The Anonymous Widower

Wrightbus StreetDeck Ultroliner Next-Gen To Get Cummins Power

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Route One.

These three paragraphs give more details.

Wrightbus will utilise Cummins power in its StreetDeck Ultroliner diesel double-decker for the first time in a next-generation variant of that model.

Those vehicles will be powered by the six-cylinder B6.7 engine rated at 250bhp or 300bhp, driving through the Voith DIWA.8 seven-speed automatic gearbox. Such an approach will further reduce emissions, and the new model will be Ultra-Low Emission Bus accredited by Zemo Partnership, the manufacturer says.

The existing StreetDeck Ultroliner, which is powered by the Daimler OM 934 four-cylinder engine, will continue to be available. The first Cummins-powered examples are to be supplied to Isle of Man operator Bus Vannin.

As a hydrogen version of the the Cummins six-cylinder B6.7 engine is available, at some point in the future, these buses will be convertible to zero-emission hydrogen power.

Wrightbus have already set up a division called New Power to do the conversion of existing buses, as I reported in Wrightbus Launches NewPower In Bicester.

November 22, 2024 Posted by | Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 3 Comments

DOE Funds Research Into Long-Duration Energy Storage Using Lead-Acid Batteries

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Best Magazine.

This is the sub-heading

US federal cash is on its way to fund research into long-duration energy storage using lead-acid batteries.

These two paragraphs give more details.

A consortium backed by industry bodies Battery Council International and the Consortium for Battery Innovation, will conduct pre-competitive research aimed at improving lead battery performance. Companies participating in the consortium include Advanced Battery Concepts, C&D/Trojan, Clarios, Crown Battery, East Penn Manufacturing, EnerSys, Gridtential and Stryten Energy. The collaborating national laboratories are Argonne, Oak Ridge and Pacific Northwest (PNNL).

The $5 million award from the US Department of Energy, announced on 27 September, will support work to develop lead batteries capable of 10+ hours of storage with a pathway to $0.05/kWh levelised cost of storage by 2030.

Note.

  1. The companies involved have names that indicate they could be battery makers.
  2. The collaborating national laboratories are world-class Premier League players.
  3. Over the nearly fifty years, that I drove cars, lead-acid batteries improved a lot and there might be more to come.
  4. The last paragraph is ambitious, unless they know more than I do about lead-acid batteries. Which is likely!

This is also said in one of Highview Power’s news items.

Highview Power, the global leader in long-duration energy storage solutions, is pleased to announce that it has developed a modular cryogenic energy storage system, the CRYOBattery, that is scalable up to multiple gigawatts of energy storage and can be located anywhere. This technology reaches a new benchmark for a levelized cost of storage (LCOS) of $140/MWh for a 10-hour, 200 MW/2 GWh system. Highview Power’s cryogenic energy storage system is equivalent in performance to, and could potentially replace, a fossil fuel power station. Highview Power’s systems can enable renewable energy baseload power at large scale, while also supporting electricity and distribution systems and providing energy security.

The battery researchers are saying $0.05/kWh levelised cost of storage by 2030 and Highview Power are saying $0.14/kWh for the same parameter.

Could Elon Musk’s Relationship With Donald Trump Be The Fly In The Ointment?

Would Musk want research to go on, that might weaken the use of his lithium-ion batteries for stationary applications?

November 21, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Matchday Travel Made Easy With Lumo

The title of this post, is the same as that as this new item from Gateshead FC.

These three paragraphs outline the partnership between Lumo and Gateshead FC.

Lumo, our official rail partner, continues to offer Gateshead fans the perfect means for travelling to London and back on away days.

Operating exclusively electric trains, Lumo’s fleet run at times convenient for football matches, allowing fans to travel to London from Newcastle train station in just under 3 hours and vice versa. Lumo is committed to delivering sustainable travel without compromising on comfort, convenience, or cost.

Discover the tips and offers from Lumo below to make planning your next trip to t Capital easier, more affordable, and completely hassle-free.

Two tips and offers are listed.

  1. Plan Ahead – Tickets Available Until Spring 2025.
  2. Stay Flexible With LumoFlex

I have a few thoughts and observations.

Lumo Is Faster Than AI

According to the September 2024 Edition of Modern Railways, Lumo holds the record of two hours and 33 minutes from King’s Cross to Newcastle.

  • Google’s AI-enhanced search engine gives three minutes longer.
  • Looks like a stupid computer to me.

