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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips (More info?)
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 11:11:16 -0500, Robert Myers <rmyers1400@comcast.net>
wrote:
>On Wed, 16 Feb 2005 19:43:10 -0500, George Macdonald
><fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>
>>On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 19:34:36 -0500, Robert Myers <rmyers1400@comcast.net>
>>wrote:
>>
>>>On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 05:20:00 -0500, George Macdonald
>>><fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 23:47:48 GMT, Robert Redelmeier
>>>><redelm@ev1.net.invalid> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>George Macdonald <fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>
><snip>
>
>>>
>>>Your position is remarkably similar to the position of the Chairman of
>>>Exxon Mobil. 🙂.
>>
>>To repeat: he's right about the scale; *possibly* wrong about the energy
>>balance but you have to believe people with bio-interests to get there.
>>
>Here's an aggressive effort (from the NRDC) to make it all look
>reasonable:
>
>http://www.bio.org/ind/GrowingEnergy.pdf
>
>They get the required land down to about 100 million acres of
>switchgrass (as opposed to 30 million acres currently under
>cultivation as switchgrass in the Conservation Resource Program out of
>700 million acres of U.S. cropland and rangeland).
>
>The assumptions are aggressive, and it is not a near-term solution.
>Figure 1 of the Executive Summary shows a ten-percentish contribution
>to gasoline demand only by about 2020.
So when the weather doesn't cooperate, we have floods and the switch grass
harvest fails, is that an "interruption" in supplies?
>>... to suggest that the net balance
>>in energy does not matter is heresy... apparently acquired by ignoring that
>>crude oil *is* stored energy.
>
>But so what? You can't hook your car up to a nuclear reactor or a
>coal-fired plant or run it on waste heat from biomass, but you can use
>that energy in making ethanol if you have to.
But at a gain/loss which is barely self-sustaining even by the best
estimates... and what about the rest of the world? There are huge
political hurdles to get over here too. There's going to be oil for
decades - worry is the interest paid on trouble before it's due.
Oh and has anybody looked at where our petro-chemicals products will come
from without the petro-infrastructure? How to make plastics, rubbers,
solvents, detergents, etc. etc.? As you sit at your computer desk just
look around you.
>>Second, the fact that the US only imports
>>10% of its oil from the Middle East is irrelevant... showing a parochial
>>and utter ignorance of how the oil industry works and assigns production to
>>refining facilities... not to mention how amazingly efficient the petroleum
>>industry is.
>>
>
>I'm well aware that the U.S. has a commitment to sharing resources in
>case of a shortage. If you don't think that actually shutting Middle
>Eastern oil out of the U.S. market would change world politics
>considerably, I'll politely ask you to reconsider your opinion. 🙂.
Sharing? That's not how it works - those are huge multi-nationals with as
much of a foot in other nations.
>>What's needed now is for the bio-ethanol and bio-diesel guys to fight out
>>which is the more efficient of the two.🙂 Here's a page which has some
>>msgs from a guy working on a method (to be patented) to produce bio-diesel
>>from algae ponds:
>>http://forums.biodieselnow.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=1841&whichpage=1 and
>>here's a snippet from him:
>>
>>"On a net energy yield per acre they're similar, but the energy balance (or
>>preferably Energy Return on Investment) is just as important. With corn,
>>there is a greater energy input to get that net output than with soy.
>>Still, neither of them is really suitable for a wide-scale energy crop. The
>>yield from both is just too low. They are nice crops to use as a
>>dual-purpose crop, provided there is a market for the meal product, but
>>they should never be grown specifically for fuel production."
>>
>On a net energy basis, ethanol from seed (corn or beans) is a
>non-starter--too much energy content is just thrown away. Bio-diesel
>from seed also throws a large part of the energy content away.
>Ethanol from cellulose has to be made to work.
I don't see how you can play celluslose as a game winner - without even
looking at the details I'd estimate that the EROI is going to be even worse
than corn-ethanol. IOW your going to be throwing away at least as much of
the energy content.
