Originally posted by: Wreckage
I don't disagree with any of that. It will be a long time before we get rid of our dependence on fossil fuels. Hydrogen is just one of many steps. It's clean, abundant and already in use in many industries. I'm not suggesting that our whole energy economy will switch over to this overnight. It could be 50 years or more. But it is possible, it would free us on foreign sources for our energy and it's virtually pollution free.
The
use of hydrogen is clean, abundant and pollution free. The production of it it is not (yet).
I don't know what would replace the crude oil/natural gas-based life (that is cars, house heating, and so on). Industry would be able to move to something else somewhat faster - if enough economic incentive is given. Huge ships could run on nuclear reactors if the need would arise. Nuclear power plant could generate electricity. Bigger and smaller dams could be built. Some places are able to use geothermal energy (Iceland is the only one I know of).
But what would replace the gasoline and diesel? Gasoline can be replaced by ethanol/methanol, diesel by biodiesel. However, bio-production of them would use too much land otherwise usable by food industry.
Some alga-based plants in the oceans could be a solution - but sometime on the oceans there are fiery storms.
However, having cheap or free electricity, hydrogen is simpler to obtain than anything else that can run in current designs of oil-based internal combustion engines (not in current engines, unlike biodiesel and ethanol, but little research would be needed).
I hope better battery technology comes out, and then battery-based cars would rule the road. One can have "tanks" of batteries that he changes at "battery stations", the way old time transports worked (changing horses at stations).
However, storing hydrogen as liquid in a car's fuel tank is impossible (at least for me as I am using my car several times a month). Even the Space Shuttle or space rockets are constantly refueled until launch, to replace the hydrogen lost by evaporation.
This is the sad truth - there is no way to generate energy that is more compact (both per volume, per weight and per horsepower) than gasoline/diesel and internal combustion engines, in regards to the needs (weight, volume and cost) of an automobile. Will this change? If the fuel prices remains the same, I bet it won't. However, the increase in oil price (and more research I hope) would get us there.