Alternative Fuels |
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Pnoom!
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 02 2006 Location: OH Status: Offline Points: 4981 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 00:21 | ||
Ethanol = a sham
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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 27 2005 Location: NE Indiana Status: Offline Points: 28057 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 00:38 | ||
It would sure as f**k help Indiana's economy. Not that it's really bad to begin with., |
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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 27 2005 Location: NE Indiana Status: Offline Points: 28057 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 00:39 | ||
Nah, Indiana...the ethanol capital of the world. |
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stonebeard
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 27 2005 Location: NE Indiana Status: Offline Points: 28057 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 00:43 | ||
That doesn't sound bad to me at all! Only problematic for long road trips. Who makes a commute to work of more than 100 miles a day? Just charge it overnight... |
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Pnoom!
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 02 2006 Location: OH Status: Offline Points: 4981 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 01:04 | ||
^^^
That. Hybrids ftw. You can always rent a car if you really need one for a long road trip. And I'm sure they'll find ways to make them go further and charge faster, anyway. |
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KoS
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 17 2005 Location: Los Angeles Status: Offline Points: 16310 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 04:06 | ||
So I wouldn't be able to go to San Francisco not even Santa Barbara without renting a car or making it a multi-day trip. Plus, what about the Summer and Winter storms. You think with all those storms that power is going to be continuous. Just last winter some people had no power for weeks. Edited by KoS - June 14 2008 at 04:06 |
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Visitor13
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 02 2005 Location: Poland Status: Offline Points: 4702 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 05:53 | ||
If someone out there has the clout to make us pay for gas as much as we do now, they also have the clout to prevent any alternative fules from gaining the upper hand. Learn to live on air/sunlight, and take the bus or walk. End of story.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 06:48 | ||
Siam's got a good point here. Storms in Melbourne are fortunately not as harsh as they are in some of the other state capital cities, although back in January literally hundreds of thousands of people had no power to their homes after a storm for well over a week, even maybe 2 weeks or more. I was lucky in that my western inner south west suburban area was only affected for 6-8 hours at most. In the next few years/decades a lot of work should be done to ensure electricity infrastructure is more weather resistant. |
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crimhead
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: October 10 2006 Location: Missouri Status: Offline Points: 19236 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 13:37 | ||
This from the oil minister of the UAE ALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Recent huge spikes in oil prices are "crazy" and unrelated to supply and demand fundamentals as world markets are adequately supplied with crude, the United Arab Emirates energy minister told Reuters on Tuesday. Still, the OPEC member would be pleased to join in a meeting with oil-consuming countries to discuss runaway prices because they are hurting economies, Mohammed al-Hamli said. Saudi Arabia will host such a gathering later this month. "There is no shortage of crude oil in the market. Inventory levels are huge," Hamli said after speaking at a conference in Canada. On Friday, U.S. crude jumped $10.75 to a record close of $138.54 a barrel, capping a two-day surge of more than $16 and stunning analysts who saw little fundamental reason for the spike. "If you look at prices moving by $10 a day, that doesn't make sense," Hamli said. "That's crazy." The UAE has spare capacity and is "quite happy" to supply more oil if called upon, he said. So who is setting the price of this commodity if the suppliers are saying they have a glut of it? I agree that we have to get off of oil but our leaders are doing little to do so. Who is pulling their strings? Edited by crimhead - June 15 2008 at 13:40 |
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Visitor13
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 02 2005 Location: Poland Status: Offline Points: 4702 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 14:15 | ||
^ well, there you go. Someone's making billions on oil out there and they're getting away with it.
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Henry Plainview
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 26 2008 Location: Declined Status: Offline Points: 16715 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 19:48 | ||
Ethanol is a very well publicized scam. It's barely an energy gain, if at all.
Also, ETHANOL INTO FOOD!! isn't quite true yet. |
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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rileydog22
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2005 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 8844 |
Posted: June 14 2008 at 23:59 | ||
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Relayer09
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 31 2007 Location: Ohio Status: Offline Points: 314 |
Posted: June 15 2008 at 19:13 | ||
AP
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -- Saudi Arabia plans to increase its oil production by 200,000 barrels a day next month, the kingdom's oil minister told U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon on Sunday, according to Ban's spokesman.
The U.N. secretary-general met with Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi in the port city of Jiddah during a one-day trip to the world's largest oil producer.
