"H-Prize" Announced 394
An anonymous reader writes " The House passed legislation to encourage research into hydrogen as an alternative fuel creating the "H-Prize",allowing scientists, inventors and entrepreneurs to vie for a grand prize of $10 million, and smaller prizes. The Department of Energy would put together a private foundation to set up guidelines and requirements for the prizes. Anyone can participate, as long as the research is performed in the United States and the person, if employed by the government or a national lab, does the research on his own time.
Best political Quote: "If we can reinvent the car, imagine the jobs we can create." said bill sponsor Rep. Bob Inglis, R-S.C."
Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
Splitting the atom at work is fun, getting to take work home is just a bonus.
Now, where's my chisel?
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
At last! I have an excuse should I "accidentally" blow something up in the cource of my "research".
"No officer, I'm not building weapons of mass destruction or meth... I'm simply exploring alternative fuel sources to help this country become less dependant on foreign oil."
I am so sorry... You can't do that. (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe I'm just being cynical... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Maybe I'm just being cynical... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe I'm just being cynical... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
In honour of Ian Dury (Score:2, Informative)
Taken from "There Ain't Half Been Some Clever Bastards"
Einstein can't be classed as witless.
He claimed atoms were the littlest.
When you did a bit of splitting-em-ness
Frighten everybody shitless
Re:Awesome! (Score:2)
No there were at least three of us. I was going to ask the GP the same question but you beat me to it. According to IMDb Young Einstein was an international hit.
A good start. (Score:5, Insightful)
However, I really don't think this admistration seems too interested in ending dependance on foreign oil, when they electric and natural gas cars [lta.gov.sg] to the tune of $500+/year.
Hydrogen would be great & all, but what really needs to be done is to improve America's public transport infrastructure & encourage people to start using it. A gradual raising of gas taxes until pump prices are around $7/gallon, with the money raised being pumped into (free) public transport would achieve precisely that.
Re:A good start. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A good start. (Score:2, Insightful)
Hmmmmn, my understanding of Australian cities is that they sprawl in a similar fashion to US West Coast cities. If they'd been planned properly (or at least had development & freeway building curbed a little), public transport could be much better.
But people accept the burden of debt and maintenance
Re:A good start. (Score:5, Informative)
Why did it fail? There are areas where public transport is convenient - intra-urban commuters primarily - but in most such cases the public transport system is already there and utilized almost as heavily as it can be. Meanwhile for everyone else - those commuting between suburbs/outlying areas and cities - in many cases there is just no way public transport can be made attractive. For example at my previous job, I had an easy 30 minute commute by car. Public transport took 90 minutes, and cost three times as much. You couldn't really improve that much, you can only have so many stations, and you can only run your busses and trains so often. Even if you made it free, the extra hour makes it unviable. Not to talk of losing the ability to stop of at a shopping center on the way home, or run errands in my lunch break.
Since the USA has more of a car culture than the UK, I'm sure there are improvements to be made, but it is fantasy to believe that public transport is the transportation panacea that some make it out to be. Public transport has it's place, but the convenience and freedom that comes with personal transportation is not something many people want to part with, and nor should they in my opinion.
Re:A good start. (Score:3, Interesting)
The tube trains are unbelievably slow, they're hot all year round, to the point where there's warnings at the entrances.
In spite of this, it's still far more convenient then a car (even without factoring in the cogestion charge).
You don't mention what part of the UK you're from, but a 30 minute commute that's 90 minutes by public transport
Re:A good start. (Score:3, Insightful)
In spite of this, it's still far more convenient then a car (even without factoring in the cogestion charge).
As I said, there are places where public transport is convenient, travelling within central London is one.
You don't mention what part of the UK you're from, but a 30 minute commute that's 90 minutes by public transport is an indication the PT is broken there too.
I disagree. As I poi
Re:A good start. (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you believe everything your government tells you?
While quite a rosy picture [defra.gov.uk] is being painted by defra, it appears they have been forgetting [guardian.co.uk] to include boats and planes in their emmission counts. Oops.
