The design of Chernobyl NPP itself was dangerous compared to other designs at the time.
Yes.
I take it that you agree that people haven't stopped cutting costs and being stupid and arrogant.
The design of Chernobyl NPP itself was dangerous compared to other designs at the time.
This is the root of the issue. You don't care how much it costs, so you'd rather go with the method that makes you feel good.
Whereas I'm suggesting we go with one that will achieve the same, but with a lower cost, enabling us to afford other important things.
Both of those web pages are blocked for me. Can you quote the relevant passages for us?Yesterday, I mentioned this in the other thread, but there's a new WP article about it:
Can vacuums slow global warming? Administration bets $1.2 billion on it. (Washington Post, Aug 11, 2023).
Unfortunately, those machines suck!
And I think that it is a particularly bad idea for the Biden administration to fund Occidental Petroleum Corp. in this manner. If the company uses fossil fuel energy instead of solar and wind to drive those CO2 sucking machines, it will emit more CO2 than it pulls out of the atmosphere.
Problem is if we start by building more nuclear power plants it be 10 years or longer before they come online. That's 10 years of burning fossil fuels that will make the situation much worse.
However If we start by prioritizing renewables, then when those nuclear plants finally become operational we will already be half way there, and need less of them.
Modern cars can go much faster, are generally heavier, and are driven at high speed a lot more, so they are inherently less safe. That has been mitigated by adding seatbelts and airbags and crumple zones and other safety features. But those features cost money, making modern cars a lot more expensive.
Similarly, modern nuclear plants are only safe because a lot of effort is put into making them so. They take a long time to build right and the power they produce is more expensive than other sources, including wind and solar. In the future this lack of competitiveness will get worse. That means from a purely economic standpoint it doesn't make sense to bet the farm on nuclear alone.
You say 'wealthy' countries can afford it, but is that really true? Western countries have generated their wealth through market economies that are actually quite fragile, and the wealth is not spread around evenly. Just because the US for example is 'rich', doesn't mean it can sink a large percentage of GDP into projects that that won't provide a return for a decade or so without affecting the economy. The poor will suffer first, then the political backlash could be severe.
Many places in the World are not suitable locations for nuclear power plants. They need to be close to a large source of water that doesn't mind being heated up, and located away from earthquake, volcanic, tsunami, flooding and wildfire zones - and of course not in war zones. In some countries that's impossible. Maybe in the future we will develop nuclear power plants that aren't so picky, but that's not now.
Countries which have the most need to build new nuclear plants are doing it. China currently has 21 plants under construction, India has 8, Turkey has 4, Egypt, South Korea and Russia have 3 each, Japan and the UK have 2 each. China is the most important because they are currently burning way more coal than any other country in the world. And you can bet they aren't holding out on nuclear over irrational safety concerns.
The IEA predicts that between now and 2040 nuclear will be dominated by China and other developing economies, while advanced economies overall will reduce nuclear capacity as they ramp up renewables. By 2050 the total added nuclear capacity of 20GW will be matched by the retirement of a similar amount - IOW we will be building a lot more new reactors than we are now just to replace old ones being decommissioned.
Gonna assume that rich people aren't really interested in putting the public good ahead of their own venal interests, and clawing back any of this wealth and plowing it into a green energy project will be quite heavily contested.
In 2006, the American Cancer Society and other plaintiffs won a major court case against Big Tobacco. Judge Gladys Kessler found tobacco companies guilty of lying to the American public about the deadly effects of cigarettes and secondhand smoke.
Today, after 11 years of Big Tobacco stalling and negotiating, tobacco companies are being required to run an extensive television and newspaper advertising campaign, at their own expense, admitting the truth about their products.
Federal District Court Judge Gladys Kessler issued a 1,500 page ruling in 2006, finding that, “over the course of more than 50 years, Defendants lied, misrepresented, and deceived the American public, including smokers and the young people they avidly sought as ‘replacement smokers,’ about the devastating health effects of smoking and environmental tobacco smoke, they suppressed research, they destroyed documents, they manipulated the use of nicotine so as to increase and perpetuate addiction, they distorted the truth about low tar and light cigarettes so as to discourage smokers from quitting, and they abused the legal system to achieve their goal – to make money with little, if any, regard for individual illness and suffering, soaring health costs, or the integrity of the legal system.” For a helpful summary of keys points of this landmark decision, see The Verdict Is In: Findings From United States v. Philip Morris Collection (Public Health Law Center, William Mitchell College of Law)
Department of Justice Lawsuit Against the Tobacco Industry (American Cancer Society, Jan 3, 2023)
In the first case of its kind to go to trial, a Montana district judge ruled that the young plaintiffs’ rights to a clean and healthy environment were violated. The state will likely appeal. NBC News’ Anne Thompson reports.
Montana judge rules in favor of 16 young people in climate change case (NBC News on YouTube, Aug 15, 2023 - 1:24 min.)
It's a sweeping victory for the 16 young people who brought the case. The first of its kind to go to trial.
A district judge ruled that their right to a clean and healthy environment, as guaranteed by Montana's constitution, was violated because the state prohibited agencies from taking climate-change impacts into consideration when evaluating fossil-fuel projects.
The judge also ruled that the ban was unconstitutional.
The judge found the state knew about the dangers of greenhouse gases from fossil fuels for at least 30 years and that, until concentrations are reduced, she says that young people will be unable to lead clean and healthy lives in Montana.
