For a bloke who repairs £20 waterbutts and fishes for bikes from bridge parapets, your lack of ingenuity and derring-do surprises me somewhat.
I do what it is practical to do, the impossible - often takes a little longer.
For a bloke who repairs £20 waterbutts and fishes for bikes from bridge parapets, your lack of ingenuity and derring-do surprises me somewhat.
Water in the Sahara, is surprisingly lacking.
It is, however, unsurprisingly (very) abundant within a few tens of miles of its northern boundary.
Sea water, is not the best, for splitting into H and O.
For a bloke who repairs £20 waterbutts and fishes for bikes from bridge parapets, your lack of ingenuity and derring-do surprises me somewhat.
Sea water, is not the best, for splitting into H and O.
There must be scope for solar energy and desalination plants, plus crops grown under plastic. Must help long term with climate change.
a very expensive process.
The team hopes to scale up their project for commercial production in ammonia synthesis, and to generate hydrogen fuel cells. "
Lots of idea appear, but never prove to be practical, or to scale up.
Unless you have limitless supplies of low cost energy on siteThere certainly is, but desalination is a very expensive process.
It was some thing to do with a German house builder and Viessman were involved ?
All gone quiet and have heard nowt about it
Depending on precisely what's being claimed, that's highly unlikely. It would violate various laws of physics.Apparently if you melt ice and re freeze it you create energy that can be used to heat the prop ?