Green Steel: Can We Make Steel Without CO2 Emissions?

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • Can we decarbonise the steel industry?
    The steelmaking industry has been said to be "hard-to-abate" and due for an overhaul in its production processes. It's currently responsible for about 7% of the global CO2 emissions. To keep up with the ever-growing renewables installations that require steel, we're going to need to start decarbonising the steelmaking processes.
    Companies and organisations all over the globe are currently researching and developing all manners of ways to produce steel without coal, also known as "Green Steel". In this video I talk with Dr Bart Kolodziejczyk about the traditional steelmaking process and where CO2 emissions come from. Then we discuss different ways we can get from iron ore to steel through low-emissions processes.
    Bookmarks:
    00:00 Intro
    01:11 The problem with decarbonizing the steelmaking industry
    02:13 How is iron ore turned into steel?
    02:38 Traditional Steelmaking - Iron reduction via Blast Furnace
    03:01 Using captured carbon to produce “Blue Steel”
    03:39 Other ways of reducing the CO2 emissions in steelmaking processes
    04:02 Traditional Steelmaking Continued - Refinement of pig iron into steel via Basic Oxygen Furnace
    04:19 Electric Steelmaking - Recycling scrap steel via Electric Arc Furnace
    05:06 Direct Reduced Iron - Iron reduction using gases
    05:41 Introduction to Dr Bart Kolodziejczyk
    06:17 Is steel actually a “hard-to-abate” sector?
    06:53 The option of using hydrogen to decarbonize steelmaking
    08:19 What are the other methods of producing green steel?
    08:23 Boston Metal’s Molten Oxide Electrolysis
    09:45 Low Temperature Electrolysis
    10:18 Advantages of Low Temperature Electrolysis?
    11:16 Bart’s outlook on the future of green steelmaking
    12:22 Rosie’s opinions on green steelmaking
    12:59 Current green steel projects around the world
    13:43 Outro
    If you would like to help develop the Engineering with Rosie channel, you could consider joining the Patreon community, where there is a chat community (and Patreon-only Discord server) about topics covered in the videos and suggestions for future videos and production quality improvements. / engineeringwithrosie
    Sources:
    IEA Iron and Steel Technology Roadmap: www.iea.org/reports/iron-and-...
    C&EN Can industry decarbonize steelmaking?: cen.acs.org/environment/green...
    World Steel Association Map: worldsteel.org/steel-by-topic...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 249

  • @EngineeringwithRosie
    @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +20

    The full interview (40 minutes) is available here: czcams.com/video/PHTRzeb6nMM/video.html
    We talked in more depth about the steel making process, aboutcement, and other applications of hydrogen and electrification.

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Před 2 lety

      yet more man made climate bullshit
      if that process were possible and affordable then why is it not adopted ?

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Před 2 lety

      go back to washing the dishes
      steel cannot be made without or with so called low carbon
      why do you lie so much ?

    • @mrman1536
      @mrman1536 Před 2 lety

      @@richardcowley4087 hehehe that's telling . Every one knows if good steel is to be made , the process required is using coking coal..
      It doesn't hurt to look at other ideas or processes.

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mrman1536 hilarious !
      other ideas and processes that are manipulated and lied about so much that those who have no idea think that because low or no CO2 (carbon) is mentioned then it fits the bill for the man made climate brigade
      fantasists like rosie should shut up
      you are wrong, "everyone" does not know and that "everyone" are people who think that mankind can control nature and CO2 is pollution
      Although, "everyone who knows about how steel is made" is a very different "everyone" to the agw lot !
      There is no such thing as clean, green, dirty or renewable energy, or green hydrogen all a fantasy

    • @jamesstjames1289
      @jamesstjames1289 Před 2 lety

      Or you could react the co2 with hydrogen and heat from the furnace to creat methanol in a sort of sebatier process. Rocket fuel but in a green way.

  • @AlRoderick
    @AlRoderick Před 2 lety +38

    The point about the electro chemical steel making process needing a consistent electrical supply, I wonder if it would be a good move to build an array of molten metal batteries into your steel mill when you're constructing it. You're already building a structure designed to contain molten metal so you're already sited in a place that's suitable for that kind of industrial process and you have high capacity power lines coming into your facility, it would make sense to add some backup power that you're uniquely suited to handle.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +16

      Interesting idea. I am hoping to do a video on molten metal batteries soon, I am just trying to arrange a company to let me film some of their work.

    • @michelem.6104
      @michelem.6104 Před 2 lety +2

      Great idea on utilizing liquid metal batteries (Ambri?). Utilizing a big buffer of LMB's...(tied into a large solar farm+off-shore wind farm) it could be possible for sustained steel production.

    • @AlRoderick
      @AlRoderick Před 2 lety +5

      @@michelem.6104 You wouldn't even have to use Ambris, those are designed to be transported and installed somewhere. If you're already building heat proof structures you can make giant liquid metal batteries in place. I remember some of the early research about liquid metal batteries was basically repurposing aluminum smelters, because the electrochemical process for refining aluminum is effectively a battery.

    • @Sirrangi
      @Sirrangi Před 2 lety +2

      @@AlRoderick there is a very big difference between aluminium plants and Steel mills - about 500 °C. Molten steel eats any refractory it is contained in, and a steel plant does not have the capacity to indefinitely store it in a molten state. Many steel making steps actually produce heat, which reduces the need for constant reheating, but the thermal loss is constant. A decomissioned plant may have materials useful for constructing lower temperature molten metal storage, but I can't see that there would be pbvious synergies at an active plant

    • @kayakMike1000
      @kayakMike1000 Před rokem

      AMBRI.

  • @stalwart56k
    @stalwart56k Před 2 lety +12

    Rosie, you're the bomb. Thank you for all your content :)

  • @grahamalbert3805
    @grahamalbert3805 Před 2 lety

    Great video Rosie! Thanks for sharing :)

  • @tikaanipippin
    @tikaanipippin Před 2 lety +3

    Electric Arc Furnaces have electrodes, made of Graphite, a highly refined form of Carbon, which has its own carbon footprint!

  • @TheJamesRedwood
    @TheJamesRedwood Před 2 lety

    Superb education, superb information. Subscribed!

