Jin wrote:but will the free market economy and the captilists allow us to be able to use cheaper and better fuels , oil trading will keep this fuel from ever reaching the consumer , as many are gambling their money on it ,
i've been hearing about hydrogen fuel , bio fuel , and few other fuel efficient technologies for 15 years now but nobody is doing anything except scientists who keep this hopeful situation progressing ,
I think we're reaching a critical mass for alternative energy technologies.
Hydrogen's always been iffy though will likely be feasible when it can be produced when it's being produced with sea water in conjunction with solar/wind. I doubt it as fuel for automobiles, but for general energy storage (hydrogen burning plants and the like), it'd be great.
Flow batteries have come a long way and are already being used to store wind and solar energy. MIT had a recent breakthrough that should enable its implementation in automobiles.
Diesel's improving by leaps and bounds with "electrofuels" and algae based biofuel, for instance, but butanol from cellulose seems to be the most immediate solution on a large scale if it's sufficiently funded and pursued. I would hope for automobiles that use either butanol or diesel in conjunction with being able to run purely on electricity. It's possible that market forces could smite this latest development (by mechanisms of state, perhaps), but it's only going to get harder and harder to hold back the future.