Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Is Thorium better for nuclear reactors than Uranium?

It's so tempting to just shout NO NUKES in a knee-jerk reaction to any suggestion of any sort of nuclear power. Nuclear anything produces radiation and is dangerous, or so goes the stereotypical claim. But...

Th Better than Uranium discusses the advantages of Thorium over Uranium. It comes down to the side effects that come from using one over the other. Uranium run through nuclear reactor systems converts to a variety of other elements, some are benign while others are dangerously poisonous for 10's of thousands of years. To adequately protect ourselves from the latter elements we have to think about building facilities like the Yucca Mountain storage facility, where the location is hopefully geologically stable over a drastically long period of time. Thorium on the other hand has byproducts that become safe within a relatively short period, and some of the byproducts are directly usable in commercial products.

The blog Energy from Thorium is said to be eminently useful to understanding the issues.

This is a great example of a general concept I'm thinking about. Our society often does not consider the byproducts of our actions, we just act. We, as a society, accept that fossil fuel oil is the only way to power our cars etc, and don't consider the side effects. And that's just one example, if you reflect on how we live you can see many examples where society at large simply goes about living and consuming products without considering the environmental, physical, emotional, mental or spiritual side effects. There's so many things we, as a society, do where the action has poisonous and polluting side effects.


allvoices

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Wind Power In Stormy Waters

Wind Power In Stormy Waters is a series of pictures documenting the process for installing offshore wind farms, and the huge wind turbines that are used.


allvoices

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Clueless about the real oil situation?

Route 50 Conversations: Illinois, Indiana, Ohio is part of a goofy series of stories on NPR this week. Their idea is that as the New Congress is heading towards Washington DC, they're calling regular folks from across the U.S. For this story they're following U.S. Highway 50 calling people in small towns along the highway. The series of stories is largely fluff, but this particular one has several people saying stupid things about the Oil situation.

The idea they present is that the U.S. is not utilizing its own oil supplies very well, and that's why the oil prices are high. They seem to think that all we have to do is drill for oil, and we'll have plenty of oil again, and the gasoline prices will fall again.

This shows the people who said that are clueless about the real situation.

The U.S. had its oil peak in 1970-71.

The "oil peak" model describes the capacity to deliver oil. There's a lot of mathematics and whatnot involved, and the book Beyond Oil: The View from Hubbert's Peak is a really good introduction to the phenomena. I also have links to Peak Oil web sites which will help educate you.

Essentially the oil peak model describes the delivery capacity for a set of oil fields. Such as the oil fields in the U.S. The capacity to deliver oil will grow over time until it reaches a maximum capacity, and once the fields reach that maximum capacity they go into an inexorable decline.

The U.S. had its oil peak in 1970-71. That means the capacity to deliver oil from U.S. oil fields has been in decline since 1970. That does not mean the U.S. has run out of oil, it means our capacity to deliver oil has been declining and cannot increase.

In 1973 during the first oil crisis the U.S. imported only 35% of the oil we used. Today the percentage of oil imports is close to, if not beyond, 70%. This is due in part to the decline in delivery capacity from U.S. oil fields, and due in part to the increase in oil demand.

Because the U.S. is past its oil peak we cannot increase the capacity to deliver oil from U.S. fields. That does not mean we cannot do more drilling for oil. It means that new fields that are found will not replace the exhausted fields.

WAKE UP!!!! DRILLING FOR NEW OIL IS NOT A SOLUTION!!!!

The game has to change and cause the U.S. people to leave behind their addiction to fossil fuel oil.

Not only has the U.S. gone past our oil peak, it's possible that the world went past its oil peak a year ago. If true it means the world capacity to deliver oil cannot increase beyond the amount that was delivered over the last year. Given that demand for oil has consistently grown over the years, the growing demand will conflict with the inability of the market to deliver more oil. And, what will result from that conflict?

