No could be about it, its very well established technology.
Just no need to use it currently when crude oil production hasnt even peaked yet.
Lie. Natural gas doesnt. Nukes dont.
Coal can be used to produce transport fuels if that becomes necessary.
Another lie.
Just because its currently the most viable approach. It isnt the ONLY approach tho.
And you're just plain wrong with the bulk of what goes into a nuke anyway. Almost all of it can be done with grid power and coal, particularly metal, concrete, etc etc etc production.
Just because its currently the most viable approach. It isnt the ONLY approach tho.
Just because its currently the most viable approach. It isnt the ONLY approach tho.
Just because its currently the most viable approach. It isnt the ONLY approach tho.
Just because its currently the most viable approach. It isnt the ONLY approach tho. They can obviously use natural gas and LPG powered cars, stupid.
Nope.
No need for invention, its all been invented long ago now.
Metal and concrete production dont use much crude oil now, and what is used can be easily replaced.
High Gas Prices Fuel an Octane Rebellion 2011On Sat, 06 Aug 2005 21:43:52 -0700, Scott en Aztl‡n , said the following in rec.autos.driving... True, the "gas out," concept is a nice knee-jerk reaction to the situation. True, because all...
In spades with heavy transport systems. Its completely trivial to use natural gas powered generators instead of the currently petroleum fueled generators with diesel electric systems, not a shred of invention required at all.
Mindless stuff. We havent even seen crude oil production peaked yet.
Thanks for that completely superfluous proof that you've never ever had a f***ing clue. Just another terminally pig ignorant denison of some pathetic little sheltered workshop-ivory tower.
Lie.
Lie.
High Gas Prices Fuel an Octane Rebellion 2010Roger that big guy. Here's an interseting hit: Two excerpts for your academically challenged self: Amoco said its commercial production should get underway by 1980, with full scale production of 50,000 to...
Lie.
Lie, most obviously with natural gas used to power that.