“Joby took a pre-production prototype of one of its battery-electric aircraft and outfitted it with a liquid hydrogen fuel tank and fuel system. The modified, hydrogen-powered VTOL was able to complete a 523 mile flight above Marina, California…”

  • @Allero@lemmy.today
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    14 months ago

    1.That’s where it normally comes from in the industry. I later made an assumption that this will maybe change 2-3.My point was, all energy has a cost, including environmental one. Even if you put it in an uninhabitable area, you still have to manufacture components and install the plant in a remote area (which is expensive and requires ton of landscape engineering and logistics with a very real and large footprint), and then transport hydrogen to the destination.

    • That’s where it comes from presently because we haven’t started producing significant amounts of green hydrogen yet. “This tech is useless because we aren’t doing it yet!”

      Constructing large solar and wind arrays in remote / uninhabitable areas is not free, but the land is “free” because in many cases it’s not suitable for any other use. I think a lot of people dreaming of a wind & solar renewable future underestimate the physical area required to capture enough sunlight to power everyone’s EVs.

      • @Allero@lemmy.today
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        14 months ago

        Scaling mostly reduces economic costs, not environmental ones (latter primarily through better logistics).

        I think a lot of people dreaming of a wind & solar renewable future underestimate the physical area required to capture enough sunlight to power everyone’s EVs.

        Exactly! And we’ll need even more if we want to use hydro. That’s my point, besides the fact that building cars is extremely wasteful to begin with.