The first round of talks between India and the United States regarding re-processing of used US atomic fuel on Indian soil has begin here.
Top diplomats from both sides met to discuss and chart out rules for reprocessing the nuclear fuels for electricity at designated civilian reactors according to UN guidelines.
The meeting is being seen as [...]
Posts Tagged ‘fuel’
India, US talks on atomic fuel re-processing begins
Hybrid Meets Hypermiling in Ford Fusion
Product: Fusion Hybrid Manufacturer: FordWired Rating: 8
The new Ford Fusion Hybrid isn’t shaped like an almond. It doesn’t have badges shouting “hybrid” from every surface. And it won’t make you sacrifice fun for fuel efficiency. That’s what makes it…
Fuel-cell legacy
Richard Hollingham reports from California on how technology that took man to the Moon could soon take shoppers regularly to the mall.
It looks like an ordinary SUV (Sports Utility Vehicle), the sort of chunky 4X4 you’ll find jamming American roads.
It’s only when you take a drive that you realise that this is something very different.
I’m no motoring correspondent but, as we pull out of the parking lot, it’s difficult not to be impressed by this car’s smooth acceleration.
What’s even more disconcerting is that the vehicle is almost totally silent – the only noise comes from the wind buffeting the windows and the squeal of the tyres as we bomb down the freeway.
"The car drives with electricity but – unlike a battery-electric car that you need to plug in to charge – the fuel cell vehicle makes electricity on-board from the hydrogen stored in a tank," explained Catherine Dunwoody, executive director of the California Fuel Cell Partnership.
"The fuel cell is a fuel conversion device that converts hydrogen to electricity," she told the BBC World Service’s One Planet programme.
The only byproduct is water – the ultimate ‘zero-emission’ vehicle.
Drinking by-product
The partnership, based in the Californian state capital Sacramento, was set-up 10 years ago to promote fuel cell vehicles and involves carmakers, energy companies and government agencies.
And although "fuel conversion device" sounds terribly futuristic, the basic technology of the fuel cell has been around for more than 150 years.

Like a battery, a fuel cell uses a chemical process to generate electricity. Inside the fuel cell, a catalyst strips hydrogen into positively charged hydrogen ions and electrons. The positive ions pass across a special membrane and react with oxygen (from the air) to form water. The electrons have to take the long way round and flow through a circuit to generate electricity.
But with a world powered by coal and oil, no-one knew what to use these things for, until Nasa needed a way to power its spacecraft.
The agency turned to British engineer Francis Bacon.
During the Apollo 8 mission of 1968, Bacon told a BBC reporter how excited he was to see "a real genuine use for a fuel cell".
When it came to powering Apollo (and the previous Gemini missions), fuel cells were perfect. Less bulky than batteries and more efficient than 1960s solar panels, they even produced a useful by-product: water, which the astronauts could drink.
So, great if you want to go to the Moon but it’s still been a struggle to apply the technology back on Earth.
Various US government initiatives have come and gone, fuel cell cars have remained as prototypes. There are hydrogen fuel cells around but they’ve proved to be a niche market. That could, finally, be about to change.
Just how clean
A quick scout through a list of California’s hi-tech start-up companies and you’ll find many of them devoted to the technology.
"There are a lot of people working on fuel cells in California," Fritz Prinz, the chair of mechanical engineering at Stanford University, said.
"They are trying to create new ideas, making fuel cells more cost effective, more efficient, for a variety of different applications from personal power to mobile applications such as cars."
The first hydrogen fuel cell cars are due to go on sale in the next five years and with governments keen to wean their nations off oil, they would seem to be a viable alternative.

But a number of issues remain. Hydrogen fuel cell cars need hydrogen and, even in California, there are only around 25 filling stations in the whole of the state. The other problem is even more fundamental: where does the hydrogen come from
"Most hydrogen today is made from natural gas," admits Ms Dunwoody.
So although the cars are technically zero emission, the process of making the hydrogen produces carbon dioxide.
Nevertheless, she says, it’s still greener than burning it.
"When you make hydrogen from natural gas and use it in a fuel cell vehicle, you immediately cut your carbon emissions by 50%. But there’s a lot of work going on in California on creating renewable hydrogen," and that includes using hydrogen produced from wastewater biogas.
