DC
Banned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 23,064
JWideman said:Hydro requires having a nearby natural waterfall big enough and has a major environmental impact.
wrong.
hydro power does not need a water fall.
do you think they just stick a turbine under one?
alberta and b.c. have lots of hydro power.
they build dams.
Solar energy, as we know, is nuclear, in the final analysis. Building nuclear power plants on satellites (natural or man-made) and beaming energy to earth is science fiction, so far. But it can become reality.
Ludwik Kowalski
.
wrong.
hydro power does not need a water fall.
do you think they just stick a turbine under one?
alberta and b.c. have lots of hydro power.
they build dams.
Greenies regularly oppose hydro projects as they are quite destructive to river ecosystems.
Nuclear reactors aren't.
So what happens when the energy beam is "accidentally" knocked off kilter and ends up getting aimed at something like a foreign government capital building? Or a military command post? And aircraft carrier? A missile base?
No way in hell anyone will ever allow such a thing to be built.
The theory goes that you build a solar collector in space and in shoots an energy beam down to a collector on the ground that distributes the power, right?
So what happens when the energy beam is "accidentally" knocked off kilter and ends up getting aimed at something like a foreign government capital building? Or a military command post? And aircraft carrier? A missile base?
The construction of such system would be very visible from the ground and take a long time, and anyone with ICBM capability will make sure it never gets finished.
that's a lie.
reactors on rivers affect the temperature of the water, which can be devastating to the river's ecosystem.
Maybe, but less devastating then building a 50 meter wall across it? Besides, not all reactors use liquid water for cooling; the most infamous icon of nuclear power, the hyperbolic cooling stacks, use air and some water, but don't put any hot water back into the river.
that's a lie.
reactors on rivers affect the temperature of the water, which can be devastating to the river's ecosystem.
You're the liar here.
I've explained to you before CNSC regs on reactor intake and outflow temperatures (no more than 3 degrees variation allowed).
If you've read any of the engineering concepts on it, nothing. In fact, many have proposed using the target array on earth as a cattle pasture.
three degrees is a huge variation in river temperature.
that was not the plan for the reactors that were planned for our neighbourhood, on one of the world's largest river systems.
Pardon, but we were talking about hydroelectric systems there. How did reactors get into the middle of it?
(UK) Dip in nuclear power support after Fukushima proves shortlived
The dip in public support for new nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster in Japan lasted no more than nine months in the UK, according to a new poll from Ipsos MORI, published here for the first time. Futhermore, looking at the trend over the last decade, acceptance of nuclear power shows a rising trend.