not in all of the us.  a lot of empty ground is here in the southwest,
and algae will grow year round.

Also, large ponds that are heated...   that waste heat goes straight
up, and will change wehather patterns.

On 4/2/07, Jed Rothwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Jones Beene wrote:

>That is an artificial distinction. You definitely do NOT need, nor
>even want "tanks".

There are tanks in most of the prototypes now on line, such as this one:

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/08/worlds_first_ca.php


>In fact there are already plans and suggestions from NREL that
>almost every power plant in the USA which now burns coal or natural
>gas could and should be piping CO2 into an adjoining algae pond.

In the U.S. outdoors it is too cold in winter for algae to grow
naturally. (I have several ponds and streams, and I am quite familiar
with the stuff.) You need to keep it warm, and exposed to sunlight.
Therefore, a growing pond would have to be covered or heated with
waste heat from the generator plant. I said "tanks" but I had in mind
covered ponds or the plastic bags now being used for this
application. There is plenty of waste heat at plants, not to mention
CO2, so that is a promising technology. But you cannot have ponds
thousands of hectares wide in natural conditions that are heated and
that produce algae year-round in natural conditions (that is, without
massive infusions of man-made heat or CO2).

Algae grown at fossil fuel generator plants is probably a great idea,
but it cannot begin to supply all of the liquid fuel we need for
transportation (14,080 GWh/day). Naturally, it could if we were to
reduce liquid fuel demand by a factor of 5 or 10, which we could
easily do with plug-in hybrid cars. In a plug-in hybrid world,
something like algae from fossil fuel plants would fit in perfectly,
because it would reduce CO by half. That is to say, assuming the
algae recovers all of the CO2 from the fossil fuel plants, it would
end up using the same oxygen twice before finally converting it to CO2.

- Jed




--
That which yields isn't always weak.

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