If Lumo could keep their record pace going to Edinburgh, they’d be in the Scottish Capital in three hours 43 minutes after leaving King’s Cross.

There Are Eleven Teams In The Same Division Of The National League As Gateshead, That Can Be Reached Easily From London

The teams are.

  • Aldershot Town – Train from Waterloo
  • Barnet – Underground and Bus
  • Braintree – Train from Liverpool Street
  • Dagenham & Redbridge – Underground and Bus
  • Eastleigh – Train from Waterloo
  • Ebbsfleet United – Thameslink
  • Maidenhead – Elizabeth Line
  • Southend United – Train from Liverpool Street
  • Sutton United – Thameslink
  • Wealdstone – Underground
  • Woking – Train from Waterloo

Note.

  1. Maidenhead and Sutton United are probably the easiest.
  2. Woking could be the most difficult.
  3. Thameslink and the Elizabeth Line are useful.

If Lumo bring a train-full of passengers to London, that is 400 passengers per train at £18 each way, if all supporters get the best price.

So each train could produce £14,400, if it was full. If Lumo can run ten-car instead of five-car trains, that doubles the revenue to £28,800.

I think Lumo see this as a nice little earner and they are going for it.

Conclusion

Train companies could support fans a lot better than they do.

November 21, 2024 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My First Ride In An Irizar ie tram

I took these pictures as we travelled from Orpington station to Crystal Palace.

These are my thoughts. In My Second Ride In A Wrightbus Single-Decker Hydrogen Bus, I talk about the Wrightbus single-decker hydrogen bus. Both buses are going for the single-decker zero-carbon market.

Design And Build Quality

The design and build quality of both buses is excellent, but then I suspect Irizar and Wrightbus are giving the bus companies, what they feel they need, within the various regulations.

Both buses had USB charging for phones and I particularly liked the seats in the Spanish bus for being very comfortable.

Road Holding

None of my rides in these two buses were at a particularly fast speed, but both vehicles handled the roads in and South of South London with very little difficulty.

Both vehicles felt much more like mini-coaches, rather than small buses, which is probably a good thing.

Battery Charging Of The ie Tram

I watched this at Crystal Palace. But for some reason my camera wasn’t recording the time. So I don’t know how long it took.

Hydrogen Or Battery Power

When you are in the bus, you don’t have any idea, what the fuel is. Both buses are mouse quiet, but I do feel that hydrgen’s longer range and greater power may mean it is better on some routes.

So some bus companies will go hydrogen and some will go battery.

 

November 21, 2024 Posted by | Design, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

The Versatile Substance That Is Carbon Black

I suspect very few of us think much about carbon black.

In an over fifty-year working life, I have only come across carbon black indirectly and no-one has actually shown me any carbon black.

This is the first sentence of the Wikipedia entry for carbon black.

Carbon black (with subtypes acetylene black, channel black, furnace black, lamp black and thermal black) is a material produced by the incomplete combustion of coal tar, vegetable matter, or petroleum products, including fuel oil, fluid catalytic cracking tar, and ethylene cracking in a limited supply of air.

It doesn’t sound the most appetising of substances and the next sentence reinforces that view.

Carbon black is a form of paracrystalline carbon that has a high surface-area-to-volume ratio, albeit lower than that of activated carbon. It is dissimilar to soot in its much higher surface-area-to-volume ratio and significantly lower (negligible and non-bioavailable) polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) content.

The text is illustrated with what looks like a small pile of soot.

I first came across carbon black, in my first job after leaving Liverpool University at ICI Mond Division at Runcorn.

For a time, I shared an office with Peter, who was part of a number of engineers, who were trying to get a new plant, that had been purchased from BASF to make commercial quantities of acetylene. All the plant seemed to make was large quantities of soot, which it then proceeded to spread all over the town of Runcorn.

If I remember correctly, the process worked by burning ethylene in a limited supply of air and then quenching it with naphtha. The similarities between the BASF process and the method for producing carbon black lead me to believe, that ICI’s process was probably producing a lot of carbon black.

Peter was working on an instrument that measured the quantity of acetylene in the off-gas from the burners and he succeeded, but unfortunately proved that the plant was going into explosive limits. For this reason, ICI shut their process, although BASF persevered.

Ethylene is a hydrocarbon which has the formula C2H4 or two carbon and four hydrogen atoms. So if you can get them to stop tightly holding hands with no oxygen around, the hydrogen will pair off as H2 and the carbon will exist as a lot of single C atoms or carbon black.

