The Ways that the Military is Using
Alternative Energy
The US military knows that its branches must revamp their
thinking about how to engage in “the theater of war” in the
new, post-Cold War world of the 21st century. One thing that
the military leaders stress is the desire for the forces
deployed in the theater to be able to be more
energy-independent. Currently the US military has policies and
procedures in place to interact with allies or sympathetic
local populaces to help its forces in the field get their
needed energy and clean water when engaged in a foreign
military campaign. However, this is not wholly reliable, as the
US might well find itself facing unilateral military
activities, or have itself in a situation where its allies
cannot help it with the resources it needs to conduct its
military actions successfully.
The US military is very interested in certain alternative
energies that, with the right research and development
technologically, can make it energy independent, or at least a
great deal more so, on the battlefield. One of the things that
greatly interests the military along these lines is the
development of small nuclear reactors, which could be portable,
for producing theater-local electricity. The military is
impressed with how clean-burning nuclear reactors are and how
energy efficient they are. Making them portable for the typical
warfare of today's highly mobile, small-scaled military
operations is something they are researching. The most
prominent thing that the US military thinks these small nuclear
reactors would be useful for involves the removal of hydrogen
(for fuel cell) from seawater. It also thinks that converting
seawater to hydrogen fuel in this way would have less negative
impact on the environment than its current practices of
remaining supplied out in the field.
Seawater is, in fact, the military's highest interest when
it comes to the matter of alternative energy supply. Seawater
can be endlessly “mined” for hydrogen, which in turn powers
advanced fuel cells. Using OTEC, seawater can also be endlessly
converted into desalinated, potable water. Potable water and
hydrogen for power are two of the things that a near-future
deployed military force will need most of all.
In the cores of nuclear reactors—which as stated above are
devices highly interesting, in portable form, to the US
military—we encounter temperatures greater than 1000 degrees
Celsius. When this level of temperature is mixed with a
thermo-chemical water-splitting procedure, we have on our hands
the most efficient means of breaking down water into its
component parts, which are molecular hydrogen and oxygen. The
minerals and salts that are contained in seawater would have to
be extracted via a desalination process in order to make the
way clear for the water-splitting process. These could then be
utilized, such as in vitamins or in salt shakers, or simply
sent back to the ocean (recycling). Using the power of nuclear
reactors to extract this hydrogen from the sea, in order to
then input that into fuel cells to power advanced airplanes,
tanks, ground vehicles, and the like, is clearly high on the R
& D priority list of the military.
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