The Anonymous Widower

More Problems For Coal

I am not a great fan of coal as, I think it’s a dirty fuel, that is dangerous to mine and causes all sorts of problems like subsidence for the neighbours.

So this news of a large fire at Daw Mill Colliery in Warwickshire, that might spell the end of mining in the county, is just typical of the problems of this fuel.

I will not be sorry if this hastens the end of the UK coal industry.  For everybody’s sake, we should have put together a comprehensive plan to shut the lot down perhaps half a century ago.

February 26, 2013 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

A Benefit Of Fracking

To many there isn’t one benefit from using fracking to extract gas from the ground.  but here’s one even the most total opponent of the technique might concede.

Modern Railways this month states the following.

The major rail operators in the US are all reporting reduced profits as coal volumes plummeted by up to 20% in the last year. Here, the shift in generation mix is being driven principally by the exploitation of shale gas now being produced on a massive scale as a by-product of crude oil exploitation. although a frighteningly high proportion of this gas is just flared, sufficient is being used in power-generation to undermine the need for coal, and for rail freight.

I would suspect the facts are correct. So fracking is cutting the need to burn coal, thus reducing global warming, as burning gas creates less CO2.

February 24, 2013 Posted by | News, World | , , , | 5 Comments

The HS2 Eco-Report

The Sunday Times is reporting the Eco-report for HS2 stretched to 50,000 pages and weighs half-a-ton.

Partly this is due to the fact that Parliament needs a hard copy.

Surely though, that in this case to save a large number of trees, they should receive it electronically.

February 24, 2013 Posted by | News, Transport/Travel | , , , | 2 Comments

Sleepwalking Our Way To An Energy Crisis

The head of Ofgem, Alistair Buchanan, is warning that we’re running out of power capacity and that bill will rise.  It’s all in this article on the BBC.  This is the first few paragraphs.

Consumers are being warned they face higher energy bills as the UK becomes more reliant on energy imports.

In a speech, Ofgem chief executive Alistair Buchanan will say that falls in Britain’s power production capacity are likely to lead to more energy imports and customers paying more.

The energy watchdog predicts power station closures could mean a 10% fall in capacity by April alone.

So what have successive governments over the last ten or so years been doing?

Nothing really, except building useless wind farms.

We should have barraged the Severn, which done properly would create ten percent of our power.

A handful of nuclear power stations would have helped.

As would some gas extracted from fracking, which it seems now, will be the most promising cheap source of energy. Like it or not, we’ve going to have to get fracking!  Both the gas and the echnology is there! A few power cuts or higher energy bills, would turn the public’s mind!

We should of course, insulate our houses better. Wouldn’t that create a few jobs too?

My Buchanan has just appeared on the BBC.  He talked a lot of sense and we need to see more of him! But the politicians won’t like him, as he’ll make all of them unelectable.

I just sent this e-mail to the BBC.

The public is to blame, as they don’t want generating capacity like the Severn Barrage, wind farms, fracking or nuclear power stations and they continue to want to live in inefficient supposedly beautiful houses. When the bills quadruple and the lights go out, they’ll change their tune.

I suppose it will cure the immigration issue as no-one will want to come here to sit in the dark.

I doubt they’ll read it out.

February 19, 2013 Posted by | News | , , , , | 2 Comments

And People Worry About HS2 And Other Developments!

I do sometimes worry about the grip some people have on sense.  Look at this article, about the damage done by the slag heap from a coal mine to the railways near Doncaster.

We should have got rid of our coal mines just after we found we had North Sea Gas and Oil, and probably developed nuclear power for most of or electricity. Instead we struggled on with the world’s most polluting fuel for many years.

Now the Nimbys don’t want any developments, be they fracking, nuclear power, wind power or even new railways like HS2.  I suspect, if you had a vote on new motorways it would pass, provided they didn’t build one near to the voters.

