Belz...
Fiend God
Comparing how dangerous buses are when somebody points out how dangerous a metro train is, is just stupid.
So you're looking for a 100% safe alternative ?
Comparing how dangerous buses are when somebody points out how dangerous a metro train is, is just stupid.
Maybe we can have another good laugh ?
Hey, did you know that bannane are radioactive ?
Well, to be fair the necesserary material can be mined somewhere else, like the US and other places, there would be a gap of years until production is ramped up , and it would be very costly due to pollution clean up requirement in the western world, but it could be done if it is required. It's not as if China had a monopole on the ore, they actually have only a monopole on producing it cheaply by ignoring all pollution and dumping it in the environment.
R-J, can I ask how you feel about Germany switching away from tightly controlled and regulated nuclear power and increasing their reliance on the lowest and dirtiest grade of coal and subsequently dumping tens of thousands of pounds of radioactive waste into Germany's soil and waterways every year?
I've always had an insane idea to increase our nuclear power and simply shoot the nuclear waste into space. I know it sounds crazy and dangerous. I'm sure many of you can point out things I haven't considered.
The so called greens are not about saving the planet.
It's all about saving humans.
Ignoring r-j's trolling and coming back to this, in addition to the points already covered about cost, energy, and so on, there's also the problem of simple danger. The simple fact is, rockets sometimes explode. Take the Ariane 5, for example. Ignoring the first two test flights, which both failed, it has had 54/56 launches successful. The most reliable rocket we have, and there's still a significant percentage that end up spreading their contents across the world. And while the point has been made that radiation isn't actually as scary as many people think, we still don't really want to start spraying it haphazardly across the landscape.
So it's not just a question of cost. In order for disposal into space to be viable, you'd need to have rockets be much more reliable so that the amount of radioactive material released in failures would be less than the amount released due to failed containment on Earth.
No news there. It's about preaching something they'll never have to implement.
Not to them.
Ignoring r-j's trolling and coming back to this, in addition to the points already covered about cost, energy, and so on, there's also the problem of simple danger. The simple fact is, rockets sometimes explode. Take the Ariane 5, for example. Ignoring the first two test flights, which both failed, it has had 54/56 launches successful. The most reliable rocket we have, and there's still a significant percentage that end up spreading their contents across the world. And while the point has been made that radiation isn't actually as scary as many people think, we still don't really want to start spraying it haphazardly across the landscape.
So it's not just a question of cost. In order for disposal into space to be viable, you'd need to have rockets be much more reliable so that the amount of radioactive material released in failures would be less than the amount released due to failed containment on Earth.
Not to mention there's no reason to get rid of it, other than political reasons.
http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/20...n-soil-tokyo-135-miles-south-fukushima-34691/I live in japan 135 miles / 220 Km south of Fukushima, in Kashiwa. I had the soil in Kashiwa professionally tested here are the official results for the levels of Cesium-137 and 134 and Iodine-131 only. No lab in Japan offers testing for any of the other dangerous radioactive elements like Plutonium / Strontium / Tellurium or Curium, all elements that were released in the explosion Use these results as you see fit, yes I know the results are nothing less than horrifying, what is even more terrifying is that the soil sample was taken from the side of the street where children walk everyday and not from where the elements could accumulate. This is the Cesium-137/134 and Iodine-131 levels of the soil in Kashiwa, that I had sent in and officially tested by a lab here in Japan.
Did you not notice, or were you hoping nobody else would?
http://www.living-intentionally.com/?p=548Putting It All Into Perspective
As always, what all this means to us is a matter of context. First off, to alleviate the fears of folks in the U.S. and Canada: Unless you’re having a domestic nuclear crisis of your own, you don’t have anything to worry about with regard to the current state of affairs here in Japan. Current numbers point to the fact that 20,000 out of 100,000 (that’s 20%) are predicted to die of cancers from other causes in the U.S. Current numbers indicate that 0 out of 100,000 people are expected to die from cancer caused by fallout from Fukushima. That’s 0%.
For those of us in Japan, the numbers are only moderately different. We have a significant population within the 20km “ground zero” radius and a much larger population within a 100km radius. The reality is that people at ground zero have a small increased chance of dying of cancer compared to statistical averages. To put it into perspective, if you were at ground zero during the atomic bombings of Hiroshima or Nagasaki, you had a 4% greater chance of dying of lung cancer. Compare that to the 400% greater chance of dying of lung cancer from smoking a pack of cigarettes a day for 20 years.
Fortunatetly there's always wind somewhere (like the Texas plains, constant wind nearly 365) for most wind conditions gearing and feathering keeps the turbines running in most conditions. Except for micro burts, tornados, etc. Anyhoos. Wind turbines are not meant to be a sole source of electrical power. It's just one part of a renewable whole.Those turbines need a minimum wind speed to function. You also need to shut them down if there's too much wind. Useful, eh ?
Havent heard about the noise thing since they are usually outside of city limits and in open fields and pastures.They're also extremely noisy and dangerous to birds.