http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=143&art_id=vn20080210085730876C308900Biofuels might prove worse than CO²
2/22/2008 7:04:15 PM
you should really say "corn-based ethanol"
2/22/2008 7:08:24 PM
i'm one of those people that totally hates the idea of ethanolanyways just wanted to post a pic but then i thought i should state that first
2/22/2008 7:13:36 PM
We need to give it up our addiction to liquid fuels already. It's obvious that oil prices aren't going down anytime soon, and every attempt to make a replacement is proving to be futile. A combo of solar and nuclear is our only option at this point.Wouldn't carbon-neutral fuels be sort of moot anyway? The huge amounts of carbon we've already put into the atmosphere will still be there, albeit slowly removed by natural systems. If we really want to save the environment, we need to find ways to actively scrub the CO2 and any other greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere.[Edited on February 22, 2008 at 8:15 PM. Reason : grammar nazi]
2/22/2008 8:15:02 PM
0EPII1 is all about quoting dubious sources.
2/22/2008 9:45:01 PM
his sources may or may not be dubious, but his overall point stands. Just think rationally about ethanol or plant-based fuels work. We know that we can only extract as much energy from the plant as we put into it + energy the plant gains from the sun and the earth. The earth corn and sugar grow in is so overworked it is depleted of all its natural resources, so we have to abundantly fertilize it. Fertilizer is a horrendous waste of energy in and of itself, in the amount of energy it takes to create (the nitrogen to create the fertilizer comes from, guess what, fossil fuels!), transport, spread, etc. So really, then only net gain we can get from plant-fuels is what the plant absorbs from the sun. If we wanted to collect energy from the sun, I'm not sure planting thousands of acres of corn which take an incredible amount of additional outside energy to plant, grow and harvest, is the way to do it. Really - the only reason ethanol is trendy or being pushed right now is the massive government subsidies the farmers are getting. Otherwise, they would be losing their shirts on this inefficient and wasteful process.
2/22/2008 9:53:55 PM
got to keep those farmers happy
2/22/2008 9:59:56 PM
What better time to be running as a senator from Illinois... Seriously though, I wonder if this applies to the growth of biomass such as algae or switchgrass.
2/22/2008 10:05:31 PM
^ it all depends on how self-sustaining the plant is and how much energy can be extracted from it. If you can find a plant that can grow and thrive off of natural, renewable resources and doesn't require tons of fossil fuel based fertilizer to grow it, and it's also easy to harvest and can be burned efficiently, then yeah - maybe there's potential there
2/22/2008 10:28:28 PM
we get fertilizer from fossil fuels only because they are cheap. We invented fertilizer long before we discovered oil and natural gas, not to mention the many other ways we have developed to make fertilizer since then. All that is required to make fertilizer is air (got that) and energy (nuclear?). But it might be silly to use energy to grow energy; perhaps we would be better off replacing our acres and acres of plants with solar panels?
2/23/2008 12:26:39 AM
Ethanol is only talked about because lazy farmers want government handouts.
2/23/2008 12:31:12 AM
2/23/2008 1:22:28 AM
2/23/2008 10:29:59 AM
2/23/2008 12:11:27 PM
We can also thank our government for supporting inflation. The increase in demand for corn has led to a sharp increase in the price for wheat, soy, ect given the number of farmers switching from these crops to corn. Additionally, given corn is a major input for feeding livestock, we have higher meat and dairy prices as well. In the end, we are spending much more for a less efficient energy source in more than one way.
2/24/2008 10:35:02 AM
Thank goodness the air cars are coming by 2010. I'm saving money NOW.http://www.popularmechanics.com/automotive/new_cars/4251491.html?series=19http://zeropollutionmotors.us/
2/24/2008 11:46:56 AM
2/24/2008 12:15:09 PM
2/24/2008 12:31:02 PM
how so? Grassland abounds out west with minimal human interference.I'm not disagreeing with you necessarialy, I'm just saying that what I've read doesn't seem to think this is a problem.
2/24/2008 1:37:21 PM
2/24/2008 3:02:55 PM
there are methods of storing the energy using compressed air without much loss that scientists are working on (and there have been systems in place in germany and alabama that use this model for decades now).
