Yes. In fact there's one not half an hour from here. My uncle works there.
It doesn't matter. NIMBYism is real and has to be accounted for.Stimey wrote:
Which leads back to my first question.
I think its largely non education of the facts.
Last edited by Hurricane2k9 (2011-05-30 09:18:10)
Then you increase the % of power that is wasted in transit.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
fuck NIMBYs
e: it could just be built in the middle of nowhere...
mr.hrundi wrote:
As much as I hate to respont to you with facts, cause I know quite well that brains isn't your strongest point, maybe someone else is interested: one of the threats for power plants that has been researced, is plane crashes. these can, in an really unfortunate event, happen by chance (noone though an earthquake that strong could ever hit japan), or they can happen quite intentionally, as should be known since 2001. The outcome is the same.-Sh1fty- wrote:
Meh, my guess is they've played the Chernobyl part of CoD4 too many times or they're afraid a tsunami and earthquake will come cripple their plants since the Japanese got pretty screwed.Stimey wrote:
Why are people so tinfoil hat about nuclear power?
Isn't Germany pretty free of natural disasters? It's not like they get hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, tornadoes. or flooding.
Paranoid Nazis
well ya can't have your cake and eat it tooJay wrote:
Then you increase the % of power that is wasted in transit.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
fuck NIMBYs
e: it could just be built in the middle of nowhere...
Agreed. They recently tried to put a natural gas plant in my town.Jay wrote:
I'm aware. I'm just playing devil's advocate here. Home values would drop if any form of power generation was to be built. Nuclear, coal, incinerator, it doesn't matter. People bitch because they don't want to see smokestacks or giant wind mills. Nuclear just adds another level to the NIMBYs.
all well in that case, but some of the tested power plants here in germany wouldn't even withstand the impact of a cessna, let alone something of the size of a 747. Improving the walls to make them plane-proof would cost as much as building a new one.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=25vlt7swhCM
We have these things called smoke stack scrubbers. 99.9% of what is released is steam.presidentsheep wrote:
I think what with people having such a paranoid view of nuclear power a nuclear plant would probably lower house prices more than a coal one, despite the coal plant being worse for residents health
what about waste runoff?Jay wrote:
We have these things called smoke stack scrubbers. 99.9% of what is released is steam.presidentsheep wrote:
I think what with people having such a paranoid view of nuclear power a nuclear plant would probably lower house prices more than a coal one, despite the coal plant being worse for residents health
Last edited by Jay (2011-05-30 10:05:08)
I think the winner would be a de-centralized energy system, with lots of small energy producing devices. a start would be solar panels on many private buildings, wind turbines in suitable spots, geothermal power generators where they work and so on. In other words: everybody produces a little bit of energy and puts it in a regionwide network.Jay wrote:
It's an issue, but everything has environmental issues. Nuclear has nuclear waste as well as heat, coal has it's waste and also releases heat into the local water supply (and the filters have to go somewhere too). Gas is similar to coal except without the solid material waste. Wind doesn't work all the time and kills birds/bats/insects while creating noise pollution. Solar requires heavy metals in manufacturing and doesn't work at night or in the winter. Both wind and solar require caustic batteries.
So... pick your poison. Personally, natural gas fired plants seem like the clear winner to me.
Why do people keep saying this? Where do you get your source material for your opinion? Decentralizing is much less efficient. Little boutique power plants dotting the landscape does nothing more than take up more space and require more infrastructure to be built. It doesn't make any sense. You're talking about using 50-100 times the space for the same result. It makes no sense.mr.hrundi wrote:
I think the winner would be a de-centralized energy system, with lots of small energy producing devices. a start would be solar panels on many private buildings, wind turbines in suitable spots, geothermal power generators where they work and so on. In other words: everybody produces a little bit of energy and puts it in a regionwide network.Jay wrote:
It's an issue, but everything has environmental issues. Nuclear has nuclear waste as well as heat, coal has it's waste and also releases heat into the local water supply (and the filters have to go somewhere too). Gas is similar to coal except without the solid material waste. Wind doesn't work all the time and kills birds/bats/insects while creating noise pollution. Solar requires heavy metals in manufacturing and doesn't work at night or in the winter. Both wind and solar require caustic batteries.
So... pick your poison. Personally, natural gas fired plants seem like the clear winner to me.
The factor I see working against this are the big companies. a de-centralized energy system would take away most of their profits.
not as dangerous as a meltdown ffsDoctor Strangelove wrote:
I'm not talking about radiation. Coal plants produce large amount of poisonous gases, and coal mining is incredibly dangerous.presidentsheep wrote:
coal plants produce waste 100 times more radioactive than nuclear from what I remember?11 Bravo wrote:
not sure if srs
that is true but when there is a nuclear emergency................ill take my chances with coal
e: we're still talking radiation that is not even close to dangerous levels though.
coal has been around for a long time and seems to be working with newer technology.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
But the likelihood of a meltdown isn't that great compared to the likelihood of coal plants producing poisonous gases (100%)
Last edited by 11 Bravo (2011-05-30 10:26:35)