Red Baron Farms
Philosopher
Specifically how large? And net or gross?Who said anything about eliminating 100% of CO2 emissions? I only talked about reducing it by a large amount.
Specifically how large? And net or gross?Who said anything about eliminating 100% of CO2 emissions? I only talked about reducing it by a large amount.
Specifically how large? And net or gross?
Black tar heroin is always poison to an addict. But carbon dioxide is a necessary component of all life on the planet. It only becomes a pollutant when we produce more than the environment can cycle back and we get too much building up in the atmosphere.You don't ask exactly to the percentage point how much black tar heroin you can mainline before you OD. You just stop shooting up heroin.
Specifically how large? And net or gross?
black tar heroin is always poison to an addict. But carbon dioxide is a necessary component of all life on the planet.
Interesting. I always assumed that comparing Navy reactors to commercial electrical reactors was a bad comparison because I assumed a single ship would be using a very small reactor not comparable to generating reactors. But I just looked a few up and find they can be 100MW plus which seems comparable to me. So I wonder if this is more practical than I thought.
How much do Navy reactors cost to operate?
Navy reactors use highly enriched uranium. This allows a more compact design and longer periods between refueling. Those are especially useful features for ships, but the use of highly enriched uranium is... less than ideal for civilian use.
If we're talking about safety and quality of life, I think that bet is a nuclear bedrock with a solar periphery. Hydro and others where you can, but coal has got to go.
Sarcasm and population comment aside, I am seriously asking an electrical engineering question that hopefully you can answer.Seriously, I'm not a climate scientist. But removing motor vehicles from the roads and replacing coal plants with something else would be sufficient, in my opinion.
There's CO2 in the atmosphere regardless of how much we put out.
Navy reactors use highly enriched uranium. This allows a more compact design and longer periods between refueling. Those are especially useful features for ships, but the use of highly enriched uranium is... less than ideal for civilian use.
Given the issues surrounding base load needs for maintaining a sufficiently robust electrical grid, how much can we reduce the fossil fuel side and replace it with solar, wind, hydro, geothermal etc.. Before we start requiring more dependable base load sources? Then translate that into reductions in fossil fuel CO2 we can make right now at current technology.
Ill get you started. Right now we can drop in natural gas everywhere coal is used and Natural gas emits 50 to 60 percent less CO2 when burned in a new, efficient natural gas power plant compared with emissions from a typical new coal plant. [1]
[1] National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL). 2010. Cost and performance baseline for fossil energy plants, Volume 1: Bituminous coal and natural gas to electricity. Revision 2. November. DOE/NETL-2010/1397. United States Department of Energy.
That was 9 years ago. I am certain by now we almost could have replaced every coal plant on the planet by now and the power grids' emissions would be reduced 50%. We could drop it even further by using more solar hydro and wind, but it is my understanding costs skyrocket if too much of the grid is by types of renewables that are not always reliable and fail because of the weather or time of day etc.
So how much more can we lower it before we need run into those problems? And how much fossil fuel CO2 will that save us?
How are they "good" alternatives? It's absolutely not "in evidence" that batteries can supply half the world in electricity during the night, especially during very hot or cold days, or during weeks where one barely sees the sun through the clouds. It's fantasy. You need a type of power generation that does _not_ rely on the weather.
The easiest method for which would also involve nuclear technology!Of course not. We could, alternatively, kill 90% of all humans and largely solve the problem.
There's no particular answer because it depends on storage and distribution, and we could go to 100% with enough storage and/or distribution. A solar station with a bunch of batteries/supercapacitors can maintain constant output by charging the storage system in mid-day and letting energy out from it at night. A network of interconnected power plants can distribute power to where the windmills are standing still from where they're spinning and adjust that flow an hour later when both air masses move on. Postulate different levels of storage & distribution abilities, and you get different answers for your question, but there's nothing in particular to stop it from going all the way.Given the issues surrounding base load needs for maintaining a sufficiently robust electrical grid, how much can we reduce the fossil fuel side and replace it with solar, wind, hydro, geothermal etc.. Before we start requiring more dependable base load sources?