  • @davidcebon7792
    @davidcebon7792 Před 2 lety +7

    Excellent episode on clean steel Rosie... Bart Kolodziejczyk was a great choice of interviewee.. Factual, knowledgeable and experienced... straight to the point. Thanks for a very educational walk to the shops and back!

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety

      I was really excited to score Bart as an interviewee! I learned so much from him, before this I had thought green steel was one of the (few) big roles that green hydrogen would play in the energy transition so it was interesting to learn that it's likely to be a transition technology on the way to electrification.

  • @manuelcilia391
    @manuelcilia391 Před 2 lety +1

    Always wonderful and interesting

  • @grahamstevenson1740
    @grahamstevenson1740 Před 10 měsíci +1

    One thing that would reduce demand for steel is protecting it in some applications like automobiles, so that end of useful life is no longer determined by when the bodywork rusts away ! I had a SAAB for example with galvanised bodywork panels where life could easily exceed over 20 years.

    • @konradcomrade4845
      @konradcomrade4845 Před 9 měsíci +1

      yeah, none of the "Green" automobile-haters discuss this aspect!
      btw. University Professors making steel will be a disaster. They know nothing. Those, proposing Green Steelmaking, are not experts on metallurgy, they haven't worked in steel production or anything close. Companies are doing research because of political pressure. Steel which contains residual hydrogen is brittle!
      Zinc galvanized steel is fun: in warm humid conditions, with some ammonia present it corrodes. A 2mm thick galvanized frame will corrode away within less than two years if someone has peed on it several times! ( I can't tell who did it.)
      Hydrogen and/or Phosphoros ("Rot-Bruch", red cracks) make iron brittle.
      There is one exception in India: They have a 2000-year-old steel column that doesn't rust in wind and weather! it was found to be "Goethit-alloy", which contains phosphorous. How was that column made? I suspect the Goethit-alloy is only a surface treatment. Imagine, the ancient Indians, (after casting that column), ordered 1000 men to pee on the red hot piece, to make it stronger.
      Phosphoros has a bad rap in steel technology, but I think it's value as surface treatment is not well researched.

  • @hyric8927
    @hyric8927 Před 2 lety +8

    One of the major conventional uses for hydrogen is in the production of ammonia. Even decarbonizing ammonia for conventional uses would take quite a bit of doing.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes I agree. We are starting to see a few green ammonia/fertiliser projects being announced but not as many as projects creating new uses for hydrogen. I'm hopeful that'll change over the next couple of years because replacing existing fossil hydrogen with green is a no- regrets action.

    • @gregbailey45
      @gregbailey45 Před rokem

      Green ammonia could easily be made from green hydrogen. Not sure why you say it's difficult.

    • @hyric8927
      @hyric8927 Před rokem

      @@gregbailey45 Should have been more clear. What I meant to say is that the quantity of green hydrogen needed just to decarbonize ammonia is nothing to sneeze at.

  • @lylestavast7652
    @lylestavast7652 Před 2 lety +1

    on the low temp electrolysis - you can select out specific metals... but can you use the exact same process tanks, pull the iron and then maybe pull some set of other metals sequentially to save setup times etc ? I realize you'd have to do some work on the aqueous mix to get the right salts etc in place... surely some of the ores out there contain multiple metals that could be extracted, where today maybe they're bypassed... Short note otherwise, it is so awesome to see bright young women like yourself in the engineering spaces - wasn't enough of y'all during my career...

  • @simpletim
    @simpletim Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks!

  • @ArgumentativeAtheist
    @ArgumentativeAtheist Před 2 lety

    Great video.

  • @BenMitro
    @BenMitro Před 2 lety

    A comment from ForzaJersey who made an interesting suggestion about "methane microwave assisted pyrolysis", got me wondering when such a technology could be implemented industrially. My quick google foray into this technology seems to indicate to me that this is very much in the lab stage and hasn't commenced its journey in development, let alone large scale implementation.
    Timeliness is rather important in relation to Climate Change, so I was wondering if this could be a worthwhile part 2 video, that adds to your excellent coverage of emerging and established technology for making steel with potential for de-carbonisation of the current steel making practises.
    Such a part 2 video could add some detail to this video with info about the likely scale of reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and realistic timeline to implementation of the selected approaches.
    Just a thought bubble, but perhaps you already have most of this information and contacts and so not such a Herculian task?
    Your down to earth reporting and discussions of technology and engineering is very valuable and, I think, well respected. I imagine quite influential too, perhaps not so much with those that "don't hold a hose", but certainly with switched on political and industrial leaders that take their roles seriously, as well as us common folk that are interested in such topics.

  • @Spacedog79
    @Spacedog79 Před 2 lety +2

    There is a whole class of high temperature nuclear reactors that could decarbonise steel much more cost effectively. Not only can they provide direct process heat, but they can also provide electricity and green hydrogen production at the same time. They also work 24/7 so they make much more efficient use of the capital expenditure.

    • @McSlobo
      @McSlobo Před rokem +1

      And, if you use the heat directly to produce hydrogen in a (V)HTR the effiiency could be a lot better than with e.g. electrolysis.

  • @informationcollectionpost3257

    Spent some of design and engineering life in the steel machinery industry for mostly electric arc operators. In N America we have been using natural gas in our blast furnaces for quit a number of years to reduce the need for coking coal. Coking coal has created a problem with a significant rise in the number of people downwind from the coking plants developing cancer. While natural gas does produce a greener steel and less cancer cases as mentioned it should also allow an easy conversion to hydrogen reduction of iron with little modification. Steel companies in N America have also employed very powerful magnets at the mining pits to concentrated the iron into an electric arc grade iron that reduces the need for massive amounts of carbon added into the electric arc furnaces and shipping costs and the amount of fuel needed in the shipping process. With carefully placed oxygen lances in the electric arc furnaces, impressively large electric arc furnaces can be built that can match the output of blast furnaces or basic oxygen furnaces. All of this was developed to reduce either cancer cases or the need to run your furnaces at full tilt during poor markets of the product. Just thought that it is ironic that these technologies could also usher in green steel.

