Reflex wrote:
I'm up by Tiger Mountain fairly routinely for a client of mine, probably drive right past where you are.

I agree with much of what Dr. Dan is saying, he is correct that its ridiculous to be importing the sources from around the globe, the fuel expenditure there is far in excess of what the processed biomatter will ever produce(not to mention the environmental devestation that palm production is causing in Asia). That said,
agriculture simply cannot solve the fuel issue, there is not enough land and it is itself very environmentally damaging for a multitude of reasons. That is why I support algae and other low impact solutions, but tend to stand against anyone who is endorsing crop-based approaches.
For those who look at this as a way to support farmers, I will point out that there is nothing stopping farmers from getting into the algae business. Much farm land lays fallow each year for crop rotations, an acre of soy produces about 42 gallons of diesel per year, but an acre of algae can produce about 33,000 gallons. Developing the equipment to allow them to multi-purpose the land(ie: during off seasons setting up algae production in closed systems on that land) would allow them a slice of the pie without federal subsidies or increased crop farming(which leads to water shortages and soil depletion).
Yep!
I am very familiar with the algae farming concept. A while back I read an exhaustive financial analysis of algae farming based upon current technology and expected advancements and it does look very promising. One possibility is to use them as carbon scrubbers at coal fired power plants - basically using the concentrated CO2 to hyper-grow the algae.
There are even people experimenting with small-scale algae bio-reactors. I have seriously considered different ways I could be involved in such an effort on the business and manufacturing engineering side but as of now, I am having trouble enough starting 2 other businesses!
Here is a really quick Youtube snippet concerning algae:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxTICY_7KRQ&NR=1
Here is my brief on this topic:
* There will be
no magic bullet energy source to replace oil. We will depend upon many different sources of energy including, hydro, wave energy, jet stream harvesting, tidal, wind, photovotaic, geothermal, Ocean-based Sterling engines, many different sources of biomass including algae-base biodiesel and genetically engineered microbial-based ethanol, greenhouse draft turbines, Hot fushion and others. The most dominant source for each household will depend upon where you live. We are lucky here in Washington because our primary source of electricity is already solar. (hydro) I am extremely annoyed at the strawman arguments including: Energy XYZ cannot possibly solve all of our energy needs. The implied message: Give up and drill for more oil or wait until some magical advancement in the distant future. The truth: Of COURSE energy source XYZ won't solve all our problems. However, it could be a part of the solution depending upon where you live, what your needs are and how it is implemented.
* Vehicles will utilize numerous different sources of fuel. Once batteries are capable of high energy densities, they will become the dominant energy storage units. They will be nothing like the starter battery in your car.
* Energy production should be kept as close to it's point of use as possible and be able to respond to variable demand quickly.
* Energy production needs to be decentralized and have more diverse ownership. We need the equivalent of mom & pop energy manufacturers. Economies of scale will be less of an issue as technologies advance.
* We need nothing less than a Manhattan Project for the development of alternative energy. There are simply no real excuses and we are out of time. We have the money, the scientists, the resources, the manufacturing capability, the facilities....we could lead the world in alternative energy production and technologies. There will not be a "better time" in the future for us to get this started. It is like waiting for some better time in the future to stop smoking, eat right and exercise.
* There are already many, many energy technologies out there. It is sad that so few have received attention or funding. Here is an interesting page showing many of them as well as energy storage and transmission technologies:
http://www.logicalscience.com/technology/
* Part of the reason for my own involvement in biofuels is to encourage people to start thinking about and participating in change - and it has been remarkably effective within my sphere of influence. There needs to be a lot of debate on these subjects, just like we are having on this forum. The more I see people arguing about the pros and cons of various approaches and the more I read of people running their own backyard experiments, the more heartened I am that the subject is now in the forefront of the public consciousness. Ultimately, it is Joe Sixpack who will determine our success in all of this and Joe is easily frightened and does not like change. If this subject can be taken out of the land of the hippie on the commune farm and "normalized", Mr. Sixpack will be much more likely to help drive real change.
- Chris