New Hydrogen

February 20, 2008 | Filed Under hydrogen | Leave a Comment 

Washington, DC - The National Hydrogen Association’s Hydrogen Education Foundation has launched a nationwide educational campaign to increase understanding about hydrogen. The initiative includes targeted public relations and the new, informative website: www.H2andYou.org. The website has been designed to act as a destination for those wanting to learn more about hydrogen while highlighting, in laymen’s terms, new ways hydrogen is being used today and how these uses relate to things people really care about. The site will answer common questions; present examples of market-ready hydrogen products that provide real energy solutions today; and offer video, podcasts and links to hydrogen news stories.

H2 and You Website“While many people identify hydrogen as a universal alternative fuel, in general, the public doesn’t yet understand how hydrogen can relate to them,” says Jeffrey A. Serfass, President of the National Hydrogen Association and the Hydrogen Education Foundation. “The H2 and You program is designed to help anyone grasp how hydrogen can be made and how its adoption is already having a positive impact on our lives.”

Hydrogen, a universal, highly adaptable fuel, is present in water, plants, minerals and all living things. Thanks to modern technologies, the energy from virtually any natural resource can be converted to hydrogen and then put to work for things we use every day, helping them operate more cleanly and efficiently. Just how clean hydrogen is, over its entire lifecycle, depends mainly on how it is produced. H2 and You will explain the full range of options for producing hydrogen and putting it to work.

H2 and You also highlights hydrogen’s current applications. For example:

“One of the things we would like people to take away from our H2 and You campaign is the significance of hydrogen energy and how its long-term adoption can benefit us all,” said Serfass. “Hydrogen will play a substantial role in the areas of greater energy security, a cleaner environment and stronger economic growth.”

To see new hydrogen products in person, come to the NHA Annual Hydrogen Conference and Hydrogen Expo US in Sacramento, CA March 30-April 3, 2008. You will have opportunities to see working hydrogen fuel cells, drive hydrogen cars and take rides in hydrogen buses. For more information, visit www.HydrogenAssociation.org or Google “hydrogen conference.”

Sourse: NHA Press Release: New Hydrogen Website

Crude oil hits $100 a barrel for the third time this year

February 20, 2008 | Filed Under oil | 1 Comment 

Crude-oil futures hit $100 a barrel for the third time this year on Tuesday, as concerns that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries may cut production boosted prices. Crude for March delivery soared nearly 5% to $100.10 a barrel in late afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Crude touched $100 a barrel in the first session of January and topped the historic mark in the second session.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

Crude oil hits $100 a barrel for the third time this year
Sourse: Crude oil hits $100 a barrel for the third time this year

What Do The Presidential Candidates Think of Solar Energy? Mike Huckabee

February 19, 2008 | Filed Under renewable energy | Leave a Comment 

Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee is hanging in there. So what’s his position on solar energy?

Mike Huckabee’s stance on environmental policy centers solely on energy independence. From his point of view, energy independence is a vehicle toward national security. He supports activities that promote energy independence: solar power, nuclear power, “clean coal,” natural gas, and biofuels.

Unlike McCain, Huckabee does not necessarily believe global warming is the result of human activity. Instead Huckabee is motivated to protect the earth for religious reasons. In a MSNBC hosted Republican debate in 2007, Huckabee expressed his view on how the environment relates to global warming, “our responsibility to God means to be good stewards of this earth, be good caretakers of the natural resources that don’t belong to us we just get to use them, we have no right to abuse them.” (Check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep0DGbrwdzw if you’re interested in hearing Huckabee’s view firsthand.)

Huckabee’s campaign website is light on specifics on how he will achieve his plans toward energy independence. He does, however, set forth a bold plan: “The first thing I will do as President is send Congress my comprehensive plan for energy independence. I’ll use the bully pulpit to inform you about the plan and ask for your support . . . The plan will get underway during my first term, and we will achieve energy independence by the end of my second term.”

