pc wrote:Looks to be a bit off topic here but molex seemed to writing from the point of view of the problems converting all transport to hydrogen based, and relating it to the reasons we would want to transfer away from the status-quo.
Assuming this, then a production method for hydrogen that involves the large scale use of fossil fuels or biofuels would create an end result not much different from the situation we are in today...
I think his point was based on the false premise that you produce hydrogen from cracking water, which requires vastly more power than it produces.
The situation is not so much that we need to move away from fossil fuels in the immediate future, it's more that the fossil fuels that are readily available for petrol production are being held to ransom. There is a vast supply of methane available that would be suitable for conversion, either to methanol or directly to hydrogen.
At least if the hydrogen "engine" technology is developed, then at some point in the future when all the fossil fuels run out, or are too expensive to use, we would have the technology to run our transportation system. Even if the energy requirements to produce this fuel are higher than they are currently, the world would not grnid to a halt. Which is what it would do if we do nothing.
Sure using the energy directly would be more efficient, but solar cars are a long way off, battery technology is cumbersome and requires a charging method, which isn't much use to you if you run out of power and need to recharge in a hurry. What is needed is a portable fuel supply, and using Hydrogen as a fuel, and a portable reformation unit solves that problem.