Economists suggest that Market Forces will take care of it. The rising oil price will cause people to decrease their oil usage. Simple enough. In fact one of the speakers in the NPR peace linked above suggested the same, that the rising price for oil would cause people to do less recreational stuff.

But will it be that simple? Consider The Road Warrior as an alternate scenario. It depicted a crumbling society falling apart from the heights of high-tech wonders, all due to their inability to have oil to drive the machines they've come to depend on.

One thing that's for sure is that if The People continue being as clueless about the real situation as those interviewed by NPR, the U.S. will continue to be unprepared for the real problem that's looming in front of us.


allvoices

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Yahoo!Autos Green Center

Description: 

Information center constructed by Yahoo giving coverage for "Green" cars. This is primarily the biofuels, ethanol and Bio Diesel.


allvoices

Monday, January 1, 2007

Biodiesel America links

Description: 

Links directory maintained by Biodiesel America.


allvoices

Biodieselcommunity.org resources page

Description: 

Extensive set of biodiesel related resources.


allvoices

distributiondrive.com/links.html

Description: 

exhaustive list of biodiesel and industry links


allvoices

Propel Fuels

Description: 

Commercial level distributor of Biodiesel in the Seattle area.


allvoices

BioWillie Diesel Fuel

Description: 

Willie Nelson's Biodiesel supply company.


allvoices

Seattle Biodiesel

Description: 

Commercial level refiner and supplier of biodiesel.


allvoices

Biodiesel Warehouse

Description: 

Suppliers of kits, pumps, filters, etc for the home brewing of biodiesel.


allvoices

B100 Supply

Description: 

Suppliers of kits, pumps, filters, etc, for the home brewing of biodiesel.


allvoices

Utah Biodiesel Supply

Description: 

Supplier of parts, tools, pumps, filters, etc related to the use of biodiesel.


allvoices

Frybrid Forum

Description: 

Discussion forums for conversion of vehicles to biodiesel or straight vegetable oil.


allvoices

Vegetable Oil Diesel (UK)

Description: 

Vegetable Oil Diesel discussion forum based in the United Kingdom. (UK)


allvoices

biofuel-uk discussion forum (UK)

Description: 

Biofuels and biodiesel discussion forum based in the United Kingdom.


allvoices

BIODIESEL & SVO DISCUSSION FORUMS

Description: 

Online discussion forum hosted by InfoPop about Bio Diesel and Straight Vegetable Oil.


allvoices

Biodiesel America

Description: 

the home page for Josh Tickell, who probably has done the most to wake us all up to biodiesel. He offers a bunch of informational products and resources.


allvoices

About Biodiesel

Description: 

Information site about Bio Diesel sponsored by Topia Energy Production.


allvoices

Biomass Research & Development Initiative

Description: 

The Biomass Research and Development Initiative (BRDI) is the multi-agency effort to coordinate and accelerate all Federal biobased products and bioenergy research and development.


allvoices

Biodiesel @ Wikipedia

Description: 

Biodiesel @ Wikipedia


allvoices

Collaborative Biodiesel Tutorial

Description: 

More tutorials showing how to brew your own biodiesel. It's described as the sister site to localb100.com. They host a list of biodiesel resources.


allvoices

localb100.com

Description: 

An information site showing how to brew your own biodiesel. This is published by Maria ‘Mark’ Alovert, and she writes a blog here.


allvoices

Northwest Biodiesel Network

Description: 

"Our mission is to promote the use of biodiesel in the Northwest as an immediate and effective way to advance environmental health, economic strength, and social and political well-being in our communities, our nation, and the world."


allvoices

Biodiesel Council of California

Description: 

Biodiesel Council of California is an alliance of consumers, distributors and producers, committed to the use of B100. The Biodiesel Council of California's mission is to inspire socially, economically, and ecologically sustainable development of the biodiesel industry in California by educating and organizing the public, by advocating for governmental acceptance of neat biodiesel, and by developing and protecting the public biodiesel supply.


allvoices

BioDieselNow

Description: 

A site promoting Bio Diesel.


allvoices