DocumentCode
1532629
Title
Hydrogen Without Tears: Addressing the Global Energy Crisis via a Solar to Hydrogen Pathway [Point of View]
Author
Abbott, Derek
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Univ. of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia
Volume
97
Issue
12
fYear
2009
Firstpage
1931
Lastpage
1934
Abstract
In this paper, the dominant scaleable vision is a solar-hydrogen economy, where solar thermal collectors are preferred to solar cells. Also for mobile storage, pure hydrogen (liquid and/or gas) is preferred to both electric batteries and hydrogen fuel cells. Placing this form of a solar hydrogen economy as an end vision on our energy policy. Governments profits, as they can build solar farms on a grand scale, with high levels of public acceptance, building stability and economy. A solar-hydrogen economy is of no threat to any existing industry-like fossil-fuel industry, petrochemical industry, nuclear power stations, nonsolar-sector renewable industries, such as wind, geothermal, etc., power generation industry, car manufacturing industry and the solar cell industry as hydrogen can be produced by even by splitting water, in fact, it is the bedrock upon which existing industries can anchor their longterm survival. Every energy source has its niche, and placing each in its correct perspective is the way forward to a viable energy policy roadmap.
Keywords
hydrogen economy; solar absorber-convertors; solar power; car manufacturing industry; electric batteries; energy policy roadmap; energy source; fossil-fuel industry; geothermal industries; global energy crisis; hydrogen fuel cells; nonsolar-sector renewable industries; nuclear power stations; petrochemical industry; power generation industry; solar cell industry; solar cells; solar farms; solar thermal collectors; solar-hydrogen economy; water splitting; Batteries; Chemical industry; Fuel cells; Fuel storage; Hydrogen storage; Manufacturing industries; Photovoltaic cells; Wind power generation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPROC.2009.2032826
Filename
5306145
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