And yes, the technologies to makea hydrogen/fuel cell economy work are already out there. Just engineering now, no theoretical problems left.
]]>Well this article is actually rather sensible, at least they have a breadth of comment
]]>‘The goal should be to make carbon-free energy economically viable, and that will require heavy investment in such technologies as solar photovoltaics, carbon sequestration and hydrogen technology. Governments need to get away from targets and penalties, and concentrate on maximising the potential of research.’
Hydrogen is one of three buzzwords she’s picked up, obviously, but her point is sound – ruining our economies with Kyoto style emissions cuts isn’t going to leave much money or appetite for expensive R&D and massive structural changes to the energy infrastructure. The only point she makes about renewables is a series of quotes from the Lords Committee report:
‘Britain’s own climate change strategy is a shambles based on “dubious” assumptions, vague, “wildly optimistic” estimates of costs — and a politically correct approach so dominated “by certain renewable technology interests” that the “big” future technologies, such as hydrogen power, are being neglected in favour of an obsession with wind power.’
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