Okay. A hundred miles on a side will do (probably an optimistic number, but lets go with it).
Lets go with my 1000 dollars a person in the USA budget.
If I did the math right, you need to be able to build that facility for about 1.5 dollars a square foot. You can barely do cheap carpet for that kind of money.
A state of the art industrial power production facility, of a kind never really made before? Color me dubious.
We should seriously put this stuff on the south pole. What possible place could be better than in the center of a virtually lifeless continent? We dig out an Iowa Class battleship yet again, and spend the millions a year to make it the worlds most well armed and armored trash truck(and would be a bargain considering the billions already spent).
Till then, yucca is fine. I’d be jumping for joy at the cash being brought in to the area to support this sort of benign installation. I’d try to get a job there. I would laugh as the land prices nearby dropped, and bought it for myself.
I just don’t understand the problem. Then again, I’ve taken many a nap less than 50 ft* away from an actual operating reactor without worry, or indeed second thought, because I was trained to understand the risks of radiation, to be able to use monitoring equipment and monitor it myself to determine dose rates and stay times. I knew the risks and knew the safety precautions, not because someone told me, but because I spent years getting the theory hammered into me so I could do the math myself, and understand, not just be told, that what I was doing was safe.
It seems nevadans, and indeed, most americans, have received their training about reactors/radiation/rad safety/health physics from hollywood, and believe what they were taught. Crying shame too, since the longer we spend waiting for a miracle/revolution, the worse the changeover is going to be. Unless we actually do get a miracle or revolution in power production, in which case sweet… Still, not something I would gamble on.
*“Sure Chief… I’ll clean the bilge EXTRA good…” I had a great spot on top of two warm, insulated pipes with some rags for a pillow. Yeah, against the rules and a bit naughty, but not that bad.
Cutter, I’ve been saying this for a long time as well.
Not because its a giant, nearly lifeless continent. Though it helps.
The nuke waste people are worried about 2 things mostly. Undesirable folks stealing the stuff and doing evil things with it. The waste moving from where its placed/buried to somewhere else. Mostly the second.
The location of Antarctica is a damn good deterent to the first.
The cold ass nature of the continent is damn good for the second problem.
The waste people are worried that water will leach the waste out from its solid form and move it.
Water needs to be liquid to move.
That doesnt happen down there (Inevitable pointless nitpick to be posted by someone soon I am sure ). Also, there are the dry valleys, which in addition to be stone cold, barely have trace amounts of precipitation. They are some of the driest places on earth. So, not only is the water frozen, there is hardly any there in the first place.
Hell, down there in the dry valleys, you could probably dig a shallow trench, dump the stuff in, and in thousands of years you couldnt even tell if it moved any.
And even IF the stuff manages by some miracle of miracles TO move, its gotta move thousands of miles, at which point it just reaches a big ass ocean and gets diluted as hell before it gets anywhere.
I’m pretty much out of this discussion at this point…all that RL stuff. However:
From your Wiki site:
Seriously…this is from YOUR cite. Even a cursory review of the data and even a passing knowledge of the history would show that, well, you don’t have any idea what you are talking about…again. How do you expect anyone to take you seriously when you make statements that I can basically check out on a frigging iPod?
Unless your definition of ‘real’ ‘study’ and ‘site’ are, of course, radically different than anyone else uses…
I tried to steer it away earlier. It’s unfortunate that this thread got derailed from something interesting into someone’s NIMBYism and attempts by either side to uncover it and hide it.
Not a chance. Bo is going to just keep declaring victory despite the fact that only he seems to feel that way…well, he and gonzo of course. Your best bet is to simply let this thread die and start another one (this one was almost a zombie thread in any case as it was recently re-revived) with a more narrow focus on simply the aspects you want explored.
Congratulations on being able to copy what I posted. The 10 sites were not studied. Data that had already been collected was organized into a report. From that report, there were initially 3 sites to be studied. In 1987, Congress directed the DOE to study only one site.
It’s really quite clear and simple. I’m sorry that you are having a hard time understanding the facts, but it doesn’t change them.