Sourse: What Do The Presidential Candidates Think of Solar Energy? Mike Huckabee

WY State CBM Study: Sometimes, Water is More Precious than Gas

February 19, 2008 | Filed Under coal | Leave a Comment 

 Coal bed methane production in Wyoming sometimes doesn’t produce any gas, but does produce plenty of controversy because of the large volumes of water that come from the projects. A new scientific review from the Wyoming State Geological Survey shows some of that controversy could be avoided because the water/gas ratios can be predicted.

The agency also recommends production be banned in some areas, because there is so little gas. Jill Morrison, with the Powder River Basin Resource Council, agrees. She’s hopeful the science can help manage development to avoid legal wrangling and politically-charged skirmishes.

Read the entire story here:

http://www.publicnewsservice.org/index.php?/content/article/4368-1

Sourse: WY State CBM Study: Sometimes, Water is More Precious than Gas

Solar cell directly splits water for hydrogen

February 19, 2008 | Filed Under hydrogen | Leave a Comment 
Plants trees and algae do it. Even some bacteria and moss do it, but scientists have had a difficult time developing methods to turn sunlight into useful fuel. Now, Penn State researchers have a proof-of-concept device that can split water and produce recoverable hydrogen.

“This is a proof-of-concept system that is very inefficient. But ultimately, catalytic systems with 10 to 15 percent solar conversion efficiency might be achievable,” says Thomas E. Mallouk, the DuPont Professor of Materials Chemistry and Physics. “If this could be realized, water photolysis would provide a clean source of hydrogen fuel from water and sunlight.”

It’s not a silver bullet for all of mankind’s energy problems, but it had to happen, right? Use this link for the full press release

Correction Regarding Water4Gas Alternative Gas Solution

February 18, 2008 | Filed Under hydrogen | Leave a Comment 

The clarification having to do with Water4Gas alternative fuel solution, it is that we are not actually an alternative fuel solution. We are a BOOSTER. Now, factually, in the information package that you can buy from one of my links there are blueprints they do show you various methods that some folks have discovered which allow you to substitute hydrogen for gas altogether. And you are welcome to try them on your own responsibility.
But this is not our focus. Our focus is to get you improving fuel economy If we can bring about improving fuel economy by at least twelve percent that will save you more cash in a few months then what you spent on our information. And the for the rest of forever you will continue saving, meanwhile your automobile should run better and you will have cleaner emissions which is better for the environment. If we can get you 50% or greater fuel economy then I am sure you would be satisfied with that. Results vary significantly from one automobile to the next and we are not making any promises. You might say that our motto is “no promises/no secrets”
We are NOT attempting to make cars run on Hydrogen energy. We just take EXCESS energy from the automobile’s battery or alternator (in other words very low current that the engine does not feel) and employ this electricity to generate a tiny amount of Hydrogen per minute. The hydrogen helps split the gas/air mixture droplets intosmaller particles – thus helping it burn more efficiently and less wastefully.

Now HOW do we do it? This is explained in the information in the ebooks. Water is getting split into Oxygen and Hydrogen with an uncomplicated home-made device, and fed into the UNCONVERTED engine (same gas system, same computer, etc.) It’s just an ENHANCER. The automobile isn’t running on Hydrogen. The automobile runs on gas!!!
Water4Gas is NOT about hydrogen as a source of energy. It is about consuming gas a little bit better by reducing its droplet size in the gas/air mixture from the use of a TINY amount of Hydrogen+Oxygen.

Sourse: Correction Regarding Water4Gas Alternative Gas Solution

Wind power in Maine: Goals of report are lofty

February 18, 2008 | Filed Under wind power | Leave a Comment 

A goal to make Maine a regional leader in wind power by developing 2,000 megawatts of capacity by 2015 may require more than just regulatory changes.
Gov. John E. Baldacci’s task force on wind power submitted a final report this week, calling for more than half the state to be identified as expedited permitting areas where […]
Sourse: Wind power in Maine: Goals of report are lofty

Biofuel Startup Claims It Can Make Ethanol for less than $1 per Gallon

February 18, 2008 | Filed Under ethanol | Leave a Comment 

trees

The startup is funded by GM and other investors, and uses gasification to turn organic materials into carbon monoxide and hydrogen by reacting the raw material at high temperatures with a controlled amount of oxygen.

