arcticpenguin
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2002
- Messages
- 5,687
OK, assuming you solve whatever issues you have with nuclear waste, etc.
I then see H2 as being competitive with electrical power. You could use the nuke plant to crack H2, or you could use it to generate electricity.
In either case you have to distribute it somehow. For electric, you pump it onto the existing grid. For hydrogen, you have the choice of whether to crack the H2 right at the nuke plant, then pipe it and ship it around, or distribute electricity to remote H2 plants. In either case you have to build infrastructure to get the H2 to end-use points, but we could assume that by the debate technique of 'fiat'.
It then comes down to which system works best for consumer vehicles.
H2: need to overcome engineering problems with storing large amounts of H2. Need to improve fuel cell performance. Advantage: can refill quickly.
Electric: Disadvantage: Takes a while to recharge. Advantage: this could be done at home or at a 'filling station' (if it becomes fast enough) Would need to improve capacity => driving distance.
Other important issues:
which technology lets you drive furthest on one fill, and
which is more affordable.
There are so many contingencies in there that I'm not sure which would win at any given future date.
This question of H2 damaging the ozone should be looked into; right now there's just one or two preliminary reports.
I then see H2 as being competitive with electrical power. You could use the nuke plant to crack H2, or you could use it to generate electricity.
In either case you have to distribute it somehow. For electric, you pump it onto the existing grid. For hydrogen, you have the choice of whether to crack the H2 right at the nuke plant, then pipe it and ship it around, or distribute electricity to remote H2 plants. In either case you have to build infrastructure to get the H2 to end-use points, but we could assume that by the debate technique of 'fiat'.
It then comes down to which system works best for consumer vehicles.
H2: need to overcome engineering problems with storing large amounts of H2. Need to improve fuel cell performance. Advantage: can refill quickly.
Electric: Disadvantage: Takes a while to recharge. Advantage: this could be done at home or at a 'filling station' (if it becomes fast enough) Would need to improve capacity => driving distance.
Other important issues:
which technology lets you drive furthest on one fill, and
which is more affordable.
There are so many contingencies in there that I'm not sure which would win at any given future date.
This question of H2 damaging the ozone should be looked into; right now there's just one or two preliminary reports.