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Energy Secretary Chu and the Toll of Silly Physics
American Thinker ^ | September 30, 2009 | Claude Sandroff

Posted on 09/29/2009 11:22:35 PM PDT by neverdem

Many of us had just the grandest time conducting worthless research for the old monopolistic phone companies.  Dr. Steven Chu, our Secretary of Energy was one of the typical products of that era of unfocused industrial research.  He nurtured his career in what had become the most arrogant and unfocused lab of them all, Bell Laboratories.   If you landed one of those storied jobs as a newly minted Member of Technical Staff, you could expect to conduct research indistinguishable from that of any academic scientist supported by government agencies like the National Science Foundation. That a once glorious Bell Labs is now a rotting corpse inside the French-owned Alcatel indicates how far the laboratory has fallen from its halcyon days, when giants like John Bardeen, Claude Shannon and William Shockley walked the corridors.

The measure of worth of a Bell Labs scientist in the Chu era was unrelated to the discovery or development of any practical technology, patent or invention.  Rather, citations, invited conference talks and publications in certain select journals were how the value of your research was measured in yearly reviews. The main aim of the labs' researchers was to foster relations with the academic scientific world, so that the new Ph.D. graduates would come to Bell Labs to replace someone else who was leaving to accept a tenured university post. This is the revolving door that pushed Chu to Stanford and then Berkeley, to continue his pursuit of academic excellence.

Sometimes research could be first class.  Steven Chu and his colleagues masterfully controlled a half dozen laser sources to essentially freeze the motion of atoms. Very nice work indeed, paid for by the aggregated pennies collected from grandma's analog phone bill. The work, which never helped grandma or improved her phone service, won Dr. Chu and others the Nobel Prize in physics in 1997.

Now, there are Nobel Prize winners and there are Nobel Prize winners.  Steven Chu should not be confused with the likes of monumental geniuses like Hans Bethe, a man who identified the energy producing cycles in the sun, and then lead America's greatest theoretical physicists in the building of the atomic bomb.  Or with Enrico Fermi, who not only invented a class of quantum statistics but also engineered the first sustained and controlled nuclear reaction. 

The point of these comparisons is not to denigrate our Energy Secretary, because figures like of Bethe and Fermi tower above us like gods in world of physics.  But let the record show, there was a time when even theoretical physicists were willing and able to marshal their talents to build real things, especially when national survival was at stake.  Bell Labs in the 1970's and beyond could not have cared less about real things. 

Andrew Grove, a founder and legendary CEO of Intel, once remarked that while his company was forced to double the speed of its microprocessors every eighteen months, the phone companies were content to double the performance of their networks once every hundred years.  The dismal comparison is the result of the research focus of staff scientists like Dr. Chu. 

Given our current national energy crisis, we have never been more in need of grown-ups in charge of energy policy.  You could even make the argument that next to the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy is now the most important Department of all.  But in an age when our security and energy access are intertwined as never before, we have Dr. Chu, focused like a laser beam of the chimera of global warming, not on oil and gas extraction.  Focused on limiting coal mining not on advancing its cleaner embodiments.   For Chu, apparently, the less we do to affect the earth the better. For Chu our desire for fossil fuels and the life styles they permit is almost like a fetish. "The American people...  just like your teenage kids, aren't acting in a way that they should act."

Well, how should we act?  We should act as reality dictates, and energy realities are stark and unforgiving.  Almost every energy expert, from Michael Economides to Boone Pickens to Sarah Palin, knows that by 2030 global energy demand, driven by population growth and higher standards of living, will increase by 50%.  Unfortunately, the sources that contribute to the global energy mix are unlikely to change much no matter how much we dream it to be otherwise.  Oil, gas and coal contribute close to 90% to the total mix today and they'll be close to 90% a scant 20 years hence.

There are two key reasons for this brutal energy truth: a small starting base for alternative energy, and the very high energy density of hydrocarbons. According to the Energy Information Administration (probably the only part of Jimmy Carter's DoE worth preserving), only 3.1% of our electricity comes for alternative sources, including wind and solar. When you start from such a small base, facing headwinds of growing global demand, even spectacular advances in technology won't make very dramatic dents in fractional contribution.  For an even more sobering historical energy perspective it's worthwhile listening to Vaclav Smil from the University of Manitoba. Smil explains that it typically takes at least 50 years before a new energy source (whether it's oil, natural gas, or nuclear) contributes even a 10% share to the energy pie chart.

Energy density is just as unforgiving a parameter.  Nature has endowed hydrocarbons with high energy content in very small volumes.  When you look at the energy contained in a tank of gasoline and compare it to the tons of batteries that would be required to match its energy content an environmental radical should get quite depressed.  The same energy density dictates that huge swaths of land need to be dedicated for energy production from solar and wind, compared to the relatively minuscule footprints required for energy production from fossil fuels.

