Sorry for the double-post, I just wanted to make sure this was seen:
Just to be clear, here's how I picture it. Energy production from entirely renewables. Hydro, geothermal, solar, etc. That energy is usable, but we don't currently have the infrastructure for it. We'd need battery powered cars, and not everyone can afford to switch to them. That's where hydro-carbon creation comes in. We use the renewable-sourced electricity to create fuels we CAN use in our current cars and trucks and buses and industries. That fuel is created from carbon and water, preferably carbon sources that were in the carbon cycle recently, such as actual atmospheric carbon or lawn-cuttings, agricultural chaff, etc.
When burned, you're not -adding- to the carbon cycle. You're only putting carbon back that's been there recently. The carbon count stays level for the next hundred years, or thousand, or however long. We have a renewable source of energy, the Sun, however we extract the energy from the Sun, or from nuclear/geothermal, so it's not a closed system. There's no "infinite energy!" going on here. And we have usable, and more importantly renewable, carbon-neutral fuel source, that we can just drop into cars as-is.
And since it's cleaner than fossil fuels, as it's ONLY the artificial hydrocarbon, not any sulfur or other pollutants, the only products are carbon dioxide and water.