Smorley
location: Boston, Mass.
listening to: Mindy Smith, Allison Moorer, Randall Bramblett, Bach Cantatas
registered: 2004.05.11
posts: 262
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Sorry if this is scattered a bit--I am swamped with something else at the exact same time. The
story of the modern being, I guess. I went to a talk the other day on the future of nuclear power and nuclear security. I was working at
the same time but I got a fair amount of it all the same.Animals (including the weirdest bipedal mammal) are of course a big part of the carbon dioxide
emissions in the world but there's also a real explosion coming in the emissions of cd in the next
short-term (to 2025) from the main sources of energy we're using right now with the biggest
explosion coming from electricity which increases and estimated 33% in that time and is nearly
equal to the amount put out by petrol. The total amount of tons of cd emissions from a combo of
petrol, natural gas coal and electricity is likely to increase by 25% in that same time. The speaker was very plain that we have roughly 10 years now to really do something about the
prime driver of warming. He was optimistic in large part (as I think I am half the time) that the
folks now running our national science policy get quite a lot of this and therefore hopefully will not
drop the ball which is earth. I know a couple of these people a bit and know them to be people of
real character. Let's hope they are also people of stunning savvy to move the roughly The US is still way ahead of places like China and India in terms of C02 production where it meets
GDP per capital but they'll catch up a lot, of course. France is very low on that list because of their
heavy reliance on nuclear power (which they of course went to in large part due to a lack of energy
natural resources). If the science on nuclear spent fuel management and proliferation risks could be solved or half-
solved (no small things but they are being worked on seriously in every corner of the globe) then
you'd see a lot more of the next generation nuke plants in the US. Some will come, likely built by
someone very much like the French but they won't come here in a big way any time soon. There
will likely be a lot more Nuke plants coming to China and India to a lesser degree but it will still
generate by 2050 only maybe 30% of the developed worlds electric market and only 10% of the
developing world's (that includes China, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico) electric. Still,
that's hundreds of millions getting their electric from low-carbon (yet, still wicked scary) nuke
power. It'd be lovely if something like wind come come down in price in a big way but it just hasn't and
won't maybe ever. It ain't cheap to generate electricity by wind. It'd be great if the solar folks could
rule the roost a bit more (and there's signs they're making some gains).In the next few decades, it's all about increase efficiency in electricity generation + use; expand use
of renewable sources like wind, solar, biomass + geothermal; capture carbon dioxide emissions at
fossil-fueled (espec. coals) electric plants and permanently sequester the carbon, and increase
nuclear power. Oh, and wait for the next brainiacs to fix it all with the thing not yet dreamed. That's the way of the world as Earth, Wind and Fire would say.
S
Smorley
(view)
Sorry if this is scattered a bit--I am swamped with something else at the exact same time. The
story of the modern being, I guess. I went to a talk the other day on the future of nuclear power and nuclear security. I was working at
the same time but I got a fair amount of it all the same.Animals (including the weirdest bipedal mammal) are of course a big part of the carbon dioxide
emissions in the world but there's also a real explosion coming in the emissions of cd in the next
short-term (to 2025) from the main sources of energy we're using right now with the biggest
explosion coming from electricity which increases and estimated 33% in that time and is nearly
equal to the amount put out by petrol. The total amount of tons of cd emissions from a combo of
petrol, natural gas coal and electricity is likely to increase by 25% in that same time. The speaker was very plain that we have roughly 10 years now to really do something about the
prime driver of warming. He was optimistic in large part (as I think I am half the time) that the
folks now running our national science policy get quite a lot of this and therefore hopefully will not
drop the ball which is earth. I know a couple of these people a bit and know them to be people of
real character. Let's hope they are also people of stunning savvy to move the roughly The US is still way ahead of places like China and India in terms of C02 production where it meets
GDP per capital but they'll catch up a lot, of course. France is very low on that list because of their
heavy reliance on nuclear power (which they of course went to in large part due to a lack of energy
natural resources). If the science on nuclear spent fuel management and proliferation risks could be solved or half-
solved (no small things but they are being worked on seriously in every corner of the globe) then
you'd see a lot more of the next generation nuke plants in the US. Some will come, likely built by
someone very much like the French but they won't come here in a big way any time soon. There
will likely be a lot more Nuke plants coming to China and India to a lesser degree but it will still
generate by 2050 only maybe 30% of the developed worlds electric market and only 10% of the
developing world's (that includes China, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico) electric. Still,
that's hundreds of millions getting their electric from low-carbon (yet, still wicked scary) nuke
power. It'd be lovely if something like wind come come down in price in a big way but it just hasn't and
won't maybe ever. It ain't cheap to generate electricity by wind. It'd be great if the solar folks could
rule the roost a bit more (and there's signs they're making some gains).In the next few decades, it's all about increase efficiency in electricity generation + use; expand use
of renewable sources like wind, solar, biomass + geothermal; capture carbon dioxide emissions at
fossil-fueled (espec. coals) electric plants and permanently sequester the carbon, and increase
nuclear power. Oh, and wait for the next brainiacs to fix it all with the thing not yet dreamed. That's the way of the world as Earth, Wind and Fire would say.