I agree that the UK is generally better then the US. Bu
Re:A good start. (Score:2, Interesting)
They're not included because we can't do anything about them. Aviation treaties limit the amount of taxation you can apply to commercial air and boats tend to registered to other countries that don't give a hoot about the environment, or safety or anything much apart from their flag fee.
Both situations are clearly daft, but until the international commun
Re:A good start. (Score:2, Interesting)
Not strictly so. You could, for example, stop out of town office parks that weren't serviced by a rail link. The planning laws are there for a reason, but they're so abused that you end up with exactly the sort of sit
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
Re:A good start. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A good start. (Score:5, Insightful)
A gradual raising of gas taxes until pump prices are around $7/gallon, with the money raised being pumped into (free) public transport would achieve precisely that.
Yeah, that's what we need -- more artificial controls by the government on commodities.
Your plan won't work for several reasons:
Nope, this H-Prize approach is the best way, I think -- let our own greed be the catalyst for innovation. I think you'll only see true innovation in alternative energy when a) shortening supplies naturally cause current technology to no longer be a viable option and b) the economic carrot presented by a) becomes more attractive to big energy companies than their current oil business.
Re:A good start. (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not? The govt already controls the prices of everything buy subsidising virtually every industry in the nation. Everything you eat has been subsidized, every piece of paper or scrap of wood, every mineral, everything. There is already a tax on gasoline too.
"Your plan won't work for several reasons:"
Seven reasons boil down to these two. Nobody is brave enough, nobody is selfless enough.
That's it.
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
As I said a couple of days ago, the price of petrol in the pump in the UK is currently $6.89 / US Gallon. We pay about the same per mile (17c or thereabouts).
Re:A good start. (Score:2, Funny)
Right. Because the whole state-owned-rail-system-thing has such a glorious history of excellence.
Listen up, you urban childless wonder: Raise your own damn taxes, and stay away from gasoline. It fuels a whole lot more than those "e-e-e-e-e-vil" SUVs and Hummers, like interstate commerce for example.
But if we're going to play the game of frivolou
Re:A good start. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
"Breeder?"
Breeder... breeder... Wait! I know!! That's, like, the meant-to-be-derogatory term gays call straight people when they're really, really so-o-o-o-o annoyed with us, right? RIGHT? I guessed it, didn't I? Tell me what I win! (I'm hoping it's a full tank of gas, but I'll settle for a new wardrobe, manicure, and having my house re-decorated...)
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
The taxes you propose don't actually provide any social benefits - you should word it like:
I propose a $1,000 tax on every Computer puchase to pay for the cost
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
I think you're missing a verb in this sentence. Is it "tax"? If so, why did you link to a site in Singapore!? What does that have to do with the US taxes?
Hydrogen would be great & all, but what really needs to be done is to improve America's public transport infrastructure & encourage people to start using it. A gradual rai
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
I suspect the GP uses a segway to get from his bedroom to his kitchen and has no idea what 'walk' means.
Raising gas taxes is just ignorant. (Score:2)
Besides, how can anyone actually suggest jacking taxes when politicians and other whiners bitch and moan about $3 gas prices? Get real, the government already puts more taxes on a gallon of gasoline than gas companies make in profit y
Re:A good start. (Score:5, Insightful)
In a nutshell there are two ways to get hydrogen commercially. The first is striping hydrocarbons. They're called hydrocarbons because it diverts your attention from the very obvious problem with this approach. Hydrocarbons are foriegn oil (more accurately natural gas, but it is the same problem.) Remind me again what the problem is that prompted us to look at alternative fuels.
The second way is electrolysis of water, the only problem is that pesky second law of thermodynamics. Yes, I know that stationary powerplants are more efficient than IC engines, and yes I know that we might be prepared to pay the energy penalty twice in order to get a transportable fuel, but the fact remains you are starting with a losing proposition.