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
    @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 2 lety +2

    Something interesting I found when researching in-situ resource utilization is the FFC Cambridge process.
    I like it for its simplicity and versatility. It's used for titanium, but as I understand it, it could be used for pretty much any metal.
    "The FFC Cambridge process is an electrochemical method for producing titanium from titanium oxide by electrolysis in molten calcium salts. The process typically takes place between 900 and 1100 °C, with an anode (typically carbon) and a cathode (oxide being reduced) in a solution of molten CaCl2."

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Před rokem

      Isn't that process prohibitively expensive compared to current steel production processes.

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před rokem

      @@garethbaus5471 First paragraph of Wikipedia: "The FFC Cambridge process is an electrochemical method for producing titanium from titanium oxide by electrolysis in molten calcium salts. It is thought that this process will eventually be capable of producing titanium more efficiently than by current conventional processes."
      Now if more efficiently means cheaper, I can't tell you. An established industry will always be cheaper than a new technology thanks to experience and economies of scale. It's possible it would be cheaper at that scale, I don't know, I'm not from the industry. I just think it's cool because of its versatility, you can produce pretty much every metal with it, just like high temperature electrolysis, but at lower temperatures. Which is why it is a candidate for in-situ resource utilization for space exploration. Conventional titanium extraction involves treating the oxides with chlorine, I'm sure that removing that step makes things simpler.
      Other metals also use electrolysis, like Aluminium, so I don't see why not in principle. Of course that needs cheap energy, which we don't have at the moment, but I don't expect that to continue on like this for long.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Před rokem

      @@Embassy_of_Jupiter Titanium is not steel, it can't be produced using the same methods we typically use to refine steel, the fact that this process can produce titanium more cheaply doesn't mean that it can produce steel at the same cost as current steel production methods.

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před rokem

      @@garethbaus5471 It's electrolysis, it can produce base metals from any oxide. It's literally just reverse redox.
      I never said that it will be cheaper for steel production or any other metal for that fact, you need to read more carefully.
      I just mentioned it because it is interesting for its versatility.

  • @emceeboogieboots1608
    @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety +1

    Professor Sadaway of MIT? The same man involved with the Ambri liquid metal battery I presume 🤔
    That is a very interesting process that I haven't look back into for a while

  • @sentinel76
    @sentinel76 Před 11 měsíci

    I'd just like to raise a note of caution in regards to low-temperature processes - that is, anything that doesn't have molten iron (at 1600ºC or hotter) as its output. Common steelmaking alloys - carbon, manganese, silicon, chromium - need to be dissolved into stirred liquid steel in order to produce a homogeneous batch (called a 'heat' in steelmaking jargon) as diffusion in the solid state would take too long and would not give a fully homogenous material. Also, dephosphorisation of steel requires the steel to be liquid as well, along with the application of molten quicklime and oxygen (I'm assuming that desulphurisation may be less of a requirement due to the absence of coal, but as phosphorous comes from ores, dephosphorisation would still be required). This means that any cold metal would then have to be melted in order to carry out these processes, followed by casting to shape. Further shaping by hot-rolling requires steel to be austenitic, which means a minimum temperature of 900ºC - most hot-rolling processes have furnace exit temperatures of 1200ºC.

  • @tarugardiner4287
    @tarugardiner4287 Před 2 lety

    You know I was just thinking this the other day , and was wondering how we could tackle this issue .

  • @christopherfairs9095
    @christopherfairs9095 Před 2 lety +12

    An interesting video, thank you. Dr Bart K's statement near the end about using, wherever possible, electricity for such processes, instead of hydrogen sums it up nicely; efficiency. Making, storing and burning hydrogen is not an efficient process, despite its advantages, when looking at CO2 production.

    • @waltermcphee3787
      @waltermcphee3787 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes only makes sense if you use green hydrogen from electrolysis, not as most hydrogen is produced from methane and produces its own CO2. Hydrogen from electrolysis is not very efficient so using the electrons directly in electrolysis steel production would seem like the most efficient use of energy.

    • @richardallison8745
      @richardallison8745 Před 2 lety

      Hydrogen is a bad idea for making steel. It will never be economical or competitive with natural gas or even coal. Man-made climate change is a lie.

    • @anonymousAJ
      @anonymousAJ Před 2 lety +1

      Why would you need to tell a business to do things more economically? That's their whole job

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Před 2 lety

      fantasist

    • @waltermcphee3787
      @waltermcphee3787 Před 2 lety +2

      @@anonymousAJ businesses doing things cheaply is not usually good for our environment even if it benefits share holders.

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před rokem

    Just about the best Rosie Engineering, relevant technology information video.
    The "Greening of Australia" has come around again in the Mineralogical sense of what matters most to Citizens.
    And the production of Reducer Gas type Hydrogen made with Wind and Solar for reducing oxides to metals is to be a top priority?
    Haven't seen any convincing science plus economics to recommend Hydrogen for other uses..

  • @azlanang
    @azlanang Před 2 lety

    What is your view on magnetite? Do you think that the high purity of magnetite pallets will see a massive uptake for DRI? My understanding is that low quality hematite will create slag in the electric arcs + uses more energy to seperate. Thoughts?

  • @rtfazeberdee3519
    @rtfazeberdee3519 Před 2 lety +1

    With the advent of not being able to produce enough steel to meet future demand, hopefully they start to develop other products to replace steel (that are recyclable) in vanity projects and just leave steel to be used in structural projects

  • @bilginerkoc7519
    @bilginerkoc7519 Před 2 lety

    You are Super.

  • @QALibrary
    @QALibrary Před 2 lety +1

    This is a very good video and this week Volvo trucks said are now using green steel to make their lorries now

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +1

      I would love to do a trip to Sweden to make some videos! They have the green steel, also green batteries and some very interesting energy intensive industry up north taking advantage of the cheap green energy up there. I used to go there a couple of times a year for work, but I don't know when I'll be able to get up there again now that I live in Australia!

    • @QALibrary
      @QALibrary Před 2 lety

      @@EngineeringwithRosie will you be part of fullycharge live Australia?

  • @pradip6989
    @pradip6989 Před 2 lety

    How does one tackle the impurity buildup in the molten oxide bath ,coming from the iron ore? How much energy is consumed in this step?

