- PeterMoulding.com
- Author
- Trainer
- Speaker
- Business Coach
- How to write a How To book
- PHP Courses
- Speaking
- Web Architect
- Australia
- Books
- Authors
- Akkana Peck
- Alex Berenson
- Andrew Nugent
- Ben Sanders
- Brock Clarke
- Chris Simms
- David Mercer
- Dianna Mullet
- Don Winslow
- Dori Smith
- Harlan Coben
- Jack McDevitt
- James Wines
- Jerry Yudelson
- John Grisham
- Kevin Mullet
- L. E. Modesitt Jr.
- Laurell K. Hamilton
- Marshall Karp
- Martina Cole
- Michael Marshall Smith
- Michel Roux Jr
- Nadia Sawalha
- Philip Pullman
- Raymond Khoury
- Richard North Patterson
- Robert Masello
- Sally Roth
- Sarah Langan
- Stella Rimington
- Stephen Booth
- Stephen King
- Stephen Leather
- T.C. Boyle
- Tom Negrino
- Tony Hillerman
- Urban Waite
- Val McDermid
- Valerio Massimo Manfredi
- Beginning GIMP
- Beginning Visual C++
- Culturalism
- Fiction
- A Drink Before The War
- A Talent for War
- Bag of Bones
- Blood and Ice
- Burn
- Dark Lady
- Dead Line
- Eclipse
- Empress of Eternity
- Exley
- Flipping Out
- Just One Look
- Nightfall
- Pet Sematary
- Savage Moon
- Skinwalkers
- Starvation Lake
- The Fallen
- The Gardens of the Dead
- The Jump
- The Last Templar
- The Mermaids Singing
- The Midnight Mayor
- The Secret Soldier
- The Summons
- The Terror of Living
- The Testament
- The Tower
- Under the Dome
- Virus
- AJAX and PHP
- Aging with Grace
- Food books
- Green Architecture
- Life Is So Good
- SQL: The Complete Reference
- The Backyard Bird Lover's Ultimate How-to Guide
- The Garden Gurus
- Authors
- Sustainability
- -18 hours left to decide the future of Australia
- Campbells vegetable stock or Massel vegetable stock?
- Carbon Sequestration
- Carbon tax for Australia is a fraud
- Copenhagen will fail
- Cost of living in Australia
- Dick Smith jumps on the population bandwagon
- Dry Run: Preventing the Next Urban Water Crisis
- Energy Saving Lights
- Garlic
- How many people can live in Australia?
- Its obsolete, throw it out!
- Julia Gillard offers 9.9 billion dollars bribe to Rob Oakeshott
- Laundry detergent
- Petrol or Diesel?
- Reflective foil batts kill
- RoHS
- Sea level to rise 3mm due to climate change
- Solar power
- Spring again in Sydney
- Sustainable fuels
- The CRUD Tax is back
- The people who make building regulations do not own houses
- Water efficiency
- Which insulation is safer, foil or wool?
- Will Australia reduce greenhouse gas emissions?
- Technology
- Android or Blackberry or iPhone or a flip phone?
- Apple versus Google 2011
- Cameras
- Cars
- Colour
- Burgundy
- Colour Blindness
- Colour Names
- Dulux colours
- Pantone colours
- Safe Colours
- Seculine ProDisk Mini colour balance card
- What Causes Colour Blindness?
- Hardware
- Batteries for the Digital Age
- Cables
- Cases
- Computer reliability
- Computrace
- Disks
- Astone ISO Gear 481E
- Best SSD for your notebook computer
- Disk block size
- Hitachi disk HDS722020ALA330
- LaCie USB 2.0 250 GB mobile hard drive design by F.A. Porsche
- SMART disk
- Samsung 2 TB HD204UI quiet low power disk for mass storage
- Seagate and Samsung merge disk business
- Select the right disk for your RAID array
- USB disk speed
- Western Digital WD20EARX 2 GB SATA 3 disk
- How long should computer hardware last?
- Keyboards
- Mainframe
- Memory cards
- Monitors
- Netbooks, notebooks, tablets, and xPads
- Network Attached Storage
- OLED Displays
- PC's are a thing of the past
- Printers
- Quiet
- Samsung Galaxy S
- Speed
- Television
- Tools
- USB
- Worst computer movies
- Xserve is dead. What next?
