Tag Archives: energy

Ronald C. Davidson, Pioneer of Fusion Power, Dies at 74

During Dr. Davidson’s tenure, the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory made major advances toward harnessing fusion, which powers the sun. View this article:  Ronald C. Davidson, Pioneer of Fusion Power, Dies at 74 ; ; ;

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Ronald C. Davidson, Pioneer of Fusion Power, Dies at 74

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Trump goes full Trump on energy

Trump goes full Trump on energy

By on May 26, 2016Share

For all the hype surrounding Donald Trump’s energy policy speech in the oil town of Bismarck, N.D., there was, shall we say, a lot of hot air.

Here were some of his more memorable “thoughts” on energy, both from his press conference before the speech and from the speech itself.


On the Paris Agreement: “This agreement gives foreign bureaucrats control over how much energy we use right here in America … We’re going to cancel the Paris climate agreement and stop all payments of U.S. tax dollars to U.N. global warming programs. We’ve got big problems folks and can’t send our money all over the world.” Except Trump can’t actually cancel the Paris Agreement.

On real environmental issues: “From an environmental standpoint, my priorities are clean air and clean water.”  Protecting air and water will be a challenge without the Environmental Protection Agency.

On “phony” environmental issues: “A Trump administration will focus on real environmental challenges, not the phony ones we’ve been looking at.” And by “phony ones,” he means that whole climate change thing.

On Keystone XL: “I want the Keystone pipeline, but the people of the United States should be given a piece, a significant piece, of the profits. … I’m saying yes, we will absolutely approve it, I want it built, but I want a piece of the profits, because we’re making it possible for it to happen through eminent domain and other things.” Trump has a complicated relationship with eminent domain.

On the Clean Power Plan: “How stupid is that?”

On energy independence: “We will make so much money from energy that we will start to pay down our $19 trillion in debt and lower taxes and take care of our Social Security and Medicare.” There’s no such thing as energy independence. Enough said.

On his first 100 days: “We’re going to save the coal industry.”

On the death of coal: “The market forces are going to do whatever they do. All I’m going to do is free up the coal. … The market force is a beautiful force.” In fact, the free market is what’s killing coal.

On miners: “I asked a couple of [coal miners], “Why don’t you go into some other profession?” and they said, “We love going after coal.” Except when they’re suffering from black lung.

On fracking: “You [knock out fracking], and you’re going to be back in the Middle East.” What does happen if the U.S. bans fracking?

On solar: “I know a lot about solar. … I’ve gone solar on occasion.”

On wind power: “Wind is killing all of the eagles.” Trump has strong opinions on wind.

On renewable energy more broadly: “The problem with solar is it’s very expensive … Wind is very expensive … Despite that, I am into all types of energy.” That was true if we’re talking about, say, 1999. Wind and solar are getting cheaper all the time in 2016.

On fracking: “Hillary is going to ban fracking. … I will do the opposite.” Clinton might beg to differ.

On special interests: “I’m prepared to kick the special interests out of Washington DC.” He says, without irony, at a special-interest conference for the oil industry.

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Trump goes full Trump on energy

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Report Warns of Climate Change Disasters That Rival Hollywood’s

Bad news for Stonehenge, Venice and the Statue of Liberty. A report says climate change could pose a colossal threat to World Heritage sites on five continents. Read more:  Report Warns of Climate Change Disasters That Rival Hollywood’s ; ; ;

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Report Warns of Climate Change Disasters That Rival Hollywood’s

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This Chemical Reaction Revolutionized Farming. It’s Also Destroying the Planet.

Mother Jones

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This story was originally published by Wired and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Of all the elements that make up Earth’s atmosphere, nitrogen is by far the most abundant. It is also one of the most inert. Nothing happens when you breathe it in, swallow it, or let it suffuse your skin. Nitrogen gas likes to stay nitrogen gas.

But in the early 20th century, two German chemists, Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch, figured out how to pluck fertilizer from thin air by making ammonia (NH3) out of nitrogen gas (N2). You need energy, lots of it. The Haber-Bosch process relied and still relies on high temperature, high pressure, and hydrogen atoms ripped from fossil fuels. Ammonia from this process fertilizes crops, which in turn nourish you. On average, half the nitrogen in your cells might come from Haber-Bosch. “The Haber-Bosch process is one of the most important for humanity,” says Mercouri Kanatzidis, a chemist at Northwestern University.

But what seemed ingenious a hundred years ago is running into problems in 2016. The Haber-Bosch process burns natural gas (3 percent of the world’s production) and releases loads of carbon (3 percent of the world’s carbon emissions). If relying on fossil fuels to give the world electricity and heat is unsustainable, so is relying on fossil fuels to grow its food.