If the senate is serious about spurring Hydrogen growth they should be approving new nuclear power plants with the express purpose of making hydrogen. That IMO is the only economically way to produce the stuff. (Sure solar is great, but I think that if we manage to improve solar technology to the point that we can mass produce hydrogen we've solved a bigger problem than foriegn oil. In other words solar power is a bigger problem independent from Hydrogen, and if we lick that we will be less concerned with Hyrdogen.)
So even if we do have hydrogen production plants you still have very serious storage and transporation issues. Not to mention prohibitively expensive fuel cells and batteries. I think the govenment is already dumping more than enough money into these fields as it is. Maybe the H-prize will help along research in storage, but I think the dozens of million dollar plus university grants are a bit more of an incentive than this prize.
All in all I view this as a public challenge to violate the laws of thermodynamics. Call me cynical, but I don't think it's going to work out.
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
It's funny when people think raising the price of gasoline is 'interfering with the market' isn't it?
Re:A good start. (Score:2)
"Whatmoron modded THAT "funy"?"
It's just because there's no "+1 Depressing"
yet.
BMW has a nice car already (Score:5, Informative)
Does BMW win anything for its ingenuity?
Re:BMW has a nice car already (Score:2)
sweet jobs (Score:5, Funny)
oh and uh, it might help the environment or something too.
Re:sweet jobs (Score:2)
UAW guys and auto manufacturers better study up on alternative fuel cars.
Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:5, Informative)
Do people not realize that Hydrogen is like electricity, it's only an energy delivery mechanism? There are NO free sources of hydrogen around to tap, to the best of my knowledge. You have to generate the hydrogen somehow...from oil, coal, or some other energy source In the amount of time that this idea has been bantered about, I have come to the conclusion that no one understands this point, including the President and the Secretary of Energy.
The reason that things like solar, wind power, or geothermal and the like have ben discussed as energy SOURCES is that they are just that; ways of extracting energy from processes on the earth. Hydrogen is an energy TRANSFER MECHANISM, not a source.
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:5, Insightful)
You can't grow hydrogen trees or dig the ground looking for it. Just about all the hydrogen around us (and yes, there is a lot of it) is combined to Oxygen or Carbon. In order to burn it (a fuel-cell is sort of like burning, without flames) we must first apply energy to get it loose (and, probably, release some carbon to the atmosphere in the process).
Unless they are talking table top (or "under hood") fusion, this is only an act of "look, we are concerned with the environmental"-type misdirection.
And a remarkably dumb one.
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2, Informative)
Get it from nukes (Score:2)
You can't grow hydrogen trees or dig the ground looking for it. Just about all the hydrogen around us (and yes, there is a lot of it) is combined to Oxygen or Carbon. In order to burn it (a fuel-cell is sort of like burning, without flames) we must first apply energy to get it loose (and, probably, release some carbon to the atmosphere in the process).
Very true. Hydrogen used by NASA for rocket propellant is derived from natural gas! The process does not result in the release of hydrocarbons. The hydroc
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2)
Oh, they understand alright (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, I think they understand it just fine. The Whitehouse administration has been in bed with the oil industry from the beginning. The whole 'hydrogen economy' promotion is just an attempt to make it look like they are taking action towards energy independance and alternative energy source development, as to divert interest/funds for alternative energy research
Re:Oh, they understand alright (Score:3, Interesting)
1. As long as we're not generating carbon dioxide during the stripping process, then we will be generating less greenhouse gas. Consuming hydrogen as a fuel produces water only. If the stri
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2)
That's the whole point! (Score:2)
You use wind or nuclear power to generate the hydrogen, simple as that.
And before anyone starts going off about nuclear waste - who gives a crap. We can bury enough of it to power a generation in any of the current storage facilities. And I am willing to be by that time ion propul
Re:That's the whole point! (Score:2)
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2)
You can also think of it as a battery of sorts. You can use solar enerygy, geothermal energy, and yes even oil, nuclear, or coal energy and use it to make hydrogen that you can put into a fuel cell and power a car. It's more convenient then an electrib motor and lots of batteries.
