David Wong
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2006
- Messages
- 1,773
If you check the comments under any news story or any blog post about alternative fuel cars and/or hybrids, you see the same debate format.
Poster 1: "Our problems won't be solved until we convert to (insert alternative fuel here)!"
Poster 2: "Wrong! That technology will never be viable due to (insert limitations here). We need to convert to (insert another alternative fuel here)!"
Poster 3: "Wrong! That technology will never be viable due to..."
And so on. What I'd like to do in this thread is sort through some of the supposed insurmountable technical barriers and find out which ones are real and which are being over-stated by fans of some competing technology. So let me start with a couple I just heard, some elsewhere, some right here at JREF:
1. Hydrogen fuel cells will never be necessary, because the next generation of lithium ion batteries will have a range of 300-400 miles, and can be charged in a few minutes.
This was stated by someone who claimed to work in the industry, for one company's hydrogen program. They were reacting to comments made by someone high up at Toyota who said the same thing publicly. When someone challenged that there was in fact no way to fast-charge electric vehicles, they responded that this was only a limitation in household outlets, and that powering stations would be able to transfer the charge fast enough so that it'd be just a little slower than gassing up now.
Is that true? When they say that electric vehicles take 8 hours to recharge, is that purely because of the capabilities of the electrical outlets in your garage? If so then I don't understand why this was ever considered a limitation.
2. Hydrogen components will never be affordable, because the components require significant amounts of platinum.
3. As for the extra stress an all-electric vehicle fleet would put on the power grid, and the automatic answer of "build more nuclear plants," one claim was that there literally are not enough experts and engineers in America to build the 500 nuclear power plants that would be required to meet the need over the next 30 years.
4. None of the technologies we currently have or are about to have - next generation of solar, wind, nuclear fission, coal - will produce enough energy to replace what we're getting from petroleum, and the only solution is to take an enormous step back in our lifestyles and consumption until something like nuclear fusion comes along.
(Edited in from this thread)
Can anybody tackle those? Have any of your own?
Poster 1: "Our problems won't be solved until we convert to (insert alternative fuel here)!"
Poster 2: "Wrong! That technology will never be viable due to (insert limitations here). We need to convert to (insert another alternative fuel here)!"
Poster 3: "Wrong! That technology will never be viable due to..."
And so on. What I'd like to do in this thread is sort through some of the supposed insurmountable technical barriers and find out which ones are real and which are being over-stated by fans of some competing technology. So let me start with a couple I just heard, some elsewhere, some right here at JREF:
1. Hydrogen fuel cells will never be necessary, because the next generation of lithium ion batteries will have a range of 300-400 miles, and can be charged in a few minutes.
This was stated by someone who claimed to work in the industry, for one company's hydrogen program. They were reacting to comments made by someone high up at Toyota who said the same thing publicly. When someone challenged that there was in fact no way to fast-charge electric vehicles, they responded that this was only a limitation in household outlets, and that powering stations would be able to transfer the charge fast enough so that it'd be just a little slower than gassing up now.
Is that true? When they say that electric vehicles take 8 hours to recharge, is that purely because of the capabilities of the electrical outlets in your garage? If so then I don't understand why this was ever considered a limitation.
2. Hydrogen components will never be affordable, because the components require significant amounts of platinum.
3. As for the extra stress an all-electric vehicle fleet would put on the power grid, and the automatic answer of "build more nuclear plants," one claim was that there literally are not enough experts and engineers in America to build the 500 nuclear power plants that would be required to meet the need over the next 30 years.
4. None of the technologies we currently have or are about to have - next generation of solar, wind, nuclear fission, coal - will produce enough energy to replace what we're getting from petroleum, and the only solution is to take an enormous step back in our lifestyles and consumption until something like nuclear fusion comes along.
(Edited in from this thread)
Can anybody tackle those? Have any of your own?
Last edited: