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Chemical engineer questions Belledune hydrogen plan

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    Chemical engineer questions Belledune hydrogen plan

    Chem engineer in Hydrogen field destroys hydrogen, wind and solar all in one article. Lets see chuck scramble for a response. This is from commie CBC website.

    ---------------

    Process takes a lot of time, money and effort with minimal benefit, says engineer

    A chemical engineer says there's a lot of unanswered questions about the viability and future of green hydrogen.

    Canada and Germany announced a plan to send green liquefied hydrogen from Newfoundland and Labrador to ports in Germany to help the European nation wean itself off fossil fuels largely imported from Russia.

    While the first plant will be in Newfoundland, the Port of Belledune is also looking to get into the business and has already signed a memorandum of understanding with a German port to deliver hydrogen by 2027.

    But Paul Martin, the Toronto-based co-founder of the Hydrogen Science Coalition, said the business case for liquefied hydrogen really isn't clear.

    The coalition describes itself as promoting an "evidence-based viewpoint" on how hydrogen is used to combat climate change.

    This includes advocating for hydrogen not being integrated into existing fossil fuel grids, producing hydrogen using renewable energy and promoting the local production and use of hydrogen to avoid wasting energy

    The process uses energy to break down water into its component parts, hydrogen and oxygen.

    Step backwards
    Martin said the process takes a lot of time, money and effort for what is essentially a step backward in terms of energy.

    "We're turning electricity, which is really valuable … and we're turning it into heat … and that's a step backwards in thermodynamics terms," said Martin.

    "When you take a step backwards in sort of dynamic terms, you're taking a step backwards in value as well. It's worth less than the electricity is to start with."

    Martin said hydrogen would be difficult to transport across the ocean because it will need to be cooled into a liquid state first, loaded on a ship, and then reheated when it arrives to be turned back into a gas.

    Each step takes additional energy, so it may not be a great deal for Germany.

    "By the time you get to the other end, you've paid for 10 units of electricity and in Germany you get one to two units of electricity back again," said Martin.

    Mass production
    Martin said there aren't a lot of places producing green hydrogen on a mass scale, as is proposed in Atlantic Canada.

    While there may be places where it makes sense, they don't look like Canada.

    "There are some places in the world where there's this magical special set of circumstances," said Martin.

    "There are places where there's a desert, which has an ocean to the West."

    Martin said the sunny weather in these places is optimal for daytime solar power collection.

    And at night, when the land cools, the ocean produces wind, which can power wind turbines.

    Also, since these are deserts, there are few people around who need electricity, so there's an incentive to produce and export hydrogen.

    "That doesn't exist in Canada," said Martin.

    "That exists in places like Chile and Western Australia and maybe the west coast of Africa."
    Last edited by jazz; Aug 25, 2022, 18:58.

    #2
    Judging by the fact that Chuck has repeatedly claimed that hydrogen is an energy source, I'm afraid this article is well above his pay grade, even if it did come from cbc.

    Comment


      #3
      I find it interesting that cbc is doing some actual journalism and being critical of the government. This hydrogen fart in the wind has potential of another muskrat falls project. Newfoundland seems to be home some wacky make work projects.

      Comment


        #4
        Bleeding edge technology.

        Taxpayer money.

        No pilot project.
        Borrow some more billions.

        If you have a clown you have a circus. Entertainment for the children.

        Extremely virtuous so must be good.

        Comment


          #5
          Last ditch attempt by two disgraced world leaders to regain popularity. Better off to convert that hydrogen to green ammonia. At least there are pilot plants and I think a small scale commercial plant which relies on wind and a process different from Hauber Bosch which uses less energy. Unlike he who should not be named I admit my command of STEM isn’t up to speed.

          Comment


            #6
            Ammonia is the first step hydrogen the second. Ammonia is easier to transport.

            Good to see the naysayers quote an engineer on how valuable renewable electricity is. Thats a step in the right direction.

            As to whether it will be the solution? It will be part of the solution.

            Germany is already producing and using large amounts of renewable electricity. Much to the chagrin of the negative nellies who think we should do nothing about climate change while there are massive droughts and heat waves on several continents.

            Its a long road to replace all Russian gas imports. And there is nothing that will change the mind of most flat earthers.
            Last edited by chuckChuck; Aug 26, 2022, 07:05.