- Your backup will not work
- Z68 motherboards
- iPad or Acer Aspire One?
- IQ
- LG Intello Washing Machine
- Lack of a challenge
- Networks
- 802.11n wireless networking
- D-Link DIR-655 wireless router
- D-Link DWA-160 Xtreme N dual band USB adapter
- D-Link DWA-556 Xtreme N PCI Express desktop adapter
- MIMO
- NBN spends another $12 billion of our tax money on nothing
- National Broadband Network
- Netgear wireless modem router DGND3300 with 300 Mbps 802.11n
- Refrigerator kills wireless broadband
- Small Wireless Network
- TP-LINK TL-SG10005D 5 port gigabit switch
- TP-Link TL-WR1043N wireless N gigabit router
- Telstra Pre-paid Mobile Wi-Fi
- Where are the router plus proxy server combinations?
- Open Source documentation
- Software
- 7-zip
- Accounting
- Asterisk
- Audacity
- Backup software
- Bloat only in Windows
- CAD
- CDex
- Disk imaging software for copying and backup
- Exact Audio Copy
- Filezilla
- Firefox
- Java
- LibreOffice or OpenOffice?
- Linux
- 1 in 5 servers will ship with Linux
- Android phones outsell iPhone
- Another Move to Linux
- CentOS 5.5 installation on SSD and RAID 5
- Debian
- Debian 5.0.5 AMD64 installation
- Debian 5.06 installation
- Fedora
- Fedora or Ubuntu?
- Gnome or KDE?
- K9copy
- Linux 2.6.38
- Linux Gnome login settings lost
- Linux Mint
- Linux RAID, a rant
- Linux Speed
- Linux Time
- Linux reliability as demonstrated by Ubuntu 10.10
- Linux reliability as demonstrated by Ubuntu 11.4
- Linux still a struggle in 2011
- Linux workstation disk RAID 1
- Linux, NT, Windows, and SETI
- Linux, three years of progress
- London Stock Exchange switches to Linux
- Mandrake Linux 9.2
- The partition is misaligned by 48128 bytes - warning from Linux RAID
- Ubuntu
- How to fix the scroll bars in Ubuntu 11.4 Gnome
- Kubuntu 10.10 alternate installation on desktop with RAID 1
- POWbuntu
- Ubuntu 10.10 after 6 months use
- Ubuntu 10.10 alternate installation
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop RAID 1
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop RAID 5
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop install on a netbook
- Ubuntu 10.10 desktop installation
- Ubuntu 10.10 netbook install on a netbook
- Ubuntu 10.10 server AMD64
- Ubuntu 10.10 upgrade to version 11.4 beta 2
- Ubuntu 10.4
- Ubuntu 11.10
- Ubuntu 11.10 first upgrade
- Ubuntu 11.4 after one month use
- Ubuntu 12.04 beta1 desktop amd64
- Ubuntu One
- Ubuntu by Microsoft?
- Ubuntu desktop upgrade 10.4 to 10.10 failed because I did not check the media
- Ubuntu strikes again
- Upgrade Ubuntu to Linux Mint 12 LDXE for extra speed
- Yes, use Linux but not that distribution!
- Nero
- OpenOffice
- OpenOffice is now Apache Office
- Project management
- Scribus
- Software for Windows and Linux
- Text editors
- Time
- Todo applications
- Tomboy notes
- Top text editors
- Version control
- VideoLAN VLC media player
- Visio
- Webmin
- Webmin installation on CentOS for Web development
- Webmin installation on Ubuntu
- What is the most popular open source software today?
- Windows
- Another Windows person goes Linux
- BAD_POOL_CALLER
- Cygwin
- Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool cannot find a common virus
- One of the developers of Windows XP is criminally insane
- There are unused icons on your desktop
- W32time
- Which Windows version?
- Windows 7 Home Premium
- Windows XP Stop 0x0000007B during installation
- Windows XP is a disaster
- Windows processes
- XML
- Zip, bzip, gzip, or 7zip?
- configFree
- Technology Succession Planning
- VoIP
- Web Sites
- Drupal
- Do Drupal themes have to use the GPL?
