Archive for the ‘energy’ Category

More Global Warming theory failures

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

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I’ve long believed that “global warming” theory is, at best, inconclusive science; at worst, religious zealotry masquerading as science. The UK has confirmed the latter.

Ed Morrisey has an excellent list of recent news articles from non-US media on the growing criticisms of global warming research.

Definitely check out Ed’s full list, but here are some of the better articles I’ve come across recently:

World may not be warming, say scientists

From the Wall Street Journal, one of the few American articles on the subject — The Continuing Climate Meltdown

Green Collar, American Made, Renewable Fuel, Job Loss Ignored

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

A factory in the heartland of America that produced fuel from food waste has just closed down.

Changing World Technologies owns a plant in Carthage Missouri that converts leftover turkey parts from a neighboring Butterball plant into oil. It uses the process of “thermal depolymerization” it has perfected over the years. In effect, instead of letting nature do the job with dinosaur remains over tens of millions of years, CWT developed a way to do it in hours. CWT was featured twice in Discover magazine as the “Anything Into Oil” company - in May 2003 and April 2006.

But now, the company has filed for bankruptcy after Butterball stopped sending turkey leftovers to the plant. There’s also been an ongoing issue with the odors coming from the plant. It hopes to reorganize and reopen at some point in the near feature. In the meantime, nearly 50 workers are out of a job and applying for unemployment.

I view this more as a national security issue above all else and would prefer the government stay out of the way of this project. But if we’re going to waste billions on other pet pork projects with little to no economical “stimulating” effect; and, if this is truly critical to a future free from foreign oil, with lots of homegrown “green collar” and “renewable energy” jobs; isn’t this exactly the kind of operation we should have at the top of the priority list? Why has there been little action from the National Science Foundation or even DARPA on this fuel creation process and this plant?

Many other bifuel projects have come and gone - some promising, some not. But it doesn’t appear we’re serious as a matter of national policy about leading the world in this kind of research and industry. Despite lip service to “green collar jobs” and “renewable energy”, have we actually done anything about it yet?

Maybe the next time you talk with your local Chamber of Commerce or economic development folks, or your state or federal legislator, mention this to them. They’re probably not even aware it exists, let alone the job possibilities that could be created if a plant opened in your area.

The Truth Shall Set You Free

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

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From Dave Barry’s Review of 2008 (he is not making this up):

January tidbit:

“On the Democratic side, the surprise winner is Barack Obama, who is running for president on a long and impressive record of running for president. A mesmerizing speaker, Obama electrifies voters with his exciting new ideas for change, although people have trouble remembering exactly what these ideas were because they were so darned mesmerized. Some people become so excited that they actually pass out. These are members of the press corps.”

March tidbit:

“In politics, Barack Obama addresses the issue of why, in his 20 years of membership in Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, he failed to notice that the pastor, Jeremiah Wright, is a racist lunatic. In a major televised address widely hailed for its brilliance, Obama explains that . . . OK, nobody really remembers what the actual explanation was. But everybody agrees it was mesmerizing.”

April tidbits:

“tensions run high in the Pennsylvania Democratic primary, which all the experts agree is extremely crucial. Barack Obama gets into trouble with rural voters for saying that rural Americans are ”bitter” and ”cling to guns or religion.” Responding to charges that this statement is elitist, Obama responds: “You are getting sleepy. Very sleepy.” ”

“On the Republican side, John McCain gets wind of something called the ”Internet” and orders his staff to give him a summary of it on index cards.”

“In economic news, the price of gasoline tops $4 a gallon, meaning the cost of filling up an average car is now $50, or, for Hummer owners, $17,500. Congress, responding to the financial pain of the American people, goes into partisan gridlock faster than ever before, with Republicans demanding that the oil companies immediately start drilling everywhere, including cemeteries, and Democrats calling for a massive effort to develop alternative energy sources such as wind, the sun, tides, comets, Al Gore and dragon breath, using technology expected to be perfected sometime this millennium. It soon becomes clear that Congress will not actually do anything, so Americans start buying less gasoline.”

May tidbit:

“the International Atomic Energy Agency releases a report stating that Iran is actively developing nuclear warheads. In response, Iran issues a statement asserting that (1) it absolutely is not developing nuclear warheads, and (2) these are peaceful warheads. The United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Russia and China convene an emergency meeting, during which they manage, in heated negotiations, to talk France out of surrendering.”

June tidbit:

“In other campaign-related news, Chicago developer Tony Rezko, a former Obama associate and fundraiser, is convicted on corruption charges, but the press realizes that this is not an issue after Obama explains that it is not an issue.”

July tidbit:

“Barack Obama, having secured North and South America, flies to Germany without using an airplane and gives a major speech — speaking English and German simultaneously — to 200,000 mesmerized Germans, who immediately elect him chancellor, prompting France to surrender. ”

August tidbits:

“Barack Obama, continuing to shake up the establishment, selects as his running mate Joe Biden, a tireless fighter for change since he was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1849. The Democratic Party gathers in Denver to formally nominate Obama, who descends from his Fortress of Solitude to mesmerize the adoring crowd with an acceptance speech objectively described by The New York Times as “comparable to the Gettysburg Address, only way better.” ”

“Meanwhile John McCain, still searching for the perfect running mate, tells his top aides in a conference call that he wants ‘’someone who is capable of filling my shoes.” Unfortunately, he is speaking into the wrong end of his cellular phone, and his aides think he said ‘’someone who is capable of killing a moose.” Shortly thereafter McCain stuns the world, and possibly himself, by selecting Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, a no-nonsense hockey mom with roughly 114 children named after random nouns such as “Hamper.””

