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Thursday, January 26

Floating wind power, great pictures!
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 26 Jan 2006 01:55 AM CST
http://www.hydro.com/en/press_room/news/archive/2005_11/hywind_en.html
These are what are needed in the Cape Wind situation. Anchored a few more miles offshore than the present site,they would not interfere with the residents who object to it.
By scaling the size of each machine up, the extra cost of cables to transport the power would not increase the cost per kwh. Larger machines that will not be visible from shore are preferable to smaller machines that are.
And by adding a toroidal wave power generator the power would be even less expensive, it could double the amount of kwh produced by each platform.
Wednesday, January 25

Is nuclear power necessary? Or will wind and solar be enough?
by
amazngdrx
on Wed 25 Jan 2006 03:45 AM CST
From a discussion here:
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/23/233434/091#11
Capacity factor measures how many kwh (kilowatt hours) a system produces in a given time period compared to how many kwh that the rated power of the system would produce in that same time period under continuous operation.
A coal fired plant typically produces 80% of what it's rated power running continuously would produce. The site says nuclear is 90%, but what about downtime for maintenance?
Does cutting that 28 foot square opening in containments and replacing inner workings take months or years?
Wind and solar are typically 30% due to variability of the energy source.
So what does this mean? It means that cost per watt of generating capacity tends to be difficlt to compare between generating systems.
So it is easier to compare kwh per year, rather than power ratings or capacity factor. That is how wind power contracts are negotiated and verified.
A typical home uses about 10,000 kwh per year. A 12 foot wind generator operating in 12 mph average winds will produce about 3,000 kwh per year. That solar panel on the New Jersey home mentioned on my blog produces about 7000 kwh per year.
His panels have an 8.5 year payback period in energy bill savings. The wind generator would be similar in payback and most of the average home's power use could be obtained from a dual system of this type.
With solar cogeneration heating domestic hot water and helping a geothermal heat pump provide home heating and cooling, the whole system would produce enough of a surplus of electric power to charge an electric vehicle for household use.
Wind and solar can be scaled up to provide commercial transportation, manufacturing, and heating/cooling energy by installing it on roofs, over parking lots, farms, and industrail sites.
The largest wind machine kwh production levels indicate that the generating capacity needed to power half the present capacity of 600,000 mega watts (the equivalent of 600 typical nuclear reactors), 300,000 megawatts, could be provided by 15,000 1,000 foot wind machines.
The 15,000 square miles that these machines would be distributed on would constitute less than 2% of the very high windspeed area in the nearly deserted northern great plains. And 98% of that land area would not be used, only rudimentary roads and the tower bases would be actually used.
Nuclear plants come in at 2,3,4 dollars per watt of generating capacity. Who knows how high the cost will go, given the fact that new plants are so far impossible to site and finance in the wake of Cherbobyl, Three Mile Island, and revelations about widespread radioactive contamination at various government owned, nuclear industry contractor run, sites like Hanford, Oak Ridge, Rocky Flats ...and on and on.
The equivalent generating capacity per watt from wind (factoring in the 30% versus 80% capacity factor for wind versus nuclear) is at 2 dollars (in the newest, most efficient wind machines)and dropping. With the mass production of 15,000 units the cost would drop signifigantly. And wind has no fuel or waste. Cost of wind on that scale would be about 2 cents per kwh.
Half of national electric power could come from home and commercial building installations of solar and over parking lots, and the installation of small to medium wind systems.
The other half from these large wind machines. Nuclear is just not necessary. And it is far too expensive and dangerous.
That's all without even considering the waste, which could add up to a dollar ( or even more) per kwh generated over 10s of thousands of years of secure storage, not to mention transportation, processing, and nuclear plant decommisioning.
Thursday, January 19

After much debate: Cape Wind Project dialectic yields a useful compromise.
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 19 Jan 2006 09:14 AM CST
Maybe all this infighting in the environmental community has produced a compromise on siting wind and solar power projects.
No industrial renwable power in natural areas, unless those installations are temporary and a portion of the energy generated goes to remediate land around the wind farms already devestated by agriculture and industry... actually returning destroyed areas to a natural state.
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/18/105422/981#2
How much earth destruction does a particular human activity entail?
Modifying a human activity (such as home heating or transportation) to conserve energy should have the same (or maybe a greater) emphasis as powering that activity with green energy.
Most up to date comparisons indicate that the initial cost of wind is higher than coal or natural gas fueled generation capacity. An independent, unbiased scietific study (with no industry funding or control)of the latest projects ought to be done.
I think that otherpower.com, the do-it-yourself home wind power builders have attained the lowest intial cost and cost per kwh, with good old fashioned low tech cooperation between friends and neighbors.
As you say the main advantage to wind is zero fuel input. Wind and solar are nuclear powered, but the reactor, the fuel, and the waste are 93 million miles away, in the sun, where they belong.
An antique Jacob's wind electric machine, running since the 30s, is probably the cost per kwh leader. (Too low to meter...as the nuclear industry used to tout in the 50s.) Due to the advantage of not needing fuel decade after decade, all that free wind adds up.
It looks like solar panels that simultaneously generate elecricity and heating/cooling capacity covering the average sized home roof, parking area, and southern exposure coupled with a small wind system (under 12 ft in diameter) can produce enough power to equal the per capita personal energy use of the average american.
And enough capacity to power public and commercial buildings, manufacturing, and commercial transportation can be obtained with solar and wind installed on public buildings,at commercial, farming, and industrial sites and over parking lots.
No wilderness land need be utilized.
In fact an environmental program ought to be adopted that establishes a 40 year permit for industrial wind that includes remediation of the land around wind plants (don't call 'em "turbines", "plants" are bird friendly).
If farming or industrial uses have destroyed it, the 40 year time period could be used to restore the cropland around the machines into a nature conservation area. In the case of industrial pollution, extra peak wind energy that would normally go to waste can be used to operate compressors that could power filtration systems that would trap and eventually eliminate toxic waste.
A small tax on the wind powered electricity ought to be reserved to retire and recycle the wind machines and the site after the 40 year period is up. Then that remediated land can stay a natural area.
And no wind machines need to be installed where they interfere with natural vistas like the ones near the Cape Cod area. There is more than enough area already devestated by human abuse to meet our energy needs.
Monday, January 16