Despite the track record of dismissals for youth-led climate cases in the United States, experts said the Montana youths had an advantage in the state’s constitution, which guarantees a right to a “clean and healthful environment.” Montana, a major coal producer, is home to the largest recoverable coal reserves in the country. The plaintiff’s attorneys say the state has never denied a permit for a fossil fuel project.
(...)
Though it remains to be seen whether the Montana Supreme Court will uphold Seeley’s findings, experts said the favorable verdict for the youths could influence how judges approach similar cases in other states and prompt them to apply “judicial courage” in addressing climate change.
(...)
Phil Gregory, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said the court’s verdict could empower youths everywhere to take to the courts to secure their futures.
“There are political decisions being made without regard to the best scientific evidence and the effects they will have on our youngest generations,” he said. “This is a monumental decision.”
Judge rules in favor of Montana youths in landmark climate decision (Washington Post, Aug 14, 2023)
I can recommend the rest of the article. There is much more, and it's as brutal as any TV court drama. It's not a long article.The final witness the state called was Terry Anderson, a fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution and professor at Montana State University who proclaims himself to be a founder of so-called “free market environmentalism” and identifies himself as a “climate economist.”The attorneys for the plaintiffs almost immediately objected to his testimony, which involved him presenting data about Montana’s greenhouse gas emissions, arguing that he is an economist and not a climate scientist.
Seeley allowed the state to continue their questioning of Anderson since he was reading data purportedly off the Energy Information Administration’s website.
Anderson argued global greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 were 34.8 gigatons, while they were 36.8 gigatons in 2022, citing the EIA data. He then said that Montana’s emissions – which he narrowed to the location where carbon is consumed – were 0.0262 gigatons in 2020 and 0.036 gigatons in 2022, which he provided as seven hundredths of one percent and eight hundredths of one percent of global emissions those years, respectively.
But his testimony was almost immediately flipped on its head.
Plaintiffs’ attorney Phil Gregory pointed out the numbers that Anderson originally submitted in a report last October contained data that was incorrect, which Anderson said had later been “corrected” before he was deposed in the case.
Gregory told Anderson he had changed the metric between his two submissions, from million metric tons of CO2 to gigatons of CO2, which make the numbers appear smaller compared to global emissions. He further changed one of the data points for 2022, Gregory said, which Anderson confirmed.
DEQ employees, ‘climate economist,’ testify for state in Montana climate change trial (DailyMontanan, June 19, 2023)
HELENA, Mont. -- Montana officials sought to downplay a first-of-its-kind trial taking place over the state's obligations to protect residents from climate change, saying Monday that a victory by the young plaintiffs would not change approvals for fossil fuel projects.
Montana officials downplay first-of-its-kind climate trial (ABC News, June 19, 2023)
Heat is the number one environmental cause of death in the US – greater than cold, storms, hurricanes, floods, or tornadoes. Worldwide there are about 5 million deaths per year related to extreme heat or cold, four and a half million from cold and half a million from heat. This ratio is slowly shifting, however, due to global climate change. There are fewer cold related deaths, but more than offset by greater numbers of heat related deaths in recent years. We can expect this trend to continue for at least the next 2-3 decades, depending on how successful our efforts are to mitigate climate change.
Heat A Growing Public Health Problem (Science-Based Medicine, Aug 16, 2023)
Unfortunately none of those articles have enough info to determine whether current DAC techniques will significantly slow down global warming. I couldn't find any hard numbers anywhere else either, so apparently it's going to take $1.2 billion to find out. Scary number, but remember that the US government previously spent over half a billion dollars on Solyndra in 2009 for no result. So $1.2 billion is not that much - a mere 0.02% of the federal budget.MIT claims that "the move represents a big step in the effort to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere - and slow down climate change," but no, it doesn't.
However, it sounds damn good, doesn't it?!
For the time being, it's no practical solution to anything.
Unfortunately none of those articles have enough info to determine whether current DAC techniques will significantly slow down global warming.
Eventually oil companies will start to feel the squeeze as demand drops off.
That's not what I'm looking for.Try this one from the other thread.
Not much they can do about it. Once renewables get cheaper than oil the market will be against them.Big Oil can't allow that to happen, obviously!
That is why the campaigns against solar and wind are of the utmost importance!
(Why didn't somebody get to that ******* judge?!)
Work began on the site on 29 May 1975 with 400 volunteers helping to lay the initial groundwork for the turbine. Tvindkraft was officially opened on 26 March 1978 and has continuously produced power since this date.
Tvindkraft – the oldest operating wind turbine in the world (Power-Technology, Aug 13, 2019)
As the globe bakes under some of the longest, hottest heat waves in recorded history, reducing emissions to curb climate change is clearly an existential imperative. But climate change driven by human activity and the burning of fossil fuels has been in the news for more than 110 years. By the 1980’s, Congress was already seriously discussing the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. So what happened? Since then, the fossil fuel industry has set out to reshape the narrative surrounding climate change, global warming, and the consequences of burning fossil fuels. It's a decades-long, multi-billion dollar campaign to influence our politics, gaslight people to question scientific consensus, and maintain our addiction to fossil fuels.
Big Oil’s decades-long gaslighting campaign (MSNBC on YouTube, July 23, 2023 - 6:57 min.) (I assume MSNBC's pun on gaslighting is intended.)