Iceland for example is planning on making use of all their geothermal energy to create a hydrogen economy. Sunny countries can do
The only solution is Nuclear Power (Score:2)
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2)
It's so big you've missed the obvious: The sun! A huge ball of hydrogen just sitting there just waiting to be tapped. All we need is a rather lenghty piece of heat resistent pipe and we could just pump all the hydrogen we'll ever need. Brilliant I tell you.
Re:Where do you GET the Hydrogen? (Score:2)
Idiocy never fails. (Score:3, Insightful)
Hydrogen would require plants, specialized chargers, etc. Keeping control for ourselves are we?
Some "we the people" eh?
I wish some more of us would wake the hell up. The Matrix has you, boys and girls, and you're loving every moment of vying for a few scraps from its table.
Enjoy yourselves, oh mindless slaves, and keep vying for what they tell you to vie for. After all, you're free to decide for yourselves, not free to think for yourselves.
~DaedalusHKX
Re:Idiocy never fails. (Score:2)
I don't mind tinfoil hats, but the melodrama was a bit much.
I agree - why no decentralization of energy? (Score:4, Interesting)
>at NON centralized NON corporatist methods of achieving alternative energy sources?
I think you hit the nail on the head, and I have long suspected that the fear of losing their deathgrip on the control of scarce energy resources has been driving huge government and business interests to make sure other, less centralized options are kept off the table.
Energy is a multi-billion dollar industry. What would happen to that industry if anyone could make their own fuel?
What if anyone could buy a bottle of Iogen's ( http://www.iogen.ca/ [iogen.ca] ) new cellulase enzymes at the grocery store, just like we buy Rid-X enzymes for our septic tanks, throw it in a trashcan in the backyard full of water and lawnmower clippings, and make their own ethanol?
What if anyone really could easily and rapidly convert water into hydrogen? (spare me the jabs on how easy electrolysis already is, please)
I'm no tinfoil-hat guy, but there are huge, huge interests that would be massively hurt by such innovations.
Lately I've been doing a lot of googling on biodiesel ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiesel [wikipedia.org] ), ethanol ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanol [wikipedia.org] ), and even wood gas generators (pyrolysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrolysis [wikipedia.org] )
From what I've seen, most of these processes are fairly simple to do, even at home. I don't think these processes would take much more technical innovation to make simple, practical, cheap decentralized fuel production a reality.
Steve
Re:I agree - why no decentralization of energy? (Score:3, Insightful)
Excuse me? Electrolysis IS easy and quick, it's just energy-intensive. So what you're asking for is a way to extract the hydrogen without paying the price in energy.
Well, then we'd be living in a different universe. One where you can convert water to hydrogen and oxygen, and then burn the hydrogen in oxygen to make water again, and yet have a net energy output from t
Two issues (Score:5, Insightful)
Two: Decentralized generation of fuel sounds like a really good idea, until you realize that most people are too stupid to do this stuff themselves in a safe manner. Half the people who aren't too stupid don't have the spare time. You have, in fact, a relatively small fraction of the population (I'm going to guess less than 2%) that have the time, space, and resources to generate and store reasonable quantites of fuel safely.
I mean, sure, I can create my own fuel at home, and given advances in technology [slashdot.org], it might even be somewhat safe. But now you're looking at doubling or tripling the volume of flammable materials in a typical residential setting, and you're adding a large amount of fuel, pre-fuel, and potentially dangerous fuel byproducts that are being transferred on a regular basis. Think about how much gas an American family will go through in a week. With three drivers (two adults plus a teen or elderly live-in), it can easily top 20-30 gallons. Now, switch to ethanol - you're up to 32-40 gallons. You'll probably not want to generate every week, so lets say you run your still twice a month, and you'll never want to drop below 20 gallons or so, or you might run out. Now you've got 100 gallons of ethanol sitting in your garage, in addition to that in your autmotive tank. In a medium-to-high density area, I would consider that an apparent danger that most municipalities would tend to discourage.
While it may become viable for those with space, it remains wholly impractical for everyone else.