1.9 trillion Iraq war cost, predicted prewar.
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 16 Jan 2006 01:59 AM CST
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/15/business/yourmoney/15view.html?ei=5070&en=8015c341d2572446&ex=1137560400&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1137397543-X1j9/0+ZrKUvmlkFPpTkZA
Mr. Nordhaus is the economist who put the subject back on the table with the publication of a prescient prewar paper that compared the coming conflict to a "giant role of the dice." He warned that "if the United States had a string of bad luck or misjudgments during or after the war, the outcome could reach $1.9 trillion," once all the secondary costs over many years were included.
That is the equivalent of adding 2 dollars per gallon to the cost of gasoline, diesel, and heating fuel over the next 20 years. But since a gas tax will not be imposed to pay for these oil wars, that debt will be compounded instead.
Lowering the standard of living and gutting the financial health of the USA.
On the other hand, a national policy to replace oil with renewable energy would revive our failing manufacturing sector, lower and stabilize energy prices, and instead of raising the national debt to astronomical levels as these oil wars are doing.. actually pay off the debt incurred by this korporate kleptocracy disguised as the bush administration.
Saturday, January 14

Definitly an IMPEACHable offense! Is a mini-911 next?
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 14 Jan 2006 12:28 PM CST
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/011306Z.shtml
What had long been understood to be protocol in the event that the NSA spied on average Americans was that the agency would black out the identities of those individuals or immediately destroy the information.
But according to people who worked at the NSA as encryption specialists during this time, that's not what happened. On orders from Defense Department officials and President Bush, the agency kept a running list of the names of Americans in its system and made it readily available to a number of senior officials in the Bush administration, these sources said, which in essence meant the NSA was conducting a covert domestic surveillance operation in violation of the law.
If this could be proven, the Bush administration should be history.
But with a GOP majority in the legislative branch that can't happen. Can this assault on the US Constitution be halted in the 06 election cycle?
If it comes down to actual impeachment will neocons get their friends in Saudi or Syrian intelligence to stage a minor terror incident to bolster the president? After all, they did stage the WMD, flowered greeting, and Saddam connection with al qaeda big lie campaign to justify the invasion of Iraq.
To save their administration would they at least be willing to let a terror attack occur? Just a little one?
This recent disposable cell phone terrorism story sure seems staged.

More bickering over the Cape Wind project. Making "Darth" Cheney grin?
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 14 Jan 2006 03:40 AM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/13/111914/405/#6
If the urgency of global climate disaster impells the use of wind power over any local objections, why does that same emergency not impell us to simply drop controversial projects like this that delay the build out of wind power for years.
With the time and money wasted arguing and litigating over this one wind farm....how many times the power capacity could have been installed where there are no NIMBYs?
And given a wind farm many times the size of the Cape project, that could have already been up and running on the northern great plains, how much closer would we be to the meaty 10% level of the exponential growth curve that chatacterizes the adoption of a new technology?
Investment on a national scale, instead of getting tied down in endless bickering over one wind farm. Rather than fighting a diversionary battle, move forward with the real home front effort to win these energy wars.
10s of thousands of 1000 foot scale wind machines are needed to really win this battle. North Dakota,South Dakota, Montana, Minnesota... all welcome wind energy development.
If this green energy revolution is really that vital, and I believe it is, build capacity out where it is actually wanted first. Then as that 10% level is approached and passed the momentum created will get projects going in places like Cape Cod, without blunting the leading edge of this important movement.
Only 3000 of these very large wind machines across the northern great plains would get US to the level of 10% of total electric power generated by wind.
And last but not least of the reasons to at least modify the Cape Wind project as RFK jr suggests?
The time and money spent in endless litigation would be better spent on moving the whole project further offshore, possibly on floating platforms. That would open up the entire coast line of the US to offshore wind, wave, and ocean current power generation.
If NIMBYs can't see them from shore, it makes everything so much easier.
Tuesday, January 10

More power plant emmission algae scrubber news. Energy synchronicity.
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 10 Jan 2006 10:03 PM CST
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0111/p01s03-sten.html
This design features the harvest of biodiesel from the algae that is used to soak up the CO2 from the coal combustion.
a further ptoduct after the biodiesel is natural gas, which can then be stored and burned instead of coal, or better yet run through a catalytic fuel cell to produce electricity directly.
Multi-fuel plants like this that store wind and solar power, in the form of natural gas, can cleanly buffer the times when wind and solar power does not keep pace with grid demand. And the use of coal can gradually be phased out, but without idling the expensive turbines and generators, they can then burn mainly natural has from algae production.