But how many people will call this trouble with the trains near Doncaster, an environmental disaster caused by not getting rid of coal years ago?  I will!

February 14, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Are Lithium Ion Batteries Too Dangerous?

The Boeing 787 Dreamliner has been grounded because of the fire risk of lithium ion batteries catching fire.  There is a news item here, which discusses the problem.

Having read the article my safety first brain, says that the batteries are not proven technology for use in applications such as aviation. This piece to me is crucial.

Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger, a former US Airways pilot famed for his precision flying that enabled passengers and crew to survive an emergency landing on the Hudson River in New York, said in an interview that he wouldn’t be comfortable flying an airliner that carried lithium ion aircraft batteries in its cargo hold.

“The potential for self-ignition, for uncontained fires, is huge,” he said. The new regulations “need to be looked at very hard in the cold light of day, particularly with what has happened with the 787 batteries.”

Pilots generally don’t accept unnecessary risks.

So lets get out and do more research and testing. I have a feeling though, that this problem will be solved by the re-engineering of some old technology or a completely new and novel one, that is easily proven to be safe. But it won’t be solved quickly!

Incidentally, I just had a count up and there are five small lithium ion batteries on the table as I type this.

February 3, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 2 Comments

Are Wind Farms A Good Idea?

A wind turbine in Devon has collapsed in high winds according to this article on the BBC.

I suspect engineers and investigators will find the cause of the collapse, but it illustrates one of the problems with turbines.

Failures like these stiffen the resolve of people, who don’t want them nearby, making the costs of the installation even more uneconomic.

If we need to develop renewable power sources, there are better systems available, than putting multiple blots on the landscape.

January 31, 2013 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

Is This A Serious Or Crazy Idea?

There has been a story today about large numbers of very large wind turbines being built in the Irish midlands and the power generated being exported to the UK. Ireland would get quite a few jobs.

I think it could be one of those schemes, that may be al right in theory and budget, but doesn’t perform as it should, when it is built. In the article on the BBC web site, there are these closing paragraphs.

Richard Tol, professor of economics at University of Sussex, said he felt that the whole scheme was “crazy” and would not work in the long term .

“From an Irish perspective this is not selling the family silver; this is giving it away. There is no money staying in Ireland that I can see.

“But from the British perspective it is a good deal,” he said.

It would appear it’s being very much imposed on the Irish people and the Irish are not stupid.

So I would be very surprised if the scheme is ever fully implemented. But then I don’t like blots on the landscape, whether I can see them or not!

If we are going to have large wind farms, in my view the best place for them is offshore.

January 24, 2013 Posted by | News | , , , | 1 Comment

Fracking In The Times

The Times yesterday also had an article in favour of fracking from Alice Thomson.

As an engineer and a scientist, I tend to dismiss emotional arguments about anything, when the science and technology says otherwise. In this article, I outlined a few thoughts on the subject. I stated this in the article.

The technologies employed are still very much under development and have been used mainly in the very underpopulated parts of the United States and Canada.  The extraction is now moving towards more populous states, like Pennsylvania, and only when it is totally accepted by the inhabitants there, will it be time to use it in Europe.

My views haven’t changed  and as I said we should keep a watching brief.

We should also do more research, as I said here.

One point that we forget about onshore energy extraction, is that in Wytch Farm, we have one of the largest onshore oil fields in Europe.  It’s also slap bang in beautiful countryside.  Do we here a massive movement to close it? To me, it proves that in the UK, the oil and gas industry can be good neighbours.

If we can use fracking safely, I believe that the economics say that our energy bills will drop.

December 13, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | Leave a comment

Battersea Power Station From The South London Line

I took these pictures of Central London’s worst eyesore from the train going to Victoria from London Bridge.

It may be Europe’s largest brick building, but would anybody mourn if it were to be demolished. It’ll probably self-demolish in a short time.

December 7, 2012 Posted by | World | , , , | 1 Comment