I worked on some biofuels panels...
MIT/Stanford venture labs featured this company -- the lady is neat!
Lightsail energy. the founders are working on a compressed air option
I've seen stuff with recycled woodchips as well, people creating biofuels
alternatives to the petroleum based fertilizers that big ag uses in the
midwest.
Would love to see other people wikify this topic.
I'll diagaram dude.
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 4:41 PM, <hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
if you have an existing grid connection and intend to
have a good sized
solar array, it just makes sense to grid tie and sell solar during the day
when electricity is more expensive (you can elect for variable rates with
PG&E) and leech grid energy at night when it's cheaper, rather than storing
it chemically at a loss. you can get solar panels under $1/watt if you
look around but storage and grid tie inverters are what will wind up
costing you unless you can just suck it up on a DC bus when it's available.
i don't have any viable suggestions on how to overturn the whole
financial/energy system nor would i research one as an individual, but
distributing/democratizing generation and reducing those transmission
losses (2/3 of electrical energy produced!!!) is a step in the right
direction that we can take independently as individuals while cumulatively
reducing the power of PG&E et al. there is of course intrinsic security
value in storing onsite - one way to go about it is to consider all the
ways you use energy and see if you can convert it immediately into that
format for use later, like making ice during the day to use as coolant at
night if you run solar, or vice versa if you run off the grid and want
cheaper electricity rates. personally i have a few old car batteries that
i try to keep topped off, with a switchboard to dish out power to 2
cigarette lighter type plugs for experiments. would like to get the wifi
router (~30% of my bill) hooked up but don't have enough storage to keep it
running overnight at the moment. if anyone wants to work on a smart
controller for adding solar to the home electrical budget sometime next
month, let's set up a time and draft the specs.
the claim that centralized power production is obsolete ignores the
existence of factories as we know them. geothermal, solarthermal, gas
turbine, nuclear, hydroelectric, none of these will be reasonably installed
in homes. true, even manufacturing is becoming more decentralized and i
intend to help push it along that path, but you really need a certain
economy of scale to melt a bucket of metal, control its chemical
composition, and form it into long uniform extrusions, etc. i don't see
that need ever completely disappearing. seems like gas turbines are pretty
good for on demand topping off the grid, and new solar thermal cycles can
produce at night, so we can really get away from some of the nastier
feedstocks but there will always be a role for a grid. what happens when
you top off your batteries completely? you can suck water out of the air,
crack it into hydrogen and oxygen, liquefy it for use as rocket fuel. you
can have earthmoving equipment standing by to sieve rocks for concrete
aggregate out of the topsoil. you can overclock computers for distributed
computation projects like SETI@home, or pump water uphill, any number of
schemes if you have the need for whatever endproduct. i have looked into a
few of these, in particular condensing atmospheric water with excess solar
power, but it also makes sense to just sell your surplus onto a grid until
you think of a more pressing need onsite. it becomes a question of how
mature is our energy conversion technology and how close we want to live
and work to eachother, or how close we want our electrical loads and
generators together
Mar 26, 2013 03:41:49 PM, di.franco(a)aya.yale.edu wrote:
Production of alternative energy can be and for most reasons probably
should be much less centralized, equivalently, smaller-scale, than
production of energy mostly is now. (Off-grid, as you mention, but very
literally.)
Large-scale up front + large, complex distribution networks is revealed as
an obsolete architecture; large scale distribution networks become
relatively less important, so even if the answer to your question is no,
which it probably isn't given crowdfunding and other disintermediated
finance gaining momentum, it's moot, or at least of much less relative
importance.
Put another way, when the most important goal is maximum efficiency rather
than maximum centralization, large upfront capital investment + large,
complex distribution network is stupid; proper accounting of all costs and
benefits in a global rather than piecewise local sense reveals this now for
agriculture, manufacturing, energy, ...
Even now, buffering between supply and demand is a constraint on grid
architecture leading to great economic demand within the current paradigm
for distributed storage / production of energy according to someone who
came through sudo room whose name escapes me.
This loosely-drafted email brought to you by the slogan, "localize
production, virtualize everything else" and the acronym STEMI compression.
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 3:17 PM, Romy Ilano romy(a)snowyla.com> wrote:
Is it possible to create alternative
energy distribution networks
(biofuels/solar/ wind etc) that replace mainstream petrol and natural gas
based energy without a large financial sector?
the vc system that funds these alternative energy start-ups piggy backs
off the investment banks, etc. and big private equity and institutional
investment funds. vcs are like a fly on the @ss of a financial hippo.
I haven't heard people discuss off-grid that
much in the tech talks I've
been to( which are excellent). Is there a
conversation here that would show
how off grid is a viable alternative, even if it's not a big money solution?
>On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 1:56 PM, hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
>this talk about imports and exports always reminds me of energy flow
compare 2011
https://www.llnl.gov/news/newsreleases/2012/Oct/images/25306_LLNLUSEnergy20…
with 2002
http://www.hubbertpeak.com/us/images/us_energyflow2002.jpg
fascinating
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