- Hole in mountain from top to bottom
- Connect to vents drilled at bottom of mountain
- Fit wind turbines to generate power. (Constant supply of wind because of heat circulation)
- Use the power to produce hydrogen from water
- Store in tank (filled with metal powder in order for safety and to store more hydrogen relative to pressurized tanks) connect to pipe as gas line
- Use for fuel,heating etc etc
- At the same time it can also can be used as a cost effective water treatment facility.
- No birds or other wild life will be harmed and an absolute minimum of pollutants produced.
- One plant can power a state like Wisconsin.
The real green energy
Endless supply of clean, reliable, renewable, and cheap energy.
Note: This would replace coal and oil used for energy.
These types of techs are being suppressed.
I said "190 million"... actually 1.90 million.** This is how many turbines you need, each producing 1/17 the output of Hoover...that would be the 1.5 million cfs air requirement for each. To replace US energy demand... 3,930 Terawatt hrs.** (3.93 trillion kWh) each of your 130 plants produce 30 Tw (Trillion watts)....not the 235 thousand kWh as described in example. Palo Verde is largest functioning US nuclear plant at 3.3 gW. Each of your 130 wind turbines will produce the equivalent of 9.5 PV Nuclear plants before storage... 28.5 after. Your plants will need to produce 94 gW each! Brilliant! You will be a god among men and far and away the wealthiest!! Certainly a genius above all others!!! As a final assist, that's 2.85 Trillion CFS of air to move...hopefully by convection (cuz it would suck to have to use fans to move all that air through the turbines!)...math is hard
100% correct. The math is what it is. We can only work within the constraints of physics.
Regardless of design, horizontal/ vertical blade turbine, source of rising heat, the q can be rephrased "how much moving air at atmospheric pressure do we need to capture energy equivalent of 9 to 28 of the largest nuclear plants. Not going to get cat 5's rising from that giant open mine/ big bore hole.