Transforming the Electric Infrastructure
The grid and the problems it faces. “If the electric power grid is to meet 21st−century demands, society will need to invest in extensive modernization,” say the authors.
The grid and the problems it faces. “If the electric power grid is to meet 21st−century demands, society will need to invest in extensive modernization,” say the authors.
The gap between the present state of the art in hydrogen production, storage, and use and that needed for a competitive hydrogen economy is too wide to bridge in incremental advances. It will take fundamental breakthroughs of the kind that come only from basic research.
Tehran’s sense of strategic encirclement, allied to Washington’s hostile rhetoric, could make Iran the epicentre of the next regional crisis….Once more, the politics of energy, especially oil, emerges as the most potent hidden factor in regional political insecurity.
According to George Tenet, the former director of the CIA, “access to networks like the World Wide Web might need to be limited to those who can show they take security seriously.”
In a new review of cold fusion – the claim that energy can be generated by running electrical current through water – the US Department of Energy released a report yesterday that says the evidence remains inconclusive, echoing a similar report 15 years ago.
The bitterly disputed Ukrainian presidential election, and the crisis that is exploding in the wake of the contested outcome, has reignited the Cold War and a new round of East-West conflict over control of Eurasian/Caspian/Black Sea energy.
Among the challenges facing President Bush in his second term is a big one left over from his first: energy. Oil is causing the most anxiety. Some say world oil production has peaked.
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries signalled that the cartel would keep pumping crude at currently high levels even though crude prices have cooled recently.
Exxon Mobil Corp., the world’s biggest publicly traded oil company, and Saudi Aramco started engineering work on a US$3.5 billion refinery in China’s southern Fujian Province, a Saudi official said.
An Ohio refinery is widening its use of synthetic crude oil – made from tar stripped from Canadian sand. The problem is, according to Jim Meyer, tar cannot be extracted and turned into oil fast enough to make up for the expected fall in conventional oil production.
Iran’s economic attaché in Saudi Arabia, Hamid Zadboum, said here Wednesday that Sabec (the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority) and Iran’s National Petrochemical Company will discuss a joint economic project.
If temperatures in western Siberia continue to rise, its peatlands could thaw and dry out. They would then essentially become giant compost heaps and begin to release vast amounts of carbon dioxide.