BASF  and ICI were trying to produce acetylene or C2H2, where there is a powerful triple bond between the two carbon atoms. All that energy in the acetylene makes it useful for activities like welding.

Common Uses Of Carbon Black

The Wikipedia entry for carbon black, has this summary of its uses.

The most common use (70%) of carbon black is as a pigment and reinforcing phase in automobile tires. Carbon black also helps conduct heat away from the tread and belt area of the tire, reducing thermal damage and increasing tire life. Its low cost makes it a common addition to cathodes and anodes and is considered a safe replacement to lithium metal in lithium-ion batteries. About 20% of world production goes into belts, hoses, and other non-tire rubber goods. The remaining 10% use of carbon black comes from pigment in inks, coatings, and plastics, as well as being used as a conductive additive in lithium-ion batteries.

The entry then gives a list of other uses, some of which are still being developed.

Global Production Of Carbon Black

This paragraph is from the Wikipedia entry for carbon black.

Total production was around 8,100,000 metric tons (8,900,000 short tons) in 2006. Global consumption of carbon black, estimated at 13.2 million metric tons, valued at US$13.7 billion, in 2015, is expected to reach 13.9 million metric tons, valued at US$14.4 billion in 2016.

So we have the useful paradox, that we don’t want to emit more carbon dioxide, but extra carbon black could probably be usefully used.

Conclusion

Using the HiiROC process to extract hydrogen could even give us a biproduct ; carbon black, that has uses.

November 20, 2024 Posted by | Hydrogen, Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , | 2 Comments

Regulator Approves New Go-op Train Service Between Swindon, Taunton and Weston-super-Mare

The title of this post, is the same as that of this press release from the Office of Rail and Road.

This is the sub-heading.

The rail regulator has given the go ahead for new train services between Swindon, Taunton and Weston-super-Mare from the end of 2025. The regulator has also set conditions on its approval to ensure the new, co-operatively owned operator has sufficient finance and rolling stock in place in good time.

These paragraphs from the press release give more details.

Go-op plans to operate return weekday and weekend services between Taunton and Weston-super-Mare, Taunton and Westbury, Taunton and Swindon, and Frome and Westbury.

It will compete with Great Western Railway (GWR), a public service operator. Go-op plans to start in December 2025 at the earliest, and must do so no later than December 2026 in order to use the capacity ORR has granted.

As part of ORR’s decision, Go-op must provide evidence to ORR of the necessary finance to start operations, fund level crossing enhancements, and that the necessary rolling stock has been secured. ORR’s decision requires Go-op to do this without delay, and no later than November 2025.

I must admit I’m a little surprised at the Office of Rail and Road giving approval.

There is more on the Go-op web site.

November 20, 2024 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 2 Comments

London’s New Tram-Like Buses Come Into Service

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

I went to Orpington station and all I saw was several small diesel single-decker buses running around in the awful cold.

So I retreated on a warm train after a couple of hours.

One driver said that the reams were running and she looked genuinely disappointed, that they hadn’t turned up.

But from my knowledge of electric vehicles, although not Irizar ie Trams, I do wonder if the single-figure temperatures in Orpington had drained the batteries.

But I can’t imagine a company like Irizar making a mistake like that.

Although one of the station men said that Orpington can get to be a very cold station. Now that is something I’ll agree with!

In the other hand the 358 route takes an hour from end to end, so in my opinion, it might have been better to use hydrogen-powered buses.

November 20, 2024 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Bord Gáis Energy Acquires Leading Irish Solar PV Installer Swyft Energy

The title of this post, is the same as that of this news item from Centrica.

This is the sub-heading.

Bord Gáis Energy today announced the acquisition of Swyft Energy, a leading solar PV provider in Ireland for an undisclosed sum.

Note.

  1. Bord Gáis Energy is a subsidiary of Centrica.
  2. Swyft Energy has this web site.

These three paragraphs give more details of the acquisition.

Bord Gáis Energy already operates in the solar PV market: directly to residential customers, and through its partnership with Irish Farmer’s Association delivering solar PV to farms across Ireland, helping farmers transition to green energy. The acquisition of Swyft Energy now brings deeper solar PV capability to residential as well as business and farming customers of Bord Gáis Energy, as the company transitions to a green energy business.

Swyft Energy, a technology-led solar PV and boiler installation company, brings over six years of experience in delivering customer-focused solutions using a digital-first platform. This acquisition enhances Bord Gáis Energy’s highly skilled workforce and strengthens its customer proposition.

