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We can sum this up in a word:

Hydrogen

According to 'Scotty from Marketing', and his mate 'Twiggy' Forrest, hydrogen is the, newly discovered panacea, to all our environmental woes:
 

The Hon Scott Morrison MP - Prime Minister of Australia

"Australia is on the pathway to net zero. Our goal is to get there as soon as we possibly can, through technology that enables and transforms our industries, not taxes that eliminate them and the jobs and livelihoods they support and create, especially in our regions.

For Australia, it is not a question of if or even by when for net zero, but importantly how.

That is why we are investing in priority new technology solutions, through our Technology Investment Roadmap initiative.

We are investing around $20 billion to achieve ambitious goals that will bring the cost of clean hydrogen, green steel, energy storage and carbon capture to commercial parity. We expect this to leverage more than $80 billion in investment in the decade ahead.

In Australia our ambition is to produce the cheapest clean hydrogen in the world, at $2 per kilogram Australian.

Mr President, in the United States you have the Silicon Valley. Here in Australia we are creating our own ‘Hydrogen Valleys’. Where we will transform our transport industries, our mining and resource sectors, our manufacturing, our fuel and energy production.

In Australia our journey to net zero is being led by world class pioneering Australian companies like Fortescue, led by Dr Andrew Forrest..."

From: Transcript, Remarks, Leaders Summit on Climate, 22 Apr 2021
 

 

Why didn't we think of hydrogen before?

Well of course we did, a number of times. Jules Verne in 1874; J B S Haldane in 1923; General Motors in 1966; Daimler AG in 2006; Honda in 2008.

Trouble is that converting 'green' electricity to hydrogen and then back to electricity, as in an electric vehicle, loses more energy, and thus money, than simply using a battery to store the electricity. It's not commercially or environmentally competitive as it wastes energy.

The alternative, that's actually being promoted by Scotty, uses fossil fuels to make hydrogen to make electricity.

But it turns out that this too is less efficient than burning the fossil fuels to make heat to make electricity or using the fossil fuels directly to power a vehicle or aircraft. It produces more carbon dioxide for the same usable energy than our present, oil based, technology.

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Carbon sequestration
       Source: Wikimedia Commons

Carbon Capture

Scotty's solution - we'll just capture the the carbon dioxide and bury it.

Well Scotty, if that's the magic technology, why aren't we already doing that with the carbon dioxide from coal burning power stations?

The answer is: the nature of reality. In this universe when one fully burns carbon, a carbon atom, (atomic weight 12), combines with two oxygen atoms (combined atomic weight 32). So the new molecule, carbon dioxide, now weighs 44 (3.7 times more). Its volume grows even more, because even when compressed to a solid (dry ice), carbon dioxide is only about half as dense as carbon (1.5 g/cc : 2.26 g/cc). 

This means that each cubic metre of solid carbon (for example as a component of coal) extracted from underground weighs 2.26 tonnes. Yet the resulting carbon dioxide now weighs 8.3 tonnes. Depending on its temperature the volume is now vast.  If instead of letting it loose into the atmosphere we capture it and compress it to a solid (dry ice) its volume is now 12.4 cubic metres. We've gone from one coal train to bring it in to twelve coal trains to take the resulting carbon dioxide out. Similar calculations apply to the carbon component in oil and natural gas.

Thus burying the carbon is a much larger undertaking than digging it up.

Theoretically it's possible, but the energy required to capture; compress; transport; and bury the gas makes it totally impractical and uneconomic. Further, no existing underground storage, like a depleted oilwell, is large enough to accommodate a lifetime of carbon dioxide output from even a modest sized coal or oil burning power-plant. The same would apply to a commercial-scale fossil based hydrogen plant. And the sort of reverse 'fracking', pumping the gas into underground strata, proposed by some advocates, (see the picture above) would be incredibly environmentally destructive; uneconomically costly; and potentially extremely dangerous to people and animals living in the vicinity.   

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 Steelmaking small

 

 

 

 

 

       Source: Wikimedia Commons

Green Steel

Twiggy doesn't want to make electricity. He wants to make hydrogen to reduce iron ore (hematite Fe2O3 and/or magnetite Fe3O4) to pure(ish) iron (Fe), by stripping out the oxygen. If the temperature is high enough, the hydrogen bonds with the oxygen to make water, leaving the iron metal behind.

The iron can be sent directly to an electric steel furnace to make steel - eliminating those messy 18th century coke ovens and blast furnaces and 20th century Basic Oxygen furnaces.

This has been done on a laboratory scale for many decades.  When I was employed by British Steel at the British Iron and Steel Research Association Laboratories (BISRA) in Battersea - in the 1970's - we were already talking about the 'hydrogen economy' and many teams around the world had already demonstrated hydrogen's technical viability as a reducing agent (For example: Turkdogan, E.T., Vinters, J.V. Gaseous reduction of iron oxides: Part I. Reduction of hematite in hydrogen. - at the Fundamental Research Laboratory, U.S. Steel Corporation, Research Center, Monrocville, Pa in 1971).

