Friday, February 26, 2010

Sustainable

Any method for doing anything that cannot be sustained for 100 billion years minimum is unsustainable. Nothing is sustainable in the long term. So why not just focus on getting by with an eye towards future requirements?

And let me add that the things people were doing 200 years ago were unsustainable. And 200 years hence?

My definition of sustainable? Can we keep it up for about 100 years? Which is time enough to figure out what to do next.

Which was brought up by a discussion of the Bloom Box fuel cell and water heater.

Now if you want to get more into the technology of the Bloom Box here are a couple of very pricey books that may help:

Biofuels for Fuel Cells (Integrated Environmental Technology)

That came out in 2006. I wonder if The Bloom Boys got some ideas there? Here is one of the latest books in the field:

Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Technology: Principles, Performance and Operations

I haven't read either of them so I can't give any recommendations.

Cross Posted at Classical Values

2 comments:

ZenDraken said...

Sustainability is an absolutely critical and often misused guiding principle.

Sustainability has been misused by environmentalists, who neglect *economic* sustainability. An environmental policy that is economically unsustainable... Will not be sustained. So why waste resources on it? Or figure out how to make it economically sustainable.

And speaking of unsustainable, how about that multi-trillion dollar deficit spending, hm?

LarryD said...

If the astrophysics are right, nothing on Earth can be sustained for longer than 500 million years, at which point the Sun will have grown hot enough that the habitable zone moves out past Earth.

And if we don't have an asteroid defense system in place, we certainly won't last that long.

32,000 metric tons of Uranium are eroded into the oceans annually, with billions of years worth precipitated onto the ocean floors. So nuclear fission is sustainable to a significant degree.