            Comment


              #7
              Its a long road to replace all Russian gas imports.

              Even a broken clock is right once a day.

              Comment


                #8
                Why convert electricity to hydrogen at all. I thought these next gen batteries were going to be our salvation.

                Just put 10,000 tesla batteries on the ship, charge them up with the renewables and set sail for duetcheland. Dump them into the grid. Rinse an repeat.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Hydrogen will be good if it comes from Alberta using carbon capture and bad if it is green from renewable sources? LOL

                  Lets see the numbers and the full environmental impact assessment of both. I agree there are lots of questions to be answered. But you might as well ignore the ones coming from the petro province and negative nelly climate change deniers.

                  Oh yeah I forgot Alberta dosen't like environmental impact assessments. Kenney tried hard to renew interest in off shore companies mining coal in the Rockies but ran into a lot of opposition from ranchers and landowners because of the environmental impact.
                  Last edited by chuckChuck; Aug 26, 2022, 07:14.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by jazz View Post
                    Why convert electricity to hydrogen at all. I thought these next gen batteries were going to be our salvation.

                    Just put 10,000 tesla batteries on the ship, charge them up with the renewables and set sail for duetcheland. Dump them into the grid. Rinse an repeat.
                    Germany has no real mid-term urgency to import energy.

                    They have all they need.
                    Just mandated out of service.

                    They just need to change their political direction. And logically will.

                    Germany has long been the industrial heartland of Europe. Industry thrives on cheap readily available energy.



                    Making long term investments in Europe's bad decisions seems short sighted.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Can you blame Angela Merkel for most of the illogical political direction?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                        Hydrogen will be good if it comes from Alberta using carbon capture and bad if it is green from renewable sources? LOL

                        Lets see the numbers and the full environmental impact assessment of both. I agree there are lots of questions to be answered. But you might as well ignore the ones coming from the petro province and negative nelly climate change deniers.

                        Oh yeah I forgot Alberta dosen't like environmental impact assessments. Kenney tried hard to renew interest in off shore companies mining coal in the Rockies but ran into a lot of opposition from ranchers and landowners because of the environmental impact.
                        Do you smoke crack? Your post isn’t relevant to this discussion. Go blow your load at a NFU or NDP rally.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Wilton, Alberta is already producing hydrogen and interested in producing more if you hadn't noticed.

                          If Alberta is interested in hydrogen and the market opportunities it must be good? Right?

                          But lets see the cost of producing hydrogen from natural gas using carbon capture vs green hydrogen from renewables. As well as the environmental impact.


                          https://www.alberta.ca/hydrogen-roadmap.aspx

                          Overview

                          Alberta is preparing for a lower emission future. The Hydrogen Roadmap is a key part of that future and Alberta's Recovery Plan. The roadmap is our path to building a provincial hydrogen economy and accessing global markets. It contains several policy actions that will be introduced in the coming months and years, and it provides support to the sector as technology and markets develop.

                          Alberta is already the largest hydrogen producer in Canada. We have all the resources, expertise, and technology needed to quickly become a global supplier of clean, low-cost hydrogen. With a worldwide market estimated to be worth over $2.5 trillion a year by 2050, hydrogen can be the next great energy export that fuels jobs, investment and economic opportunity across our province.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Silence from Wilton now that Alberta is also interested in more hydrogen production?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                              Silence from Wilton now that Alberta is also interested in more hydrogen production?
                              Chuck, you are so low information its pathetic. The difference between Ab hydrogen and NFLD hydrogen is that ABs is a byproduct of its existing refining and extraction processes. The sunk cost has been paid for for yrs. Now they just have to collect and transport it and surprise, all the pipelines start at Edmonton. They can slip a 5% blend into the countries natural gas system like nothing. Enbridge is already doing that. A 5% blend could probably be sent to one of BCs LNG plants and shipped to asia.

                              NFLD is trying to build a money losing project (windmills & solar) using more valuable electricity to purposefully extract it. Their project is no where cost competitive to anything thats done in AB. No port, no storage, no pipelines. Cant even use NFLD H2 in Canada, it has no way to get on shore unless we build a receiving port up the St Lawrence.

                              Stupidest idea ever conceived by a politicians.
                              Last edited by jazz; Aug 28, 2022, 08:16.

                              Comment

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