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The English hydrogen boom

By | November 19, 2009, 2:00 PM PST

Fundamental change is hard work.

It takes a lot of research, and a lot of false starts.

Take, for example, the English hydrogen boom.

Right now companies there are bidding for roughly $11 million in hydrogen and fuel cell subsidies. There is enthusiasm on the local level, too, with London and Sunderland both deploying hydrogen-fueled buses.

A lovely new research and demonstration center has just opened at Swansea, while researchers at Leeds, in Yorkshire, are exploring conversion of industrial glycerol into a hydrogen-rich gas.

Despite the growing climate fatigue, researchers at Liverpool and Newcastle are excited about a new method for injecting hydrogen into a porous material that can hold it safely.

Perhaps no effort is so audacious, however, as the Bio-Reactor from Hydrogen UK, described in the video above. The Web site has just opened. The page is a template from its Web host.

The idea is to create a green algae biomass, extract hydrogen from that, and store it. The company hopes to cut the size of its unit by more than half and go into production. Personal, green power plants.

It may work in principle, but it may fail in practice. All these ideas, being pursued across the country, may succeed or fail, in the lab, in practice, or financially.

It’s the fact they’re being tried that matters. The British government isn’t just backing sure things. It is acting as a sort of venture capitalist, on both the research and the application side of the hydrogen puzzle.

Would that America could be as brave.

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Dana Blankenhorn

About Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Contributing Editor, Technology

Dana Blankenhorn has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement and founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media. He holds degrees from Rice and Northwestern universities. He is based in Atlanta.

Follow him on Twitter.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: The English hydrogen boom
If there were a hydrogen boom going on in England I'd have heard
something - I've had the windows open all day. Boom and indeed boom.
Posted by steve_jonesuk@...
20th Nov 2009
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Do the Math
8.4 liters per day equals 0.375 grams per day, or ~27 BTU which is equivalent to 40 horsepower seconds! This is enough for 2 cars?
Posted by Normal_z
20th Nov 2009
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RE: The English hydrogen boom
The English hydrogen boom, err!! Swansea is in Wales.
Posted by concrete lamposts
21st Nov 2009
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RE: The English hydrogen boom
"Would that America could be as brave." Indeed! Let's get the U.S. government involved in another business enterprise and watch as the politicians turn another promising technology into a corruption plagued money pit a la Social Security, Medicare, Fannie & Freddie, GM, and the U. S. of A Postal System.
Posted by psquare11
21st Nov 2009
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psquare11
I know your ideology can't account for this but Halliburton and Blackwater are not highly efficient.

Whether an enterprise is public or private doesn't tell you whether it will be corrupt. It's whether its leaders are corrupt that matters.

And this is not really about public or private anyway. Putting out public dollars for research gave us Apollo and this medium you're now using. Market incentives gave us today's hydrocarbon industries.

I'm just calling for more research into what we know we need and new market incentives for what we must have to compete with our trading partners.
Posted by DanaBlankenhorn
23rd Nov 2009
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RE: The English hydrogen boom
24 hours later and still not apologized for insulting an entire nation (the Welsh).
Posted by concrete lamposts
24th Nov 2009
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RE: The English hydrogen boom
8.4 liters isn't enough energy to raise the garage door. What kind of a come-on is this???? How can this limey claim to be able to run 2 cars and a house on 8.4 liters a day?
Posted by coulter@...
24th Nov 2009
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