  • @RyuZaKi1925
    @RyuZaKi1925 Před 2 lety

    Not related with this...could you please make video on Magnus Effect Wind power technologies ? Looks very promising but not picked up. Thank you!

  • @awolffromamongus875
    @awolffromamongus875 Před rokem

    The electrolysis method to produce iron is intriguing. But I'm I right in saying it's only compatible with iron/sulphur compounds (a waste by-product from SA's Olympic Dam mine and others), rather than the Haematite or Magnetite we currently dig out the ground for steel production?

  • @clmdcc
    @clmdcc Před 2 lety

    Hmm the Sadoway molten metal reductions sounds like it would work really well with a molten salt reactor.
    Then just use a non fossil carbon source, and you can make steel production carbon negative.

  • @TheBlibo
    @TheBlibo Před rokem

    Hi
    Is there not a risk of hydrogen enbrittelment using hydrogen or amonia and if there is what might the solution be. I'm no chemist but am fully aware of the risk of enbrittelment when stripping and replating hydraulic rams which from my worms eye view is that electro plating would only at worst case be a skin effect but bulk reduction may effect the whole ingot
    Please correct me and tell me why
    Regards
    Zed
    Keep up the good work

  • @BigDaddyBlais
    @BigDaddyBlais Před 7 měsíci

    Woah, are you a fellow metallurgist, fellow iron ore enthusiast and fellow Montrealer? Or did you just stumble upon Décarie Boulevard @6:50?

  • @florinadrian5174
    @florinadrian5174 Před 2 lety

    About the Boston method:
    1. We should not assume an intermittent power supply. The grid of the future will need to have balancing features.
    2. The high temperature is not necessarily a problem. Once you have your steel, at high temperature, you need to cool it off, right? Well, instead of just releasing the heat you could trap it and reuse it either to heat more feed, to heat some buildings or to convert it back to electricity.
    In fact, combining both points, there are energy grid thermal storage solutions using molten salts - your steel factory could serve as such solution, with feed and steel instead of the molten salts, and then your energy cost (and footprint) will be minimal while your impact on the grid would be beneficial (balancing the grid).

    • @ThomasBomb45
      @ThomasBomb45 Před 2 lety

      1. Flexible demand (also called "demand-side management") is an integral part to the grid of the future. Why have huge battery banks that can supply MW's of power whenever the factory decides to flip the switch and make steel, when the factory could instead soak up peaks in energy production (noon, windy days) and quickly shut off if demand increased or production decreased? It's less costly to shift energy demand than to artificially shift demand with batteries

    • @florinadrian5174
      @florinadrian5174 Před 2 lety

      @@ThomasBomb45 Interesting idea. I'm sure that in countries (like UK, I believe) where the cost of electricity varies a lot with demand, hourly even, business have adapted to benefit from lower rates. Residential consumption has also adapted, people program the laundry to be done at night, top up the boiler with heat when the energy is cheaper etc. It would be interesting to do a study of how much the peaks of demand/supply can be smoothed out by such actions, or have been already.

    • @chrishaberbosch1029
      @chrishaberbosch1029 Před rokem

      @@ThomasBomb45 Using power supply arbitrage batteries become very cost effective.

  • @stephenhall3515
    @stephenhall3515 Před 2 lety

    I agree with others who say that you are often somewhat negative and rates of progress we have become used to perhaps account for your caution.
    However, the times we have entered now remind me so much of the 1950s and '60s in Britain when innovation was astonishing and it is pleasing to see Asian states such as Turkey, Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia coming up with vital solutions sort of 'glueing' major nation developments together. South America is given too little credit for innovation, notably in green fuels which have been priority for decades and hydrogen cell aircraft.
    Sadly, the over cautious USA and EU are failing to take developments further and these areas of the globe are in stasis as blocs but progress in Poland, Czech Rep, Hungary and Nordic countries will shock the EU big boys out of bureaucratic sclerosis or the EU will split apart. No loss IMHO.
    The impact of small company innovation is breathtaking and even Mr Musk was a small player from S.Africa before Tesla and the massive achievement of SpaceX.
    For pure cheap hydrogen I have a feeling that your native Australia (with Japanese experience over 30 years) will become the leader sooner than many think.

  • @emceeboogieboots1608
    @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety +1

    I worked at th BHP dri plant in Port Hedland. Very scary process, the H2 will auto ignite anywhere it leaks. They shut it down soon after a fatal accident. I used to have nightmares about it burning down😬

    • @guringai
      @guringai Před 2 lety

      Ah interesting, I've been wondering about how they prevent explosions!.

    • @emceeboogieboots1608
      @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety +1

      @@guringai As long as the H2 stays in the vessels and the O2 stays on the outside, all is good.
      Until there is a leak...

    • @merchantoo
      @merchantoo Před 2 lety +1

      Indeed, good safety practice is the key. Refineries have been using hydrogen for a long time, and of course there have been bad accidents, but there are many more dangerous product and by-products to be scared of, like the alkylation unit...

    • @emceeboogieboots1608
      @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety

      @@merchantoo Yeah, the trouble at HBI was the interaction of H2 and the iron oxide powder. The solids would clag the valve between vessels and need to be purged through with HP Nitrogen bottles
      Only once someone used an oxygen bottle😬
      They all look the same with the grey iron dust all over them

  • @h.e.hazelhorst9838
    @h.e.hazelhorst9838 Před 2 lety +1

    Not a solution for cutting back the CO2 emissions directly, but still: wouldn’t it make a big difference if we’d reuse the heat coming from the steel mill for heating homes and offices? This would also work after the steel making process would change to a hydrogen-based one (the heat is always a ‘by-product’).

  • @spacecase0
    @spacecase0 Před 2 lety

    I wasn't going to comment on the CO2 production being required, I was going to suggest that I'm pretty sure I can run a cupola furnace to create carbon monoxide instead. Not entirely convinced that's going to help things.

  • @mohannair5671
    @mohannair5671 Před rokem

    To my understanding, the carbon dioxide need not be released but could be used in ureaproduction with atmospheric nitrogen?

