- Location
- N Ireland BT47
Not OK, read this very recent storyThey put windfarms on peat bogs is that ok then?
Donegal: Ministers shocked at peat slide devastation - BBC News
Not OK, read this very recent storyThey put windfarms on peat bogs is that ok then?
Use surplus electricity from wind turbines to isolate and liquify hydrogen?Generate hydrogen from where and then use it to burn for heat? Utter insanity.
That is the 'super power' quoted in the report.Use surplus electricity from wind turbines to isolate and liquify hydrogen?
Use surplus electricity from wind turbines to isolate and liquify hydrogen?
Agree however hydrogen will have applications say in the likes of heavy trucks and tractors where you need an intense power source and long range.There is no doubt in my mind that this is possible, but to then send the hydrogen down a pipe and use it to create heat to heat people's homes??? You might as well just connect the wind turbines to air source heat pumps for heating and then to A/C units when they need cooling.
Agree however hydrogen will have applications say in the likes of heavy trucks and tractors where you need an intense power source and long range.
Its amazing how strong concrete can make a structure if you place plenty of it on any type of ground.They put windfarms on peat bogs is that ok then?
They sure put plenty concrete in the bases here in the peat.!Its amazing how strong concrete can made a structure if you place plenty of it on any type of ground.
300ton i beleve holding big turbines up no far from me on boggy moorland!They sure put plenty concrete in the bases here in the peat.!
Isn’t concrete meant to be carbon unfriendly stuff300ton i beleve holding big turbines up no far from me on boggy moorland!
id imagine so yeah. but those thats collecting the big payout for them being there aint worried about that & after all generating power this way is pretty much the way to go isnt it?Isn’t concrete meant to be carbon unfriendly stuff
There's some sort of pinch point ahead in Ye Greate Decarbonising Planne because air source heat pumps, although good, require upgrades to larger radiators in addition to costs and upheavals of installing the pumps themselves. If domestic systems already have natural gas boilers, then it's thought a swap can be made for hydrogen without those additional costs.
Good, so those of us with oil fired heating systems can just switch to a biodegradable alternative and carry on as normal?
Think about the carbon used in building a 2,000Mw coal fired power station.Isn’t concrete meant to be carbon unfriendly stuff
Taken from the Solar Power Portal;Shame it costs the Earth to use Solar, Wnd and Batteries ..