http://www.cosmiverse.com/news/tech/1102/tech11040201.html


A new world energy source?

If you know anything about methane gas ­ and the Office of Naval Research
thinks you should ­ it probably has something to do with swamp gas, and a
faintly unpleasant sulfurous smell that rises from country marshes on
sultry, summer evenings, or perhaps ­ for more romantic types ­ stories of
Will-o'-the-Wisp, the flickering lights seen at night above that very same
swamp (mundanely, methane igniting spontaneously with traces of odorous
hydrogen sulfide found in the bog's rotting organic matter).

Forget it.

Start thinking about methane hydrates - a crystalline form of methane gas
and pure water that exists when pressures are sufficiently high, or
temperatures sufficiently low. If you manage to keep that pressure high or
that temperature low, it looks like a lump of ice. There are mega-tons of
the stuff at the bottom of the ocean all over the world and in the Arctic
permafrost (about 300,000 trillion cubic feet of it) and it is the cleanest
and most abundant source of energy in the world. There is at least twice as
much of it around as fossil fuels (some say 10 times as much). And, when
burned as a fuel, it releases less carbon dioxide pollution than anything
else around.

So why aren't we using it?

Plain and simple, methane hydrates are hard to get at, and once gotten at,
hard to transport. Its crystalline form will change to gas when pressures
are lowered, or temperatures rise (like when it's brought to the sea
surface) and in doing so it will expand 164 times, representing definite
storage and transport issues. There are geo-political considerations, too ­
who owns it? What about global warming (because extra methane, when
released, is another addition to the greenhouse gases)? And, naturally
occurring submarine landslides, which in turn create tsunamis and cause
costly damage to pipelines and undersea cables, may be caused by hydrate
dissociation and sediment failure; that is, landslides may occur if the
substrate becomes lubricated when the crystalline form reverts to gas and
water. If we exploit the resource, are we exacerbating the problem?

All these issues are being addressed in a series of international
conferences entitled 'Fiery Ice from the Sea.' "Many technological problems
need to be resolved," says Nick Langhorne, science officer in ONR's London
office, "And these need a coordinated international effort. There will
always be nuclear energy, of course, but nuclear power comes with a lot of
emotional baggage and, while it's good for generating electricity, chances
are you'll never run your car on it. It's time to put the necessary
resources toward methane hydrates R&D."

The world consumes 3 billion gallons of oil a day. The Navy alone uses over
4 million gallons of it a day, and that's in peacetime. Production and
supply of all the traditional hydrocarbon fuels ­ coal, gas and oil ­ are
well established but will peak by the year 2010.

"And there's another bonus in all this," says Rick Coffin, of the Naval
Research Lab. "When methane, which is a gas, combines with seawater to make
methane hydrate, it rejects the salt in the water. Therefore, fresh water is
produced when the concentrated hydrates are melted. It's a desalination
process where the methane can be recycled to continue the process. For areas
thirsty for water, this could be a real windfall. Perhaps I should have said
'waterfall.'"


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Multiple Solutions Maru
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