Energy Flashes....
VIEW FROM THE EXECUTIVE SUITE: A recent
study has shown that while 53% of the general public prefer
solar power to that generated by coal or nuclear
facilities, only 9% of the corporate executives surveyed
view sun power as a desirable energy alternative.
WIND 'ER UP: UCLA
engineers believe that the car of the future may be
equipped with devices fitted with giant elastic bands
that—in effect—recycle braking energy for use
in acceleration. The project's directors point out that as
much as 30% of the fuel burned in urban driving is wasted
in braking. However, the researchers admit they've been
unable to whip one problem encountered in their testing:
The rubber bands keep breaking.
TOO COSTLY AND TOO UNCERTAIN were the
words used by the National Academy of Sciences in
evaluating the solar power satellite (SPS) concept. The
Department of Energy had proposed an SPS system comprising
60 photovoltaic—cell-equipped satellites—each
the size of Manhattan Island—which would supply
electricity to earth. The project's cost was estimated at
more than $3 trillion. (See page 125 for more details on
the SPS issue.)
COCONUT WATTS: Natives on the South Seas
island of Bora Bora have returned to the power source they
used prior to World War II: a generating plant fueled by
coconut husks. It's estimated that each Bora Bora household
requires the equivalent of six coconut husks an hour to
produce its electricity.
AN AC BREAKTHROUGH? About the same time
Exxon's Reliance Electric Company announced that it was
abandoning its research on alternating current synthesis
technology (a technique that was aimed at increasing the
efficiency of electric motors), NASA revealed that it has
developed a device to reduce the energy consumption of such
powerplants by half.
A SOLAR/LIQUID METAL SYSTEM , developed by
an Israeli scientist, employs a collector containing a
metal alloy . . . which, when heated and mixed with a
volatile liquid, causes the latter substance to vaporize.
The vapor then drives the metal, at high speed, through
piping in a high-intensity magnetic field. Electrodes tap
the electricity that's produced, and the metal and liquid
are then separated and recycled. The system has no moving
parts, will cost about $70,000 for a 100-kilowatt unit, and
should last 30 years without repairs.
ICE CONDITIONING: Issue 68's Energy
Flashes mentioned the ice-filled basement as a possible
replacement for conventional air conditioning. As it turns
out, the concept will soon be a reality: Engineers are
beginning work on an ice pond that'll be incorporated into
the cooling system of a 130,000—square-foot
Prudential Insurance Company building now under
construction.
NUCLEAR EVACUATION: After evaluating
estimates of the time necessary—in an
emergency—to evacuate persons living within a
ten-mile radius of atomic power plants, the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission has classified 17 of the estimates as
"poor". The NRC rated 27 plants' reports as "adequate", and
five were termed "excellent". (Two of the facilities didn't
even bother to respond.)
RENEWABLES NEWS: The National Solar
Heating and Cooling Information Center has now become the
Conservation and Renewable Energy Inquiry and Referral
Service (CAREIRS) and is offering information about energy
conservation and such technologies as wind, biomass,
photovoltaics, ocean and solar thermal, and more. The
service operates from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. eastern time, and
the toll-free numbers are 800 / 523-2929 for the
continental U.S., the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico . . .
800/462-4983 for Pennsylvania residents . . . and 800/
537-4700 for Alaska and Hawaii.
CATTAIL FUEL: Cattails can yield up to
1,000 gallons of ethanol per acre, as opposed to the 200
gallons possible from corn or 640 gallons from sugar cane,
according to an experimental study called the Aquahol
Project. Furthermore, the plants can be grown in swamps and
thus do not compete for agricultural cropland.
TOP SEED: After successful tests using
peanut oil to fuel diesel engines, Gold Kist (a large
agricultural concern) is forging ahead with research on
other vegetable oils-such as cottonseed, sunflower,
linseed, and coconut—as replacements for
petroleum—derived fuels. Gold Kist says the results
are promising because the plant's protein meal can be used
as food after the oil has been extracted.
Researchers at Israel's Ben-Gurion University have
developed a SOLAR GREENHOUSE COVERING,
filled with a pale gray dye, that can collect the sun's
rays for heating while still allowing the light necessary
for photosynthesis to filter into the structure ....
Georgia Tech is converting a FAMILY-OWNED DAIRY
FARM INTO AN ENERGY-INDEPENDENT MODEL: It'll
feature a methane-fueled generator, a hydroelectric plant,
wood-fired boilers and furnaces, solar water heaters, and
an alcohol fuel distillery .... After an absence of ten
years, the EFM COAL-FIRED, WARM-AIR STOKER
FURNACE is back on the market. General Machine
Corporation (Dept. TMEN, Fourth and Furnace Streets,
Emmaus, Pennsylvania 18049) is producing the coal-burner in
response to consumer demand for a less costly-to-operate
home heating system .... GLASS-REINFORCED
CONCRETE may provide a lightweight, strong, and
low-cost material for solarand wind-energy applications.
Researchers say the substance can be readily formed into
curved or angled shapes .... THE WOODSTOVE TAX
CREDIT that was originally part of the Reagan
administration's proposed tax cut legislation has been
eliminated from the final bill.