  • @PAHighlander24
    @PAHighlander24 Před 7 měsíci

    You glossed over the electricity and natural gas required for the EAF operation. I worked at one which had a 120 MVA transformer that consumed as much electricity as a large city, and ours was by no means the largest EAF in operation. Since it operates 24/7 and green sources of electricity need wind and sunshine it is clear that a stable base of power from a fossil fuel generating station is required. An alternative of a massive battery facility on site is not economically viable, which then requires an even larger green supply of power during the wind and solar generation hours. Sure, given an unlimited money supply it could be accomplished, but what would it do to the cost of the steel and is it then a viable proposition? What would it do to the cost of the ultimate steel products (autos, structures, consumer goods, and wind turbines and solar farms?)

  • @roscoepatternworks3471

    So for each ton of steel, what is the time to produce? You still have mining to contend with. Whether it's mining for Iron ore or materials to make the infrastructure to create steel with alternative energy. It's still replacing one non-renewable resource for another.

    • @ThomasBomb45
      @ThomasBomb45 Před 2 lety

      Metal is easy to recycle in a closed loop, especially iron/steel

  • @roguedogx
    @roguedogx Před 2 lety +1

    absolutely fascinating, but I just don't think it will be as easy as the doctor thinks.

    • @roguedogx
      @roguedogx Před 2 lety +1

      I've actually been looking into using a heat pump for high temperature smelting. it should be much more efficient, if I can find a material that can take the strain at such high temperatures. Which to say the least is proving challenging.

    • @HughCStevenson1
      @HughCStevenson1 Před 2 lety

      @@roguedogx Thermodynamics is against you in this. Heat pumps are great when you don't have to raise the absolute temperature much - say from 273 K to 303 K (0 °C to 30 °C), maybe to heat your house. The coefficient of performance (COP) is Thot/ (Thot - Tcold). For the houshold heating it would be 303/(303 - 273) = 10.1 this is the theoretic maximum, you will have other losses so might get 5 ish. For heating to 1200 °C from a heat source at 25 °C the COP would be (1200 + 273)/(1200-25) = 1.25. This again is the theoretical maximum and there will be losses. It's not worth the effort, sorry. So don't bother looking for a working fluid. :(

    • @roguedogx
      @roguedogx Před 2 lety

      @@HughCStevenson1 dang.
      I must have dropped a zero someplace, because I swore the numbers came out better than that.

  • @wjhann4836
    @wjhann4836 Před 2 lety

    Rosi, there is one topic aside hydrogen, that I never hear about, but is perhaps concerning not me:
    For me hydrogen may be a nice energy transporter - but physically it's more than annoying:
    - super small, need special containers
    - steel tubes and containers will be spoiled over time in contact with hydrogen
    - you have to compress it with much energy to transport
    - when transporting, most assume liquid - which is extremely cold - other technical challenges will arise.
    - any leakage in the transportation and storage will be extremely dangerous.
    So - as I heard, some Arabian states already test solar power to produce hydrogen for future markets (make sense due to their sun exposure).
    It would be interesting how production ready transportation exists.

  • @KM-rh1eb
    @KM-rh1eb Před 2 lety

    You missed steel plants are integrated sites with attached mills, the works arising gasses are captured for their reheat furnaces. Every mills reheat furnace will also need converting too.
    Integrated steel works are massive, and those in the EU pale to those in China, the blue circles on the map just don't convey the enormity of the issue here..

  • @harmenbos
    @harmenbos Před 2 lety

    Where can i find the data about the emissions per ton of steel? In Holland (Tata Steel) steel is made with coal (cokes) which generates CO2 and gas, then we have emissions from the Blast Furnace, and emissions from (re)heating of steel before rolling, and emissions from electricity use. They say it is a very efficient proces but it is a non substantiated claim.

    • @damo87araimo
      @damo87araimo Před rokem

      The Dutch Blast Furances in IJmuiden are amongst the most efficient in the world. They produce iron at a rate of 1.88T CO2 / T Hot Metal.

  • @heaslyben
    @heaslyben Před 2 lety

    Unprocessed iron is the most basic form of iron, also known as "brown iron" or "Bumcivilian".

  • @TG-lp9vi
    @TG-lp9vi Před 2 lety

    Wind and solar electricity does not have to be intermittent, because if one uses them to produce Hydrogen then the Hydrogen will stabilize the intermittency. So if you have Hydrogen for that then unit for making steel.

  • @RichRich1955
    @RichRich1955 Před 2 lety

    Lots of steel will be needed for all the wind farms now if they can stop it from rusting. Are wind turbine towers steel or aluminum? They use dehumidifiers in some of them to stop rust so steel I'm guessing.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety

      They're steel

    • @guringai
      @guringai Před 2 lety

      One of the Nordic countries have some wind towers & blades made of massive plywood sections under trial ATM

  • @Lichenlikenedlich
    @Lichenlikenedlich Před 2 lety +1

    I wonder how we should address hydrogen embrittlement in the future.

  • @cameronmclennan942
    @cameronmclennan942 Před 2 lety +2

    Great vid, Rosie! Australian recycled water engineer in France currently researching water use in steel manufacturing and other heavy industry. Would be interesting to know whether any of these processes may also change water demand significantly. If anyone has any thoughts, I'm all ears

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +3

      Great question ☺️ I'm actually headed to Boston Metal tomorrow for a tour and an interview, so that would be a good place to ask!

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Před 2 lety

      @@EngineeringwithRosie stop these manipulative lies !

  • @geoffgeoff143
    @geoffgeoff143 Před rokem

    Where is steel used win solar PV modules?

  • @chrisgriffiths2533
    @chrisgriffiths2533 Před 2 lety

    Yes Rosie it is Very Very Disappointing that BHP, Rio Tinto, Fortisque etc are Not Producing Green Iron Ore.
    Which is Needed to Produce "Green Steel".
    Thankyou Rosie and Bart for Sharing Your Knowledge.

  • @michaelstreeter3125
    @michaelstreeter3125 Před rokem

    3:52 I don't really think biogas is very green - my problem being fossil CH₄ is used to make the fertiliser to help grow the plants. We need to decarbonise NH₃ production before we can say biogas is green!

  • @geoffgeoff143
    @geoffgeoff143 Před rokem

    Coal is heated to make coke. This releases a lot of methane. However, tnis methane is burnt to heat the coal. This releases co2. As you mention, there are greaner sources of carbon.