Third (Okay, I'm one issue over...sue me): you won't be able to produce it as cheaply, on a continuing basis, in your back yard. Sure, you can make a bit from your brush clippings, or buy the materials in bulk, but to really be efficient will require the leverage of a large operation. We can all make our own clothes, but we don't. We could all grow our own food, but we don't. It just isn't cost effective. In the end, making fuel at home won't be either.
Sorry to be a bummer about this, but while the idea works well on an individual scale, it just doesn't scale to the society level.
Re:Idiocy never fails. (Score:2)
It is now the 11th hour, and they are grabbing at straws to keep their bloated profits.
I wonder how many jobs would really be created if we opened up this so-called 'H' prize to all forms of alternative energy. My guess is it would create even more jobs than are employed at refineries today; of course the
Re:Idiocy never fails. (Score:2)
Work With Bountiful Source (Score:5, Interesting)
It's long been known that oil (petroleum or organic) would fuel fire. And it was discovered that refining it lowered it stability and made it explosive. But where was an abundance of oil? Why, also underneath the ground.
The fact of the matter is that our energy concerns can't be solved by anything that requires more energy to make (insert corn ethanol reference here) than it produces.
So now we need to figure out how to use hydrogen and many car companies have done that but the form that hydrogen abounds in is gas--not liquid. And most hydrogen powered cars require refilling a compressed hydrogen tank. But to make this hydrogen requires electricity and this electricity requires some fuel or energy to make in the beginning
I think the real challenge here should be "just hydrogen" as an alternative fuel but instead "anything we got a lot of lying around in a ready form."
Good Idea but (Score:5, Insightful)
Protesting a plant != fear of nuclear power (Score:2, Interesting)
This was <cough> some years ago. Chernobyl and Three-mile Island have since demonstrated his point.
Re:Protesting a plant != fear of nuclear power (Score:3, Insightful)
But Three Mile Island is actually proof that the system works. Multiple failures, and no radiation released... that's a GOOD thing.
Your last sentence is crap. (Score:2)
Do you know how much oil we get from OPEC? If you said 24%, you'd be right. That also includes non-Middle Eastern countries in OPEC like Venezuela, who, spat with GWB not included, do not have the hate for tUSA that many Middle Easterners do.
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) holds 60 days worth of oil. So, even if all of OPEC shut us off and nobody tried to cheat, we'd still have 240 days until we fel
Re:Good Idea but (Score:3, Informative)
The Chinese are completely trouncing us on this one.
Re:Good Idea but (Score:2)
I think that is the point he is trying to make when he says ...
if we did not have the 70s/80s scare tactics about Nuclear power
Sure, there have been some bad events like Three Mile Island, and obviously, Chernobyl, but the technology has moved on since then. No one wants to have a Nuke plant down the road, regardless of how safe it might be, hell, most people wouldn't want a Coal power station next door! This do
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
LHC? (Score:2)
That sounds like an excellent idea, to save budget atleast.
"H-Prize" eh? (Score:2, Funny)
Hydrogen is Just an Energy Storage Medium (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hydrogen is Just an Energy Storage Medium (Score:2)
Well duh, politicians aren't scientists. The best politics can do is create a need for technology through legislation. One great way of doing this is to start wars, that has given us lots of technological enhancements, though it is a bit messy.
In this case politcians can pass legislation to cut polution. They don't have to have the answers, but at least they can set emission targets and stick to them. That will get industry into action in coming up with
research refueling stations, not engines (Score:2)
Prizes not Patents? (Score:2, Insightful)
Well Republican Bob, you seem to know that the patent system is so corrupted that it will no longer drive innovative research, elsewise why the prize? How about fixing that little problem for us instead of hamming it up for the press with stupid quotes about job creation (which by the way has been the slowest under this administration than anytime in the last 70 years.)
And the winner is... (Score:2)
Considering this is Congress, does anybody believe they'll actually be able to give this "prize" money to somebody that isn't Ford or GM? I wouldn't be surprised if the rules were tailor made for Detroit.
diversity and decentralization (Score:3, Interesting)
We need electrical cars, fuel cell cars, hyrodgen cars, ethanol cars, and a whole slew of others so that the open market can thrive. Cars themselves should run off different sources as well. Charge themselves with solar when available. If they sit outside have some small wind turbines. I'm sure there is a way to convert the energy of falling rain drops if we think about it hard enough.