The ultimate goal is to produce an efficient way of extracting hydrogen from water. Imagine that Cars powered by water.
What’s certain is that without the effort that went into getting a spacecraft to the Moon, the development of efficient, useful hydrogen fuel cells would be nowhere near as advanced as it is today.
Said Dunwoody: "This is our future, this technology is tremendously efficient and clean and, most importantly, it’s going to give customers the performance they expect from their vehicle." </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Jerry Cope: The Failure of Democracy in West Virginia: Redefining “Alternative” Energy
Alternative energy is a standard reference to energy sources that are not carbon based. But in West Virginia, many of the designated “alternative” energy sources contribute not only significantly more GHG emissions than the dirtiest conventional coal fired plants, they emit toxic pollutants as well.
Gene scientist to create algae biofuel
• New biofuel requires no car or plane engine modification
• Carbon Trust says production will take ‘many years’
Gene scientist Craig Venter has announced plans to develop next-generation biofuels from algae in a $600m (£370m) partnership with oil giant Exxon Mobil.
His company, Synthetic Genomics Incorporated (SGI), will develop fuels that can be used by cars or aeroplanes without the need for any modification of their engines. Exxon Mobil will provide $600m over five years with half going to SGI.
“Meeting the world’s growing energy demands will require a multitude of technologies and energy sources,” said Emil Jacobs, vice president of research and development at ExxonMobil. “We believe that biofuel produced by algae could be a meaningful part of the solution in the future if our efforts result in an economically viable, low-net carbon emission transportation fuel.”
Transport accounts for one-quarter of the UK’s carbon emissions and is the fastest growing sector. Finding carbon-neutral fuels will be crucial to the government meeting its target to reduce overall emissions by 80% by 2050.
Algae are an attractive way to harvest solar energy because they reproduce themselves, they can live in areas not useful for producing food and they do not need clean or even fresh water. In addition, they use far less space to grow than traditional biofuel crops such as corn or palm oil.
“Algae consumes carbon dioxide and sunlight in the presence of water, to make a kind of oil that has similar molecular structures to petroleum products we produce today,” said Jacobs. “That means it could be possible to convert it into gasoline and diesel in existing refineries, transport it through existing pipelines, and sell it to consumers from existing service stations.”
The Carbon Trust, a government-backed agency that promotes low-carbon technologies, has forecast that algae-based biofuels could replace more than 70bn litres of fossil fuels used every year around the world in road transport and aviation by 2030, equivalent to 12% of annual global jet fuel consumption or 6% of road transport diesel. In carbon terms, this equates to an annual saving of more than 160m tonnes of CO2 globally with a market value of more than £15bn.
Ben Graziano, research and development manager at the Carbon Trust, said that alge-based biofuels offered the potential for “major carbon savings”. “Exxon Mobil is estimating that algae could yield just over 20,000
litres of fuel per hectare each year, which is in line with our own forecasts. However, producing biofuel from algae on such a massive commercial scale is a major challenge, which will require many years of research and development.”
Venter, who is best known for his role in sequencing the human genome, said the new partnership was the largest single investment in trying to produce biofuels from algae but said the challenge to creating a viable next-generation fuel was the ability to produce it in large volumes. “This would not happen without the oil industry stepping up and taking part,” he said. “The challenges are not minor for any of us but we have the combined teams and scientific and engineering talents to give this the best chance of success.”
The research programme will begin with the construction of a new test facility in San Diego, where Venter says different techniques to grow and optimise algae will be tested. These will include open ponds as well as bioreactors, where the algae are grown in sealed tubes. “We will be trying out these different approaches … using newly-discovered natural algae to test the best approaches we can come up with to go into a scale-up mode.”
Venter has spent several years trawling the world’s oceans in search of environmentally-friendly microbes that could be used, in one way or another, to bring down the world’s carbon emissions. The organisms he has found include those that can turn CO2 into methane, which could be used to make fuels from the exhaust gases of power stations, and another that turns coal into natural gas, speeding up a natural process and reducing both the energy needed to extract the fossil fuel and the amount of pollution caused when it is burned.