The direct reduction of iron ores (DRI), using 'producer gas' (a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen) from coal or natural gas has been competitive in some situations for decades. Today around 7% of global crude steel production is from DRI and the International Energy Agency expects this to rise to 11% by 2050. In this process the producer gas is derived from the fossil fuels and carbon monoxide is the principal reducing gas, with the hydrogen taking a secondary role.

Used on its own, considerably more hydrogen is required for the same level of reduction. When derived from electricity, via electrolysis of water, this volume of 'green' hydrogen is far too expensive and is uncompetitive with conventional DRI.

The vast majority of global crude steel production comes from even more conventional integrated steelworks (see the picture above). These employ a modern version of age old blast furnace iron making. This process was pioneered by the Chinese around 500 BCE and introduced to Europe, along the Silk Road, to Switzerland, Germany and Sweden around 1200 CE where it replaced the older 'bloomery' method used for centuries in Europe. This iron had to be worked by a blacksmith for many hours to remove impurities and convert it into malleable and very highly prized steel - for premium swords like Excalibur or sickles and ploughshares.

For the first time, in the 19th century pig iron from a blast furnace was refined in bulk, to wrought iron, in an open hearth 'puddling furnace'; and then to steel using the Bessemer process. This facilitated the acceleration of the industrial revolution; modern bridges; railways; ships; high rise buildings; and tall towers in Paris. In the mid 20th century, with the development of tonnage oxygen plants, basic oxygen steelmaking became the predominant iron converting technology and remains so today.

China now makes over half the steel manufactured in the world. This is because China is also the largest steel market, with over half the worlds: bridge; rail; tunnel; high-rise building construction; and car manufacturing. And that's before they even get to facilitating their exports of white goods and electronics products.

Most Australian iron ore goes to China. So they buy a lot of Twiggy's iron ore and a lot of Australian metallurgical coking coal to reduce it.

Judging by the the Fortescue website it seems that Twiggy would like to add some value in Australia.

 

Nuclear Steelmaking

The electrolysis of water is typically accomplished within cells consisting of an anode (+) to which oxygen is attracted and a cathode (-) to which hydrogen is attracted. The electrodes are typically separated by a membrane (polymer or ceramic) that is transparent to hydrogen ions (protons) but not to oxygen. To assist in separating these proton from the source water, an electrolyte, typically of alkaline salts is employed and the water temperature is raised to around boiling point.

The energy thus expended in separating the hydrogen, that will later be recovered when the hydrogen is reunited with oxygen, comes mainly from the electrical current across the cell but also from the external heat provided. Electrical efficiencies of up to 80% are claimed for some, still experimental, cells.

Back in the 1970's at BISRA a forward-looking paper proposed that both the electricity and heat, needed to improve the efficiency of electrolysis, could be provided by a nuclear power-plant.  The same reactor would produce steam to generate the required electricity. An associated electric arc furnace would melt the hydrogen-reduced-iron into steel.   

Such a steelmaking plant is not presently economic but could compete with conventional fossil-fuel based steelmaking if there was a sufficiently high tax on carbon. Needless to say, such a tax would need to apply in China; as well as in other steel producing countries.

But here in nuclear-free Australia Twiggy can't do that. He'll have to stick to good old fossil fuels if he wants to make steel or to have an awful lot of Chinese solar panels and/or wind turbines.

 

3600 MW Cruas Meysse Nuclear Power Station near Mirmande Southern France s
3600 MW Cruas Meysse Nuclear Power Plant
near Mirmande, Southern France
                        My photograph - Sept 2014

But here's an idea: for $20 billion why not just replace all those coal, oil and gas burning furnaces, used to heat water to generate electricity, with half a dozen state-of-the-art nuclear power stations; À la française? 

Six power plants like the four reactor one near Mermand in France (pictured above) would replace Australia's entire thermal electricity generation capacity. France has eighteen such plants. 

Now those electric cars and fast trains make sense.

China, that has pledged to do something effective about climate and their dreadful air quality, has 49 active reactors already operational, typically around 1000 MW each, 18 under construction and a further 83 planned. I wonder why they don't need so much Australian steaming coal?

 

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Travel

Israel

 

 

 

 

 

2024 Addendum

 

It's shocking that another Addendum to this article is necessary.

Yet, we are no nearer to a peaceful resolution like the, internationally called for, 'Two state solution', or some workable version thereof.

Indeed, the situation, particularly for Palestinians, has gone from bad to worse.

At the same time, Israeli losses are mounting as the war drags on.  Yet, Hamas remains undefeated and Bibi remains recalcitrant.