Farhan Haq, a spokesman who is traveling with Ban, said in an e-mail that the U.N. chief said al-Naimi told him Saudi Arabia would increase oil production by 200,000 barrels a day from June to July. In May, the kingdom increased its production by 300,000. By July, production should be at 9.7 million barrels a day, Haq said. Ban also said Saudi Arabia understands that the current price of oil, which topped $139 per barrel earlier this month, is not normal, according to the official Saudi Press Agency. "The king believes that the current oil prices are abnormally high, and he is ready to restore prices to their appropriate levels," SPA quoted Ban as telling reporters in Jiddah. The report carried by SPA was in Arabic, and it did not say what language Ban spoke in. Saudi Arabia is concerned that sustained high oil prices will eventually slacken the world's appetite for oil, affecting the kingdom in the long run. The kingdom has called for a meeting of oil producing and consuming countries on June 22 in Jiddah to discuss ways of dealing with soaring energy prices. I Think they're getting a little concerned that western countries are fed up and may very well be serious this time about alternative fuels. I guess having oil become as worthless as sand doesn't sound like a very lucrative prospect for them. I say we convert anyway just for laughs.
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If you lose your temper, you've lost the arguement. -Proverb
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KoS
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 17 2005 Location: Los Angeles Status: Offline Points: 16310 |
Posted: June 15 2008 at 23:01 | ||
From Syriana:
"You know what the business world thinks of you? They think a hundred years ago you were living in tents out here in the desert chopping each other's heads off and that's exactly where you'll be in another hundred years" |
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Passionist
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 14 2005 Location: Finland Status: Offline Points: 1119 |
Posted: June 16 2008 at 05:09 | ||
I think the whole idea of driving 100 miles just for the sake of it is pretty f***ed up. Yeah, sure, electricity won't last that long, but hey... Personally I'd take a train. I happen to be blessed enough to have a nice train system and when i move to Helsinki there'll be trams everywhere so I won't have to go allt he way by bike. Though back in the old days it was no problem for the old people to just ride 100 miles to go look for work, or that's what they say all the time. In fact, cycling some 50 miles a day wouldn't hurt anyone either. I myself only go 20 or so miles a day, to the shop and back.
There's a petition or something at Facebook, that's gathering names for lower gasoline prices. A friend of mine joined and asked me to join too. I told her, that I find the whole idea sh*t and I'd rather bring down any price in the world than gasoline. Not that I hate it, but seriously, using all the gas 'till we have none left isn't really the solution we should be looking for. I personalyl don't think, that with cars, the reason we should develope them further is the growing lack of oil but what a million or more gas motors are doing to the environment. Also, notice, that china is currently building up their "car culture" faster than anything. I find people moralizing over it, though still driving their own cars and saying that they have one already, there shouldn't be more. But the truth is, in 20-30 years we'll most likely have twice as much cars and individual personal forms of transportation than what we have now. Well, if the east is innovative, they might build a society around electric cars or rice-field ethanol. After all, rice-wine is too awful to drink anyway. Personally I'd prefer transportation gates like the ones in Baldur's Gate2, or motorbikes that run on squirrel juice and play a happy ice-cream van tunes while triving. Oops, and I ranted again... |
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Visitor13
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 02 2005 Location: Poland Status: Offline Points: 4702 |
Posted: June 16 2008 at 05:42 | ||
To do that first you'd need to bring down the price of gasoline. |
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Relayer09
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 31 2007 Location: Ohio Status: Offline Points: 314 |
Posted: June 16 2008 at 15:47 | ||
Honda rolled it's hydrogen car out today. Too bad I don't live in southern California.
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If you lose your temper, you've lost the arguement. -Proverb
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crimhead
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: October 10 2006 Location: Missouri Status: Offline Points: 19236 |
Posted: June 16 2008 at 18:49 | ||
With only 3 places to fuel up in the L.A. metro I wouldn't run out and get one. The $600 a month lease would be another stumbling block as well. |
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: June 17 2008 at 09:22 | ||
I can't picture Hydrogen becoming a really viable solution for at least 20 years yet. Hell, the hybrid car hasn't even really taken off.
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Relayer09
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 31 2007 Location: Ohio Status: Offline Points: 314 |
Posted: June 17 2008 at 11:14 | ||
Agreed, but this is the first step in the right direction for emisson free vehicles. This is only in the prototype stage and once the refueling infrastructure is in place prices for these vehicles would drop dramatically for consumers. |
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If you lose your temper, you've lost the arguement. -Proverb
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