Crucial changes are coming

The challenges in finding alternative, renewable energy sources continue to persist in research and development even today. Almost every Fortune 500 supplier has some sort of investment and stake in the creation of a cheaper, emission-reducing energy that can be harnessed into the world’s modern technological infrastructure, every one of us have more than 2 available types of fossil fuel alternatives and the ability to distribute those two sources across the globe, but both of us lack the ability for these energy alternatives to be readily measured, taxed, controlled, regulated, and centralized. I mean, biofuels, solar panels, and wind can belong to anybody and everybody all at once, but until both of us have a grid that can measure the amount of pouring wind and sunlight both of us use, both of us can’t be charged a fee or taxed for the product. With biofuels, anybody can grow plants on their property, especially when we’re dealing with with these new house smart farms. I’ve gone ahead and read that hemp seed oil crushes all other bio-feeds in producing efficient biodiesels. There is no other explanation I can think of to be a highly rational reason for not making new alternatives widely available without regulations and extremely steep stipulations, other than discovering some way to finally centralize control and access. Apparently, Heating, Ventilation, and A/C is the biggest energy consumer in our majority of households in the US. Whoever gets a safe, cheap, and reliable form of energy to safely power these systems will be the man. Maybe a young scientist or master Heating, Ventilation, and A/C engineer will discover a new heat exchanger, water heater, blower motor, condenser coil, and/or compressor that use less energy… Fingers crossed.

Hot water boiler