It’s a talent like any other. Some folks excel at laughing their ass off and declaring victory by fiat. Me…I cut and paste with the best of them.
Well, that clears it all up, obviously.
Too be sure.
All of your arguments have been simple and clear…and bubbling with humor as well, which is an additional bonus. I haven’t had a hard time understanding the ‘facts’…merely incredulous of what you keep trying to present as ‘facts’, and that you really believe you are doing well in this debate.
Well, I think I’ll leave it too you. Those reading along can form their own judgments on the various issues. Myself, magical roof top power and solar powered roads seem just a wee bit beyond our current abilities. Perhaps some day. Wind…again, ramping this up to meet a large percentage of our current needs just doesn’t seem to be in the cards right now. Coal…well, certainly this technology can and does meet the majority of our current needs. However there is all that nasty CO2 stuff. Carbon capture and sequestration could be the answer, but again, it’s not even close to being ready for prime time, and there are a lot of questions as to it’s viability.
Then there is nuclear. This is so obviously the ONLY serious technology currently available that could actually be deployed on the scale of our current energy needs that it boggles the mind…until you realize that the public has been super-saturated with anti-nuclear propaganda for pretty much my entire life time…leaving folks like Bo needed a serious 12 step program, as well as a course on probability statistics and risk analysis…plus a correspondence course in cost to benefit projection.
To me, I’ll know that we in the US are actually serious about Global Warming when I see real initiatives to start building nuclear power plants to modern designs in this country…and when I see the playing field leveled wrt all those hidden costs due to law suits, protests and other forms of blockage go away. In the end it’s going to take a mix of energy solutions to ween us off of coal and oil…but if nuclear isn’t being seriously discussed as one of the major technologies then, IMHO, we aren’t really serious about GW.
Wrong again. I can tell you either did not read my post #335 or you are just going to ignore facts that don’t fit your view. You’ve been doing it for most of this thread, so no big surprise.
We can build a 100 square mile solar farm with the tech we have now, and supply all of America’s energy needs. cite
You were wrong about the area needed (“whole states covered in solar panels” you said), and you are wrong about the state of the technology. You were wrong about how and why Nevada’s land is controlled by the federal government. You were wrong when you said that someone else built the Hoover Dam for Nevada. You’re basically wrong about almost everything you’ve posted in this thread, at least since I got into the discussion.
I imagine you’ll keep throwing that NIMBY label around as if it means something, but I don’t see you volunteering your backyard to be a nuclear waste dump.
You also keep saying you’re done posting in this thread, but you keep coming back and posting. Because of this, and the frequency with which you have facts wrong, I find it difficult to take your opinion very seriously.
Um… what exactly are you trying to say? Wiki says Congress declared only Yucca mountain would be ‘officially’ studied (because it had a clear political advantage). I’m sure the other sites had plenty of people spend a lot of time studying them, but in America if something isn’t ‘official’ it’s worthless and doesn’t merit consideration. Seems pretty fair to say we had our mind set on Yucca without a true scientific competition. I’m not sure the signficance of that, except to address that first point that there’s probably lots of good places to store nuclear waste left.
No, electricity needs. Total energy needs are about four times greater.
(100 miles)^2 is the size of Massachusetts or New Jersey. 50,000 sq miles for total energy is Pennsylvania. Factoring in future growth (we’ll have that, won’t we?) we may take over all of Nevada (100,000 sq miles).
In all, we’ll need 2% of the US surface area today. 5% (or 10%) in the future, although increases in efficiency might bring that back down to 2%. It’s hard to say how I feel about that. Whether that’s a huge number or a manageable one. That’s about the surface area of our roads. (Which frankly surprised me. This factoid was also the inspiration for that roads-as-solarcells daydream).
Shh. I’m sure you’re wrong about plenty of things yourself.
