Gibbs is wrong. There are many roads to over unity energy production.
Eventually the top over unity performers will win out. The production of
heat from LENR is the least desirable, efficient and resource intensive of
those various over unity energy production methods.

As a superior engineering approach, I favor the Papp reaction which
extracts energy out of the quantum foam.

Its conversion efficiency of pressure to electricity is in the high 90’s
percentages with little or no heat production.

The reactions typically referred to as cold fusion will be discarded as
antiquated and resource intensive when compared to the Papp reaction.

The Papp reaction does not modify the nucleus of the noble gases that carry
its energy content so no waste products are produced.

These minuscule 500 CCs of noble gases that enable the Papp reaction do not
deteriorate for many years and are essentially indestructible.

These noble gases do not produce toxic or radioactive wastes and this clean
gas phased single stage electrical generation operating regime reduces the
total cost of electric power production from the Papp reaction to the
absolute minimum.

Coupled with Papp electric generators, zero heat producing electric LED
lighting will not add to the urban heat load.


Cheers:     Axil

On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 2:23 PM, Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Gibbs published a new article:
>
>
> http://www.forbes.com/sites/markgibbs/2012/11/20/cold-fusion-and-unintended-consequences/
>
> For once I have no objection! He says nothing unreasonable.
>
> I posted the following response:
>
>
> Gibbs is correct. The problems he describes may occur with cold fusion.
> These problems -- and others -- have been discussed by several people since
> the discovery of cold fusion, especially: Martin Fleischmann, Stanley Pons,
> Arthur C. Clarke, David Nagel, Michael McKubre, Michael Melich, Eugene
> Mallove, Anthony Lovins, Jeremy Rifkin, Adm. Sir Anthony Griffin and me. I
> described some of their conclusions in chapters 11, 12 and 19 of my book,
> “Cold Fusion and the Future.” The book is here:
>
> http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/RothwellJcoldfusiona.pdf
>
> Some of these problems are not likely to be as serious as Gibbs fears. The
> total nuclear waste from cold fusion cells is likely to be very small. It
> should be easily contained because the cells will be sealed units, like
> batteries. As long as the recycling plants are designed and run correctly,
> this should not be a problem. Clarke discussed the heat islands problem.
> He, I and others concluded that even with low Carnot efficiency, savings
> from co-generation space heating will likely lower overall heat releases.
> Agriculture from desalinated water may be a problem, but not if the
> standards of Israeli and Saudi desalination plants are adhered to. These
> and other examples demonstrate that the use of cold fusion will have to
> regulated to some extent.
>
> Granted, there are many other unintended consequences. They are
> anticipated, but not intended. There are also a host of evil applications
> for cold fusion, some of which I describe in the book. Fleischmann and Pons
> delayed the introduction of cold fusion for a few years partly because they
> feared some of these applications. They thought it might be a good idea for
> the Department of Defense to classify the research.
>
> - Jed
>
>

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