The Anonymous Widower

Developing A Rural Hydrogen Network

On my last stud farm, we had three regular fuel deliveries.

  • Propane to heat the house and offices.
  • Red diesel to power the tractor and farm machinery.
  • Road diesel to power the horse box and a couple of diesel cars, that went on the roads.

Note.

  1. Like most farms in the UK, we didn’t have mains gas.
  2. The local low-life of whom you never speak their name, used to regularly steal the diesel.
  3. Stealing of diesel in rural areas of the UK is a big industry.
  4. The police did nothing to stop the thefts as the culprits are untouchable.
  5. We had two boilers, that both ran on the propane.
  6. Modern boilers can be converted from propane to use hydrogen.
  7. All cars, trucks, farm vehicles and machinery on the stud farm could in the future use hydrogen.

Propane and diesel would be replaced by clean hydrogen.

Delivering The Fuel

Consider.

  • Propane and diesel are currently delivered in rural areas by truck.
  • Hydrogen will be delivered the same way and stored in a tank designed for hydrogen, which could be similar in appearance to current propane tanks.
  • Boilers would be directly piped to the hydrogen tank.
  • The technology exists to fill hydrogen-powered vehicles and equipment from hydrogen tanks.
  • I believe that a thief-proof hydrogen tank would be possible.
  • The hydrogen will be delivered as needed in a hydrogen-powered truck.

I believe companies like Centrica, will develop the technology so that farms and businesses could have their own hydrogen system.

 

Supplying The Hydrogen

Electrolysers would be needed around the country.

Some could be based on nuclear sites, where others could be powered by offshore wind.

Hydrogen Safety

Hydrogen safety has its own Wikipedia entry.

The entry starts with a description of the Hindenberg Disaster, which has a detailed Wikipedia entry of its own.

I’ve spoken to someone, who was there; Dory Previn, who later wrote a song about it.

The Hydrogen safety Wikipedia entry has this paragraph.

There are many codes and standards regarding hydrogen safety in storage, transport, and use. These range from federal regulations, ANSI/AIAA, NFPA, and ISO standards. The Canadian Hydrogen Safety Program concluded that hydrogen fueling is as safe as, or safer than, compressed natural gas (CNG) fueling,

I’ve also talked to German schoolchildren about their hydrogen trains and as you are educated about hydrogen, the fear decreases and the safety increases.

Hydrogen-Powered Lawnmowers And Garden Tractors

Everybody likes a lush, green lawn.

Surely, yours is better, if your lawnmower emits no carbon dioxide!

Electric will work, but if you have a hydrogen-powered lawnmower, that can be filled from your central heating tank, that is better.

Collateral Benefits

These would be collateral benefits.

  • One set of tankers would be replaced by a single zero-carbon hydrogen tanker, thus reducing road traffic.
  • I believe there would be less fuel theft.
  • Rural businesses, that needed gas like blacksmiths could be supplied.
  • A lot of buildings with a propane-fuelled boiler could be converted to hydrogen.

It would be a path to decarbonisation of the rural economy.

How Big Is The Off-Grid Energy Market?

A document on the House of Commons web site says this.

An estimated 4.4 million households across Great Britain were not connected to the gas grid in 2021. This was 15.1% of domestic properties.

If the average gas bill is £100/month, then that is £1200/year, which works out at £5,280,000,000.

When you add in off-grid businesses, that would need fuel and hydrogen fuel for vehicles and agricultural equipment, the market can’t be much short of £10 billion.

Conclusion

As it is a multi-billion pound marketplace. someone will develop it.

 

April 11, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 5 Comments

My Musical Taste

As a teenager growing up in North London in the 1960s, I saw a lot of the bands of the time.  I saw the Stones, the Animals, Adam Faith and quite a few others at the Regal Cinema in Edmonton.

We also mounted a school outing in 1974 to see the Beatles, supported by the Yardbird, at Hammersmith Odeon.

At Liverpool in the 1960s, the University always had the best bands and I saw such as the Who, Manfred Mann, John Mayall and many others on Saturday nights at the Mountford Hall in the Student Guild.

At that time, I also went to various concerts in London and saw Eric Clapton with John Mayall at the Manor House, with to say he got paralytic would be a severe understatement. I was also at Cook’s Ferry Inn, when the Animals tried out the possible replacements for Alan Price.