- Drupal 7
- A better search facility for Drupal
- Drupal - performance or flexibility
- Drupal 7 Fields are hard to fix
- Drupal 7 new features
- Drupal 7 ships on January 5
- Drupal 7.14
- Drupal 7.4 hits PeterMoulding.com
- Drupal function sequence
- The evolution of a module
- Undefined index: headers in DefaultMailSystem->mail() (line 54 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- Undefined index: to in DefaultMailSystem->mail() (line 83 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- implode(): Invalid arguments passed in DefaultMailSystem->format() (line 23 of /modules/system/system.mail.inc).
- Drupal 8
- Drupal Code Load Cut
- Drupal How To
- Drupal Modules
- Backup and Migrate
- Browscap
- CKEditor with Drupal WYSIWYG
- Captcha
- Cel
- Colorbox
- Content Construction Kit
- Content type
- Devel module for Drupal
- Drupal Rules as an automation language
- Drupal Spam add-on module
- Form alter to node
- IMCE
- IMCE Wysiwyg bridge
- ImageAPI
- Jdog
- Lightbox2
- Module variable
- Node Gallery Access
- Node_Gallery
- Path
- Path redirect
- Pathauto
- Pet
- Search
- Service links
- Session Variable
- Statistics
- Taxonomy
- Token
- Token ex
- Transliteration
- Trigger
- Watch
- Other modules
- Drupal Training
- Drupal access controls need a major rewrite
- Drupal coding tricks
- Drupal performance
- Drupal themes for the future
- Drupal.org colours
- Import existing data into Drupal
- Multiple Web sites made easy using Drupal multisite and the right start
- drupal_lookup_path()
- Adobe PDF
- Apache
- Apache Mahout
- Audi.com
- Bleet
- CSS Strikes Again
- CSS or xCSS
- Can you believe Facebook or email?
- Content Management Systems
- Databases
- Facebook scam
- Font
- Fonts
- HTML
- Install Apache, MySQL, and PHP 5 in Ubuntu 11.4 using the Ubuntu Software Centre
- Language Codes
- Marketing
- Memcache
- Nginx
- Open source development hits another roadblock
- Oscars
- PHP
- SPDY
- Search software
- Techoni.com.au
- Theme themes
- Things to hate on Web sites
- U.S. Patent No. 6,985,875
- Virtual Private Server
- Visible Improvement
- Web 4.0
- Web browser usage
- Web browsers
- Web site development
- Bluefish
- Crying over spilt code
- Eclipse and PHP
- Getting a Git client, a story of ancient technology and pain
- HTTrack
- MVC
- Netbeans
- PHP or ..., CakePHP/Symfony/ZF versus ...
- Programming
- Superfish
- Web browser emulators for testing your Web site
- Web development frameworks
- Web site books
- Web site development on your own computer
- Webmin or phpMyAdmin or cPanel for creating databases?
- aiki framework
- jQuery
- Views development - Learn Fields first
- Views development - Learn Actions and Rules
- jQuery .each()
- jQuery .has()
- jQuery .is()
- jQuery and Firefox Firebug
- jQuery children
- jQuery for people not using Drupal - Installation and getting started
- jQuery hover
- jQuery hover de-duplication example
- jQuery or CSS?
- jQuery performance
- jQuery tests
- Web site hosting
- Westpac Web site still broken after two years and ten months
- Wordpress wins another CMS survey
- Drupal
Sustainable fuels
Submitted by Peter on Sat, 2010-07-03 11:44
Sustainable fuels are important in Australia and many other countries because electric vehicles are not yet capable of travelling the long distances required in a large rural country. What sustainable fuels are practical today?
Hydrogen
Hydrogen is a favourite fuel in science fiction and among people seeking to get their face on television at any cost. There are hydrogen based systems in a small selection of German and Californian cities. A hydrogen atom supplies only a quarter of the energy supplied by a carbon atom. Pure hydrogen is hard to store. Your hydrogen powered vehicle will be practical for the same uses as electric cars, short inner city commuting.
Hydrogen is liquid below -252.87°C (-423.17°F) making liquid hydrogen impractical for everything except the space shuttle launch. Hydrogen requires massive pressure to liquefy it at room temperature so give up on storing hydrogen the way we store liquefied petroleum gas. Hydrogen can be stored in special tanks containing a special metallic sponge that absorbs hydrogen but the sponge is expensive to produce and is practical only for Arnold Schwarzenegger when he is trying to attract votes. Arnold has two Hummers converted to alternative fuels and only one converted to hydrogen. The other, the more practical one, uses biodiesel.
