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Futurists say
it is possible. Maybe
environmental and economic solutions are easier to accomplish with just a
little more attitude applied. Like
political solutions. From Wired
magazine April 2003 @ http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.04/hydrogen.html?pg=1&topic=&topic_set= See attached jpeg 27.4 KB. - KWC How Hydrogen Can
Save America By
Peter Schwartz and Doug Randall Four decades ago, the United States faced a
creeping menace to national security. The Soviet Union had lobbed the first
satellite into space in 1957. Then, on April 12, 1961, Russian cosmonaut Yuri
Gagarin blasted off in Vostok 1 and became the first human in orbit. President Kennedy understood that dominating
space could mean the difference between a country able to defend itself and one
at the mercy of its rivals. In a May 1961 address to Congress, he unveiled
Apollo - a 10-year program of federal subsidies aimed at "landing a man on
the moon and returning him safely to the Earth." The president announced
the goal, Congress appropriated the funds, scientists and engineers put their
noses to the launchpad, and - lo and behold - Neil Armstrong stepped on the
lunar surface eight years later The country now faces a similarly dire threat:
reliance on foreign oil. Just as President Kennedy responded to Soviet space
superiority with a bold commitment, President Bush must respond to the clout of
foreign oil by making energy independence a national priority. The president
acknowledged as much by touting hydrogen fuel cells in January's State of the
Union address. But the $1.2 billion he proposed is a pittance compared to what's
needed. Only an Apollo-style effort to replace hydrocarbons with hydrogen can
liberate the US to act as a world leader rather than a slave to its appetite
for petroleum. Once upon a time, America's oil addiction was
primarily an environmental issue. Hydrocarbons are dirty - befouling the air
and water, possibly shifting the climate, and causing losses of biodiversity
and precious coastal real estate. In those terms, the argument is largely
political, one of environmental cleanliness against economic godliness. The
horror of 9/11 changed that forever. Buried in the rubble of the World Trade
Center was the myth that America can afford the dire costs of international oil
politics. The price of the nation's reliance on crude has included '70s-style
economic shocks, Desert Storm-like military adventures, strained relationships
with less energy-hungry allies, and now terror on our shores. George W. Bush arrived in Washington, DC, as a
Texan with deep roots in the oil business. In the days following September 11,
however, he transformed himself into the National Security President. Today,
his ambition to protect the United States from emerging threats overshadows his
industry ties. By throwing his power behind hydrogen, Bush would be gambling
that, rather than harming Big Oil, he could revitalize the moribund industry.
At the same time, he might win support among environmentalists, a group that
has felt abandoned by this White House. According to conventional wisdom, there are
two ways for the US to reduce dependence on foreign oil: increase domestic
production or decrease demand. Either way, though, the country would remain
hostage to overseas producers. Consider the administration's ill-fated plan to
drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. For all the political wrangling
and backlash, that area's productivity isn't likely to offset declining output
from larger US oil fields, let alone increase the total supply from domestic
sources. As for reducing demand, the levers available are small and
ineffectual. The average car on the road is nine years old, so even dramatic
increases in fuel efficiency today won't head off dire consequences tomorrow.
Moreover, the dynamism at the heart of the US economy depends on energy. Growth
and consumption are inextricably intertwined. There's only one way to insulate the US from
the corrosive power of oil, and that's to develop an alternative energy
resource that's readily available domestically. Looking at the options - coal,
natural gas, wind, water, solar, and nuclear - there's only one thing that can
provide a wholesale substitute for foreign oil within a decade: hydrogen. (end of
excerpt) |
- [Futurework] A hydrogen economy in ten years Karen Watters Cole
