Hi Mark,

I'll lay my cards on the table and say that I am distinctly anti H2 - *as a 
short to medium-term serious contender for the replacement of petrol and 
diesel-powered vehicles*.  I have no massive problem with research continuing 
into fuel cells whether powered by H2 or anything else.  However, what I and 
many others object to, is the use of vast sums of public money being spent by 
Big Oil to continue their virtual monopoly on what is essentially a basic human 
right to travel without relying on flakey or non-existant public transport.  
Big Oil currently has a monopoly because few of us have the means to produce 
our own 'oil'.  If allowed to, BO will continue to run this monopoly by being 
the sole providers of H2 as, again, it is effectively impossible for 
individuals to 'roll their own'.

Electric vehicles, on the other hand, are an entirely different matter.  Today 
it is quite possible for an individual to generate all the electricity s/he 
could need - including that for an EV - on the roof of their own house 
(assuming it is big enough).  This idea scares the Hell out of Big Oil for 
obvious reasons.

That is my principle problem with H2FCVs.

But it does not stop there.  There are many other very good reasons why H2FCVs 
are a 'bad idea' and the very next one on my list is the fact that the 
efficiency of the whole system is dreadful when compared to BEVs - barely 
better than ICEVs.  I'll let others name the rest of the list - or you could 
research it yourself... Start with the fact that Southern California is talking 
about installing just a dozen H2 refuelling stations at a combined cost of some 
$6m and then consider that there are some 120 thousand gas stations in the 
US... On the other hand, consider that every single home in the land has at 
least one EV 'refuelling station' in it already in the form of a standard mains 
receptacle...

To my mind, spending the, frankly, obscene amounts of public money that 
providing even a barely adequate H2 refuelling infrastructure would cost rather 
than one the one hundredth of that amount that providing a truly world class 
public rapid charging infrastructure would cost is completely insane.  We'd 
just be repeating the mistakes of the past and allowing BO and their revolting 
bed-fellows to continue to take the micky out of us all and carry on running, 
laughing their fat little heads off, all the way to the (off-shore) bank.

MW


On 29 Jul 2014, at 18:55, Michael K Johnson via EV wrote:

> Speaking as a newbie to the list (last November), I've been surprised
> by the levels of invective levelled at H2. There have been a lot of
> assumptions that it cannot possibly ever be efficiently produced
> without a bad carbon footprint, and lots (my perception) of ad hominem
> attacks. I'd like to think that if we can find ways to efficiently and
> cleanly produce new battery technologies, we could have our minds open
> to the possibility of clean H2 generation, separating the issue that
> in practice right now most H2 generation is very dirty from the
> question of different forms of chemically storing electrical energy in
> the long run.
> 
> Change to allow H2 discussion, or continue to ban it, but the
> derogatory language about it gets tiresome and I'll bet it turns off
> more people than just me. When looking for problems to police, if you
> want to police H2 discussions, I would suggest to include in the
> policing derogatory comments about the technology and people as well
> as promotion and technical discussion thereof. Complaining only about
> the promotion and letting the derogatory comments slide is kind of a
> one-sided enforcement of the rules.
> 
> My 2¢, do what you like, I'm hardly a major contributor here. ☺
> 
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 1:30 PM, EVDL Administrator via EV
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> The original EVDL charter, written by our founder Clyde Visser back in the
>> internet's dim past (1991) says, "the energy storage device [for an EV] ...
>> can [be a] ... fuel cell ..."
>> 
>> But not too far into this long history of the EVDL - I think about 1995 or
>> so - we had a pretty detailed discussion about discussion of FCEVs and H2.
>> We even took a vote, and folks decided that we'd minimize FCEV and H2
>> discussion.
>> 
>> Was that a mistake?  Is it a mistake to continue on that road?  The folks
>> who say that H2 is the way forward surely think so.
>> 
>> Well, if it is, we're still making it today.  (Hint, hint.)
>> 
>> You know, one of the huge advantages of the internet is that, unlike
>> broadcast spectrum, it's effectively just about infinite.  Unlike newspapers
>> and magazines, it's dirt-cheap to make your voice heard, at least so far.
>> 
>> There's room for lots more internet discussion forums like this one.
>> Somewhere there has to be a place where H2 and FCEV enthusiasts can
>> congregate.  If not, it's almost trivial to start one.
>> 
>> Thus I will refer y'all to the EVDL conventions:
>> 
>> http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#conv
>> 
>> Please read point 2f.
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> 
>> David Roden - Akron, Ohio, USA
>> EVDL Administrator
>> 

_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to