He said No to Walmart
"Cliff" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 3 Jan 2006 21:42:32 -0500, "Ed Huntress"
wrote:
"Cliff" wrote in message
.. .
On Tue, 3 Jan 2006 14:50:31 -0500, "Ed Huntress"
wrote:
wrote in message
...
In misc.survivalism Dave Lyon wrote:
Unfortunately, ethanol is probably not a long term solution. We
simply
don't
have enough crop land to supply our energy needs.
No one souce is a "long term solution". Not even oil.
Sources I've seen over the past few months, DOE-related, say up to 6%
of
motor-fuel consumption could come from biodiesel (others say this
would
require an all-out effort); 5% from corn-based ethanol; up to 12% from
cellulosic ethanol.
Every little bit helps.
Global warming?
That's an interesting question. Alternative-fuel promoters often talk
about
the advantage of these biological sources in terms of CO2 production,
because they supposedly sequester as much CO2 in growing as they release
in
burning.
Closed cycle. But you cannot deplete the soils doing so either or
it all fails in a bit.
However, there is a (probably complex) heat-cycling issue, too. If you
let
corn stover compost, it gives off heat. If you burn it, it gives off
heat.
If you convert it to ethanol and burn the ethanol, it gives off heat.
Quick now, calculus students...
That heat is very minimal, compared to the effects of global
warming.
Nuclear remains, as they know in Iran.
--
Cliff
The interesting thing is that, added up, those sources of biofuel could make
up something like 20+% of our motor fuel consumption. And the heat going
into the system is solar energy converted by electrolysis.
--
Ed Huntress
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