The best way to store hydrogen is to combine hydrogen with carbon. You get a massive increase in hydrogen density by adding small amounts of carbon. Fuel cells convert hydrogen to electricity by combining two hydrogen atoms with one oxygen atom to form H2O, commonly known as water. The carbon in from hydrocarbon fuels is used to strip the oxygen from the water to produce more hydrogen for the fuel cell. One carbon atom produces four hydrogen atoms. Ethanol is the favourite fuel for fuel cells because ethanol is readily available, cheap, and convenient.
Ethanol as a hydrogen source
Ethanol is C2H5OH indicating there are two carbon atoms in the middle with five hydrogen and one oxygen atom attached plus an extra hydrogen atom hanging off the oxygen atom. Fuel cells can split the ethanol into two carbon atoms, five hydrogen atoms, and one hydroxyl molecule (the bit with one oxygen and one hydrogen atom). One hydrogen atom should combine with the hydroxyl to produce one unit of energy. The remaining four hydrogen atoms combine with two oxygen atoms to release four more units of energy. Each carbon atom can strip the oxygen from two water molecules to release four hydrogen atoms. The two carbon atoms produce a total of eight free hydrogen atoms that are combined with four oxygen atoms to release eight units of energy. You end up with thirteen units of energy from one ethanol molecule and the ethanol molecule uses a tiny amount of space compared to storing thirteen hydrogen atoms.
Ethanol and methanol are natural fuels high in hydrogen. The original petrol engine was first demonstrated using ethanol and ethanol was an important ingredient in fuel mixes until the 1930s. Australia and many other countries sell an E10 mix using 10 percent ethanol mixed with conventional fuel. Some countries are moving to E20 and E25. Brazil is converting to 100 percent ethanol for cars.
Methane as a hydrogen source
Methane, CH4, is a gas produced by waste rotting in land fill sites and is collected, using underground pipes, to produce electricity. In a fuel cell, the carbon atom can produce four hydrogen atoms giving you a total of eight hydrogen atoms to produce eight units of energy. The poor quality of the gas from landfill often results in the gas being burnt in low technology heating applications. Methane is not practical for use in vehicles because of the high pressure required to store a useful amount of fuel.
Methane is also produced from petroleum products as a by-product of refining the petroleum. Currently there is no system for labelling methane based on the source. If you are buying pure methane in quantity then you are almost always receiving methane from petroleum.
Liquefied petroleum gas as a temporary hydrogen source
Liquefied Petroleum Gas, LPG, is a lot of hydrogen combined with a small amount of carbon, and is in common use in Australia for long distance commuting and for commercial vehicles that are not big enough to benefit from diesel. Fuel cells can work with LPG. You could convert a lot of cars to fuel cells today and use LPG as a temporary fuel until production of ethanol and alternatives reaches the point where you can stop buying LPG.
LPG is butane (C4H10), propane (C3H8), or a mixture of the two.
Biodiesel
The world is running out of diesel. Diesel is artificially created from other petroleum products and the conversion wastes energy. We need an alternative.
Diesel engines work beautifully on vegetable oil with very little work on the oil. When Rudolph Diesel invented the diesel engine, he demonstrated the engine using peanut oil. Today a a huge number of cars worldwide run on rapeseed oil (including canola), palm oil, and soy oil.
You combine vegetable oil with a small amount of methane to produce biodiesel. Methane can be collected from rotting food waste. Food waste can be fermented to produce ethanol then fermented further to produce methane then used as fertiliser and mulch to help produce more food. Used vegetable oil from cooking can be recycled as biodiesel in the same plant that produces methane.
Rapeseed is one of the most common seeds grown for oil and food. Canola is the name for a variety of rapeseed developed in Canada. Rapeseed oil has the advantage that it is thinner than palm oil based diesel and works in the colder parts of the world.
Palm oil production is common in tropical regions and produces a slightly thicker diesel that works in the warmer parts of the world. Some parts of some tropical countries do suffer deforestation to increase palm oil production and it is a political issue to solve. If the source of palm oil could be traced, we could ban imports of oil from new deforestation areas.