2/24/2008 3:14:41 PM
^^what an idiot
2/24/2008 3:19:13 PM
you people are out of your fucking mind if you think simplistic systems that work for a few kilowatt's worth of output could be scaled up to work for the grid. Battery backup systems could even be made to work for a house, but they are completely unrealistic at larger scale operations. Jesus Christ you people are fucking stupid.If he had said that windmills were the way to go, I would listen. If he suggested geothermal or tidal operated generation, I could go along with that. But to suggest that solar power is anything more than a fickle pipe dreams indicates that he has no understanding of what the real problems with renewable energy are.
2/24/2008 3:27:57 PM
well considering they have been using this system in germany for over thirty years, i don't think it's all that stupid.
2/24/2008 3:35:10 PM
ahahah, yeah, because no progress is ever made to make anything more efficient.ever.
2/24/2008 3:35:13 PM
NB: I don't think solar is THE answer, but it should definitely be a big part of the solution (including wind, geothermal, nuclear, etc)
2/24/2008 3:39:10 PM
Wind is cheap, but it's also even more intermittent than wind.Tidal is complete crap.Geothermal has potential (and we should by all means develop it further), but probably of a limited scale similar to hydro. And you also have a similar destroy the environment or do it cheap tradeoff.Compressed air storage is also heavily reliant on the environment depending on the formulation. Most plans call for large salt formations to be hollowed out, and then essentially a mine is pumped with the air and used when needed. Producing our our pressure vessels, filling them with compressed air, and using them for peak times on the grid is laughably infeasible.HVDC saving the world, on the other hand, is a boldface lie/myth as far as I can tell. There is nothing to indicate that intermittency differs strongly by location for any competitive form of renewable power. Solar - duh, sun shines the same time of day unless you transport half way across the world, the cloud problem can be somewhat dealt with. Wind - look at a weather report, all the wind turbines in an entire nation can go practicality idle for a week and it don't matter how far you have them connected. Tidal - same problems as solar, only worse b/c it doesn't cycle conveniently per time of day.And don't even THINK any of these can begin to provide something like a solution to the [quickly] developing world.--Basically we're mostly fucked one way or the other. We're most fucked if we listen to the "greens".
2/24/2008 3:43:23 PM
2/24/2008 3:48:08 PM
2/24/2008 3:52:06 PM
Solar has a lot of potential for the developing world, actually. Across most of Africa and the Middle East, sun is plentiful and consistent. Current PV cells only convert about 10% - 20% of sunlight into energy. Advances in efficency are bound to come, even if they come slowly. The only issue will be the storage of capacity for the evening. It won't supplant more traditional sources of energy but that doesn't make it worthless.Anyone thinking petroleum will be replaced in under 50 years is dreaming . . . you're probably looking at a much further event horizon, but I don't want to underestimate the exponential path of technology growth.
2/24/2008 3:52:35 PM
^^i think he means efficiency of the power plants/storage of that power.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 3:53 PM. Reason : .]
2/24/2008 3:52:55 PM
it's not a question about the efficiency of the system. Devices of this nature don't scale up easily. Nobody in the industry gives a shit about a test program working for 30 years when they know that the technology will never be scalable to offer any real world solutions to the grid as a whole. We've had high temperature superconductor transmission technology in operation at certain test facilities for over a decade now, but it's still not seeing any implementation anywhere else in real-world applications.solar power will serve it's purpose on the grid of the future: to provide peak shaving capabilities on hot days, where we are currently using gas turbine units and some diesel units to provide that power. Solar power will do almost nothing to solve issues with peak shaving in winter load areas, which happens to be a large portion of our country.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 3:56 PM. Reason : too slow for karats]
2/24/2008 3:54:56 PM
^^ correct. I was addressing the future potential of PV technology, and gains in efficency in general, not claiming that overall demand in the world will drop. I appreciate your knee-jerk assumption of my own ignorance though. Classy^ you're assuming we're only discussing energy use in the United States.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 3:58 PM. Reason : ^]
2/24/2008 3:55:00 PM
What are you going to make the pressure vessels out of? Sunshine and happy faces?I'm thinking they'll be made of steel, of which the price is conveniently going up for. Grid storage is already efficient. Not cost efficient.
