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petweis
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In the 18th century methane was made from carbon dioxide (from the air) and hydrogen (from water) and used as the fuel for the lights of the "Gaslight" era.
Seems to me, that if we could take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, add hydrogen and obtain methane, a very clean burning fuel, we could solve two problems in one fell swoop - reducing the carbon in our atmosphere, and obtaining an almost inexhaustible source of energy.
I realize that the carbon is returned to the atmosphere, but since buring methane yields far more energy than burning coal, oil or gasoline, and burns much, much cleaner, (carbon and water are the only burning products), using methane to generate energy, (as in powerplants and for transportation) would result in a much reduced carbon load into our atmosphere for the same amount of generated energy, as compared to coal, oil and gasoline, and their many dirty byproducts (smog).
I just don't know how much energy it takes to produce methane from atmospheric carbon dioxide and hydrogen, and how this compares to the production costs, and carbon footprint, of coal, oil and gasoline. If it can be done with bacteria, which exist, I would think that the production costs and carbon footprint would be extremely low.
It would take a Chemist though, which I am patently not, to work out all the details.
Any elucidation would be much appreciated.
Cheers;
petweis
Seems to me, that if we could take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, add hydrogen and obtain methane, a very clean burning fuel, we could solve two problems in one fell swoop - reducing the carbon in our atmosphere, and obtaining an almost inexhaustible source of energy.
I realize that the carbon is returned to the atmosphere, but since buring methane yields far more energy than burning coal, oil or gasoline, and burns much, much cleaner, (carbon and water are the only burning products), using methane to generate energy, (as in powerplants and for transportation) would result in a much reduced carbon load into our atmosphere for the same amount of generated energy, as compared to coal, oil and gasoline, and their many dirty byproducts (smog).
I just don't know how much energy it takes to produce methane from atmospheric carbon dioxide and hydrogen, and how this compares to the production costs, and carbon footprint, of coal, oil and gasoline. If it can be done with bacteria, which exist, I would think that the production costs and carbon footprint would be extremely low.
It would take a Chemist though, which I am patently not, to work out all the details.
Any elucidation would be much appreciated.
Cheers;
petweis
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