China Has Solved the Fuel Crisis
By
August Noble
The Chinese 2008 Olympics
presented a unique challenge to rowing and sailing athletes:
the local waterways were clogged with algae. Boats could not
navigate through the sticky tangled mass that clung like
barnacles to their hulls.
But, what was previously
considered a noxious nuisance, is proving to be a godsend.
China is converting the algae into gas. They are turning the
nutrient-rich goop into biomass fuel to power a new fleet of
green algae-mobiles. The solution is an inexpensive retrofit
that makes any car on the road a flex-fuel vehicle that can run
on virtually any combustible liquid. What Brazil has done with
sugar cane, China is about to do with
algae.
Algae is an unlimited
renewable resource, costing practically nothing to produce,
since it needs no planting, tending, or fertilizing. It feeds
on the pollution in the water, and can be grown virtually
anywhere, including sewage plants. Algae farms will soon be
dotting the landscape, churning out vast supplies of algaenol,
replacing corn-based ethanol as a better, cheaper alternative
to oil.
Perhaps the most remarkable
thing is that it all came about by accident. As the Chinese
endeavored to remove the algae, storage of the thick goo
quickly became a problem, choking landfills, until an intrepid
innovator came up with the brainstorm of turning the green
slime into biofuel. Had it not been for the Olympics, the
Chinese would never have even bothered to clear it out, and its
vast potential might never have been
tapped.
It is fitting that the algae
is green, since it has the power to turn the entire planet
green, eliminating our dependence on oil entirely, making
pollution, as well as high gas prices, a thing of the
past.
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