That's communism under the gise of "saving the plant".Tell that to our idiot politicians who are forcing us out of our cars and on to completely unreliable and expensive public transport to 'save the planet'.![]()
That's communism under the gise of "saving the plant".Tell that to our idiot politicians who are forcing us out of our cars and on to completely unreliable and expensive public transport to 'save the planet'.![]()
https://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/fast-facts-transportation-greenhouse-gas-emissionshttps://ourworldindata.org/energy
I did not see a link to the OP's chart source. The website is worth spending some time on. As it has some fantastic interactive charts!!! It has become clear that while Europe's move to sustainable energy is laudable, it is beyond insignificant in the big picture.
It should also be noted that "cars" are a very small percentage of energy use, both here in the USA and more so worldwide. Eliminating all cars and 15 minute cities is not addressing the issue, AT ALL.
List your sources pleaseShow me where any large wind turbine blades last 20 years. Maybe you should look into your sourcing of info.![]()
I think your numbers are incorrect. From 4.86 to 8.05 is an increase of 3.19. This is an increase of .8 times, not 1.66.World population was 4.86B in 1985 and 8.05B in 2023 (same years as OP's chart). That's a population increase of 1.66 times, yet we see energy consumption nearly triple.
Yep, unsustainable.
Scott
Gas is used extensively in coal fired plants to ignite the coal being conveyed into the boilers. Many people don't realize that.Coal isn't going to make a come back. Cheap natural gas from the fracking boom has made coal very unattractive. If you want proof just get on 77 north and drive 36 miles into Ohio. One of the largest gas turbine plants in the country sits right next to the highway. It didn't exist 4 years ago and wouldn't be possible if it wasn't for all the cheap natural gas coming from the fracking going on in Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
List your sources please
Here's some I found quite quickly
https://cen.acs.org/environment/recycling/companies-recycle-wind-turbine-blades/100/i27
https://windexchange.energy.gov/end-of-service-guide
https://www.fullcirclewindservices....ain,resistance, which affects optimal output.
Yeah natural gas or oil warms intake air, preheats the boiler. A coal fired power plant typically has several 1,200 to 1,500 natural gas boilers.Gas is used extensively in coal fired plants to ignite the coal being conveyed into the boilers. Many people don't realize that.
8.05/4.86 = 1.66. To verify, 1.66 x 4.86 = 8.05. (Just for clarity, a result of 1 is no increase at all).I think your numbers are incorrect. From 4.86 to 8.05 is an increase of 3.19. This is an increase of .8 times, not 1.66.
Gas is used extensively in coal fired plants
Uranium would like a word.Not surprising. Coal has more energy per unit than anything else. Instead of dismissing it, we should find ways to burn it cleaner.
If we were smart, Thorium might be an even better word.Uranium would like a word.
The reason we built centralized power plants in the first place, moving away from localized generation, was economies of scale. It's cheaper to build large generators and robust transmission corridors then to try and build a massive web of interconnected distributed resources with enough transmission capacity to handle local generation faults.Regardless of its nameplate power output, any nuclear facility requires a rather large area excluded from the public due to potential radioactive leaks and security concerns. There is also a need for much skilled full time support personnel and equipment at a nuclear site. Once a site is established, reactors can be packed in rather densely as economy of scale. Because of this, nuclear really isn't compatible with the concept of decentralization. There are proposals to build smaller reactors, but it is going to end up as arrays of many small reactors at the same site.
Thorium is already usable in CANDU's, and there are a couple of companies pursuing thorium-based CANDU fuel bundles, like Cleancore:If we were smart, Thorium might be an even better word.
Yes, it's more abundant in certain areas, like India, as I mentioned. It's not the long-lived actinides you need to worry about, its the short-lived ones, remember, the shorter the half life the higher the number of decays that are taking place in a given amount of time. All the really crazy stuff decays quite rapidly while the fuel sits in the spent fuel pools, after a couple hundred years you can handle spent fuel, just don't eat it.Thorium's big advantages are that it's more abundant, has reduced radio active waste stream issues like the lack of those heavy 10,000+ year half-lived elements, as well as lower risks of weapons grade material proliferation because it's difficult to extract Plutonium from the waste stream. It also has some interesting possible applications like continuous refueling in molten salt reactors.
https://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/fast-facts-transportation-greenhouse-gas-emissions
What do you mean by "small percentage"? In the US light duty cars and trucks account for 16 percent of total emissions and 57 percent of emissions from the transportation sector.
That goes without saying but no one wants to talk about it. Remember when pre climate crazies demonstrated against nuclear power holding up signs saying nuclear is dirty and should be banned. Doesn’t seem dirty to me these days. A couple of years ago I talked to a nuclear engineer in Aiken,SC who worked at the Savanna nuclear facility. They had developed a process where they made glass around the spent fuel. It was totally sealed enclosed in thick glass. At that time they were shipping it to New Mexico for burial. You probably know more about it than I.Uranium would like a word.
Yeah nuclear uses the least amount of land and other resources such as concrete, steel, copper, glass, ect. It's going to use water like any thermal plant so the desert isn't a great place for them.Say again. I’m pretty sure nuclear has anything else beat in energy per unit (weight or volume). Also, isn’t transportation an issue where natural gas can be sent by pipeline but coal still needs to be shipped and stored?