So interest in a Haber-Bosch alternative is heating up. Last month, the Department of Energy issued a funding opportunity announcement for a sustainable way to make ammonia. The challenge isn’t just making ammonia without fossil fuels—scientists can already do that—but to do it at a scale and price that can compete with an industrial process perfected over a hundred years. And that ultimately might take more than just a technological breakthrough.

Bacteria and Sunlight

Of course, ammonia existed on Earth long before Haber and Bosch came long. For millions of years, nitrogen-fixing bacteria in soil have been taking nitrogen gas from the air and converting it into ammonia, which in turn is taken up by plants, which are eaten by animals, human and non-human. You have nitrogen in your cells from these bacteria, too.

So in the search for new ways to make ammonia, scientists have turned to imitating nature. “Biology does this reaction in fairly simple way compared to Haber-Bosch,” says Paul King, a photobiologist at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. For one, it happens at room temperature, since any living thing would be cooked and crushed at Haber-Bosch conditions. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria have enzymes that grab N2 molecules and H+ ions, orienting them just the right way so they form ammonia, or NH3.

This reaction does require a jolt of energy. In bacteria, it comes from snapping off a piece of a molecule called ATP. But King has figured out something simpler: sunlight. In a paper recently published in Science, his group made light-sensitive nanorods, similar to what you might find in solar panels, that plug into the enzyme to give it a zap. Basically, all you have to do is mix together this cadmium-based material, some enzymes, and leave it out in the sun. Voila, ammonia—though only a small amount of it.

The problem with making more ammonia? “Enzymes are really cost prohibitive,” says King. Enzymes are incredibly complex molecules that have to be purified from living bacteria. “It makes days and days and lots of water to separate it, and you end up with less than a microgram,” says Kanatzidis. “We cannot even contemplate using that.”

At Northwestern, Kanatzidis is looking for a way to replace the enzyme with a man-made material called chalcogel. In another recently published paper, his team took metals commonly found in the active sites of enzymes and made clusters of them. The cluster is black, so it also absorbs light energy. When researchers scatter the material into water, shine sunlight on it and bubble nitrogen gas through, they get ammonia. And this time, no expensive enzymes.

It comes at a different cost though. The nitrogen-fixing enzyme has evolved over millions of years to grab N2 and H+; in comparison, the chalcogel is just a crude approximation, and it’s thousands of times slower than the natural process. King’s light-powered system—the one that still uses an enzyme—synthesizes ammonia at about 63 percent of the enzyme’s natural rate. And both are not as easily scaled up to Haber-Bosch levels. Yet other groups have experimented with polymer membranes and titanium-based molecules, though those have durability and efficiency problems, too.

The Ammonia Economy

So these new ammonia synthesis systems have a long way to go, but they don’t necessarily have to beat Haber-Bosch. It’s no coincidence that King and Kanatzidis have converged on using sunlight to power ammonia synthesis. Making fertilizer via Haber-Bosch is like making electricity at a big central coal-fired power plant—electricity that then needs to be transported hundreds of miles to its point of use.

But with solar panels, electricity can be made where it’s used. With solar-powered ammonia synthesis, so can fertilizer. And while electricity storage is tricky, storing ammonia is easy by comparison. You might imagine other systems of ammonia synthesis that rely on yet other forms of renewable energy. “I can’t tell you how many times we’ve talked to people who want to take the output of their wind turbine and make their own fertilizer or fuel for the farm,” says John Holbrook, executive director of the NH3 Fuel Association.

As the name implies, Holbrook’s ambitions for ammonia go beyond fertilizer. Today, cars and power plants run on fossil fuels, whose energy is stored in carbon bonds. But plenty of energy is stored in ammonia, too, and you could imagine a fuel economy based on nitrogen. (After all, the other major use of ammonia from the Haber-Bosch process in early 20th century Germany was making explosives.) The upside, though, is no more carbon emissions. “We in the ammonia fuel community feel like we’ve cracked a code in terms of getting recognition,” says Holbrook. “We’ve been at it for 13 years without anyone from the Department of Energy attending our conference.” This year’s featured speaker at the NH3 Fuel Association conference will be Grigorii Soloveichik, a program director at the DOE.

Funding interest from the top levels of government is one thing. Making fossil fuel-free ammonia synthesis commercially viable is another. King thinks what will ultimately set the industry off is a carbon tax. Humanity doesn’t need to recognize value in nitrogen; it needs to see danger in carbon.

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This Chemical Reaction Revolutionized Farming. It’s Also Destroying the Planet.

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What Are Donald Trump’s Views on Climate Change? Some Clues Emerge.

Mr. Trump has mostly expressed his opinions on climate change and energy policy through Twitter messages. But more of his views are starting to emerge. Link:  What Are Donald Trump’s Views on Climate Change? Some Clues Emerge. ; ; ;

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What Are Donald Trump’s Views on Climate Change? Some Clues Emerge.

