Re: How many hydrogen cars on the road in the US today?
- From: Williamknowsbest <William.Mook@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 29 May 2007 09:22:05 -0700
On May 25, 7:52 pm, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Williamknowsbest wrote:
Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Which one is it [US or Imperial gallon] or are you simply incapable of answering > a question witha straight reply ?
Ask a straight question and you will get a straight reply ***.
It *was* a straight question.
You answered...
1. by not answering the question.
2. by insulting the questioner.
You're a TOTAL PRICK Mook.
You're no genius, you're more like a snake-oil remedy salesman.
Graham
What was your straight question again? You didn't have one - and
that's why you're an ass.
Fact is, hydrogen is easily contained, transported and used in any
engine or device that burns coal, oil, gasoline, jet fuel, diesel
fuel, or natural gas.
Hydrogen does not embrittle pipes and tanks coated with an appropriate
polymer liner developed over 10 years ago.
Hydrogen is easily and cheaply produced from water and sunlight using
ultra-low-cost solar panels costing less than $0.07 per peak watt
installed.
Salt water taken to the desert and used to produce salt, fresh water,
and hydrogen - along with other products like bleach, ammonia, and
other industrial chemicals - al from low-cost solar panels - can be
distributed at very low costs all over North America.
The US consumes about 20 million barrels of oil and 3 million tons of
coal each day. This can be totally replaced 100% by 1.35 milllion
tons of hydrogen gas produced by low cost solar panels in US deserts
from seawater and distributed across North America by pipeline - at a
cost of $0.15 per US gallon heat equivalent, or $27 per ton of coal
equivalent.
24 sites each 9,000 sq miles in area, located in a variety of Americas
2 million square miles of desert lands - are sufficient to provide for
this amount of hydrogen. These are abandoned surface mine sites
located in the desert regions of America.
Hydrogen may be used in any heat engine currently burning petroleum
products coal or natural gas. Hydrogen may also be used wherever
metallurgical coal is used to smelt metals from ores.
Hydrogen can augment or replace natural gas and be delivered to your
home to provide heating and cooking and even gas lighting. Hydrogen
taps can even refill compressed hydrogen tanks in your cars - at $0.15
per gallon heat equivalent.
.
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