End to All Power Problems


Has anyone heard of Bloom Energy? It's a new technology that many tech companies are now using to generate power off of the grid.

It takes methane (or another similar fuel) and uses fuel cells to chemically convert fuel to power. Check out the 60 minutes segment on it, pretty amazing. I think it could be a huge paradigm type shift for the entire country.

It actually works, and they are hoping to be able to get the cost down to $3000 per house. No more power bill, only a gas bill, and we have tripled our Natural Gas reserves in the country since 2007. Fewer power plants, many fewer transmission wires, less oil........

Oh yeah, and most importantly, clean power to your audio gear.
macdadtexas
Hate to be the wet blanket but the way I see it happening is.. All those people at the power companies are out of a job and because we have very little manufacturing left in this country the power cells are made in China. Oh ya, the power used to manufacture those power cells is produced by dirty cool fired plants.
When Al Gore lowers his footprint I will look into mine, till then they can all go to............
6550c, their are 2 kinds of invertors.....True Sine Wave and the 'others'. The 'others' would seem to be pretty noisy, but are good in your car for powering laptops, charging your cell phone or a map light. True sine wave inverters with even modest power conditioners will make good, clean power.

Al 'Where's my corporate Jet?' Gore uses an astronomical amount of electricity at his house, even after the solar retrofit and alleged improvements. Of course, it is a pretty large house with staff, but the per capita usage is still wacky high.
Like the force of gravity, the market will determine what the solution is. If this box is cheaper and has a favorable ROI, then the individual homeowner and business owner will buy it.
Chadnliz- jeez, don't know where to start with that one other than two wrongs do not make a right.

As for methane, it is not just a fossil fuel, but is very easy to produce with organic waste products. The simplest example is cow manure. Farms have been producing their own heat and power that way for years. It would not take much to use this tech with a methane digester hooked up to a homes waste lines. Instead of expending energy to get rid of it, we'd get energy from it. The start up costs would be high, but as energy prices continue to rise it may look more attractive.