January 31, 2012

The Hydrogen Dream

Luis de Sousa , The Oil Drum


techportal.com

Last week I went to Longwy's university campus, the Institut Universitaire de Technologie (part of the University of Lorraine), for a conference on renewable energies and energy efficiency. It was an event integrated in an InterReg project for innovation, called Tigre, gathering institutions from Lorraine, Saarland, Luxembourg, and Wallonie. . .

Read Full Article ››

TAGGED: Energy innovation, alternative energy, fuel efficiency, Hydrogen Fuel Cells, hydrogen, The Oil Drum

RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

January 25, 2012
Hydrogen & Alane: The New Power Couple?
Angeli Duffin, Clean Technica
Hydrogen – the ever-illusive solution to our energy problems. As a society that doesn’t quite accept that you “can’t take it with you,” scientists have been on the hunt for portable energy storage solutions and... more ››
January 25, 2012
'All of the Above' Energy Strategy from Obama
Puneet Kollipara, Fuel Fix
President Obama made the case Tuesday night for producing more of the United States’ energy supplies domestically in pursuing an “all-of-the-above” approach to further bolster the economy and national security. more ››
January 20, 2012
Warren Buffett's Long Quest for Geothermal Power
Todd Woody, Forbes
Here’s a sobering sign of the challenges facing the geothermal industry: Even Warren Buffett has spent the better part of a decade trying to build a single geothermal power plant in California. . . more ››
January 24, 2012
California's Clean-Car Agenda
Editorial, San Francisco Chronicle
California pulled off a clean-air triple play last summer when it led other pollution-worried states, Detroit carmakers and Washington into agreeing to nearly double auto mileage in coming years. The result was a White House... more ››
January 19, 2012
Oil Production from the Volga-Ural Basin
Heading Out, The Oil Drum
In the last post on the oil and gas fields of the Northern Caucasus, I commented that one of the reasons that these older oil and gas fields were being further developed was due to the introduction of advanced Western... more ››