What is unique about this company is that, “Rather than fermenting that gas or using thermo-chemical catalysts to produce ethanol, Coskata pumps it into a reactor containing bacteria that consume the gas and excrete ethanol. Richard Tobey, Coskata’s vice president of engineering, says the process yields 99.7 percent pure ethanol.” Gasification is a questionable way to go, because were it feasible and cost-effective, we wouldn’t still be throwing away valuable, carbon-rich garbage into overflowing landfills when it could be converted to energy.

The use of bacteria to convert the gas into ethanol sounds like a great idea, and may just work. Using a living, renewable resource like bacteria and algae as a part of an industrial process that helps to reduce the global footprint and repair the earth is a definite win. I previously posted about converting CO2 into biofuels using algae here.

Here is an exerpt from the Wired article:

A biofuel startup in Illinois can make ethanol from just about anything organic for less than $1 per gallon, and it wouldn’t interfere with food supplies, company officials said.

Coskata, which is backed by General Motors and other investors, uses bacteria to convert almost any organic material, from corn husks (but not the corn itself) to municipal trash, into ethanol.

“It’s not five years away, it’s not 10 years away. It’s affordable, and it’s now,” said Wes Bolsen, the company’s vice president of business development.

The discovery underscores the rapid innovation under way in the race to make cellulosic ethanol cheaply. With the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 requiring an almost five-fold increase in ethanol production to 36 billion gallons annually by 2022, scientists are working quickly to reach that breakthrough.

Coskata won’t have a pilot plant running until this time next year, and it will produce just 40,000 gallons a year. Still, several experts said Coskata shows enough promise to leave them cautiously optimistic.

Gasification and bacterial conversion are common methods of producing ethanol, but biofuel experts said Coskata is the first to combine them. Doing so, they said, merges the feedstock flexibility of gasification with the relatively low cost of bacterial conversion.

Cautious optimism is better than apathy and despair. Hopefully such reasonable and sustainable alternative methods of creating ethanol fuel will succeed, because otherwise the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 mandating ethanol production will encourage unsustainable methods of biofuel production. More specifically, the act will blanket the country in corn fields. Converting food crops into ethanol is a terrible idea that wastes farmland, raises food prices, damages the ecosystem, pollutes the earth, and only benefits those that profit from the forced use of ethanol. Let’s just hope Coskata finds renewable sources of carbon-rich biomass, and doesn’t decide to start using trees for fuel.

link to the Wired article Startup Says It Can Make Ethanol for $1 a Gallon, and Without Corn

U.S. has more sun but Europe has more solar power…for now

February 18, 2008 | Filed Under renewable energy | Leave a Comment 

Courtesy EER.
A new study of the Concentrated Solar Power industry shows Europe to be far ahead, with major growth in the U.S. a couple years away. Emerging Energy Research found several reasons for the growth on Concenrtated Solar Power…but first a brief explanation. CSP uses reflectors to focus the sun’s energy, like using […]
Sourse: U.S. has more sun but Europe has more solar power…for now

Windspire: The household turbine from Mariah Power

February 18, 2008 | Filed Under wind power | Leave a Comment 

Recent years have witnessed the discovery of several mini-wind turbines, which, unfortunately, have not been of much use. However, the household Windspire turbine from Mariah Power seems promising.

The Windspire turbine has a propeller-free vertical-axis design, and can generate (in about 11mph wind conditions on an average) 1800 kilowatt hours of power every year. On an average, the power generated by this turbine can take care of around 25% of the typical energy requirements of a household. If one is energy-efficient, he/she can indeed benefit more from the turbine.
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