Boffin suggested that the monkeypox outbreak was connected to mRNA vaccines Kanekoa’s Newsletter | August 13, 2022 Professor Shmuel Shapira, M.D., MPH, served as the Director General of the Israel Institute for Biological Research (IIBR) between 2013 and 2021, where he led Israel’s effort to develop a coronavirus vaccine. Prof. Shapira is also the founder […]
Twitter Censors Pfizer-Injured Israeli COVID Vaccine Director
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Ammonia & Fuel Cells
January 2019
PEM Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles
A number of the world’s leading automobile manufacturers have commenced making Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEV’s) in recent years. These vehicles have PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane) fuel cells which are fueled by hydrogen gas carried on board in high pressure gas tanks. The fuel cells provide a very efficient conversion of the energy contained in the hydrogen fuel, into electricity to propel the vehicle. This conversion efficiency is much higher than that achieved using the hydrogen fuel in an internal combustion engine and it is therefore likely that the FCEV’s will be the carbon free way forward rather than hydrogen fueled combustion engines. The leading manufacturers of FCEV’s are:
– Toyota with their Mirai
– Hyundai with their Nexo
These FCEV’s have high pressure 700 bar hydrogen gas tanks on board to achieve a reasonable energy density. The vehicles can be re fueled…
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The QUANT: A Fast Electric car that really Works on a Saltwater solution, and a Battery that never Wears Out.
Sounds too good to be true, but this car exists already with limited public sales beginning this year (2016). It first came out as the super expensive Quant e-Sportlimosine prototype and now the Quantino family saloon (see QUANTINO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5Ic8XI3GlM) . The advantage, for you and the planet, is you need no oil or electricity, just fill up with 2 ‘cheap salty solutions’. The QUANT is projected to finally cost similar to other electric cars
Not so long ago, excitement rose to a fevered pitch with the announcement of a budget Tesla car slated to hit…
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How to DUMP Fossil Fuels… Alex Lightman.. CO2-free fuel
At last a major ‘tech guru’ is in favour of green-NH3, the non-fossil aand CO2-free fuel that has always existed, suppressed by the fossil fuel industry. (See Ted Talk below). We’ve been saying it for years with zero impact. all combustion motors can be run on green NH3, cutting climate destroying gases by 30% and abolishing air pollution, saving millions from an agonizing death.
Alex Lightman has challenged the oil giants, with
- his brilliant Ted-talk ‘How To Rid The US of Fossil Fuels by 2030′ see below. ,
- slideshow (see below)
- his presentation at the NH3 Fuel Conference : NH3, Food Security, and The Transition to Fossil Fuel Free
- and his coming book “The Infinite Feast: Food Security via Clean Energy”
Its a huge advance for green-NH3 (ie. ammonia from renewables) and comes hard on the heels of Toyota’s CO2-free ammonia prototype sportscar.. and the proposal to convert part…
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NH3 from Renewable-source Electricity, Water, and Air: Technology Options and Economics Modeling
Bill Leighty, The Leighty Foundation
11th Annual NH3 Fuel Conference, September 23, 2014
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NH3, Food Security, and The Transition to Fossil Fuel Free
Keynote Speech 2014
Alex Lightman, Chairman, GINET and Everblaze
11th Annual NH3 Fuel Conference, September 22, 2014
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Life-cycle greenhouse gas and energy balance of community-scale wind powered ammonia production
Joel Tallaksen* (1), Fredric Bauer (2), Christian Hulteberg (2), Michael Reese (1), and Serina Ahlgren (3)
(1) West Central Research & Outreach Center, University of Minnesota
(2) Department of Chemical Engineering, Lund University, Sweden,
(3) Department of Energy and Technology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
11th Annual NH3 Fuel Conference, September 23, 2014
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A Green Ammonia Economy
Yoshitsugu Kojima
Institute for Advanced Materials Research, Hiroshima University
Tenth Annual NH3 Fuel Conference, September 23, 2013
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Hydrogen from Ammonia breakthrough for car fuels
Hydrogen breakthrough could be a game-changer for the future of car fuels
Jun 24, 2014 by Marion O’sullivan
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-06-hydrogen-breakthrough-game-changer-future-car.html#jCp
1st published June 24 2014 by Marion O’sullivan
UK researchers today announced what they believe to be a game changer in the use of hydrogen as a “green” fuel. Continue reading “Hydrogen from Ammonia breakthrough for car fuels”
Fill her up… with ammonia! NH3 fuel is carbon-free
Looking to the past for the fuel of the future
IN NOVEMBER 1942, Belgium’s public bus system ground to a halt, crippled by a wartime shortage of diesel.
The standstill caused chaos. Engineers at the country’s public transport company got to work and by April 1943 the service was up and running again. They had adapted about 100 buses to run on an alternative fuel – liquid ammonia, pumped into tanks on the buses’ roofs.
The experiment was short-lived, but it proved the point that ammonia – plus a small amount of coal gas to help combustion – could be used as a transport fuel.
Seventy years later, ammonia may be ready to ride to the rescue again. As a fuel it has a number of attractive attributes. It doesn’t release carbon when burned, is relatively easy to store and transport, and could take advantage of an existing infrastructure of storage tanks, transport ships and pipelines.
These attributes give ammonia an edge over hydrogen, long touted as the fuel of the future in a hypothetical “hydrogen economy”. It also has certain advantages over electricity, which has storage problems of its own.
Ammonia isn’t a panacea. Conventional production consumes a lot of energy, the infrastructure is still dwarfed by that for petroleum, and engines would need to be modified to run on pure ammonia (like Belgium’s buses, most experimental vehicles need some conventional fuel mixed in with the ammonia).
But interest is growing in new production processes that use renewable energy (see “Grab ammonia out of thin air for fuel of the future“). If successful they could form the seeds of a low-carbon “ammonia economy” – which would actually be a hydrogen economy of sorts, with ammonia acting as the storage medium for hydrogen.
The road to a low-carbon future won’t be straightforward, and it seems certain that we will need a range of energy sources to arrive there in good time.
Ammonia ought to be part of the mix.
This article appeared in print under the headline “Fill her up… with ammonia”
much more info here
https://co2freefuelexistsnow.wordpress.com/
Looking to the past for the fuel of the future
IN NOVEMBER 1942, Belgium’s public bus system ground to a halt, crippled by a wartime shortage of diesel.
The standstill caused chaos. Engineers at the country’s public transport company got to work and by April 1943 the service was up and running again. They had adapted about 100 buses to run on an alternative fuel – liquid ammonia, pumped into tanks on the buses’ roofs.
The experiment was short-lived, but it proved the point that ammonia – plus a small amount of coal gas to help combustion – could be used as a transport fuel.
Seventy years later, ammonia may be ready to ride to the rescue again. As a fuel it has a number of attractive attributes. It doesn’t release carbon when burned, is relatively easy to store and transport, and could take advantage of an existing infrastructure…
View original post 201 more words










