Across Frontiers - 2005 Edition

Future of the World

Tomorrow’s Energy - Hydrogen, Fuel Cells....
Foreword
Senator Tom Harkin


When I was born, in 1933, there were 2 billion people on the earth. When I turned 60, there were 6 billion. When my daughter turns 60, there will be 9 billion. Many of those people will want heating in the winter and air conditioning in the summer. They will want to use refrigerators, radios, televisions, and cars.

The question is not whether nations like China and India will develop or whether they will consume more energy than they do now. They will and they should. They have a right to seek a better life just as we deed.
The question is: What kind of world will we create? If we continue to base our economics on coal and oil, we will create a world with toxic air, filthy water, and debilitating diseases. Global warming will likely bring droughts and hurricanes tropical diseases in the North, and widespread coastal flooding.
There is an alternative. We can replace coal and oil with clean, renewable energy sources that can generate electricity, heat buildings, and power cars.

Renewable energy sources are abundant throughout the world. India is flooded with sunlight, and China’s current electricity consumption could be powered by the wind in inner Mongolia. In the United States, the Midwest is something called the Saudi Arabia of wind.

However, we must remember that solar, wind, and most other renewable energy sources are intermittent and regional. They can only become major power source if we find a way to store and transport their energy efficiently.
Hydrogen can make the renewable vision real by storing renewable energy and making it available where and when it is needed. Hydrogen, the simplest molecule, is non-toxic and can be made from plain water using electricity from renewable sources. Used in Fuel cells, hydrogen generates electricity and emits only water vapor. And cars run on hydrogen fuel cells are 2 to 3 times more efficient than gasoline engines. Fuel cells can be made in any size to fit every—thing from pocket-held devices to large power plants. They are perfect for a dispersed and robust energy infrastructure.

The book “ Tomorrow’s Energy - Hydrogen, Fuel Cells, and the Prospects for a Cleaner Planet” is the culmination of Peter Hoffmann’s work over the past three decades to chronicle the progress of hydrogen energy from a vision to a niche market to its position today on the brink of full commercialization. he describes the various ways hydrogen can be made, stored, and used, and offers insightful analyses of the remaini9ng technical and economic obstacles to the widespread use of hydrogen.

Throughout my career in the Sena, I have worked to promote the development of a hydrogen economy. I’m glad today I’ve seen tremendous progress. Today there are hydrogen fueling stations and fuel cell buses scattared in cities around the world. Daimler Chrysler intends to sell fuel cell cars commercially by 2004, with other automakers close behind. To First National Bank of Omaha is using fuel cells to provide secure power fot its credit card service operations. And, recently, the New York City Police Department installed a fuel cell to power its Central Park Police Station because it was cheaper than extending power lines.

Hoffmann’s vas knowledge and insight on hydrogen will be an invaluable tool for continuing these efforts, and an important resource for anyone who cares about our environment. After reading this book, one can see the dream of a hydrogen-based economy becoming reality. I am confident that I will one day walk from my hydrogen-heated office through clean air to my hydrogen fuel cell car. And when I do, I will be carrying this book.

 

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