The first argument is always that we have to retro fit all our gas stations. I don't understand why this is such a big deal. I think we have gotten so used to the centralized controlled gas industry that we have lost touch. If a new stick of gum comes out the stores put it on the shelf. I'm hoping alternate energies will start up a grass root movement of new gas stations that off all sorts of fuel alternatives. A little push from the goverment wouldn't help either.
What we end up with is like the coke\pepsi model. Coke produces the recipe, and then individual bottlers make it throughout the country. When you buy a coke it was probably made pretty close to you.
Lastly we need to think about ways to generate things like ethanol by using renweable sources like solar panels. They can collect solor energy slowing, but then use it to produce more explosive energy sources. Fuel cells can run off natural gas which is plentiful and then use that electricity to create the ethenol. For instance there are self running sewage plants that extract the methane gas and run it through fuel cells to power the plant.
Products just lying around are really easy to work with sure, but they are rarely clean and renewable.
If we team up different energy sources and create a more diverse "energy ecosystem" then we'll be better off.
Reinventing the Car (Score:2, Funny)
"If we can reinvent the car, imagine the jobs we can create."
Imagine what it'd do for the economy if they reinvented the wheel!
We did reinvent the wheel three times all ready (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mecanum_wheel [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tri-star [wikipedia.org]
http://www.acroname.com/robotics/parts/R130-8CM-PO LY-ROLLER.html [acroname.com]
Note the first wheel and the third wheel are not the same despite looking similar. I get what you are trying to say though. The ICE is capable of running off hydrogen gas if designed correctly. Even the mythbusters managed to get a car running by only using hydrogen gas. Why we need fuel cells a b
Does the hydrino count? (Score:2)
Inheerently evil to use energy? (Score:5, Interesting)
And honestly, I don't understand - well maybe i do - why it is that people get all flummoxed at the idea of removing human transport devices from the global warming equation. Yes, yes, for now, it is just pushing the problem up the chain, but is that the job of the car makers?
If a car is fairly efficient, and it is no longer spewing out global warming gasses - what the hell else do you expect car makers to do? Not everyone - some could - but not everyone could survive driving a euro golf cart around because it wouldn't hold kids or baggage, etc.
If the car manufacturers are going to make devices that can run 100% clean and are saleable to the public meeting demand, then if you ask me, its high time we start coming up with energy solutions that are not dependent upon unstable thocracies and kingdoms in the middle east, hockey playing blue-nosers in north america, or corrupt countires like Mexico and the rest of central America. The car makers hold up their end, its someone else's responsibility to hold up the other end.
And honestly, we see that China is - amazingly enough - going to lead the way with pebble-bed reactors... 1 for each city or more. It is utterly remarkable to me that a communist county has the stones to get this problem figured out while a country like the US is handcuffed by granola munching tree huggers... except for the founder of the Sierra Club... he gets it.
Re:Inheerently evil to use energy? (Score:4, Insightful)
Scientists dreams: citations, not sweepstakes (Score:2)
And like everyone else they need food, clothing, shelter, and, of course, health insurance.
A scientist can't go to a bank and say "I have a good chance of winning a ten million dollar prize ten years from now. Coul
10 Million? At Least 1 Billion (Score:2, Interesting)
WAY TOO SMALL. A JOKE.
This just goes to show how Congress is out of touch. Just what do they think a company is going to be able to do with 10 Million? No way that would cover the development costs. This is a joke, too bad the members probably don't know how rediculously low this is for the kind of manpower that is needed. A 500 Million prize might have a shot. 1 Billion and I could bring on the right people for long enough, and equip them - and I'm not talking thousands of staff. Hundreds, yes.
Left hand, Right Hand (Score:2, Informative)
This is complete and udder fud.
