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I'm thinking big storage capacity, suitable for storing energy from the summer for the winter.
Quote from: set fair on 01/02/2021 19:13:01I'm thinking big storage capacity, suitable for storing energy from the summer for the winter.Nuclear reactors spring to mind. The fission process generates energy regardless of seasonal variations.And even when the reactor is "switched off", so to speak, the uranium fuel within it stores its latent energy for millions of years.A perfect energy source. Harmless until activated. Then providing the equivalent energy of millions of tons of coal and oil. Without a carbon footprint.Why aren't we building nuclear reactors? Instead of windmills. Don't you feel these modern windmills represent a deplorable regression into the 15th Century, when windmills were all they had.
Quote from: charles1948 on 01/02/2021 20:18:14Quote from: set fair on 01/02/2021 19:13:01I'm thinking big storage capacity, suitable for storing energy from the summer for the winter.Nuclear reactors spring to mind. The fission process generates energy regardless of seasonal variations.And even when the reactor is "switched off", so to speak, the uranium fuel within it stores its latent energy for millions of years.A perfect energy source. Harmless until activated. Then providing the equivalent energy of millions of tons of coal and oil. Without a carbon footprint.Why aren't we building nuclear reactors? Instead of windmills. Don't you feel these modern windmills represent a deplorable regression into the 15th Century, when windmills were all they had.So, what's your plan to deal with radioactive waste?
Petrol, synthesise petrol. Good to burn, easy to handle, cheaper to handle, safer than gas, more environmentally friendly than batteries, clean.
which was much better than the ground-contaminated oil from Romania.
Put the waste into ships, sail them into the North Pacific, then throw the waste overboard into the Mariana Trench.This Trench is over ten miles deep under the Ocean. Ten miles of water would provide an adequate shield against radioactive effects on the surface.Problem solved.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 01/02/2021 23:23:22Petrol, synthesise petrol. Good to burn, easy to handle, cheaper to handle, safer than gas, more environmentally friendly than batteries, clean. Splendid idea. Problem is that the ideal starting material is coal, and Margaret Thatcher destroyed practically all of the UK's coal stock - enough for the next 200 years. Next best is biowaste, but it's a horribly inefficient process because most of it is water. Biowaste to methane is OK if you don't mind wet methane.
You can synthesise petroleum from air
Nope that was during ww2, with the nazis,......, and hitler. You can synthesise petroleum from air https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20003650Ethanol is also a good contender, anything liquid, easy to transport, in pipes for example, and store, in an open container.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 02/02/2021 17:56:38Nope that was during ww2, with the nazis,......, and hitler. You can synthesise petroleum from air https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20003650Ethanol is also a good contender, anything liquid, easy to transport, in pipes for example, and store, in an open container.Baffled by your enthusiasm for Nazism, but they certainly did indeed synthesise petrol from coal. I wouldn't go so far as to accuse Margaret Thatcher of being a Nazi (or indeed any kind of socialist) nor do I think the Luftwaffe destroyed many UK coal mines, so (as often) I am mystified by your sentence..
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 01/02/2021 23:23:22Petrol, synthesise petrol. Good to burn, easy to handle, cheaper to handle, safer than gas, more environmentally friendly than batteries, clean.Yes. The Germans were the first in this field, during WW2. Their synthetic oil refineries produced pure fuel, which was much better than the ground-contaminated oil from Romania.
It seems intuitively obvious that we should use the free fusion reactor in the sky
Quote from: alancalverd on 03/02/2021 23:47:35It seems intuitively obvious that we should use the free fusion reactor in the sky I completely agree. Doesn't it seem strange that we humans are wondering where to get energy from.Shall we get it from coal, or oil, or uranium, or waves or tides or windmills.When all the time - the answer is literally staring us in the face. Every day - we see the Sun rise.What is the Sun? It's a ready-made nuclear-fusion reactor. Containing enough hydrogen fuel to give us all the energy we'll ever need for 5 billion years.And it's there - in our sky - at a safe distance of 93,000,000 miles. At that distance, it doesn't harm us by nuclear radiation. It's a constant free, safe supply of light and warmth - there all the time for us.