by Elumia » Mon Apr 28, 2008 12:43 pm
We have plenty of room for new "power plants" on the roofs of every Walmart, grocery store, and even homes are suitable for solar and some wind. It will just take the will (and subsidies like Germany has done) to make it happen. Could the local power company lease the roof of the Walmart? Will Walmart develop an energy company? Why not require every new shopping center over 100,000 square feet to fill its roof with solar panels? With this kind of mandate, solar panels will come down to a price that most of us can afford.
How much would you pay as a "parking fee" if you could plug in for a charge while you shopped? How about a meter on the receptacle, insert your visa and the flow of electrons begins.
We also need to turn more waste into fuel. A pilot program at a local utility is turning oil and grease recovered from the sewer into biodiesel. They believe they can get 100K gallons a year, enough to fuel their fleet for a year.
Many sewer utilities also digest waste into methane to supplement electrical use.
I'd much rather drive an electric car. 100% available torque at 0 speed. No more emissions check, no more check engine light, catalytic converters and all that mechanical maintenance. If I could recharge at home, no stopping at the gas station. The only thing holding back is a viable battery/charging technology for long term driving. I think Most people would be happy to have a vehicle that they could reliably drive 2-300 miles a day. they seem to be afraid of the "what if I want to go on a road trip". That could be solved with some sort of hybrid.
It's too bad the Neighborhood electric vehicles (NEV) are limited to 25MPH. If the government allowed speeds up to 40MPH, they would be much more suitable for in town trips like going to the store and taking kids to school. Thinking outside the box, they would be the ideal vehicle to let kids learn to drive in alone. From 16-18 you could get a license for a NEV (alone) or with an adult in a highway car, after 18 you could qualify for a full fledged highway capable car by yourself.
We have plenty of alternatives in this country, we just need to think in other directions.
Mark