  • @tobyw9573
    @tobyw9573 Před rokem

    Rosie, please read physicist Freeman Dyson on CO2.

  • @benoithudson7235
    @benoithudson7235 Před 2 lety +9

    It seems way easier just to spray-paint the steel after producing it if all you want is green steel.
    ...
    Joking aside, next up I want to see low-carbon cement production, and aluminium too. Both of those can easily switch to low-carbon energy but still release carbon intrinsically from the main processes we use for them today.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +3

      Both are on my list!
      And by the way nice joke ☺️

    • @lylestavast7652
      @lylestavast7652 Před 2 lety

      if you're in that mode of thinking, why produce it ? Just steal the steel.

  • @johan_anderson
    @johan_anderson Před 2 lety +4

    Great video! You inspire the industry and decision makers to take bold decisions! With our invention of the HYBRIT Technology and production of fossil-free steel since August 18, 2021, we hope to do the same. / Johan Anderson, SSAB

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks Johan! Next time I'm in Sweden it would be so cool if I could do a tour of the HYBRIT project for a video, if you're keen to share?

    • @johan_anderson
      @johan_anderson Před 2 lety +1

      @@EngineeringwithRosie Sure!

    • @merchantoo
      @merchantoo Před 2 lety

      Hi Rosie, when you visit you can dig a little deeper and ask them how they plan to decarbonise the EAF. As you say, the carbon footprint of most EAFs today is as you rightly say mostly due to scope 2 emissions, i.e. electricity production. When electricity is decarbonised there will still be a substantial footprint, 10x smaller than blast furnace route but still significant, and brushed under the carpet by all the big steel companies that have announced following these brave fellows at hybrit. Pedantics aside it's not so easy to take iron and add carbon to it to produce steel without losing loads of the carbon you add. The biggest user of cement in Sweden is the iron ore mine. The biggest users of lime in Sweden are the steel companies. Technologies do not live on islands and true decarbonisation requires a lot more thought. Great video, I would say that you characterisation of the state of CCS in the steel industry falls short, there are more initiatives at many steel companies.

    • @gregbailey45
      @gregbailey45 Před rokem

      @@merchantoo hmm, correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought you had to take the excess carbon OUT OF pig-iron to make it into steel!

    • @merchantoo
      @merchantoo Před rokem

      @@gregbailey45 yes, that's right. Direct Reduce Iron (with Hydrogen) doesn't contain carbon, so it needs to be added. One of the problems is that you add more carbon than you need because it burns of very quickly, so it's not a question of adding just the right amount. The type of DRI that already exists, from natural gas as opposed to hydrogen does have some carbon in it, so similar to the pig iron case you reduce the amount of carbon to the required level, just you start 3-4 times lower.

  • @aigarius
    @aigarius Před rokem

    Intermittent power gives you intermittent product. Not great for predictable high volume manufacturing. BMW is betting on the Boston Metal process for their future car manufacturing, so that will be happening for sure. Somewhere between 2025 and 2030.

  • @pipe2devnull
    @pipe2devnull Před 2 lety +1

    I imagined that solar arrays that concentrate sunlight on to a tower would be a good green way to go for smelting and steel making. Maybe even shipping ore and scrap to southern desert areas to do this.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +6

      I'm thinking about making a video on renewable industrial heat. I'll make sure to include that option if/when I do!

    • @chrisbraid2907
      @chrisbraid2907 Před 2 lety +2

      In Australia‘s case Northern Deserts … their Iron ore comes from a line close to the Capricorn Meridian … hey how about induction melting utilising the solar energy from an Array of electric Solar panels close to the Ore Deposits ??? Hydrogen is very dangerous compared to Solar Electricity … imagine an induction blast furnace !

    • @chrishaberbosch1029
      @chrishaberbosch1029 Před rokem

      Large PV arrays are more cost effective than reflective.

  • @harryniedecken5321
    @harryniedecken5321 Před rokem

    People are over focused on the CO2 and ignoring the much larger mining waste problem. The CO2 is like looking at a creek next to the Mississippi River.

  • @Mars-ev7qg
    @Mars-ev7qg Před 10 měsíci

    Biogas can replace natural gas quite easily. Any organic waste product can be used to produce biogas. Trash, agricultural waste, and even raw sewage are all perfect feed stock for biogas production. Biogas is one of the most underutilized products in the world.

  • @johnransom1146
    @johnransom1146 Před 2 lety +1

    As nuclear reactors retire and become replaced by larger scale renewables with storage, couldn’t they keep going making hydrogen with a steel plant right beside the reactor?

  • @marcellop4812
    @marcellop4812 Před 7 měsíci

    DRI is not disappearing at all, this is inaccurate! is absolutely true vicecersa. DRI can be produced using 100% H2 and this is what many steelmakers are actually doing including Salcos , ArcelorMIttal and many others. Electrolysis for steel ?? nice idea but did you calculate the HUGE amount of energy you need??

  • @stanleytolle416
    @stanleytolle416 Před 5 měsíci

    High tempature nuclear reactors would work very well to make green steel.

  • @OB1canblowme
    @OB1canblowme Před rokem

    Skip hydrogen. The ABE process, otherwise known as the Weizmann process, is a cheap and scalable process of producing "green" fuel for electric powered steel plants. Bacteria and plant waste from agriculture and forestry is broken down and converted into alcohols and ketones by bacteria. The products can then be further refined and used as fuel in electric power plants

  • @SocialDownclimber
    @SocialDownclimber Před 2 lety

    If we use captured CO2 to make steel, it is carbon negative steel. Probably still counts if we use biomass derived carbon too.
    EDIT: interested in how they dissolve the iron ore into the electrolyte for the low temperature electrolysis process. Mineral acid? Something else?

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +1

      But you can't use CO2 to make iron from iron ore, as it already has oxygen atoms bound to the carbon. Rather, you create CO2 if you use carbon to reduce the iron ore. If you really want to use captured CO2 you'd first need to get rid of the oxygen (e.g. as a plant does) before you could use it. And then you'd end up with CO2 again at the end, so only neutral at best, not negative.

