We have already developed nuclear fusion that creates more energy than it takes to produce it ... however, with this new and far-reaching development: headlined as a 'Game Changer': we can produce liquid carbohydrate fuel (currently) for $3-$6 per gallon from seawater, vastly reducing pollution impacts in a variety ways.
The U.S. Naval Research Laboratoryâs (NRL) Materials Science and Technology Division announced Monday that it had already flown a radio-controlled replica of a World War II plane using hydrocarbon fuel made from seawater.
The fuel is created with the help of an electrolytic cation exchange module, a machine which removes carbon dioxide from seawater while simultaneously producing hydrogen. The gases are then formed into liquid hydrocarbons by a metal catalyst in a reactor system, the lab said in a statement.
"In close collaboration with the Office of Naval Research P38 Naval Reserve program, NRL has developed a game changing technology for extracting, simultaneously, CO2 and H2 from seawater," said Dr. Heather Willauer, an NRL research chemist. âThis is the first time technology of this nature has been demonstrated with the potential for transition, from the laboratory, to full-scale commercial implementation.â
Fuel produced this way would cost an estimated $3-6 per gallon, the NRL says, and could be commercially viable within the next seven to ten years with proper funding and partnerships.
