Well, the majority of the Japanese islands’ mass is below water.
To the OP: How many people have died as a result of Fukushima?
Well, the majority of the Japanese islands’ mass is below water.
To the OP: How many people have died as a result of Fukushima?
That’s not stupid in the least bit. No, it’s not a lot on a global scale, but I did use some factors that are pretty generous. From some EPA websites, I found figures of 5.11 million tons of SO2 being released in 2010 by the US. That very conservative figure I gave would be a 3% increase of the US emissions, which are currently going down. A more realistic figure would be hard to determine unless you have a better description of the process proposed to burn the hemp. Pollution from, say NOx, would be roughly 2.75 million tons/year (133% of total 2010 US levels). It would be a shame to trade a long term localized problem (risk of radiation) for a long term diffuse problem (global warming, acid rain, surface ozone).
It always comes down to hemp… and ball bearings too.
Inhabitable means habitable? What a country!
The OP is correct though. Nuclear power can not compete without massive government financial aid. It is too damn expensive and not competitive. Solar creates many more jobs.
It also suffers from human design and maintenance failures.
Take it out of the hands of for profit companies and it might be better.
While we’re at it, can we do something about entropy ? I know it was grandfathered in at the last symposium, but it’s really a dreadfully backwards law. It might have been OK in the days of the Founding Fathers of Physics, but in this day and age all it really does it hold society back. I’m sure the Unions are all too happy at all the extra work it generates, but isn’t that just breaking windows at this point ?
Especially in light of the poster.
Which for-profit company was responsible for Chernobyl?
Yeah, I think the problem here is not too little hemp, if you get my drift…
Actually this is a somewhat feasible idea. A renewable resource with a huge biomass/growth time ratio; and of course whether we could completely replace nuclear, coal and oil with it is a question of how much acreage is devoted to it.
It’s not a bad idea.
And they’ve been covering it up (with water) so the world will not learn this fact.
The “yahoo” in the OP’s name is very apropos.
Plus with all the hemp smoke being released into the atmosphere…no more wars!
Well there was this heart wrenching documentary about the effects of Chernobyl, clearly showing the terrible aftermath.
Why hemp, in particular? Are you claiming it is the best source of biomass for burning in power stations? If so, please provide a rigorous citation for this.
Chernobyl killed considerably less than 10k, and that 150 area around it? perfectly habitable, there are places on earth where the Natural background radiation is higher than at Chernobyl, places with Cities built on them.
welcome to the dope, you might want to do your homework before posting though.
thats the only online version I could find but the BBC Horizon episode called “Nuclear Nightmares” is the one I have in mind.
Oil and Coal are both subsidized, at least here in the US. Nuclear might be as well, but I’m sure the subsidies aren’t enough to make up the millions upon millions of dollars that must be spent to fight legal challenges based on fear and ignorance.
I would be very interested to see the cost of building a plant if you remove the legal costs of fighting lawsuits from “environmental” groups and “concerned citizen” groups.
I think you mean “appropriate” not “apropos.”
The Germans plan to shut their nuclear plants, by 2020.
Just what will replace them is unclear…I nderstand that they will wind up buying electricity from France…prodced by French nuclear power plants.
What this accomplishes is unclear.
I thought that Germany was switching to a mass coal plants plan. Though IIRC Germany does buy more electricity from France than the reverse; given that electricity cant be stocked, there’s a lot of electricity sells between those two countries.
There are a lot of concerns in France over the closing of the German nuclear plants program, as that German electricity tends to be bought by France during winter. And that, if Germany closes its plants, France might no be able to cover its energy needs this winter.