We were easy marks.

  • Hypx@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    You are replacing gas stations with hydrogen stations. You are removing contamination issues. And again, it is far cheaper to put hydrogen pipelines than wires. The economics will drive adoption. People will choose the cheaper option over the more expensive one. You are just advocating the status quo and insisting that nothing can change.

    • keeb420@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      so youre suggesting its cheaper to run pipeline than it is to tie into the existing electrical grid?

      and that not even going into hydrogen like to leak from any hole it can find so those pipeline have to be perfect all the time.

      im not saying things cant change, just that weve already moved on from what hydrogen was meant to be. theres no point to use electricity to produce hydrogen, in the cleanest form, only to eventually turn it back into electricity. when we can just use electricity from the beginning cutting out a lot of losses.

      • Hypx@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’m not suggesting. I brought sources indication that this, in fact, is the case.

        Most of your counterarguments are just fearmongering. As if engineers haven’t already looked at these issues before making such claims. In reality, it is the cheaper idea by far. BEV fanatics are just spamming propaganda in order to deny these facts. It is frankly out-of-control and it is a sign of desperation.

          • Hypx@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            You get significantly more capacity with a pipeline than with wires. You are just obfuscating the facts.

            • keeb420@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Still doesn’t make it any cheaper to get the pipeline from who knows where to the station. Much less building the station. And is shell and BP and whomever else gonna run their own pipelines or are they gonna be shared?

              • Hypx@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                Where does the electricity for charging stations come from? BEV fans never answer this question honestly. They just pretend it will just be green electricity. In reality, this is an extremely hard problem. By the time you figure a way to guarantee green electricity, you’d realize that you’re making hydrogen for energy storage already. So in truth, the solution will involve hydrogen no matter what.

                • keeb420@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  Wind, solar, hydro, or hell even coal as it would still be cleaner than an ice vehicle. And no we don’t need to store electric as hydrogen, we can store electricity as electricity it’s called a battery.

                  • Hypx@kbin.social
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                    1 year ago

                    You’re not comparing to a ICE car. You’re comparing it to a hydrogen car. A BEV running on dirty energy is going to be much worse than a hydrogen car on green energy.

                    Storing it in a battery would be incredibly expensive at scale. The point of hydrogen is that you can store large quantities of it.