Bo claims no studies were done except Yucca Mountain. He’s wrong of course, and trying to play semantic games with what the word ‘study’ means doesn’t make him right. Again, from the Wiki quote (not that you couldn’t find all this info on the cites I gave earlier in the thread that Bo ignored):
My emphasis. So, the time table here was…1984 selected 10 sites for consideration (including Yucca Mountain which had been under study and consideration since 1978). According to Wiki they had been collecting data on this for 10 years prior to this. A report was issued in 1985 regarding the 10 potential sites and, based on this report 3 sites were selected for further study…including Yucca Mountain. 2 years later (1987) it was decided that Yucca Mountain, being Federal land and the site of earlier nuclear testing (as well as a host of other ration reasons) was selected for final study leading up to approval as the sole site.
Wiki doesn’t go into all the details of course (it IS a Wiki article), but it’s a fair summary. Bo is wrong…other sites were studied. Other sites were in contention for selection. Yucca Mountain, for various scientific and political reasons was at the top of the list.
Unlike Bo I’m not claiming he is wrong by fiat or simply because I say so…I think that, by and large the vast majority of his contentions in this thread have been SHOWN to be wrong, and not by my simple say so. His laundry list of things I’m ‘wrong’ about is fairly laughable…especially when he is merely contending my wrongness based on his own assertions. You and the others in this thread are, of course, free to make your own evaluations of that.
You are correct; I typed energy instead of electricity. I can only plead the late hour of my post in my defense.
Those are comparitively small states (45th and 47th in size, respectively. And frankly, I’d rather see the vast interior of Nevada covered with solar cells and mirrors than with nuclear waste.
Which brings us back to a point I made, and which DSeid acknowledged and backed up: we create a lot of artificial surface area (roads, buildings, rooftops, etc.) that could be utilized for power generation, but which is now just blank surface. There’s really no reason that our buildings and roads couldn’t multitask.
As my grandfather used to say: Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
No, I didn’t read that post. Which part was supposedly relevant? Where you told me to ‘suck on that’ (interesting…I thought this would be considered an insult), where you claimed (again) by fiat I was wrong, or where you brought Al Gore into the discussion, despite the fact I hadn’t mentioned him? Or was it supposed to be this claim that 100 square miles in Nevada could magically supply 100% of our power needs for a year?
From your cite.
I have no idea where these figures are coming from or how they are arriving at them (as was pointed out they are talking about electrical only, not total energy). Essentially your Al Gore link simply points back to this link, and they claim this without, afaict, and evidence. Even assuming it’s right though (:dubious:…highly), what does it really mean? It SEEMS like 100 square miles of solar panels should be pretty small potatoes.
From Salon:
And this was just with a cursory search. Seriously Bo…if it were as easy as you seem to be saying then, logically, someone would have done it. If you could meet 100% of the US’s energy needs by just putting up 100 square miles of solar panels, and if doing so were simple, then why do YOU think no one has done it? Sure, it could all be Bush’s fault HERE…but what about Europe? What about places like Japan who have huge energy demands and have to import a lot of their energy? Why hasn’t Australia done so…lot’s of sun there.
Also, if you REALLY want to talk about solar, why not start a thread on it and take this discussion there?
And you proved this all how exactly? Oh, to be sure, you proved it in your own mind. I remain unconvinced that you have proven me wrong on ANY of this…and if we are just going to assert things by fiat then my own assertion carries as much weight as your’s, ehe?
You proved yourself to be a NIMBY knee jerk…I didn’t have to do a thing. As for your other statement, perhaps you were unaware of it, but I lived for 10 years in Las Vegas Nevada…and I was all for the project then. If the logical cite for the disposal was in New Mexico I’d support that as well. Unlike you I realize there are bigger issues at stake here than my own backyard.
shrug So sue me. I’m posting as I find time to do so. Since most of the rational posters have left the thread I’m merely responding to your more outrageous assertions, though I’m admittedly doing so while watching restores happen or configuring RAID controllers, so I’m being even less rigorous than my normal sloppy self. Besides, it’s fairly amusing to see you declare over and over again how you are right and I’m wrong because you say so…when you aren’t laughing and chortling for reasons best left unsaid…