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  • The US Navy is big. Like, really big.

  • It's got some 290 ships, thousands of aircraft and probably tens of thousands of small boats

  • and launches. And apart from a few nuclear powered carriers and submarines, all need

  • fuel - either from a fleet of 15 so-called oilers or fuel ships, or from bases dotted

  • around the world.

  • But the Navy has just announced a technology which is pretty much the holy grail for any

  • global taskforce. It's managed to perfect the creation of fuel, which is something they

  • need, from seawater. Which is something they have no shortage of at all.

  • What's even better from a military perspective is that it doesn't require any modification

  • of the ships engines - you aren't getting a liquid hydrogen fuel out of the mix that

  • needs a fuel cell to operate, you're getting a highly efficient hydrocarbon based fuel,

  • like gasoline, that can power both ships and aircraft.

  • Although so far the only plane it's powered is this model one at the US Naval Research

  • Laboratory. Small steps though eh?

  • Here's the science bit - saltwater is passed through an electrically charged cell, which

  • causes the seawater to swap hydrogen ions produced at the anode with sodium ions. At

  • the Cathode, the water is reduced to hydrogen gas and sodium hydroxide. The end result is

  • CO2 gas and hydrogen, which are then passed through a heated chamber with an iron catalyst

  • in it, which causes them to combine into long chained hydrocarbons - that is, fuel - and

  • methane gas, which can be siphoned off and used elsewhere. The fuel is then refined into

  • jet fuel if needed in another nickel-based catalyst.

  • It's predicted to cost around $3-$6 a gallon to produce, that's about as much as fuel costs

  • at the pump in the US right now, and whilst installing distillation equipment on hundreds

  • of US ships might be expensive, the savings from not having to operate the oiler fleet

  • or get fuel to bases around the world, or from fluctuating prices, will likely run into

  • the billions every year.

  • So what's the downside? Well it's not the most eco friendly solution. Methane is a useful

  • fuel but a potent greenhouse gas if it's not completely burnt, and even if it is burnt,

  • the whole lot will produce CO2 just like burning any other liquid or gas fuel does.

  • But that's not a new problem, nor is saving the environment the navy's task. They prefer

  • to save people from it. Or sometimes destroy it with bombs. At any rate, there are an estimated

  • 80-100,000 ships in the world, and over quarter of a million planes. So the Navy's emissions

  • are a bit of a drop in the ocean, pardon the pun.

  • The military is already working with a number of partners on commercialising the tech, and

  • it's estimated it'll be finding it's way onto US warships within

  • a decade.

The US Navy is big. Like, really big.

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