Sorry Greg but you´re asking for the reason you assume ICs won´t dissapear. How should be know that? You´re not talking about a fact, but about your own assumption wich is odd if you ask meGreg Locock wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 23:31Hydrogen is fascinating. It seems to have sucked in vast amounts of money. Of course, if solar to hydrogen really works then BEVs will vanish, oddly ICs won't. I'll leave you to find out why.
and where exactly does it say 650 tons?Andres125sx wrote: ↑04 Mar 2021, 09:39Current biggest hydrogen plant produces 9 tonnes a day. Now...
New California hyddrogen plant will produce 11 tonnes per day
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kensilvers ... 5ec1402a96https://www.worktime.com/employee-monitoring
And new Saudi Arabia hydrogen plant will produce 650 tonnes a day
https://www.chemengonline.com/the-world ... rintmode=1
Or that´s the claim, we´ll see what becomes real and what´s just BS
In the headline, and into the article
Exactly, 9 tons per day is the production of biggest H2 plant today, and they claim they will produce 650christianagdmn wrote: ↑11 Mar 2021, 19:04
Do they mean to say that now the maximum volume is 9 tons per day, and they're going to produce 650 tons per day in Saudi Arabia? That's 72 times as much? What could be the reason for this huge difference and what kind of equipment is needed?
it sounds very far-fetched, but if so it is just breathtaking!
Hey hang on, aren't the turbines of ah, current, F1 engines in fact - 'motored' electrically, that is,Andres125sx wrote: ↑12 Mar 2021, 09:12
The reason is they think H2 will be the fuel of the future for transportation, not only for cars, but trucks and even planes as H2 can power both electric motors and turbines wich is something electric motors and batteries will never do...
That´s a turbo, not a turbine, they work completely differentJ.A.W. wrote: ↑12 Mar 2021, 12:52Hey hang on, aren't the turbines of ah, current, F1 engines in fact - 'motored' electrically, that is,Andres125sx wrote: ↑12 Mar 2021, 09:12
The reason is they think H2 will be the fuel of the future for transportation, not only for cars, but trucks and even planes as H2 can power both electric motors and turbines wich is something electric motors and batteries will never do...
they are 'spooled up' to speed, as required - by battery-based energy, stat prior to ICE gas-generation?
I´ve had to check the date to be sure this post is not from the 90´s. Quite outdated opinion if you ask mefrancisbaud wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 16:30As long as the oil is going to be abundant and cheap to extract and produce, which should be the case for dozens of years to come I guess, I believe that turning to electrical vehicles will be an artificially pushed solution that doesn't solve the pollution issue (batteries are extremely pollutant afaik). It's unfortunate that our western governments put so much energy in trying to quit using gas and oil to reduce emissions and attenuate warming, while encouraging technologies that are costly to recycle, possibly more costly than just using new material, which means companies do not have financial incentives to recycle batteries.
clue for Greg: I can´t read your mind mate
Yeah it´s a shame UK government subsidize things they shouldn´t. That happens all around the world I´m afraid, politics who decide what to subsidize are ignorants who don´t know anything about environement (wich is normal) but the worst part is they don´t even know what advisors to hire to be correctly advised. When you know how many advisors those politics pay with our money, and see not even with those embarrasing numbers they can take sensible decisions, you wonder how is possible such an ignorant reached that high position...Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2021, 21:342 recent events .....
UK commits on acceleration to 78% CO2 reduction by 2035
(needs decarbonisation of heating, order of magnitude increase in 24/7 'renewable' electricity and other impossibilities)
London Asst Coroner declares 2013 asthma death of 9 year old Ella Aloo-Kissi-Debrah in part due to air pollution ...
and calls for reduction of mean PM2.5 limit from UK/EU 25 microgram/cubic metre to WHO recommended 10 microgram
but ......
75% of PM2.5 in London public air is (since 2013) emitted by subsidised 'green' wood-burning heating via the RHI
(Renewable Heat Incentive that exists to help save the world from global warming)
this truth is too inconvenient for any of the legion of lying alarmist 'news' articles to mention
The U.K. government has just taken a baby step to try to improve the wood burning problem. They have banned the sale of “wet” wood and coal for domestic consumption. It is still possible to buy these in bulk and the wood has to carry instructions on how to dry it for use in a space heater. Not a very significant development but it does show that they realise there is an issue. How they take the bigger steps without losing votes is a significant challenge.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 Apr 2021, 21:342 recent events .....
UK commits on acceleration to 78% CO2 reduction by 2035
(needs decarbonisation of heating, order of magnitude increase in 24/7 'renewable' electricity and other impossibilities)
London Asst Coroner declares 2013 asthma death of 9 year old Ella Aloo-Kissi-Debrah in part due to air pollution ...
and calls for reduction of mean PM2.5 limit from UK/EU 25 microgram/cubic metre to WHO recommended 10 microgram
but ......
75% of PM2.5 in London public air is (since 2013) emitted by subsidised 'green' wood-burning heating via the RHI
(Renewable Heat Incentive that exists to help save the world from global warming)
this truth is too inconvenient for any of the legion of lying alarmist 'news' articles to mention