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Old May 19, 2007 | 07:37 AM
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Red X
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From: Upstate
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Originally Posted by bnuk
I'm not really comparing it gas, more to electric cars using modern Li-ion tech. It is still just another method for storing energy, only unlike batteries you have to ship all the byproduct to a smelter in some remote location. If they can show that the catalytic reactor, a sufficient supply of aluminum and the fuel cell is significantly lighter then an equivalent Li-ion battery then maybe we can talk. It also has to make up for the cost (and energy) of collecting all the alumina byproduct and transporting it to a smelter.

My main gripe is the way the journalist try to make this into something it isn't. It isn't some magical way to produce H2 out of thin air, it is just a way to store energy that is very stable and therefore easy to transport.
Its also a way to produce it from a common recyclable material. Can you say the same for lithium ion?
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