Wind only 1% of power supply by 2010?
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 10 Jan 2006 04:12 PM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/6/193649/7888/#12
Projections Those pessimistic projections tend to move us all closer to ... the ultimate pessimism. Death.
Human energy is better invested in hopeless causes, like this green energy revolution, than in really hopeless causes, like living out self fullfilling disasters, one oil war, climate shift, and terror attack after another.
Break the cycle.
Was the idea of producing millions of ships, planes, aircraft, tanks, trucks, guns ...and the atom bomb (talk about looking impossible!!) in a few short years, to win WW 2, impossible?
We are in a downward spiral, a cold/hot war over energy. And there are extra WMDs out there that anyone can buy for the right price.
This production of green energy revolutionary "war" machines needs to be approached as WW 2 war production was. This is global survival at stake, not just national.
Build the millions of solar panels and geothermal heat pumps, like duuhbya has at his ranch, and millions of wind machines from home size all the way to 1000 foot industrial scale. And the millions of electric cars, buses, trucks, trains, and yes even aircraft.
We can win these series of neverending cycles of oil war with a massive war production effort.
No more need for oil, no more oil wars and climate disaster.

Talking head, talking point on body armor. Alert!
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 10 Jan 2006 06:08 AM CST
All over the news channels!
The same old rummi line. Repeated by various cable news talking head retired military experts.
These middle managment military retired colonels are spewing this point.
If you wear more body armor and have uparmored humvees the bad guys will use bigger bombs...and get you anyway.
They are protecting their friends and relatives, administrators in the pentagon who bought into the neoconman war on the cheap plan.
Someone has to pay for the mistake of not supplying the very best armor to US troops. This has been delayed for YEARS!
And is public knowledge. The pentagon has finally ordered the new body armor? Just recently. Ass covering needs to be done.
All kinds of excuses are being made, but this is the main one. Repeated over and over..it started with rummi in Iraq.
Rummi told the guardsman who asked about the missing armor upgrades, after riding from the airport in a specially super uparmored halliburton vehicle (I bet that one transport contract would have paid for body armor for all of US troops and uparmored humvees!), that fatality in combat is fate, armor does not matter. If one has your number on it, your time is up.
The more the armor the bigger the bombs the enemy will use.
One aspect of that lie is true...the insurgents have unlimited quantities of explosives. The shock and awe march to baghdad, neoconman war on the cheap strategery, left saddam's huge ammo dumps full of explosives unguarded.
They were looted, and those explosives provide a practically unlimited supply of improvised explosive devices, IEDs to kill US troops.
The level of criminal negligence in the conduct of these oil wars does rise to the level of prosecution and impeachment. The fact that this can't and won't happen, makes it clear that the US government has been subverted by a coup.
The US constitution has been suspended since the 2000 appointment of Bush/Cheney.
Monday, January 9

the hopeless crusade to make humankind live within it's natural means?
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 09 Jan 2006 05:41 AM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/6/172045/7999#6
"limit the amount of energy that any household or company may use. A rational cap would be the amount that could be produced at the site added to what is produce within the political boundary"
An interesting and unique idea.
Personally I think small scale solar, wind, and water power would power my idea of balance, humankind living within it's means in symbiosis with the natural world.
Enough EXTRA power could be conserved and generated, over and above local needs, to make those areas already blighted by industrial and agribizz destruction provide enough space for industrial energy uses.
Land devestated by chemical agriculture is many, many times the area needed for wind and solar on land. And offshore installations can be justified from an environmental stance by their prevention of the use of pond nets that are destroying life in the ocean.
Would it be possible to achieve that state of grace given the virulence of the human infection?
I say we go for it. Prove the concept works and fight the hopeless poltical and cultural odds to make that the new norm.
Is there any better hopeless crusade to join? Nope. Onward!
Sunday, January 8

Agribizz subsidized ethanol, what a WASTE!!
by
amazngdrx
on Sun 08 Jan 2006 10:30 AM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/1/8/03856/17905#2
Biofuels (from anything but the waste stream or possibly algae grown in solar collectors)are a titanic waste of scarce capital that ought to be going into electric cars powered by wind, water, and solar power.
As well as a waste of the natural world in the form of agribiz monocrop, genetically modified, pesticide/herbicide eco-suicide.
Biofuels still require combustion to yield useful energy. And infernal combustion vehicles are inherently inefficient.
In a world at war over oil, it is imperative that a viable alternative be produced.
That alternative is electric battery power, charged up with green power. These cars are being kept off the market by the present capital allocation monopoly that favors infernal combustion at all costs.
The agribizz biofuel movement is a scam. It uses oil, coal, and nuclear power to produce huge government subsidies for nothing but a feel good solution.
Nuclear power (from the sun) charging battery powered vehicles through wind, water, and solar power systems is the safe, economical alternative that is needed to end oil wars and global climate disaster.
And since the cost of electric transportation is about one dollar for an equivalent amount of power provided by one gallon of oil or biofuel energy, merely removing the subsidies from fossil fuels and nuclear and applying even a fraction of that wasted capital to kick start this green electric revolution, will have 5 major problem solving effects.
- Jobs. Manufacturing jobs will return along with the buildout of green energy. Millions of electric cars, heat pumps, solar and wind installations, and electric vehicles woll need to be manufactured.
- Global climate change from CO2 greenhouse gas due to fossil fuel combustion will be halted. The costs in terms of storm damage and lost economic growth may be the biggest hidden expense of ALL from fossil fuelishness. 100's of trillions, Katrina's costs are rumored at 2 trillion now?
- The US economy will boom without the endless oil wars and ever increasing oil prices draining effect. Stable energy prices for decades to come will dispell fear of fear itself and restore investor, consumer, and business confidence. Fear of terror over oil has a huge negative effect on confidence in the economy.
- Standard of living. Having ones own solar panels, wind generator, and electric car will be like owning ones own home instead of renting. Buying increasingly expensive energy from corporate monopolists is like renting and having the rent double every few years, natural gas, heating oil,gasloine, and diesel all doubled in recent years.
And that "rent" money is GONE! Money invested in solar, wind, and electric vehicles just keeps on yielding higher and higher dividends over the years, restoring the standard of living lost to job outsourcing and soaring transportation and heating and cooling costs.
5. Quality of life. All life on planet earth will benefit from an end to the devestation that fossil and nuclear power wreak upon nature. We are all a part of the natural world, as inseparable as our individual breath from the breath of mother earth.
Friday, January 6

