The real one, not the spoof version - the Science Magazine link is here:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/301/5631/315


http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2003/07/17_fuels.shtml

Hydrogen-fueled cars not the best way to cut pollution, greenhouse 
gases and oil dependency, says expert

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations | 17 July 2003

BERKELEY - As politicians and the public leap aboard the hydrogen 
fuel bandwagon, a University of California, Berkeley, energy expert 
suggests we all step back and take a critical look at the technology 
and consider simpler, cheaper options.

In a paper appearing in the July 18 issue of Science magazine, Alex 
Farrell, assistant professor of energy and resources at UC Berkeley, 
and David Keith, associate professor of engineering and public policy 
at Carnegie Mellon University, present various short- and long-term 
strategies that they say would achieve the same results as switching 
from gasoline-powered vehicles to hydrogen cars.

"Hydrogen cars are a poor short-term strategy, and it's not even 
clear that they are a good idea in the long term," said Farrell. 
"Because the prospects for hydrogen cars are so uncertain, we need to 
think carefully before we invest all this money and all this public 
effort in one area."

Farrell and Keith compared the costs of developing fuel cell vehicles 
to the costs of other strategies for achieving the same environmental 
and economic goals.

"There are three reasons you might think hydrogen would be a good 
thing to use as a transportation fuel - it can reduce air pollution, 
slow global climate change and reduce dependence on oil imports - but 
for each one there is something else you could do that would probably 
work better, work faster and be cheaper," Farrell said.

President George W. Bush has proposed a federally funded, five-year, 
$1.7 billion FreedomCAR and Fuel Initiative to develop 
hydrogen-powered fuel cells, a hydrogen infrastructure and advanced 
automotive technologies. Several announced candidates for president 
have also proposed major research efforts to develop hydrogen-fueled 
vehicles and technologies to produce, transport and store the 
hydrogen, while many scientists have praised the initiative.

For many people, the attraction of hydrogen is that it produces no 
pollution or greenhouse gases at the tailpipe. For others, the 
attraction is that hydrogen is a research program, not a regulation, 
and that some hydrogen-related research will also help develop better 
gasoline-powered cars.

One problem, said Farrell, an expert on energy and environment 
issues, is that this glosses over the issue of where the hydrogen 
comes from. Current methods of producing hydrogen from oil and coal 
produce substantial carbon dioxide. Unless and until this carbon can 
be captured and stored, renewable (wind or solar) and nuclear power, 
with their attendant problems of supply and waste, are the only means 
of producing hydrogen without also producing greenhouse gases.

In addition, Farrell points out that setting up a completely new 
infrastructure to distribute hydrogen would cost at least $5,000 per 
vehicle. Transporting, storing and distributing a gaseous fuel as 
opposed to a liquid raises many new problems.

More billions of dollars will be needed to develop hydrogen fuel 
cells that can match the performance of today's gasoline engines, he 
said.

The benefits might be worth the costs of fuel-cell development and 
creating a new infrastructure, however, if air pollution, greenhouse 
gases and imported petroleum could not be reduced in other ways. But 
they can, said Farrell.

Improvements to current cars and current environmental rules are more 
than 100 times cheaper than hydrogen cars at reducing air pollution. 
And for several decades, the most cost-effective method to reduce oil 
imports and CO2 emissions from cars will be to increase fuel 
efficiency, the two scientists found.

"You could get a significant reduction in petroleum consumption 
pretty inexpensively by raising the fuel economy standard or raising 
fuel prices, or both, which is probably the cheapest strategy," 
Farrell said. "This would actually have no net cost or possibly even 
a negative cost - buying less fuel would save more money than the 
price of the high-efficiency cars. The vehicles would still be large 
enough for Americans and they would still be safe."

Technologies are now on the shelf to achieve better fuel efficiency, 
he said. All that's lacking are economic incentives to encourage auto 
makers to make and drivers to buy fuel-efficient cars.

"Automobile manufacturers don't need to invest in anything fancy - a 
wide number of technologies are already on the shelf," he said, 
quoting, among other studies, a 2002 report by the National Academy 
of Sciences. "The cost would be trivial compared to the changes 
needed to go to a hydrogen car."

Petroleum substitutes like ethanol that can be used in today's 
vehicles also are a possible way to reduce oil imports, the 
researchers say, but more research is needed to reduce the 
environmental impact and cost of these options.

If one goal is to reduce greenhouse gases, it would be cheaper, 
Farrell and Keith argue, to focus on reducing carbon dioxide 
emissions from electric power plants than to focus solely on 
hydrogen-powered vehicles. But if passenger cars are targeted, fuel 
economy is still the key.

If it becomes necessary to introduce hydrogen into the transportation 
sector, the scientists say, a better alternative is to develop 
hydrogen-powered fuel cells for vehicles such as ships, trains and 
large trucks instead of cars. Because these heavy freight vehicles 
have higher emissions, this strategy could provide greater air 
quality benefits. On-board hydrogen storage would be less of a 
problem also, and it would require a smaller fuel distribution 
network.

Farrell and Keith provide figures that support their arguments and 
conclude that more research needs to be done before committing 
ourselves to a hydrogen economy, which might begin to make sense 25 
years down the road.

"Hydrogen cars are an attractive vision that demands serious 
investigation, but it's not a sure thing," they wrote.

Farrell speculates that hydrogen has become attractive to people 
across the political spectrum in part because it doesn't challenge 
drivers to change their habits. It also doesn't challenge the auto 
industry to change its behavior, providing, instead, a subsidy for 
research that will lead to better cars whether they are 
hydrogen-powered or gasoline-powered.


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Ink Cartridges or Refill Kits for Your HP, Epson, Canon or Lexmark
Printer at Myinks.com. Free s/h on orders $50 or more to the US & Canada.
http://www.c1tracking.com/l.asp?cid=5511
http://us.click.yahoo.com/sOykFB/k9VGAA/ySSFAA/FGYolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://archive.nnytech.net/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 


Reply via email to