“Elsewhere abroad, war breaks out between Russia and Georgia over South Ossetia and Abkhazia, serving as a stark reminder that, in an increasingly uncertain world, we, as Americans, have no idea where these places are.”

September tidbit:

“But the presidential campaign is soon overshadowed by the troubled economy. The federal government is finally forced to take over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac after they are caught selling crack at a middle school. But that is not enough, as major financial institutions, having lost hundreds of billions of dollars thanks to years of engaging in practices ranging from questionable to moronic, begin failing, which gives the federal government an idea: Why not give these institutions MORE hundreds of billions of dollars, generously provided by taxpayers?”

November tidbit:

“Barack Obama, in a historic triumph, becomes the nation’s first black president since the second season of 24, setting off an ecstatically joyful and boisterous all-night celebration that at times threatens to spill out of The New York Times newsroom. Obama, following through on his promise to bring change to Washington, quickly begins assembling an administration consisting of a diverse group of renegade outsiders, ranging all the way from lawyers who attended Ivy League schools and then worked in the Clinton administration to lawyers who attended entirely different Ivy league schools and then worked in the Clinton administration.”

Rebuilding the GOP

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

I’m thinking more about the future of the conservative movement and the party as a vessel for that movement.

I really hope this is the end of empty, vapid, defensive, power for the sake of power, GOP national campaigns.

It’s time to get back to a sustained, positive, modern agenda of conservative, libertarian, and common sense principles that deal with today’s issues.

Energy security; universal health care based on free market principles (quit tying health care to a 1950’s employment model in order to free up capital, employee movement, and improve health costs); improve health care IT; K-12 education that is designed to produce the smartest, most productive workforce on the planet; etc. etc. etc.

God Bless the Gipper, but this isn’t 1980. When Obama runs on tax cuts, we’ve won the fight on where the battle should be (even if he’s being dishonest and it took Joe the Plumber to pierce the mainstream media’s propaganda interference).

A political party’s only about 3 things: having ideas, selling ideas, and electing candidates to implement those ideas. A lot of GOP politicians in DC and many capitals fell in love with power instead of ideas the past few years.

The site Rebuild The Party was just unveiled last night (I read about it on http://www.thenextright.com):

http://www.rebuildtheparty.com

Link on the upper right to vote on ideas:

http://ideas.rebuildtheparty.com

Down Goes The Cartel #1

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

A Texas company announced the first algae biodiesel plant is going online April 1.

The current algae farm consists of 1,100 acres of saltwater ponds that the Company projects will produce a minimum of 4.4 million gallons of algal oil and 110 million pounds of biomass on an annual basis. The Company has dedicated 20 acres of ponds for a proposed algae derived JP8 jet fuel research and development program.

Avoid the wind

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

When it’s raining, I’m the kind of person who usually just walks through the rain. I don’t care. It’s just water.

Someone nearby usually wonders how I can just walk so calmly through the rain. In my best Jedi voice, I tell them I just walk where the raindrops aren’t. After all, we’re mostly empty space, aren’t we?

Now we have 2 engineering feats designed to avoid the wind.

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Aptera is producing a car that is set to get 300 miles per gallon of fuel. They redesigned the entire shape of the car. They realized that up to 70 percent of the energy used by a vehicle is used to push the air in front of it out of the way. If you think about the analogue in nature, what does a standard car look more like - an elephant or a stingray? And this is an actual car being produced, not a concept car. Of course, it’s coming to California first. I’m also not sure I would ever drive one in the Midwest in the winter — that single back tire wouldn’t give the best traction on a snowy road. But at several 100 miles per gallon, it’s definitely worth looking into.

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The second engineering wind-avoiding feat is the Chicago Spire. Built like a screw, it forces the wind up and away from the building so that it can be built much taller than a standard skyscraper. Ground was broken in June 2007 and it should be completed in 2011.

Alternate Energies — Part 1

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

About a year ago, I bought a 2001 Ford Taurus wagon because it runs on E85. I wanted it for it’s cargo capacity and it’s superior mileage versus a truck. In fact, the Ford Taurus (wagon or sedan) is one of the few non-truck/SUV/Minivans (aka “cars”) you can purchase that run on E85. As tempting as a 2000 Nissan Hombre is to the Vladimir Guerrero’s of the world, that was not for me. (That’s a culturally-divided-nomenclature-loving joke, in case you missed it.)

Living in Wisconsin, there are lots of E85 stations.  Plus, a lot more stations and plants (both vegetable and manufacturing) continue to come online. You can even plan your route based on alternate fueling stations. I have more than once.

I’m not going to waste the effort wading into the question of whether corn-based ethanol is energy-efficient, good or bad for farmers, consumers, and the overall economy. There are already good articles on the web laying out the facts, pros, and cons.

Corn is a transitional source of ethanol in America. It’s a great starting point. We have a fairly sophisticated infrastructure around corn production. We have lots of it relatively cheaply: we know how to make it, process it, distribute it, and sell it. It’s helping us build alternative fuel manufacturing and distribution facilities. And it’s getting lots of people thinking about alternate energy sources.

The best part though is that this is just the beginning — research breakthroughs and economic milestones are just in their infancy. And just recently, plants came online that convert cheese waste into ethanol and biodiesel and cow manure into natural gas.

The energy producing potential of the Midwest looks very bright — if there’s anything we have an abundance of in Wisconsin, it’s cheese and manure.

The Windbelt

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

The windbelt is a small device that converts a breeze into DC electricity by flapping a strip between metal coils on each end. It doesn’t produce a lot of power, but it’s a breakthrough given it’s size. Popular Mechanics recently recognized it at it’s annual Breakthrough Conference. The video explains it well. Kits to build your own should be available soon.