QUOTE: Originally posted by tomtrain What's to keep oil prices from taking a dive as they did in the 80's, and wipe out the investments in alternative technology?
QUOTE: Isn't it smarter to put thought towards getting a new high-efficiency refrigerator, replacing the most-used lighting with LED lights, and getting a vehicle that gets 25-50% better mileage than you now have?
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by tomtrain Yes, that would be personal choice. It would be voting with one's dollars. Isn't the government "guaranteeing a profit" just asking for another floor to be built on an economic house of cards?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Now you're getting into something of a Catch-22. Biodiesel and ethanol would need no subsidy, if gas and diesel stayed above $ 3.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 I think it would take a big recession to bring oil prices crashing like they did in the 1980's. (At that time in Britain unemployment was at a 50 year high; so were interest rates; at the present time they're both at a 40 year low). Coal can be a cleaner fuel if newer plants are built. In South Wales the miners who bought their own pit have built a new state of the art coal fired generating plant which is both clean and efficient - almost matching the gas fired combined cycle plants. During WW2 a lot of vehicles in Britain were converted to run on coal gas. I'd have thought this could be developed by countries like GB and the US who have lots of coal so as to reduce our dependence on Middle East oil.
QUOTE: Originally posted by sierrarr Using biodiesel allows refiners to take the petro diesel and recrack it into gasoline. Biodiesel uses corn husks, etc as its base product. Instead of throwing them away they are reused. As I remember it is a simple chemical process to turn these wastes into biofiesel. One product used is lye. I do not remember what else is added. This is one way to become more fuel self sufficienct and tell the Arabs to shove there high price crude oil.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal The problem with coalbed methane is how to deal with all that salt water. Once and if that problem is sufficiently addressed, it is true that coalbed methane could be the major domestic source of natural gas. One reason coal gasification/methanization may be preferable to coalbed methane in the meantime is that water issue. Ideally, it would be doubly good if the producers could extract the coalbed methane first, and then mine the coal itself.
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