Floating offshore wind power is here!
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 06 Jan 2006 05:03 AM CST
http://www.greencarcongress.com/2005/11/hydro_develops_.html#comment-12614499
These large floating platforms can have wave power generators built into the base in order to double the power output per platform. And tidal current generators extending below them.
For energy storage try this idea, electric plugin cars, trucks, trains, buses... as a national distributed battery. Each home or business with plugin vehicles would also have it's own emergency power ... grid outage due to increasing weather volatility is a very signifigant fact eroding economic health.
http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2005/12/19/1455214.html.html
Floating platforms are also further offshore where NIMBYs will not see them. And placed in the path of pond net fishing fleets could save the national fisheries from this destructive industrial fishing that is scouring the seas of life... killing off 1000s of species in order to harvest a few to extinction for short term bottonline considerations.
No other solution...negotiation, threats.. have been effective in stopping this grave threat to all ocean based life.
The more selective, careful fishing techniques of responsible fishermen, regulated by environmental laws, will then protect a stable, sustainable food resource.
These smaller operators are being shut out by the illegal pond net fishing.
Posted by: amazingdrx | Jan 6, 2006 2:57:13 AM
Sunday, January 1

8.5 year payback on this solar installation. In it's second year.
by
amazngdrx
on Sun 01 Jan 2006 08:32 AM CST
http://msmith.typepad.com/smithelectricco/2005/07/one_year_lets_r.html
A huge part of this quick payback is the New jersey policy of letting homeowners sell their own clean energy credits.
Serious campaigning needs to be done to get this incorporated into every states energy policy for green energy.
Here in Wisconsin the power company gets those credits, but are they the ones who pay for the system? nope.
It's little details of public policy hardly even noticed by legislators that make the difference to a green energy revolution. Our representatives do not even read the legislation they vote on. So maybe a public campaign that makes them stand up and do the right thing might help.
Almost all legislation is written by industry lobbyists, that's the sad truth. Corporate "citizens" are the only ones represented by politics for hire. And they are not even real citizens.
Has a corporate "citizen", like enron or halliburton, ever been sentenced to prison? That's impossible right?
So why do these "citizens" have more rights than the rest of US? A perrmanent get out of jail free card. No wonder they steal the mega sums they do.
Monday, December 26

Welcome to a fear filled new year!
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 26 Dec 2005 05:16 AM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/12/25/22501/989#2
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/16/politics/16program.html?ex=1135746000&en=85c1fc6177dd927f& ei=5070
"Under a presidential order signed in 2002, the intelligence agency has monitored the international telephone calls and international e-mail messages of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people inside the United States without warrants over the past three years..."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/22/nyregion/22police.html?ex=1135746000&en=53334bb47adc9f11&e i=5070
"Beyond collecting information, some of the undercover officers or their associates are seen on the tape having influence on events. At a demonstration last year during the Republican National Convention, the sham arrest of a man secretly working with the police led to a bruising confrontation between officers in riot gear and bystanders."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/20/politics/20fbi.html?ex=1135746000&en=0184c4f98727565d&ei=5 070
"The documents, provided to The New York Times over the past week, came as part of a series of Freedom of Information Act lawsuits brought by the American Civil Liberties Union. For more than a year, the A.C.L.U. has been seeking access to information in F.B.I. files on about 150 protest and social groups that it says may have been improperly monitored."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/25/politics/25wiretap.html?ex=1135746000&en=d2ae725096562244& ei=5070
"Congressional officials said Saturday that they wanted to investigate the disclosure that the National Security Agency had gained access to some of the country's main telephone arteries to glean data on possible terrorists."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/25/weekinreview/25bamford.html?ex=1135746000&en=0267ffdbbdeb2c92& amp;ei=5070
"Run by the ultrasecret National Security Agency, the listening post intercepts all international communications entering the eastern United States. Another N.S.A. listening post, in Yakima,Wash., eavesdrops on the western half of the country."
The Bush administration war on the US constitution. Be afraid!
Tuesday, December 20