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Here’s Another Crazy Thing Texas Republicans Are Voting on Today

Mother Jones

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Texas Republicans are convening today to cast their ballot on a number of matters close to the Lone Star state’s conservative heart. The most notable issue is whether or not to secede from the rest of the United States, as ardent nationalists in the party are hoping to do.

But buried in the long list of standard Republican agenda items includes the following gem, one that’s stereotypically reserved for members of the left wing:

Despite the unusual bipartisan paranoia, Republicans hoping to opt out of the government-backed meters are likely fresh out of luck: In 2014 the same proposal was overwhelmingly rejected by state lawmakers who were not persuaded that the technology was endangering the public.

Anyone in search for another issue with red and blue support should look no further than the aforementioned vote on Texas secession. As our own Josh Harkinson notes, that, too, has cheerleaders from both ends of the political spectrum.

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Here’s Another Crazy Thing Texas Republicans Are Voting on Today

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When Caterpillars Move In, the Yellow-Billed Cuckoo Feasts

An upside to the onslaught of Eastern tent caterpillars, whose webby bivouacs festoon black cherry trees, is the chance to watch the birds that eat them. Excerpt from –  When Caterpillars Move In, the Yellow-Billed Cuckoo Feasts ; ; ;

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When Caterpillars Move In, the Yellow-Billed Cuckoo Feasts

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Quote of the Day: Donald Trump Doesn’t Need No Stinkin’ Policy Experts

Mother Jones

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Politico interviewed “nearly five dozen Republicans” recently and heard a consistent message: nobody with even a trace of policy cred wants to work in a Donald Trump administration. “The A-level people, and there are not that many of them to begin with, mostly don’t want to work for Trump,” said a former Bush official. “He will cut the A-level bench of available policy talent at least in half, if not more.”

But not to worry. This is all part of the plan:

A source familiar with Trump’s thinking explained that the billionaire businessman was reluctant to add new layers of policy experts now, feeling it would only muddy his populist message that has been hyperfocused on illegal immigration, trade and fighting Islamic extremists.

“He doesn’t want to waste time on policy and thinks it would make him less effective on the stump,” the Trump source said. “It won’t be until after he is elected but before he’s inaugurated that he will figure out exactly what he is going to do and who he is going to try to hire.”

That’s a confidence booster, isn’t it? We’ll all have to wait until after the election for Trump to tell us what he actually plans to do. In the meantime, he’s just going to keep tossing out anti-Muslim, anti-Mexican, and anti-Chinese bombs because that seems to appeal to his fans. But once he wins, he’ll be the most presidential president in the history of presidenting.

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Quote of the Day: Donald Trump Doesn’t Need No Stinkin’ Policy Experts

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Obamacare Continues to Not Be Doomed

Mother Jones

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Veronique de Rugy predicts disaster for Obamacare once again:

The bottom line is that after slow start, insurance companies find themselves having to increase premiums a fair amount. It seems that while for now subsidies may cover the pain for individuals, they probably won’t be able to after this year, at which point insurance companies will have to stomach the full cost of their losses due to the expiration of the reinsurance and risk-corridor programs. There soon won’t be enough subsidies to offset the premium hikes.

We’ve heard this pretty much every year: insurers are requesting huge premium increases! We’re doomed! Perhaps a bit of perspective would be helpful:

Insurers lowballed their Obamacare prices initially, coming in with premiums that were less costly than CBO projections. Higher prices were always inevitable.
Every year, insurers request big increases. They don’t get them. They get moderate increases.
Whatever happens, this is the free market at work, not some defect in Obamacare. If high premiums are truly what conservatives care about, we can fix that any time we want. Just ask Canada how to do it—or Sweden or Germany or Spain or Japan or pretty much any other advanced country on the planet.

Life isn’t perfect. Obamacare isn’t perfect. Health care is an expensive service, and health care insurance is expensive too. But so far Obamacare has done a pretty good job of keeping costs reasonably well contained. I’d wait until the end of the year before yet again declaring that it’s a failure and yet again being wrong.

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Obamacare Continues to Not Be Doomed

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Chart of the Day: Americans Are Pretty Upbeat About the Job Market

Mother Jones

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How do Americans feel about the economy? Here is Pew Research:

Americans are now more positive about the job opportunities available to them than they have been since the economic meltdown….Today’s more upbeat views rank among some of the best assessments of the job market in Pew Research Center surveys dating back 15 years.

There’s no significant partisan difference in views of the job market. However, older, poorer, and less-educated folks all report less optimism about employment than younger, richer, and better-educated respondents.

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Chart of the Day: Americans Are Pretty Upbeat About the Job Market

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