Missing the rest of the quote... (Score:2, Funny)
"We"? Who's this "we"? (Score:2)
Who's this "we" he's talking about? Politicians never actually do anything except take credit for others' work while taxing and inflating them to the poorhouse in the process.
(But, hey, at least after being taxed/inflated into the poorhouse you'll have a whole plethora of welfare programs [usagold.com] to choose from.)
H-awesome! (Score:2)
What we need is an S-Prize (Score:2, Interesting)
Why hydrogen? (Score:2)
Mythbusters Did It (Score:3, Interesting)
They also demonstrated that an unmodified diesel engine will run quite nicely on filtered used French fry oil.
The problem is that although this is feasible right now, it's not really possible for widespread use and hydrogen will probably cost more and get less mileage than a gallon of gas right now. Unless we nuke Iran and gas shoots up to $8 a gallon, anyway. The french fry oil does have potential and we're pretty close to the right price point for various nifty diesel fuels to be competitive with gasoline.
They're talking about repealing the tax on gasoline, but I'd suggest taxing the bejesus out of gasoline and dumping the proceeds into alternate energy research. Especially solar and fusion.
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:2)
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because of the Second Law, for the time being there will be a net increase in the use of fossil fuels by using hydrogen as a fuel, just as there would be a net increase in fossil fuel use if everything were run by batteries.
When the fossil fuels get expensive, hydrogen will get expensive. When the fossil fuel runs out hydrogen will be forced to become things like solar power and be in as short supply as all other forms of solar power.
The power of the power of fossil fuels is that they are the stored and concentrated solar energy of centuries, which you can use all up in a single trip to the mall. When they're gone you'll need to learn to walk again, i.e. use only as much stored solar energy (in the form of liver glycogen) as can be reasonably concentrated in a timespan relevant to the human lifetime.
KFG
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:2)
It doesn't answer the question of where the energy must come from, true, but there is some sense to shifting to hydrogen anyways, and that is rather than having to rely on a precise grade of refined petroleum, we can obtain our transportation energy from any energy source. Even better, it is easy to change energy sources as alternatives become feasible/viable, unlike the current situation, where viable alternati
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:2, Funny)
Because we have a fossil fuel economy and a great deal of fossil fuels are burned in their production.
It's all about oil, coal and natural gas.
When I ride my bicycle am going "oil free"? Well, how do you think the bananas I'm eating to fuel my bicycle got from Argentina to upstate NY, bicycle there?
KFG
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:2)
The same stupid question over and over (Score:2, Insightful)
Why?
Well first, the resource may be impractical to transport to B. Simple example, coal gassing plant generates hydrogen for cars. This would be far far far cleaner then running cars on coal, less hassle and you can do the coal burning on a huge scale with highly tuned filtration. Oh and you won't be burning the coals in busy city centers.
Then there are natural resources. Hy
Re:Why hydrogen? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not entirely the case. You can obtain hydrogen from methane or other hydrocarbons, then burn it in oxygen for a net energy gain. But if you're doing that, then you might as well just burn the hydrocarbons, which is what we do anyway.
If you're extracting hydrogen from water, then all methods cost more energy than they produce - second law of thermodynamics. But this isn't necessarily a show-stopper
Re:sounds worse than it is (Score:2)
Not just that but the oil industry execs would 'do a Balmer', and probably kill some poor sod in the carpark below with a chair.
Even if we have these wonderful new cars, who says the major Opec players won't get into mass hydrogen pro
Re:Hydrogen go BOOM! (Score:5, Insightful)
Battery go BOOM! There's a crazy guy in Australia who soups up Priuses in his spare time. Last year he made some miscalculations in the design of his homemade battery charger, and posted some pictures of the resulting explosion and fire that came close to burning his house down.
And of course cell phone battery go BLFSTSZT! burn-um-thighs make-um heap big personal injury lawsuit. But a cell phone battery the size of a gas tank would go BOOM!
Anything that can crams enough energy to propel a car hundreds of miles into a space the size of a gas tank can go BOOM! Heap smart medicine-man engineer have-um job keep-um genie bottled tightly when not in use.