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HYDROGEN, NOT FOSSIL FUELS
by Peter Moss
Representative Ed Paquin is a member of The Vermont House Committee on
Natural Resources and Energy, and in an article in The Fairfax News last
month, he discussed some initiatives to save energy and reduce dependence
on oil imports. I talked to Mr. Paquin about hydrogen as a replacement
for gasoline, and offered to write him to encourage transition to hydrogen
in Vermont, which would surely promote the transition nationally. Ford,
GM, BMW, DaimlerChrysler, VW, Nissan and others have hydrogen cars on
the road, or in development, but the gas stations have yet to be replaced
with hydrogen stations. Hydrogen is inexhaustible, generated from water,
and burns to water. No pollution, no prospecting or drilling for oil on
ecosensitive lands or mining coal, no more oil company driven foreign
policy or oil wars, no kidding.
I favor a transition tax from fossil and nuclear power plants to hydroelectric,
wind and solar energy. As. one example, BMW has six hydrogen-fueled cars
on the road. They look very much like conventional BMW'S. The engine can
even run on gasoline when the car is out of range of a hydrogen fuel supply.
Flicking a switch next to the gear lever switches the fuel injection from
gasoline to hydrogen, which is stored in a low temperature parallel tank.
When on hydrogen, the car has a top speed of 130 miles per hour. In other
designs, hydrogen is absorbed in powdered metal forming metal hydride,
with the hydrogen released as required. But in safety tests, cars liquid
hydrogen tanks were dropped up to 90 feet and the hydrogen tank did not
explode even though it was under pressure. Last, but not least, hydrogen
costs 1,5 cents per mile. Since hydrogen engines have only small variations
from gasoline-only engines, we should encourage the development of retrofit
kits to convert standard cars to dual fuel. Many other designs use fuel
cells, but even in California, where government subsidies and regulations
are the most favorable in the world, fuel cell cars are not expected on
the road in significant numbers until 2004. Vermont has neither the air
problems nor the finances of California but even here, Montpelier could
enact hydrogen subsidies (from a Fossil Profit Tax, "FPT") and favorable
regulations to speed transition to dual fuel cars starting now. 
Editor's Note:
Thanks, Peter, I've been following the progress of these hydrogen cars
with great interest for several years.
Their exhaust is actually cleaner, at times, than the California air.
Fairfax News, 3-1-02
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