SDSU help lead the way to ethanol back in the 1970's now we are up front in developing hydrogen production. Highlights from a Washington post story.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...050100692.html
Midwest Research Projects Look to Hydrogen
The Associated Press
Sunday, May 1, 2005; 8:05 PM
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. -- Several research projects in South Dakota and neighboring states are looking to hydrogen as a fuel source that could reduce air pollution, global warming and dependence on foreign oil.
Hydrogen is seen as an ideal alternative to fossil fuels since it doesn't release carbon dioxide, a leading cause of global warming. But because there is no abundant natural source of pure hydrogen, it must come from other sources. . . .
"We hope this region can be an absolute leader in the production of hydrogen," Rolf Nordstrom of the Minneapolis-based Upper Midwest Hydrogen Initiative said in a speech last month to an energy conference in Sioux Falls.
Midwest researchers are working on several ideas.
_ At South Dakota State University in Brookings, scientists want to build a manure digester that would turn the resulting gas into a renewable source of hydrogen.
Plans are on hold because of a shift in federal funding. But Kevin Kephart, director of the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station, said researchers are ready to build once the money is there. . . .
Go State! ;D
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...050100692.html
Midwest Research Projects Look to Hydrogen
The Associated Press
Sunday, May 1, 2005; 8:05 PM
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. -- Several research projects in South Dakota and neighboring states are looking to hydrogen as a fuel source that could reduce air pollution, global warming and dependence on foreign oil.
Hydrogen is seen as an ideal alternative to fossil fuels since it doesn't release carbon dioxide, a leading cause of global warming. But because there is no abundant natural source of pure hydrogen, it must come from other sources. . . .
"We hope this region can be an absolute leader in the production of hydrogen," Rolf Nordstrom of the Minneapolis-based Upper Midwest Hydrogen Initiative said in a speech last month to an energy conference in Sioux Falls.
Midwest researchers are working on several ideas.
_ At South Dakota State University in Brookings, scientists want to build a manure digester that would turn the resulting gas into a renewable source of hydrogen.
Plans are on hold because of a shift in federal funding. But Kevin Kephart, director of the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station, said researchers are ready to build once the money is there. . . .
Go State! ;D
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