With a target of 10,000 installations over the next 5 years, this will allow Bord Gáis Energy to compete better for the growing demand for solar energy in residential, commercial and agricultural sectors. Customers can save an average of 50-70% on their electricity bills with the installation of rooftop solar panels.

The deal certainly looks a good fit between two ambitious companies, who are operating in similar areas of the Irish market.

I have my thoughts and observations.

Are Bord Gáis Energy And Swyft Energy Stronger Together?

Do both companies feel, that by working together, they will be stronger from a financial point of view?

It wouldn’t be unusual for this to be a reason behind a deal like this.

Centrica Are Making Lots Of Deals At The Present Time

Centrica are also continuing, the tendency to expand, that they’ve shown in recent weeks.

These are some of the deals I have noted.

Centrica certainly have been busy expanding.

Energy Storage In The Island Of Ireland

It is generally accepted, that if you have a lot of renewable energy, then you need a lot of energy storage, to bridge the gaps in wind and solar.

In the Wikipedia entry for Energy In Ireland, there is a section called Energy Storage.

It seems to me, that Ireland could be short on energy storage, so is it likely that the enlarged Bord Gáis Energy will look for possibilities for energy storage.

Recently, Centrica formed a business relationship with Highview Power, who are developing environmentally-friendly liquid-air batteries. These smaller and more affordable batteries might be suitable for the island of Ireland.

Conclusion

There’s more to this deal, than at first meets the eye.

November 19, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Finance & Investment | , , , , , | Leave a comment

First Commercial-Scale Seaweed Farm Between Wind Turbines Fully Operational In Netherlands

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The world’s first commercial-scale seaweed farm within the Hollandse Kust Zuid offshore wind farm in the Netherlands is fully operational.

These initial three paragraphs fill out the details.

According to the non-profit organisation North Sea Farmers (NSF), the final deployment step was completed one week ago by deploying the seeded substrate.

North Sea Farm 1, initiated by NSF with funding from Amazon’s Right Now Climate Fund, is a floating farm located in the open space between wind turbines where seaweed production can be tested and improved.

The seaweed farm is located within the Hollandse Kust Zuid wind farm, nearly 22 kilometres off the coast of Scheveningen. The 1.5 GW project is owned by Vattenfall, BASF, and Allianz.

I find this an interesting concept.

I can remember reading in the Meccano Magazine in the 1950s, about the production of alginates from seaweed in Scotland.

Surprisingly, Wikipedia has very little on alginates, except for this illuminating Wikipedia entry for alginic acid.

This is the opening paragraph.

Alginic acid, also called algin, is a naturally occurring, edible polysaccharide found in brown algae. It is hydrophilic and forms a viscous gum when hydrated. When the alginic acid binds with sodium and calcium ions, the resulting salts are known as alginates. Its colour ranges from white to yellowish-brown. It is sold in filamentous, granular, or powdered forms.

But it does appear that the Scottish production of alginates is very much of the past. Unless someone else can enlighten me!

Perhaps Scottish seaweed farming can be revived to produce alginates, which appear to have a surprising number of uses, as this section of the Wikipedia entry shows.

Alginates do appear to be remarkably useful.

These are a few uses.

  • As of 2022 alginate had become one of the most preferred materials as an abundant natural biopolymer.
  • Sodium alginate is mixed with soybean protein to make meat analogue.
  • They are an ingredient of Gaviscon and other pharmaceuticals.
  • Sodium alginate is used as an impression-making material in dentistry, prosthetics, lifecasting, and for creating positives for small-scale casting.
  • Sodium alginate is used in reactive dye printing and as a thickener for reactive dyes in textile screen-printing.
  • Calcium alginate is used in different types of medical products, including skin wound dressings to promote healing,

Alginates seem to have some rather useful properties.

Four years ago, I tripped over in my bedroom, which I wrote about in An Accident In My Bedroom. I wonder if the Royal London Hospital used calcium alginate skin dressings to restore my hand to its current condition.

Paul Daniels would have said, “It’s magic!”

In the future these dressings may be produced from UK-produced seaweed.

 

 

 

November 19, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Food | , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Marks & Spencer Get A Bit Cheeky

I bought these strawberries in Marks and Spencer on Moorgate, yesterday.

Note.

  1. They have a Best Before Date of Thursday.
  2. They were grown in West Sussex by the Summer Berry Co.

But I do think it is a bit cheeky to label them with a yellow label saying “New Season”!

Their web site gives a few answers.

 

November 19, 2024 Posted by | Food | , , , | 1 Comment