Comments:

 On Wed, 4 Sep 2024, at 1:23 PM, Barry Cross wrote:
> There seems to be no resolution to the problem of the disputed land of Israel. You consider Gaza to have been put under siege, but I wonder if that and the other Israeli acts you mention are themselves responses to a response by them of being under siege, or at least being seriously threatened, by hostile forces who do not recognise the legitimacy of the state of Israel? Hamas’s claim and stated intention of establishing a Palestinian state “from the river to the sea” and periodic acts of aggression need to be taken into account I suggest, when judging the actions of the Israeli’s. In addition, there is the menace coming from Iranian proxies in Southern Lebanon and Yemen, and from Iran itself.
>
> Whatever the merits of the respective claims to the contended territory might be, it seems reasonable to accept that Israeli’s to consider they are a constant threat to their very survival. Naturally, this must influence their actions, particularly in response to the many acts of aggression they have been subjected to over many decades. By way of contrast, how lucky are we!
>
> These are my off the cuff comments for what they are worth.
>
> Regards
> Barry Cross
>
> Sent from my iPhone

 

 

 

2023 Addendum

 

It's a decade since this visit to Israel in September 2014.

From July until just a month before we arrived, Israeli troops had been conducting an 'operation' against Hamas in the Gaza strip, in the course of which 469 Israeli soldiers lost their lives.  The country was still reeling. 

17,200 Garzan homes were totally destroyed and three times that number were seriously damaged.  An estimated 2,000 (who keeps count) civilians died in the destruction.  'Bibi' Netanyahu, who had ordered the Operation, declared it a victory.

This time it's on a grander scale: a 'War', and Bibi has vowed to wipe-out Hamas.

Pundits have been moved to speculate on the Hamas strategy, that was obviously premeditated. In addition to taking hostages, it involving sickening brutality against obvious innocents, with many of the worst images made and published by themselves. 

It seemed to be deliberate provocation, with a highly predictable outcome.

Martyrdom?  

Historically, Hamas have done Bibi no harm.  See: 'For years, Netanyahu propped up Hamas. Now it’s blown up in our faces' in the Israel Times.

Thinking about our visit, I've been moved to wonder how many of today's terrorists were children a decade ago?  How many saw their loved ones: buried alive; blown apart; maimed for life; then dismissed by Bibi as: 'collateral damage'? 

And how many of the children, now stumbling in the rubble, will, in their turn, become terrorists against the hated oppressor across the barrier?

Is Bibi's present purge a good strategy for assuring future harmony?

I commend my decade old analysis to you: A Brief Modern History and Is there a solution?

Comments: 
Since posting the above I've been sent the following article, implicating religious belief, with which I substantially agree, save for its disregarding the Jewish fundamentalists'/extremists' complicity; amplifying the present horrors: The Bright Line Between Good and Evil 

Another reader has provided a link to a perspective similar to my own by Australian 'Elder Statesman' John MenadueHamas, Gaza and the continuing Zionist project.  His Pearls and Irritations site provides a number of articles relating to the current Gaza situation. Worth a read.

The Economist has since reported and unusual spate of short-selling immediately preceding the attacks: Who made millions trading the October 7th attacks?  

Money-making by someone in the know? If so, it's beyond evil.

 

 

A Little Background

The land between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean Sea, known as Palestine, is one of the most fought over in human history.  Anthropologists believe that the first humans to leave Africa lived in and around this region and that all non-African humans are related to these common ancestors who lived perhaps 70,000 years ago.  At first glance this interest seems odd, because as bits of territory go it's nothing special.  These days it's mostly desert and semi-desert.  Somewhere back-o-Bourke might look similar, if a bit redder. 

Yet since humans have kept written records, Egyptians, Canaanites, Philistines, Ancient Israelites, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, early Muslims, Christian Crusaders, Ottomans (and other later Muslims), British and Zionists, have all fought to control this land.  This has sometimes been for strategic reasons alone but often partly for affairs of the heart, because this land is steeped in history and myth. 

Read more: Israel

Fiction, Recollections & News

Now I am seventy

 On the occasion of an afternoon tea to mark this significant milestone...

 

When I was one, I was just begun;
When I was two, I was nearly new;
When I was Three, I was hardly me;
*
*
*

But then I was sixty, and as clever as clever;
Wouldn't it be nice to stay sixty for ever and ever?

(With apologies to AA Milne)

 

Hang on!  Now I'm seventy?  How did that happen? 

Read more: Now I am seventy

Opinions and Philosophy

Tragedy in Norway

 

 

The extraordinary tragedy in Norway points yet again to the dangers of extremism in any religion. 

I find it hard to comprehend that anyone can hold their religious beliefs so strongly that they are driven to carefully plan then systematically kill others.  Yet it seems to happen all to often.

The Norwegian murderer, Anders Behring Breivik, reportedly quotes Sydney's Cardinal Pell, John Howard and Peter Costello in his manifesto.   Breivik apparently sees himself as a Christian Knight on a renewed Crusade to stem the influx of Muslims to Europe; and to Norway in particular.

Read more: Tragedy in Norway

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