    • @SocialDownclimber
      @SocialDownclimber Před 2 lety

      @@EngineeringwithRosie I wasn't suggesting that. I was suggesting using captured carbon in the form of CO2 to provide the carbon to the pure iron made from hydrogen reduction. That is carbon negative as the carbon is only used in alloying the steel, and is fixed in the alloy until it rusts.

    • @HughCStevenson1
      @HughCStevenson1 Před 2 lety

      @@SocialDownclimber The Carbon in CO2 is not available to react with the steel - it wants to stay bonded to the O2 more than bonding to the Fe. You would need to create C and O2 first and then use the C to alloy with the steel. :)

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +1

      @@SocialDownclimber Ah ok! Makes more sense than what I thought you were saying. Sorry!

    • @SocialDownclimber
      @SocialDownclimber Před 2 lety

      @@EngineeringwithRosie I really wasn't very clear in my original post, sorry

  • @gadlicht4627
    @gadlicht4627 Před 2 lety

    What about STEP Iron?

  • @theelectricwalrus
    @theelectricwalrus Před 2 lety +1

    Blue steel! That was funny

  • @spacecase0
    @spacecase0 Před 2 lety

    I am all for converting my foundry to hydrogen, but I'm not sure where I would get the hydrogen. It's obviously a transfer of energy not a source of energy.

    • @HughCStevenson1
      @HughCStevenson1 Před 2 lety +1

      As far as I know, if you are just melting ingots and casting them an electric furnace would be better than using hydrogen - fewer losses (as mentioned in the video - use electricity directly if you can)... If you were to use hydrogen for the heating you would need an electrolyser to make the hydrogen and that would be a lossy process (waste heat, mostly due to overpotential).

  • @jimgraham6722
    @jimgraham6722 Před 2 lety

    Try bricks, cement and ammonia (feedstock for many industrial chemicals, fertilizers, explosives etc). Hydrogen probably better fit there.

  • @rojavabashur6455
    @rojavabashur6455 Před 2 lety +3

    The only real project right now in green steel is HYBRIT in Sweden.

    • @damo87araimo
      @damo87araimo Před rokem

      HIsarna in The Netherlands is also promising.

  • @ashishraulin
    @ashishraulin Před 2 lety

    ❤️🙏🏼

  • @azlanang
    @azlanang Před rokem

    Why haven’t you answered my question re magnetite :( I posted it again in your latest podcast

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před rokem

      I haven't seen any questions about magnetite. I get too many to see and answer them all unfortunately.

    • @azlanang
      @azlanang Před rokem

      @@EngineeringwithRosie I would like to know what your view is on magnetite given that your shows are mostly talking about decarbonisation of the steel industry using DRI tech which requires high grade ore. Would be great if you can discuss that in your next podcast :)

    • @azlanang
      @azlanang Před rokem

      @@EngineeringwithRosie here is the video Rosie czcams.com/video/TjKJejZWQ0A/video.html

    • @azlanang
      @azlanang Před rokem

      @@EngineeringwithRosie one of the thing I don’t get is why nobody ever mentions the use of magnetite (high grade ore) to produce green steel. The drain+ Submerged arc furnace hasn’t been tested at an industrial scale so it’s probably 5-10 years away. Do you foresee a growth in magnetite?

  • @liamwinter4512
    @liamwinter4512 Před 2 lety

    Solar induction coils.

  • @blackjack8957
    @blackjack8957 Před rokem

    Check out Greenpeace AU and Moonie AU are in the same block in Sydney (826 George St, Haymarket NSW).
    That leads to European Renewable Energy Council in the same way, least a case for concern.
    I highly doubt the Green series are originally from a legitimate science, rather than an awkward counterfeit pseudo-business.

  • @tarugardiner4287
    @tarugardiner4287 Před 2 lety

    Just mining it is a massive problem ,

  • @ChrisBullock1978
    @ChrisBullock1978 Před rokem

    Have3 we looked at using something other than carbon to strength iron? Maybe we have been doing something so long we need to look at how it all started. Maybe we were wrong. Heck we spent billions for dark matter and that was completely wrong on that.

  • @sergarlantyrell7847
    @sergarlantyrell7847 Před 2 lety

    I don't get why people have to be so all or nothing about things. Even if we can reduce the impact from steel manufacture that's a good thing.

  • @kenkroetch369
    @kenkroetch369 Před 2 lety

    Yes it's called environmental and mineworx

  • @leomharl68manuba18
    @leomharl68manuba18 Před 2 lety

    Check out what Pyrogenesis Canada Inc is doing to decarbonize Iron Ore Process.

  • @JP-zp5ic
    @JP-zp5ic Před 2 lety +1

    Well, at least hydrogen is good for use as a propellant in nuclear rockets. I don't see the fossil fuel industry selling as much volume as they would like for that though.

    • @HughCStevenson1
      @HughCStevenson1 Před 2 lety

      Surely a nuclear rocket uses nuclear fuel?? As in radioactive...

  • @KravMike08
    @KravMike08 Před rokem +1

    Ummmmmmmmmmmmm
    Isn’t CO2 plant food?¿?¿?¿?¿

  • @Trevor7727
    @Trevor7727 Před rokem +1

    Add this parameter into your equation.
    C02 is heavier than air…..
    This can be seen particularly in valleys which we identify as smog. CO2 is on the ground not in the atmosphere.

  • @xgrahamsmith
    @xgrahamsmith Před rokem +1

    Steel used to be made with biomass carbon. It was utterly unsustainable and led to the broad scale deforestation of Europe, you can trace the economic power of European regions through the Middle Ages based on where the steel making occurred, and when a region ran out of biomass, the manufacturing, and economic power moved elsewhere. It wasn’t until the discovery of coal in the UK, that the forests of Europe were able to recover, and Britain’s economic might took off. We use MASSIVELY more steel today than we did in the early 19th century, so no, biomass is not a sustainable alternative, as you couldn’t even grow it fast enough to meet demand 400 years ago.

    • @umaikakudo
      @umaikakudo Před rokem

      The other thing often overlooked in biomass schemes is you need to leave biomass behind to continue the carbon cycle and maintain organic matter in the soil. Remove too much biomass from the growing site and you end up depleting all your topsoil leaving a barren wasteland.