My going to concerts stopped around the late 1960s, as I was married and as our children were born in 1969, 1970 and 1972, we went out less and less.

It was about that time, that I discovered Dory Previn, for whom I have had an admiration ever since. I actually saw her in concert at the Donmar Warehouse  sometime in the 1980s.

It is true to say that Liverpool, the 1960s and Dory Previn defined by musical taste.

I have only ever been to the occasional classical concert over the years, although C and I did go concerts featuring such as Cleo Laine. But she wasn’t a great concert goer either. In her last years, she did listen to classical music in her car.

I have never listened to music, whilst I work, usually I’ll be watching sport on television, or listening to it on the radio. If it’s not sport, it’s either news or a documentary. I make it a point not to watch any drama series these days, although, I’ll go and watch a film or a play.  But I never watch films on television or at home.

Now, I don’t even have a DVD player. And I’m not even sure where the DVDs are!

The only concert I’ve been to, since I moved to London, was to see Kate Dimbleby sing Dory Previn, although I did see the Glasgow Citizens Theatre production of Backbeat.

Where music is concerned, I’m probably a lost cause.

June 21, 2014 Posted by | World | , | 1 Comment

Dory Previn To Be Remembered

I wish I could get to New York for this concert.

A group of gifted artists have been added to the lineup of VINEYARD CELEBRATES THE SONGS OF Dory Previn, a special, one-night-only benefit concert featuring the brilliant and iconic work of the legendary singer and songwriter on Monday, June 17, 2013 at 7:00 PM at The Vineyard (108 E. 15 St., between Irving Place and Union Square East)

But I am elsewhere on that day.

June 8, 2013 Posted by | News, World | , | Leave a comment

Return To The Hippodrome

Yesterday, I went to the newly-reopened Hippodrome Casino to see Kate Dimbleby perform in a musical entertainment written in collaboration with Amy Rosenthal, called Beware of Young Girls: The Dory Previn Story.

I must be one of the few people of my age, who have memories of the old Hippodrome Theatre, that previously stood on the site. I didn’t actually go, but in the early 1950s, I regularly had to go to the Royal Dental Hospital in Leicester Square. My mother, who had been to the theatre before the war, and I used to come up from North London on the Tube and get off at Leicester Square, where we exited the station at Hippodrome Corner. It was then a short walk to the actual square and the dental hospital. One day the builders were in and you could see right through the windows, which told how what was happening was the talk of the town. I can’t remember it actually opening as the nightclub called, The Talk of the Town, as we finished going to the dental hospital.  It’s since had a bit of a chequered history, with good and bad times and now it has been turned into a casino.

I think they’ve made a good job of it on the construction and furnishing side.  As to the gambling side, I don’t gamble in a casino.  I would though, if someone was fool enough to set up Canfield. But after my stroke, I doubt I still have the prowess I used to have. I do bet on horses, but only when the odds are longer than they should be. I once had Terimon at 500/1 each way for the Derby.  He came second.

But I do, see shows in a casino and once saw Siegfried and Roy in Las Vegas. I’ve been to Vegas several times and I’ve never gambled on anything there, which must be some sort of record.

So how was last night’s show?

I enjoyed the show and it brought back memories of Dory Previn’s show at the Donmar Warehouse in the last 1980s, where I saw her with C. The set was similar too and I wonder if Amy’s mother, Maureen Lipman,  who is thanked on the program, saw that show at the Donmar too!

I don’t think there are any original videos of Dory Previn singing, although there is this video on YouTube. It was taken on a toy camera, when she opened an Arts Centre in Springfield a couple of years ago. The songs are Jesus Had A Baby Sister and Twenty Mile Zone. Her last recording incidentally was Planet Blue, which can be downloaded free from here.

I should also say that I liked the venue too  Acoustics were good and from where I sat, I had a good view.

I didn’t actually eat, but the food seemed to be reasonably priced and as a coeliac, some of the snacks were gluten-free.

I’ll probably go again, when an artist I like is appearing.  Top class style it definitely has, but the prices aren’t out of the range of a sensible fan.

July 20, 2012 Posted by | Health, World | , , , , | 1 Comment