Real terrorism? The terrible reality of nuclear power.
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 20 Dec 2005 12:22 AM CST
http://www.sprol.com/?p=291#more-291
There were five radionuclides that contributed the most to radiation dose from the river pathway (dose is the amount of radiation absorbed by a person's body). The five radionuclides were phosphorus-32, zinc-65, arsenic-76, neptunium-239 and sodium-24. The Dose Reconstruction Project estimated that these radionuclides accounted for more than 94 percent of the potential radiation dose from the river pathway. There were many other radioactive materials released into the river as well.
The nuclear fuel consisted of fuel "elements" which were less than two feet long and encased in metal. There were thousands of fuel elements in each reactor. The increase in the reactor power levels put more stress on the fuel elements. Under this stress, the metal covering could split and allow small chunks of the radioactive fuel to be flushed into the river with the cooling water. The largest chunk weighed more than a pound. There were nearly 2,000 fuel element failures during the operation of the eight original plutonium production reactors.
Were any terrorist organization to acomplish sabotage on even a fraction of the scale of this one disaster caused by the nuclear industry, the secret prisons operated by the duuhbyaist regime would be filled to the brim overnight.
Does anyone doubt that?
And yet no one has ever been held responsible for even one of these nuclewar waste disasters.
How about a nuclear plant in your backyard? No? Not even if your beloved leader whom gaaawd speaks through commands it? Hehey.
New plants are being planned right now in the faithfilled southland. They need the jobs.
Monday, December 19

Energy synchronicity. Wind, solar, and battery powered cars.
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 19 Dec 2005 06:14 AM CST
The beauty of electric plugin vehicles is that they would also serve as a huge national distributed battery.
All connected to the grid when parked, 100s of millions of cars would provide energy storage to buffer inconstant wind and solar power inputs.
And when your local power went out from a storm (it happens 4 or 5 times per year here) threatening to freeze your home in winter, the huge capacity (80 kwh or more, enough to power your home for days) in your electric car's battery has you covered until things are repaired.
When 50% of the US does drive plugin electric cars, that will amount to days worth of energy storage across the country, allowing renewable energy and electric power demand fluctuations to be adjusted with backup fossil and hydroelectric sources.
Even the American Wind energy Asociation, an advocate for wind power, admits the supply interuption problems with going over 20% renewable power use on the grid. These car batteries would push that theoretical limit way up!
Maybe only 20% of power will come from fossil fuel someday? That would be very good for mother earth.
Sunday, December 18

World record utility scale battery storage system in Alaska.
by
amazngdrx
on Sun 18 Dec 2005 03:59 AM CST
http://www.gvea.com/projects/bess.php
This proves it, utility scale battery energy storage is practical and cost effective. Now bring on the wind power.
This Alaska based utility company is doing that also. How will it all work together? It will be fascinating to find out.
Saturday, December 17

RFK jr NYT op/ed on the Cape Wind project.
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 17 Dec 2005 11:53 PM CST
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/16/opinion/16kennedy.html?n=Top%2fOpinion%2fEditorials%20and%20Op%2dEd%2fOp%2dEd%2fContributors
The capital invested in this project, financial and political, would be better spent on wind installations and power distribution upgrade in the northern midwestern plains. No NIMBYs, hardly any people in fact!
His idea for siting farther off shore is a good one, but will not beat the low cost of plains based energy. And distribution grid upgrade on the plains can form a loop to attach thousands of wind machines to the grid, more efficient and cheaper than a really long cable way out in the ocean.
And what about the crucial invention for renewable energy? Energy storage. High profile spokespersons for green energy ought to be pushing reserach in this area. Superconducting energy storage is a practical technology that needs capital intensive government and private industry backing.

150 mpg Prius achieved with simple plugin battery pack added.
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 17 Dec 2005 06:25 AM CST
http://www.evworld.com/view.cfm?section=article&storyid=825
Energy CS's 150 mpg Prius plug-in hybrid. Valence Saphion (tm) lithium-ion batteries were installed in place of the Prius' 1kWh NiMH battery pack, which is located under the rear passenger seat. The car is a proof-of-concept prototype, which will make its official debut at the 21st Electric Vehicle Symposium in Monaco next month. The plug-in hybrid concept lets the car run further on electricity stored from the electric power grid instead of gasoline for the first 50-60 miles, effectively tripling the miles per gallon performance of the car.
With ever improving battery technology plugin hybrids will soon gove way to full plugin electric cars. With no infernal sombustion or greenhouse gas emissions. But these plugin hybrids at 150 mpg are exactly right at this moment in time.
Friday, December 9

The winning catalyst to green energy revolution, and it's made by a US company!
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 09 Dec 2005 05:32 AM CST
http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=14294&hed=Battery+Pumps+Up+Power+Toolshttp
A123 uses a nanotech material called doped nano-phosphate, and the Watertown, Massachusetts-based company says its battery will recharge 90 percent of its capacity in five minutes. The battery is also lightweight, weighing in at less than 1 kilogram for a battery that provides 1.5 kilowatts of power, according to A123.
This lithium ion battery installed in vehicles will replace gasoline and diesel fuel. A 5 minute recharge gets you back on the road. Just as convenient as filling up with gas, but the equivalent to a gallon of gas in electricity only costs one dollar.
That's with high electric costs that come from fossil fuel and nuclear power too. Wind power costs a fraction of the price of the dirty power we use now.
Mass production, by an american company, of these batteries installed in plugin electric cars manufactured right here in the USA would have the manufacturing base growing back up to healthy levels.
And no more need to pay higher and higher prices for imported oil, in lives and huge national debt!
Sunday, December 4

The Fog Of Iraq...tastrophe.
by
amazngdrx
on Sun 04 Dec 2005 09:47 AM CST
amazingdrx - 10:40 AM ET December 4, 2005 (#45718 of 45718)
Saddam is being tried for murdering a couple 100 Iraqis after an assasination atempt.
Bush was reelected after murdering 10s of thousands of people because "Saddam tried to kill my (his) dad".
That fictional assasination attempt was a lie cooked up by Chalabi.
As were all the other excuses for the Iraq fiasco. Notice Chalabi's snickering and gloating when asked about his lies?
Rape rooms, humans shredded in plastic shredders, WMDs, people fed to dogs, Saddam complicity in 911.... all part of bushco inc lies to get their corporate hands on Iraqi oil?
By murdering 10s of thousands of people, most completely innocent.
According to McNamara in the documentary,"Fog Of War", General Lemay told him that if the allies had lost WW 2 the two of them would be tried as war criminals for instituting fire bombing of civilians.
Of course the enemies in WW 2, the axis powers, were a REAL threat to the free world. Iraq was a fake threat to the free world.
Saturday, December 3

