak is detected. This can't help if the storage tank itself is ruptured, but that would be difficult (Normal air tanks for scuba divers are very difficult to rupture, and tanks used to transport flamable liquid are even more difficult to rupture).
The myth of the exploding hydrogen car can be linked to two things: the hindenberg and the hydrogen bomb.
The hindenberg burned, rather than exploded. The color of the flame was wrong for hydrogen to be the propellant. It's very likely that it was the flamable fabric covering the zeppelin that ignited, not a leaking hydrogen tank.
A hydrogen bomb requires special isotopes of H2, and very high temperatures. Neither of which would be found in a car fire or a hydrogen fuel cell car.
For more on hydrogen fuel cell safety: http://sanewsletters.com/FCIR/fcirfctpart1.pdf [sanewsletters.com]
In the meantime, stop propogating myth and FUD.
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.visforvoltage.com/forums/uploads/post-
notice the hydrogen bottle. notice it's still whole.
Re:People will pay for anything... (Score:3, Funny)
i don't think anyone could reasonably argue that they hit you because 'they didn't see you'...'yeah, that jerk in the giant glowing yellow bottle just came outta nowhere'
Re:Sign me up! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically you are looking for any late 80s-to-mid-90s European diesel, preferably with the Bosch pump.
Although of course. (Score:2)
Re:Although of course. (Score:2)
Basically, though, the Americans can't get oleopneumatic Cits. Sucks to be them, doesn't it? What a joy they are to drive, especially after lardy unstable Yank tanks.
Re:Sign me up! (Score:4, Funny)
Me too! But so far I've had no luck finding a car that runs on cheap vodka.
Re:Sign me up! (Score:2)
Re:Sign me up! (Score:4, Interesting)
-Rick
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Informative)
Environmental benefits in comparison to petroleum based fuels include:
* Biodiesel reduces emissions of carbon monoxide (CO) by approximately 50% and carbon dioxide by 78.45% on a net lifecycle basis because the carbon in biodiesel emissions is recycled from carbon that was already in the atmosphere, rather than being new carbon from petroleum that was sequestered in the earth's crust. (Sheehan, 1998)
* Biodiesel contains fewer aromatic hydrocarbons: benzofluoranthene: 56% reduction; Benzopyren
Re:Yes, I think Honda would... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great news! (Score:2)
Never mind that at the moment our best source of hydrogen is from hydrocarbons i.e. oil.
Re:Great news! (Score:3, Insightful)
1) WHere do you think we will be getting the energy for hydrogen seperation?
2) How many wars have started directly because of oil supply? ANd what is the death toll for these wars as opposed to the more traditional "agression" wars?
Honestly, the wars for oil have contributed very little to the death toll due to violence in our history (even modern history). And fuel cells does not remove our dependence form oil until we can power hydrogen purification plants using wind, solar, or nuclear powe
Re:Great news! (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't worry, I'm sure we can think of another reason.
Granted (Score:3, Insightful)
As to the hydrogen itself, we are loaded with it.
Re:OT: 3 column layout (Score:2)
Go google.
Re:don't know about the first (Score:5, Informative)
An article on the Honda site [honda.com] says "In December 2002, the city of Los Angeles began leasing the first of five Honda FCXs, which are now used in normal, everyday activities by city officials." ... "While the 2005 Honda FCX is our second-generation fuel cell vehicle (FCV), it is the first to be powered by a Honda designed and manufactured fuel cell stack."
So this is a meaningful trial and a significant step but it is far from the "first fuel-cell car on the road".
Re:Alternatives to fuel cells? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well the easiest (and that is a very relative term) are ethanol or biodiesel. Both are liquid fuels, meaning our entire infrastructure designed for handling liquids doesn't need to be replaced (gas pumps, tanker trucks, pipelines, etc.). They are carbon neutral, meaning the carbon released during combustion is the same carbon that the original plants absorbed as they grew (ie no net carbon increase in the
Re:Fuel Cell Hybrid more practical (Score:3, Insightful)
having an efficient vehicle that can do 70mph for highway driving is not desired by the typical american even though it will work perfectly fine and have enough charge to return home with spare capacity.
And these vehic
Re:Nice but (Score:3, Informative)
1) Plants aren't that efficient at turning sunlight into energy. They don't really need to be for their purposes, and they ignore certain wavelengths (such as green) altogether.
2) Once you have the plant, you need to turn it into diesel. Again, this is highly inefficient.
3) Once you have diesel, you must turn it into energy. Combustion engines are less efficient than fuel cells or power plant turbines.
Consider how much land we use for farm
Re:Nice but (Score:3, Insightful)
Biodiesel is a storage medium. It takes energy to produce it. What are they going to use? Nuclear, solar, geothermal, hydroelectric, wind, oil, or coal? Zero point energy [zpenergy.com] is the way to go.
Seriously, your argument is silly. Both hydrogen and biodiesel are energy storage mechanisms, and both require energy to produce.
Re:WHOOOO cares (Score:3, Insightful)