    • @redneckhippiefreak
      @redneckhippiefreak Před rokem

      Aren't Humans also Biomass? Seems like an awful lot of Humans on the planet..plenty of Biomass IMO. XP

  • @pingnick
    @pingnick Před 2 lety

    Hydrogen yeah ammonia probably will become more and more common vs hydrogen as time passes in terms of energy storage aside from obviously purely electric stuff however defined… clearly lots of investment now in aviation could be a huge future market for hydrogen IF battery/capacitor etc research isn’t as fruitful as hoped wow electricity steel stuff interesting🤯♾♾♾♾♾🌈☮️💟😍🥰😘🤩🚀🌌🗽🎬🎬🎬

  • @MustangsTrainsMowers
    @MustangsTrainsMowers Před rokem

    The war on carbon is what I call ridiculous. The world has lots of carbon as it’s all around us. What’s really looney is when they pump carbon into the earth.

  • @garymenezes6888
    @garymenezes6888 Před 2 lety

    I just want them to make Blue Steel now😂

  • @richdobbs6595
    @richdobbs6595 Před 2 lety +6

    I'll start believing in using green steel after ammonia-based fertilizer production is no longer dependent on natural gas. If you can't make ammonia without steam reforming of fossil fuels, I can't see it as being practical engineering to use hydrogen or electricity for reduction of iron ore.

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety +6

      I think it's better we work on both geen steel and green ammonia simultaneously. And people are working on both, so that's good.

    • @ForzaJersey
      @ForzaJersey Před 2 lety +1

      Actually, you can make hydrogen without CO2 via methane microwave assisted pyrolysis. This process produces high purity hydrogen and carbon black powder. The carbon can be sequestered underground or utilized for other uses.
      Like true green steel, this version of blue hydrogen or turquoise hydrogen pyrolysis is not done at scale today but can be in the near future.

    • @ForzaJersey
      @ForzaJersey Před 2 lety +1

      @@EngineeringwithRosie Agreed, let's not wait for pure processes to exist before we get to true green steel or ammonia.

    • @robindumpleton3742
      @robindumpleton3742 Před 2 lety

      You need 1.2 tonnes of hydrogen to produce 1 tonne of DRI. The UK produces 7.9 million tonnes. Germany (largest steel maker in Europe) produces nearly 50million tonnes. A wind Turbine has a tower weighing 150 tonnes. So you wil need 900000 tonnes of Hydrogen in the UK alone… UK imports 875000 tonnes of iron concentrates each year. That is without fertiliser and cement. Presently an electrolyzer uses 50 KW hrs to produce 1Kg of Hydrogen. The best Chemically is 39KWhrs to produce 1Kg of Hydrogen. The UK will require at least 160 GW installed capacity, just to keep the lights on. To produce the hydrogen required would need 16.7 TeraWatth of spare renewable generation. For the UK, would be better to let Australia make pig iron for transport to the UK.
      PS, did I mention sponge iron and electrolysis iron is pyrophoric

    • @richdobbs6595
      @richdobbs6595 Před 2 lety

      @@ForzaJersey Interesting idea. When I first worked in an oil refinery, it had a carbon black plant. Seems like carbon black might be incorporated into roadways to sequester it.

  • @serversurfer6169
    @serversurfer6169 Před 2 lety

    Now do concrete! 🤞🤓💜

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug Před 2 lety

    Thank you Rosie for telling the You Tube community about cutting the CO2 released by steelmaking. I was granted US patent 3890161, DIODE ARRAY for a method of upcycling energy as electrical energy from the ambient heat of our planet. This upcycled energy ia entirely clean so.it can decarbonize everything. I need a crowdfunding grant management team not including me to pay for nan8fabricating proof of concept prototyping.

  • @nothingmanofgod.6288
    @nothingmanofgod.6288 Před 2 lety

    Yeah steel is magic were that exist from nothing right👽

  • @terenceiutzi4003
    @terenceiutzi4003 Před 2 lety +1

    Remember it is called carbon steel! Now you can melt scrap steel in electric ark furnaces but it requires vast amounts of electricity and it depletes the carbon and makes the steel subject to work hardening and cracking! Hydrogen just destroys steel!

  • @PyjamasBeforeChrist
    @PyjamasBeforeChrist Před 2 lety +2

    Green steel is the future of Australia's economy. Iron ore and sunshine in abundance. Get on with it Oz!

    • @EngineeringwithRosie
      @EngineeringwithRosie  Před 2 lety

      I agree!

    • @jimlofts5433
      @jimlofts5433 Před 2 lety +1

      cost per tonne ????

    • @PyjamasBeforeChrist
      @PyjamasBeforeChrist Před 2 lety

      @@jimlofts5433 premium of
      hydrogen-based steel production is eliminated at electricity prices of $15-$20/MWh or lower. Solar is almost there. And that's without a price for the carbon impact.

  • @floydbertagnolli944
    @floydbertagnolli944 Před 2 lety +2

    Personal preference: provide speakers credentials before he/she speaks.

  • @kayakMike1000
    @kayakMike1000 Před rokem

    Awesome. Now do aluminum. While you're at it, come up with a climate model that ACTUALLY works with green house gas forcing.

  • @jamesthornton9399
    @jamesthornton9399 Před 4 měsíci

    You can not do anything with out making CO2, WE are Ftd.

  • @richardmiller7887
    @richardmiller7887 Před 8 měsíci

    No.

  • @nathandevine552
    @nathandevine552 Před rokem

    CO2 is not bad life would not exist without it

  • @jimlofts5433
    @jimlofts5433 Před rokem

    can we make CHEAP steel from hydrogen ??? I don't think so

  • @TG-lp9vi
    @TG-lp9vi Před 2 lety

    So what you still have not understood is that Hydrogen can come from water and when used it goes back to water. That make an energy carrier that is limitless for ever. Try to make a video about another fuel that does that. Good luck.

  • @jimrobcoyle
    @jimrobcoyle Před rokem +1

    By not generating CO2 we will be decreasing our planets biomass production.
    #Aloha

    • @theodorus1234
      @theodorus1234 Před rokem

      Perhaps read Wikipedia under biomass to see we are producing 8 gigatons in carbon from fossil fuels of which only 4 gigatons is converted to biomass or buffered in the oceans. So your comment does not make any sense to me.