An interesting discussion on Gristmill blog. Exposing Limbaugh's sophistry.
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 03 Dec 2005 05:41 AM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/12/2/123612/225#5
There it is. The half joking comments by the nut wing that once the arctic ice is gone, oil tankers will have shorter routes. And think of all that Siberian and Canadian arctic coastal and offshore oil that will become available.
They neglect the important fact, that those past ice ages were caused by natural phenomena like volcanoes and meteor strikes.
This current climate disaster IS a result of human activity and thus preventable.
Limbaugh's argument is very powerful, maybe he has switched his drug intake to more natural sources. No more oxycontin rants? Hehey.
What he should say about arctic ice and ocean currents is that when the gulf stream slows the heating effect in the northern regions will be diminished and the ice restored. Nature is self correcting. Look for that next.
Of course we can still defeat that argument against green energy by pointing out that it is economically and culturally beneficial to halt the human contribution to this global climate emergency.
In purely capitalist terms, the cost in reduced economic growth from storm, drought,energy wars, and rising ocean levels justifies the shift to green energy that eliminates the human contribution to global climate change from greenhouse gas emmisions.
It's the best course for business as well as each traveler on spaceship earth.
Sunday, November 27

Why do many environmentalists hate biofuel?
by
amazngdrx
on Sun 27 Nov 2005 01:51 PM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/11/25/202912/19#2
Biofuel from the waste stream made with wind and solar power are still a great idea. I am opposed to agrichem biofuel too, even though I'm in favor of biofuel from waste.
When the waste stream biofuel runs short of demand, then coal can be refined cleanly with the same wind and solar powered technology to produce a blended fuel that will work in regular gasoline and diesel motors.
This would eliminate imported oil.
As plugin electric cars come into wide use, the percentage of transportation energy obtained from fuel combustion can be reduced so that eventually oil and even coal are no longer needed.
And with the mass production of the new lithium ion nano tech quick charge batteries, a fillup of a plugin electric "gas tank" will take only a little longer than filling a regular gas tank.
That means no more fuel will be needed. The remaining biofuel production can be reserved for specialized uses like air travel.
A distinction needs to be made between agrichem based biofuel and boifuel produced from waste with green energy. Regional green biofuel and coal extracted fuel would establish freedom from the economic tyranny of monopoly based neo-corporate empire and it's krazy kristian oil krusade.
Region by region progressive areas could get off their oil addiction and leave the regions paying 5 bucks per gallon for fuel and yearly double digit increases in heating and cooling bills in the financial dustbin of history.
Let 'em fund bushco and its saudi/opec cronies. See how long that lasts in free economic competition with whole regions powered with inexpensive, clean, green energy.
Only when this starts happening will politicos be forced to level the playing field for alternative energy. Until large numbers of voters actually see the benefits of green energy, the system of subsidizing big oil, nukes, and coal backed by bribery will surely continue. And no real reform energy policy will be instituted.
Tuesday, November 8

VW going to lithium ion for their new hybrid?
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 08 Nov 2005 03:58 PM CST
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/11/3/92411/0383#1
If VW does it, can mass production of lithium ion hybrid batteries be far behind? Maybe even mass production of the fast charge Hitachi lithium ion battery?
That paves the way for affordable plugin electric cars that have the range and performance needed to compete with hybrids.
But the final blow to hybrids that use infernal combustion as the main power source is a plugin biofueled generator that substitutes for half the batteries in a plugin electric vehicle so that long trips without stopping to recharge become possible.
A battery pack in the trunk, for instance, that slides out and the biofuel generator slides in. No more main oil burning power source needed.
You visit your dealership and do the swap out for your vacation trip then swap back when the trip is over. That would leave maybe 1 in 10 cars actually needing the generator pack at any one time.
People who drive more miles than the plugin system would accomadate without recharge could just leave the generator in place permanently.
Tuesday, November 1

Closed session.
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 01 Nov 2005 03:20 PM CST
Well well, we were right all along. Somehow this disaster disguised as an administration has taken the joy out of being right.
Mass death over lies tends to do that.

Alito pro-choice?
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 01 Nov 2005 03:10 PM CST
Yes it's true.
He believes in choice...between semi-auto and full automatic fire for all americans.
He ruled that the federal government has no authority to outlaw the ownership of machine guns. Back to the roaring 20's you all, neeehaaaawww.
Thursday, October 6

Gristmill discussion on distributed power generation.
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 06 Oct 2005 04:52 PM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/10/5/15453/7223#2
This sort of system lends itself to local power producers, those with wind, solar, and biofuel resources, teaming up with consumers in electrical cooperatives.
Producers and consumers, many members both producing and consuming owning and controlling local area power grids.
Think of farmers with manure digestors that produce natural gas, running generators to sell power to their neighbors with wind or solar power systems when the wind isn't blowing or the sun is not shining.
This could all fit together, even to the point of members producing ethanol or biodiesel from the waste stream to sell to other coop members.
And lots of small businesses would build and install the systems.
Starting out with small solar or wind systems that only replace a fraction of grid power in the home, reducing energy bills while paying their way in a few years from savings. As people become more comfortable with small inexpensive systems, they could then add on capacity, until gradually a local area grid supports itself with no outside input.
Given the complete and utter incompetence and corruption of government and big monopoly business, especially when they work fist in glove as this neoconman regime does, locally is the only way this energy revolution will ever get started.
Eventually local coops could pool resources to invest in larger wind, biofuel, and solar projects, replacing the old monopoly companies completely.
Friday, September 30