Asian countries produce huge amounts of soybeans and could use lower quality soy for biodiesel. Soybeans are used for human food and stock feed. Replacing diesel with soy oil will cut into the use of soybean for stock feed and push up the price of feed lot fattened meat. Healthy lean meat will not increase in price because it is not fattened in feed lots. After you squeeze out the oil, the left over soybean mash can be used as food for animals or fermented to produce ethanol then used as fertiliser and mulch for production of more food. Some parts of Brazil suffer deforestation to increase soybean production and it is a political issue to solve before buying soybean based diesel from Brazil.
Petroleum oil prices rose rapidly from 2001 until 2007 then dropped back to 2004 prices. In 2004 low vegetable oil prices made biodiesel economical. In 2007 some vegetable oils jumped in price when petroleum oil prices were starting to fall. Biodiesel will fluctuate in economic value and in some years will need subsidies.
Fuel efficiency tests
You read about the fuel efficiency of new cars and it looks excellent compared to existing cars. Perhaps we could reduce petroleum use by replacing our cars?
No. The fuel efficiency tests are useless for most people. Most car journeys in Australia, Canada, USA, and similar suburban oriented countries, start with a commute to work in the morning when the car engine is cold. The fuel efficiency tests start with a car warmed up to the laboratory temperature. That warm up period chews an extra couple of litres of fuel that is never counted in the official figures. The batteries in hybrid cars are not effective until warm. If you want to achieve the official figures you have to start by burning fuel to heat your garage overnight, if you have a garage. More than half of Australia cars are parked outside or in open car parks and drop 10 to 20 degrees overnight.
In a real world test around Sydney conducted by the NRMA, the Toyota Prius was the most efficient and used 18 percent more fuel than the official figures. A Suzuki Alto used 46 percent more than the official figures. A Ford Fiesta Econetic is advertised as the most fuel efficient car based on official figures but did not come close to the advertised figures, using a massive 30 percent more than the official figures, and more than the Toyota Prius despite being a smaller car.
There might be small crowded cities where everyone parks in heated garages and drives only short stop/start trips. For the rest of us, the official figures are useless. Measurements of real fuel economy show you do not gain much when replacing a three year old car with a similar new car and the massive burning of fuel required to manufacture the new car will never be regained. You do not see worthwhile fuel gains until you replace a car that is 10 years or older or you replace a gas guzzling American car with with a Japanese, Korean, or European car, where higher fuel prices have always made car design more efficient.
The common Ford family car in Australia is the Falcon. The Toyota equivalent is the Camry. You might need the Falcon if you have to tow a very large boat. The Camry is sufficient for everything else. The Camry is AU$12,000 cheaper and uses 36 percent less fuel. The Camry hybrid is AU$7,000 cheaper and uses 60 percent less fuel. An upgrade from any Ford Falcon to either Toyota Camry would save you enough fuel to cover the fuel used for manufacture and then a lot more in subsequent years, a truly green upgrade.
Diesel or petrol?
European car brands push diesel as more efficient than petrol but individual petrol cars beat diesel. Why?
Diesel engines are made of iron instead of alloys and are heavier as a result. The weight difference is significant in small cars, giving petrol an advantage. The biggest increase in efficiency for modern engines comes from gearboxes containing more gears. The lighter petrol engines can have better gearboxes and still remain lighter.
Diesel produces more power per volume of fuel because diesel fuel contains a higher ratio of carbon atoms but is heavier and produces more carbon pollution for the same volume of fuel. When you compare diesel to petrol for a given weight of fuel, there is only a small difference and again it is from the extra carbon leading to higher pollution.
The most efficient diesel engines are stationary engines run at constant speed to pump water and for other industrial uses. Diesel engines used in vehicles around the city burn as much carbon as their petrol equivalents. Trucks cruising the interstate highways show better fuel consumption than trucks in the city but not as good as those stationary engines. Note that those big trucks cruising the highways can have 18 gears to keep their diesel engines running near constant speed.
Manufacture of biodiesel is more efficient than the manufacture of ethanol, making biodiesel a quicker replacement for existing fuels in big vehicles. Fuel cells already run on ethanol giving ethanol the advantage when powering anything small and anything based on electricity.
