Tag Archives: green ammonia

February 2022 in Review

The horrible war in Ukraine is obviously the most frightening and depressing thing going on as of early March 2022, both in terms of human suffering and the risk of nuclear war. But I prefer to avoid commenting too much on fast moving current events. I’ll just say that if the world can get past the acute crisis and maybe start talking seriously about arms control again, that could be a possible silver lining. But it seems like we are months or years away from that point. So I’ll pick something else below.

Most frightening and/or depressing story: Philadelphia police are making an arrest in less than 40% of murders in our city, not to mention other violent crimes. Convictions of those arrested are also down. Some of this could be Covid-era dysfunction. But there is a word for this: lawlessness.

Most hopeful story: “Green ammonia” offers some help on the energy and environmental front.

Most interesting story, that was not particularly frightening or hopeful, or perhaps was a mixture of both: I found a 1992 Saturday Night Live skit about the Olympics more entertaining than the actual Olympics. May Phil Hartman rest in peace. I checked on Dana Carvey and he is 66 and doing okay.

green ammonia

The idea behind green ammonia is to use renewable energy (solar, wind, etc.) to electrolyze water and produce hydrogen. The hydrogen can then be combined with nitrogen gas from the air in the Haber-Bosch process to produce ammonia. This is the same as what is done now, except that the most common process is to split the hydrogen off from natural gas, which results in carbon dioxide emissions.

Ammonia is used on a large scale as a fertilizer, so switching to this process would reduce emissions (and wouldn’t make the problem of excess nitrogen reaching our groundwater and surface water any worse, or better). I didn’t realize that ammonia could be burned for fuel. This article explains that even though burning it is less efficient than just burning the hydrogen gas, it is easier to move and store than hydrogen. Burning it does produce nitrogen oxide, which is also a greenhouse gas, but you can use a catalytic convertor to remove that.

It’s not mentioned in this article, but it should also be possible in principle to extract either nitrogen gas or ammonia directly from wastewater and farm waste, which if used as fertilizer would create a closed loop and actually help our ground and surface water at the same time it is helping our atmosphere. This sounds like a win-win-win for me, but it would have a cost, and the cost would have to be paid by the parties producing the pollution now rather than paid by all of us collectively in the future as we are impacted by the pollution, and that is the hard thing to explain and build political support behind.