Necoras
Necoras t1_ja9zrye wrote
Reply to comment by SenorHat in This “Climate-Friendly” Fuel Comes With an Astronomical Cancer Risk: Almost half of products cleared so far under the new federal biofuels program are not in fact biofuels — and the EPA acknowledges that the plastic-based ones may present an “unreasonable risk” to human health or the environment. by nastratin
I mean... jet fuel is highly combustive. Jets explode when they crash. Any highly concentrated storage of energy (fuel tank, battery) is basically just another name for a bomb.
Necoras t1_ja9pia3 wrote
Reply to comment by secretqwerty10 in This “Climate-Friendly” Fuel Comes With an Astronomical Cancer Risk: Almost half of products cleared so far under the new federal biofuels program are not in fact biofuels — and the EPA acknowledges that the plastic-based ones may present an “unreasonable risk” to human health or the environment. by nastratin
Ironically, plastic -> oil is worse for the climate than just leaving the plastic in the ground. Plastic, which famously doesn't degrade (though that's not exactly true; there are bacteria which are evolving to eat the stuff) is just another name for long term carbon storage. Obviously we'd much rather have that in a properly designed and build landfill than in the ocean. But turning it into oil and burning it is just putting more CO2 from oil into the atmosphere.
Necoras t1_ja9p6cq wrote
Reply to comment by Honigwesen in This “Climate-Friendly” Fuel Comes With an Astronomical Cancer Risk: Almost half of products cleared so far under the new federal biofuels program are not in fact biofuels — and the EPA acknowledges that the plastic-based ones may present an “unreasonable risk” to human health or the environment. by nastratin
They don't know. It hasn't been disclosed yet:
>ProPublica and The Guardian did obtain one consent order that covers a dozen Chevron fuels made from plastics that were reviewed under the program. Although the EPA had blacked out sections, including the chemicals’ names, that document showed that the fuels that Chevron plans to make at its Pascagoula refinery present serious health risks,
Necoras t1_ja9os4f wrote
Reply to comment by Undernown in This “Climate-Friendly” Fuel Comes With an Astronomical Cancer Risk: Almost half of products cleared so far under the new federal biofuels program are not in fact biofuels — and the EPA acknowledges that the plastic-based ones may present an “unreasonable risk” to human health or the environment. by nastratin
Hydrogen is clean (assuming it's green and not blue), but it's remarkably inefficient. For home heating, you need almost 6 times as much renewable energy with a hydrogen furnace compared to an electric heat pump. And that's with a middle of the road heat pump (COP 3). The newer high end ones can reach a COP of 4 or 5, which is more than twice as efficient as a COP 3.
Hydrogen may very well be our best bet for air travel, but for things on the ground it's not a very good solution.
Necoras t1_j4g85op wrote
Reply to DIY Window Bench and Storage Unit by homeprohero
Home Depot provides "precise cuts!" Hilarious!
Necoras t1_isuasbc wrote
Reply to comment by vorbo87 in Sealing gaps along the side of a garage door by vorbo87
Do note that the linked product is PVC. You'll want to paint that, or it'll deteriorate in the sun.
Necoras t1_jeew6yg wrote
Reply to comment by Beyond-Time in Inexpensive and environmentally friendly mechanochemical recycling process recovers 70% of lithium from batteries by chrisdh79
Sodium batteries are an interesting upcoming technology. Should be interesting to see how they compare once they hit the market.