2/24/2008 3:57:36 PM
my point still stands for the rest of the world. large portions of the developed world live in winter peak areas.
2/24/2008 3:57:46 PM
larger portions of the developing world live in areas of abundant sunlight. What is your point?
2/24/2008 3:59:32 PM
Very true, the developing world is mostly in hotter, more tropic climates than the developed world.And once solar starts producing more than 0.04% of the worlds energy, I'm sure that much of the developing world population will have a marginal resource advantage over the developed world. Then they will all die from the effects of global warming.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 4:03 PM. Reason : ]
2/24/2008 4:02:32 PM
what makes you so certain that the developing world is actually going to develop? Most of Africa seems to be heading backwards instead of forwards. South America has been very slow to develop.[Edited on February 24, 2008 at 4:10 PM. Reason : the developing world isn't who uses the most electricity now.]
2/24/2008 4:09:28 PM
yes, I suppose that's convent for us...I thought the general idea is that we would help them develop?But in terms of resource competition, I think China is already doing plenty.
2/24/2008 4:12:36 PM
you can't help people that won't help themselves.
2/24/2008 4:14:54 PM
2/24/2008 4:27:07 PM
1) Why the insistence on liquid fuels?2) What exactly is wrong with using compressed air for automobiles (as the links I posed above discuss)?From Popular Mechanics:
2/24/2008 4:29:57 PM
^^ ummm, I think there is a pretty good correlation between African population centers and all but the heaviest sun. Ditto the Middle East and India. Either way, PV at the micro level can power individual houses in isolated areas where electricity doesn't reach. This, in turn, raises the living standard of people in those areas. While, yes, increased living standards cause increased consumption, gains in efficiency will (hopefully, eventually) overcome those disadvantages. Furthermore, emerging economies in poor areas offer an opportunity to experiment with "sustainable" power sources due to the lack of resistance from pre-existing infrastructure.I'm not claiming PV is THE answer, I'm not claiming that Apollo will come riding in on his sun-horse and save us from ourselves, but to dismiss it as worthless because you can't see beyond the immediate limitations is asinine.^ Right now, there are few alternatives to liquid fuels to power container ships and aircraft. We're going to be dependent on liquid fuels for quite some time to come.]
2/24/2008 5:20:32 PM
2/24/2008 10:08:18 PM
2/24/2008 10:10:08 PM
^^ I never said they were the wave of the future, just not worthless as you called them. I think I made it pretty clear that I saw them as a suppliment, not a solution.
2/24/2008 10:14:29 PM
if they don't offer a viable base load generation capacity, they are effectively worthless for the purpose of this discussion.besides, there are plenty of other people in this thread that seem to be under the impression that solar power will someone solve all of our energy needs and that "the evil power companies" are holding us back. the reality is that the only thing holding us back is our unwillingness to pay for the technology and the impracticality of somehow constructing and implementing this new technology in a short timeframe.
2/24/2008 10:31:30 PM
2/24/2008 11:17:50 PM
What about blanketing regions where it is never cloudy with solar collectors and then placing a giant solar reflector in orbit which will direct sunlight, at night, at the collectors? Sure, not even the solar collectors are viable today, but they may be in the future. Anyone have any idea what such a configuration would look like? I assume it would look like daylight in the target zone and some bizare twilight as you move away due to the scattering effects of the atmosphere causing light pollution.If we put the reflector in geosync orbit, we could use it to increase the intensity of the light on the collectors during the day, increasing their day-time production as well. Any ideas how severe the heating effect would be on a desert region where the sun never sets? [Edited on February 24, 2008 at 11:33 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/24/2008 11:29:49 PM
^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9YD9-_WTjkThis is on the same scale as fission. Optimistic estimates make it 7 cents/kWh - ish, in other words, best case scenario, it's a medium to poor solution.Also seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_Suit_Gundam_00Yes, an orbital elevator could make it viable. That should happen 2307-2308 AD.What we need* tethered high altitude wind generation* Algae-Based Biodiesel* The advanced nuclear fuel cycle* Google to save the world from imminent destruction
2/25/2008 12:40:34 AM