Practical local politics.
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 30 Sep 2005 04:36 PM CDT
Practical problem solving political action on the local level sells itself. There is where the poltical base lives.
If local green energy groups helps people convert to solar, wind, and biofuel energy and cut energy bills at the same time, that trumps lofty political principles.
If a political party supports government policy to make a more friendly financial environment for this to happen, votes will surely follow.
And small businesses building and installing the systems with equipment supplied by a revived american manufacturing base will result. Remember the 90s? The internet boom funded a pay down of the national debt.
But that boom went bust, only so many people needed the latest greatest internet technology.
This green energy boom is huge, replacing all that ever more expensive oil and natural gas. It is more than a bubble. It's a huge wave of prosperity, earth friendly prosperity.
Economic growth from biulding quality rather than consumption and quantity. Energy conservation and human productivity driving this wave. Let it roll.
Saturday, September 24

Real evacuation plans! Not bushco inc. "contracting" as usual.
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 24 Sep 2005 11:03 AM CDT
Traffic needs to be routed so that people are not left stranded as freeways become 100 mile long parking lots.
And no more bushco inc. contractors to study the problem, at huge cost to taxpayers and with zero results. Universities already funded by tax dollars can do the necessary computer modeling based directly on the traffic situation encountered in these recent botched evacuations.
We the people need to demand that our government solves problems, instead of throwing money at crony corporations like bushco inc. has.
By adjusting traffic patterns out onto side roads around stalled vehicles the millions that would need to evacuate our biggest metro areas like NYC would at least have some chance of survival.
In a nuclear fuel rod storage pool disaster, for instance, an area hundreds of miles in diameter downwind from the accident would need to be evacuated very quickly.
There are 68 of these facilities located all around the US, each of which could release 8 to 17 times the radiation of Chernobyl. Any loss of water in these open pools would cause the flammable zirconium metal in the rods to burn and the residual radiation to spread on the wind.
Tuesday, September 20

Zero tolerance (poem from jseven)
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 20 Sep 2005 09:23 AM CDT
vacation accomplished! (reality not allowed)
afterwards, the headlines despaired: "new orleans engulfed by despair & lawlessness"
conveniently forgotten: the jim crow law of cause & effect (blacks "loot" but whites "find")
conveniently forgotten: despair & lawlessness dwelt deep within the delta long before katrina
battered louisiana long before shattered levees sank the big easy
long before the secretary of state's shoe-shopping spree (poverty not permitted)
shoot to kill is a sugarcoated sleeping pill to help compassionate conservatives rest easier at night
& blaming the victims is fortified balloon bread that builds character & "makes america stronger for it"
© j7
Great job seven!!!! Thanks!! Classes up my blog.
Wednesday, September 14

Recall duuuhbya for criminal negligence.
by
amazngdrx
on Wed 14 Sep 2005 01:09 PM CDT
http://www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/display?theme=11&content=4353
On February 15, 2005, Judge Michael Chertoff was sworn in as the second Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Chertoff formerly served as United States Circuit Judge for the Third Circuit Court of Appeals.
Before joining the Bush Administration, Chertoff was a Partner in the law firm of Latham & Watkins. From 1994 to 1996, he served as Special Counsel for the U.S. Senate Whitewater Committee.
The neorat Chertoff's emergency managment experience.
Let's see, brownie was a disbarred horse judge. That criminally negligent appointment by the chimp in chief caused how many deaths? Thousands?
Meanwhile nursing home operators who allegedly caused 34 deaths are now charged with criminal negligence.
When will bushco (o)inc be charged?
How many deaths will Chertoff the whiterwater prosecutor cause meanwhile?
Isn't homeland security and emergency management important enough to appoint experts? Chertoff and brownie, rummi, wolfi...and on and on should be ambassadors or something, not in key life or death positions.
Recall Bush for criminally negligent crony appointments. The buck stops at duuuhbya.
Monday, September 12

What to do when global climate disaster appears.
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 12 Sep 2005 01:39 PM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/9/11/124448/953#4
So if New Orleans is ready for a category 5 next time, what if a category 6 shows up?
With ever increasing weather volatility due to the greenhouse gas effect, in this case a warmer gulf water temperature than normal, disaster planning is not enough.
Reversal of global climate change won't help for a few decades either, even if a crash program were instituted tomorow. We have to live (and many will die) with this situation.
Storm resistant homes with decentralized power systems built farther back from coastlines is the only longer term solution. Give the coasts and wetlands back to mother nature. Thousands of miles of great coastal wilderness and camping areas will result.
Camp out at the beach on vacation instead of building fancy homes. It's a wonderful way to get in touch with nature and save energy and development.
Less homes built, less energy used, less global climate change greenhouse gases.
Let's talk peak climate change weather volatility for awhile along with peak oil. The costs from both are economy shattering!
Sooner or later the rest of US will be unable to pay to rebuild the coastal areas ravaged by ever increasingly intense storms. Federal zoning needs to be instituted. No rebuilding in coastal flood plains.
Friday, September 2