--
Rgds, George Macdonald
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 11:11:16 -0500, Robert Myers <rmyers1400@comcast.net>
wrote:
>On Wed, 16 Feb 2005 19:43:10 -0500, George Macdonald
><fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>
>>On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 19:34:36 -0500, Robert Myers <rmyers1400@comcast.net>
>>wrote:
>>
>>>On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 05:20:00 -0500, George Macdonald
>>><fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 23:47:48 GMT, Robert Redelmeier
>>>><redelm@ev1.net.invalid> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>George Macdonald <fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote:
>
><snip>
>
>>>
>>>Your position is remarkably similar to the position of the Chairman of
>>>Exxon Mobil. 🙂.
>>
>>To repeat: he's right about the scale; *possibly* wrong about the energy
>>balance but you have to believe people with bio-interests to get there.
>>
>Here's an aggressive effort (from the NRDC) to make it all look
>reasonable:
>
>http://www.bio.org/ind/GrowingEnergy.pdf
>
>They get the required land down to about 100 million acres of
>switchgrass (as opposed to 30 million acres currently under
>cultivation as switchgrass in the Conservation Resource Program out of
>700 million acres of U.S. cropland and rangeland).
>
>The assumptions are aggressive, and it is not a near-term solution.
>Figure 1 of the Executive Summary shows a ten-percentish contribution
>to gasoline demand only by about 2020.
So when the weather doesn't cooperate, we have floods and the switch grass
harvest fails, is that an "interruption" in supplies?
>>... to suggest that the net balance
>>in energy does not matter is heresy... apparently acquired by ignoring that
>>crude oil *is* stored energy.
>
>But so what? You can't hook your car up to a nuclear reactor or a
>coal-fired plant or run it on waste heat from biomass, but you can use
>that energy in making ethanol if you have to.
But at a gain/loss which is barely self-sustaining even by the best
estimates... and what about the rest of the world? There are huge
political hurdles to get over here too. There's going to be oil for
decades - worry is the interest paid on trouble before it's due.
Oh and has anybody looked at where our petro-chemicals products will come
from without the petro-infrastructure? How to make plastics, rubbers,
solvents, detergents, etc. etc.? As you sit at your computer desk just
look around you.
>>Second, the fact that the US only imports
>>10% of its oil from the Middle East is irrelevant... showing a parochial
>>and utter ignorance of how the oil industry works and assigns production to
>>refining facilities... not to mention how amazingly efficient the petroleum
>>industry is.
>>
>
>I'm well aware that the U.S. has a commitment to sharing resources in
>case of a shortage. If you don't think that actually shutting Middle
>Eastern oil out of the U.S. market would change world politics
>considerably, I'll politely ask you to reconsider your opinion. 🙂.
Sharing? That's not how it works - those are huge multi-nationals with as
much of a foot in other nations.
>>What's needed now is for the bio-ethanol and bio-diesel guys to fight out
>>which is the more efficient of the two.🙂 Here's a page which has some
>>msgs from a guy working on a method (to be patented) to produce bio-diesel
>>from algae ponds:
>>http://forums.biodieselnow.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=1841&whichpage=1 and
>>here's a snippet from him:
>>
>>"On a net energy yield per acre they're similar, but the energy balance (or
>>preferably Energy Return on Investment) is just as important. With corn,
>>there is a greater energy input to get that net output than with soy.
>>Still, neither of them is really suitable for a wide-scale energy crop. The
>>yield from both is just too low. They are nice crops to use as a
>>dual-purpose crop, provided there is a market for the meal product, but
>>they should never be grown specifically for fuel production."
>>
>On a net energy basis, ethanol from seed (corn or beans) is a
>non-starter--too much energy content is just thrown away. Bio-diesel
>from seed also throws a large part of the energy content away.
>Ethanol from cellulose has to be made to work.
I don't see how you can play celluslose as a game winner - without even
looking at the details I'd estimate that the EROI is going to be even worse
than corn-ethanol. IOW your going to be throwing away at least as much of
the energy content.
--
Rgds, George Macdonald