At the December 2008 Democratic Convention, Chu's future boss made the absurd claim that if elected he would guarantee that the United States would be energy independent in ten years.  We're approaching Obama's one-year anniversary.  Do you think that we're 10% towards energy independence?  Neither do I.  And we never will be without developing a lot more of our own oil, gas and coal.  And as long as Dr. Steven Chu is in charge of the DoE and Obama is our President that will never happen.

Claude can be reached at csandroff@gmail.com


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: agw; bhodoe; bhoenergy; chu; cluelessindc; demclowns; democrats; energy; globalwarming; physics; socialism; stevenchu

1 posted on 09/29/2009 11:22:35 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

I live a half hour from downtown Chicago and I can’t even get DSL service. Just good ol’ 130 year old analog phone technology.


2 posted on 09/29/2009 11:28:42 PM PDT by Post Toasties (Conservatives allow the guilty to be executed but Lefties insist that the innocent be executed.)
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To: neverdem
Like the rest of Obama’s cabinet, Dr. Chu is a hand puppet. White House energy czar Carol Browner is the defacto power.
3 posted on 09/29/2009 11:51:50 PM PDT by Brad from Tennessee (A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.)
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To: Post Toasties

DTE eliminated 50% of it’s linesmen in MI a couple of years ago. AT&T leases pole use. Poles are rotted out— +50 years old. The entire system is decrepit


4 posted on 09/30/2009 12:12:51 AM PDT by Westlander (Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
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To: neverdem

Domestic algae-sourced biodiesel plus removal of the government boot from the neck of diesel vehicles equals substantial steps towards energy independence.


5 posted on 09/30/2009 1:07:11 AM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: Post Toasties
Good piece as far as it went, but the really dense energy source is Nuclear. I think Mr. Sandorff is correct about hydrocarbons for mobile applications,(trains,boats,planes,etc.) but Nuclear is very well suited to power our electrical grid. I hope we do not lose sight of that.
6 posted on 09/30/2009 2:50:16 AM PDT by Old North State
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To: neverdem; rdl6989; Little Bill; IrishCatholic; Normandy; According2RecentPollsAirIsGood; ...
 




"Chu Still Have No Clue"

7 posted on 09/30/2009 3:54:20 AM PDT by steelyourfaith (Limit all U.S. politicians to two terms: One in office and one in prison!)
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To: mvpel

Not to mention that after the algae is processed into bio-diesel... the leftovers can be fermented into ethanol.

But, of course, it’s better to turn our food (corn) into ethanol.

:-(


8 posted on 09/30/2009 4:00:01 AM PDT by gogogodzilla (Live free or die!)
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To: neverdem
"When you look at the energy contained in a tank of gasoline and compare it to the tons of batteries that would be required to match its energy content an environmental radical should get quite depressed. The same energy density dictates that huge swaths of land need to be dedicated for energy production from solar and wind, compared to the relatively minuscule footprints required for energy production from fossil fuels.

The Enviro-Kooks don't even consider this in they're opposition to current energy sources. They just HATE Big Oil.
In fact try explaining energy volumes to an average person and you'll get the Homer Simpson vacant stare and a quick change of subject.

9 posted on 09/30/2009 4:31:09 AM PDT by Falcon4.0
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To: Post Toasties

Post, you CAN get DSL equivalent service; you just aren’t willing to pay for it. There are satellite ISPs and cllular plans, but they are relatively costly.


10 posted on 09/30/2009 5:04:30 AM PDT by Zippo44 (Liberal: another word for poltroon.)
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To: Old North State
Good piece as far as it went, but the really dense energy source is Nuclear.

Good point, in fissionable material we are talking about energy density orders of magnitude greater than fossil carbon. And to me the waste disposal issue is just fear mongering in light of reprocessing and many disposal options.

But the energy density claim for fossil carbon is a bit shallow. E-Density in terms of per volume or per weight sure, but throw in the time dimension and not so great - it took a long time to accumulate that energy. Hence the renewable alternatives are valid in the sense of our thermodynamic demand being in equilibrium or steady state with the supply.

Just technically saying. Personally I'm all for US carbon development for world independence reasons.

11 posted on 09/30/2009 5:37:40 AM PDT by jnsun
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To: AdmSmith; Berosus; bigheadfred; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...
Andrew Grove, a founder and legendary CEO of Intel, once remarked that while his company was forced to double the speed of its microprocessors every eighteen months, the phone companies were content to double the performance of their networks once every hundred years. The dismal comparison is the result of the research focus of staff scientists like Dr. Chu. [Dr. Steven Chu, our Secretary of Energy]
Thanks neverdem.
12 posted on 09/30/2009 4:05:43 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: Zippo44

True. I’m not ready to pay $40.00 a month to get internet service that allows basically streaming audio and video over what I have now.


13 posted on 09/30/2009 9:59:52 PM PDT by Post Toasties (Conservatives allow the guilty to be executed but Lefties insist that the innocent be executed.)
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