FO(AU)X news? Tabloidism mixed with politically correct (pro-bushco inc) censorship.
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 02 Sep 2005 07:31 AM CDT
Very interesting estimate of GDP loss from Katrina by FAUX news anchors this morn.
Faux talkin' head 1: " The economic losses from Katrina are estimated to be .05 % of GDP."
Faux talkin' head 2: "That's a very small amount..."
Faux talkin' head 1: "...that's more than the loss from 911."
The actual figure quoted in the mass delusional media? A mere 10 times that figure!?! Yep.
The ratings agency (Standard and Poors) predicted Katrina would shave 0.5 per cent off the U.S. real gross domestic product in the third quarter, a significant drop from the 3.3 per cent annual growth recorded in the second quarter.
Whoops, reading are hard. Poor talkin' heads.
Interview after interview at the scene feature FAUX news reporters cutting off Katrina victims who mention the duuuhbyaist regime in any hegative light with respect to the situation in New Orleans.
5 days with no food or water brought in by relief officialdome, citizens forced to loot to get even water! In 95+ degree heat! Armed thugs allowed to rule the city streets and designated shelter areas. Shooting, raping, beating at will.
Kind of reminds one of the Iraqi invasiion aftermath?
Why weren't police and national guard on site the last few days to provide food and water and restore public safety?
When residents interviewed on FAUX news express any of these frustrations and try to relate them to the buck stopping at the president's locale? The "reporter" cuts them off!
Thursday, September 1

Umbra told a fart joke, hehey.
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 01 Sep 2005 08:30 AM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/8/31/124732/191#1
Good one Umbra!
But seriously, imagine this of you will?
A fossil fuel powerplant emitting all it's air pollution into algae growing solar cogeneration facilities with collectors mounted on the powerplant buildings and smokestacks.
The CO2, mercury, and NOx are removed from the water by the algae. The algae, with solar energy added, is turned into biofuel, methane for instance, and the mercury is filtered out of the methane digestor.
The methane (poot)is then burned in the powerplant, saving coal combustion, and the CO2 from the methane combustion is sent back through the solar cogeneration facility to make more biofuel.
The CO2 becomes a part of a closed loop. And sequestration is acomplished, eureka! Maybe those green tags could fund some of this activity?

Trillions lost in terms of economic growth?
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 01 Sep 2005 07:15 AM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/8/31/95831/5608#6
So far no one has pointed this out. The fact that moving and rebuilding whole cities like New Orleans will cost unimaginable amounts of money, but also the lost business may even surpass that!
How much economic growth is curtailed when whole cities are wiped out?
No jobs, no money earned, no mortgages payed, no stores shopped at, no factories operating... and so forth.
This is why global climate disaster from fossil fuel combustion will cost 100s of trillions in economic growth over the next century.
Is Manhattan, or any other city, prepared for devestation like New Orleans has experienced? Of course not! Even if it were possible to plan for it somehow, would a totally corrupt bottomline, corporatist serving, lobbyist run system like the US has become do that?
Not on your, and millions of your fellow citizens lives. Just as there is no homeland security, it was a sham to loot the federal treasury,there are not even any substantial evacuation plans, much less any recovery plans.
And with completely unregulated insider trading and market manipulation run rampant could gas hit 5 dollars tomorow or next week? Yep.
Tuesday, August 30

Utility coops and wireless broadband information technology.
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 30 Aug 2005 09:20 AM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/8/25/162752/682#9
I envision renewable energy cooperatives that will also use wind electric towers to supply their customers with wimax wireless broadband. That can take care of cable tv, radio, phone, internet...as well as power needs for coop members.
All bundled into one low cost structure.
Then power consuming coop members will pay power producing coop members who have wind, solar, and biofuel installations..or in the case of internet access, those members paying for landline internet access that take it wireless on their wind towers will be paid by members using the coop's wireless broadband network.
This scheme cuts most of the old line utility monopoly participation right out of the loop. We still use their powrer lines and internet lines to some extent, but very minimally. Eventually capital will acumulate in the cooperative utility company and the old utility's lines and powerplants can be bought out lock, stock, and barrel.
Voila! A local, homegrown energy re-evolution!
Add in micro-nedia replacement of mass delusional, mass media....and we may even be able to rejuvenate our lost democracy.
Too ambitious? Hehehey. It will take plenty of grass roots political power as well, to overcome government regulations favoring old line monopolies.

Gristmill discussion on wireless information technology versus land lines.
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 30 Aug 2005 08:42 AM CDT
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2005/8/25/162752/682#8
Well digging in all those phone (or cable tv) lines does cause a lot of disruption of flora and fauna. And it creates monopolies that control information access.
As far as amount of radiation and bird killing towers, replacing all those extremely powerful analog broadcast towers for radio, tv, cell phones,all the radio dispatch sevices...with extremely low powered wimax systems mounted on existing buildings fed by fiber optics, it's clear which system wins from an environmental standard.
The public air waves are filled to the brim right now with all kinds of powerful junk signals that many of us never bother to receive. A more selective wireless broadband system would only supply signal on demand.
For instance,instead of 360 kw of tv signal beamed out over a huge area from each tv station, that signal would be transported digitally on the wireless network, only to those who request it.
I am talking about a new wireless information technology built out on the net and extended using wimax. It would bring the very latest education, news, entertainment even to the remotest regions.
And reduce the human produced electronmagnetic radiation by magnitudes. Not to mention, make all those broadcast towers candidates for recycling.
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