That's pretty spot on, Gucumatz.
It's not a tech problem it's an infrastructure problem, but once you price in externalities, clean electricity is not more expensive.
And how do you think we get the technology, by waiting for it?
Like renewable energy?
Sure, but that is a long term objective. We are currently spending more carbon fuel producing bio fuel than the bio fuel is worth. This is regression, not progress.
or climate science?
Definitely not.
or stem cell research?
No obvious issues with this one.
We would absolutely accept conversion methane if it was part of a program of tapering off fossil fuels use totals.
Exactly. Create stringent carbon taxes & see how fast things change.
Then the people vote out the government that brought them in, like we did here in Australia.
Or better yet, the factories move to areas without taxes (again).
Wow you sound like some sort of pagan dirt worshiper
Here on planet Earth the best form of energy we have is carbon based fossil fuel. Maybe someday technology will come up with something better but for now it is king. better to use our own national sources instead of supporting regimes that do not like us.
Massive government subsides for alternative energy do not change the fact that they are just not as efficient or as inexpensive as fossil fuels. The technology just isn't there yet to support it. Maybe someday we will have Star trek energy but for now we don't.
If you really wanted to stop supporting regimes that don't like us, you'd be backing renewables. While they don't meet all our needs yet, the US could very easily get our electricity needs met by renewables with today's technology. And then we could export that tech and really have a major impact on the revenue of oil and gas exporters.
But as long as we only look for new sources of oil and gas, we do nothing in the long run to improve our situation in the world.
http://singularityhub.com/2014/03/0...asible-and-affordable-stanford-proposal-says/
Climate change concerns, mainly.
But I'd trade it for coal mining for sure.
If you really wanted to stop supporting regimes that don't like us, you'd be backing renewables. While they don't meet all our needs yet, the US could very easily get our electricity needs met by renewables with today's technology. And then we could export that tech and really have a major impact on the revenue of oil and gas exporters.
But as long as we only look for new sources of oil and gas, we do nothing in the long run to improve our situation in the world.
http://singularityhub.com/2014/03/0...asible-and-affordable-stanford-proposal-says/
What climate change concerns? There is no reliable link between fossil fuels and climate activity.
BTW Conversion gas comes from mining coal or oil shale. It can also be done with oil, but the usual reference is to solid fuels. The old term is "coal gasification", which was too narrow.
Not really. Viable renewables are further away than fusion.
I would back nuclear and conversion gas, both of which are very clean air, and drilling on public lands.
J
BTW Conversion gas comes from mining coal or oil shale. It can also be done with oil, but the usual reference is to solid fuels. The old term is "coal gasification", which was too narrow.
Viable renewables exist right now, and the price is dropping every year. So how can you say they are further away that fusion?
Yeah, I don't think that coal gasification should be a real part of our toolkit. It'll have its time and place, but I don't think that scaling it up to meet our liquid fuel needs is all that wise. GHG concerns aside, coal is a pretty inefficient and ecologically risky fuel source
Why not? Methane is clean air clean and we have huge reserves of the raw materials. The technology is mature and easily adaptable to underdeveloped situations. The improvement in air quality for, say, Iran or China would be huge.
I'm distinguishing between coal and methane. I'll not disagree that methane has great potential to be a reasonably clean source of energy, since it can be removed via drilling pipes; I'd pick it as a stepping stone anyday. Coal needs to be scooped out manually, and a tremendous amount of coal is only a simple thin layer under the crust, so scooping it out requires displacing surface materials.