Once we can make good enough meat without the whole animal, the land we're using on them now can be allowed to return to a natural state, which in some cases would also "sequester" more carbon.If 9% of our greenhouse gas emissions come from "agriculture", then better management of our food production systems is an important area of emphasis for trying to stem the most dangerous levels of warming we will otherwise experience over the next several decades... So sure, let's pull down the fences, move the cattle off the feedlots, let them graze native grasses, quit eating them and let their nutrients really return to the soil, and focus on human protein from lab-grown meats...
The easiest method for which would also involve nuclear technology!
Electricity usage is not steady during a 24hr period. Let's say the base load is 20 to 25% of the total and that is what is needed at night. Day time adds another 55 to 60% and then the remaining is a peak of around 20% between around 4pm and 7pm (details depending on the country and whether rural or city).
Wind power does generate at night.
So you need a mix of power sources, wind and solar together with storage can provide most of the requirement. To that you can add hydro (including pump storage), geothermal and nuclear (except for safety reasons I doubt this will be an alternative in the short term for developing countries - and is an expensive power source)
Yes I have heard this too, but also heard there are some constraints due to cost and manufacturing capacity of unproven storage systems. What I mean is right now at current technology wind is cheaper than coal, and in some circumstances solar too, and hydro always was. So given we could just grab the low fruit where available, and also replace any extra beyond that with natural gas plants replacing coal....how much would that save us here in the US?The easiest method for which would also involve nuclear technology!
There's no particular answer because it depends on storage and distribution, and we could go to 100% with enough storage and/or distribution. A solar station with a bunch of batteries/supercapacitors can maintain constant output by charging the storage system in mid-day and letting energy out from it at night. A network of interconnected power plants can distribute power to where the windmills are standing still from where they're spinning and adjust that flow an hour later when both air masses move on. Postulate different levels of storage & distribution abilities, and you get different answers for your question, but there's nothing in particular to stop it from going all the way.
Once we can make good enough meat without the whole animal, the land we're using on them now can be allowed to return to a natural state, which in some cases would also "sequester" more carbon.
Yes but not when the wind is too weak or too strong.
If 9% of our greenhouse gas emissions come from "agriculture", then better management of our food production systems is an important area of emphasis for trying to stem the most dangerous levels of warming we will otherwise experience over the next several decades. But it's no panacea; we need re-thinking of the carbon footprint of our homes and businesses (11%), industry (22%), electricity generation (28%), and transportation (28%).
So sure, let's pull down the fences, move the cattle off the feedlots, let them graze native grasses, quit eating them and let their nutrients really return to the soil, and focus on human protein from lab-grown meats and crickets raised in repurposed skyscrapers that become towers of hydoponic goodness.
Let's also . . .
Deploy solar desalination units. Cut WAY back on flying and driving everywhere. Switch to distributed renewable/nuclear electricity generation, with the renewable almost exclusively installed within the built environment. Grow food where our lawns used to be. Retrofit our homes for increased efficiency. Wear heavier sweaters and stop refrigerating our homes and businesses in the heat of summer. Start making out with random people in huge crowds during flu season. (Gross, but probably effective.)
We need to do all of the above, people. A 100% effort aimed at 10% of the problem can only be a 10% solution.
People who talk about addressing AGW without an emphasis on a nuclear power generation revolution are not actually addressing AGW.
And lab grown meat is the opposite of whats needed.We are both saying that, but you are willing to kill off 90% of the human population and can't even be expected to have any numbersYou can't seriously expect me to have those numbers. You should ask experts in those fields.
I don't think what I'm saying is controversial: reduce our CO2 emissions as much as possible, and sequester the excess we put into the atmosphere. Then level it off.
You just said earlier without nuclear we are screwed, what do you base that on?Someone should tell the insurance companies this. Maybe then, they would actually insure a nuclear power plant. Instead, these plants are insured by the government because no insurance company will entertain the idea.