Temparature
Diesel clogs up in cold weather. Ethanol evaporates in hot weather. Australia is hotter than northern Europe and northern USA. A solution designed for Berlin winter (-3°C, 24°F) might not work in Oodnadatta summer (50.7°C, 123.26°F). When some expert prattles on about the perfect solution, find out where they live and compare their environment to your environment.
Flexibility
A stationary engine, where weight is not a problem, could be built to run on a blend of ethanol and diesel to use up whatever is produced locally. The local production could vary across the seasons with biodiesel produced from beans in summer and ethanol produced from root crops in winter. Instead of converting methane into hydrogen, the methane can be added to the ethanol/biodiesel mix. Stationary engines can have attachments to consume almost anything burnable as fuel.
The stationary engine can generate electricity to charge batteries in electric cars. When the car is charged, the electricity can switch to heating water and other uses. During the day, when your compost is heating up and producing more methane, you run the engine on methane. Overnight you add something else from your fuel mix. For city use, you get more flexibility by using natural fuels to generate electricity. Electricity is not practical for tractors and long distance trucks.
You can also use the natural fuels to supplement wind farms during windless days and solar panels overnight.
Hybrids
Hybrid vehicles are better around town no matter which fuel you use. A small battery can save the energy you waste when braking then return the energy when you need to accelerate. Highway cruising contains very little stop/start travel and does not benefit from hybrid technology. Inner city travel is almost all stop/start driving and benefits the most from hybrid power. The inner city commute to work should, of course, be replaced by travel on trains, buses, bicycles, or a pure electric car. Hybrids with current battery technology win on the commute through the suburbs where a pure electric car runs out of power.
Hybrids with large batteries can be charged at home or at work from solar electricity panels. Someone stupidly handed out a patent that stops people using the latest battery technology in cars. The patent applies only to large batteries used in cars. You can use the same batteries to power toys, iPods, and toasters but not cars. Cars are temporarily restricted to using older battery technology that makes large batteries too heavy for commuter vehicles.
The use of hybrids is completely separate from the use of vegetable based fuels and should be encouraged in larger countries, including Australia, where people travel longer distances.
Fuel cells could be used in conjunction with hybrids to top up the batteries when the engine is switched off. The engine is switched off when you are stopped at traffic lights but you still use your sound system and headlights. You could provide that low level of power direct from a fuel cell instead of draining the hybrid battery. Currently fuel cells have to run on ethanol. You could have two tanks, one for ethanol, and one for diesel.
Engine seal erosion
The people pushing petroleum products like to tell stories about ethanol eating away the rubber and plastic components of engines. Brazil runs cars on 100 percent ethanol with no problems. The car manufacturers simply replaced a few cheap plastics with slightly different plastic. All your government has to do is pass a law requiring all future petrol engines to be compatible with ethanol. A few years later, when there are lots of compatible cars on the road, you tell the petrol companies to switch a percentage of their pumps to 100 percent ethanol.
Hydrogen at home
This idea only works in country houses. It requires space and there are safety issues. You cannot use this in a city apartment.
The biggest problem with hydrogen is storage. Out in the country low pressure storage is practical and cost efficient. You can use excess electricity from solar panels in the middle of the day to electrolyse water into hydrogen. In the evening you cook using the low pressure hydrogen. Windy days can drive the electrolysis using the excess electricity from your wind farm. The hydrogen will fill a big plastic bag inside a metal shed with the metal protecting against static electricity and lightening. If a fire occurs, water sprinklers will control the heat from the fire until the hydrogen is consumed. The shed will consume space and there is usually plenty of space on farms. The roof of the shed will be covered with solar panels to drive the electrolysis.
The secret is the low pressure. You do not have to use expensive high pressure containers with special expensive treatments for hydrogen. Hydrogen destroys steel. Hydrogen leaks through almost everything. In the farm hydrogen storage shed, small leaks are acceptable and vent harmlessly through the roof.
Conclusion
Hydrogen is the cleanest fuel and is not practical outside of small cars in big cities or stationary use where the hydrogen is produced and consumed at the same location. Ethanol is currently the most efficient way to deliver hydrogen to fuel cells and is environmentally sound when produced from waste plant material instead of food. Ethanol is the best choice for a quick replacement of petrol imports. Biodiesel is currently more practical for large vehicles and long distances and in hot climates.








