@kravietz
Even if someone cut down the trees in their yard, PV is still one of the best sources of energy:
https://cleantechnica.com/2020/12/16/mediocrity-is-the-enemy-of-the-solution/
@mithrandir @kravietz
Definitely worth investigating to some extent. Scaling properties on solar are hard to beat, but small self-contained nuclear batteries could be competitive.
@mithrandir @kravietz
Per the link I dropped, problem with NEW nuclear is it takes like 15 years to bring it to completion. So shutting down nuclear prematurely is probably a bad plan, but spinning it up right now is kind of a case of too-little-too-late. New solar deployment is up within a year.
Also scaling properties. Every solar panel built makes building the next one cheaper. True too of reactors but not many of them are (ever) made so scale doesn't happen.
@mithrandir @kravietz
1. "Naive" economies of scale, bigger more efficient factories, better processes.
2. R&D-based economies of scale: more people buy PV, more competition, more R&D investment --> higher efficiency, longer lasting PV made with cheaper materials and processes.
Same story as batteries. It's not govt research that's driving these curves, it's competition.
@lain @mithrandir @kravietz
Batteries. Buy a phone, buy a Tesla, push dat curve.
Because PV is actually made mostly of mined resources, as this friendly ad from Australian Mining (!) demonstrates
@kravietz @lain @mithrandir
A PV cell is mined and then runs 10 years. A cm3 of gas is mined and then burned within a couple of hours.
Also I prefer the Australians, they don't try to invade Europe every chance they get.
I don't think anybody supports fossil fuels in this thread, so this argument is irrelevant.
The problem with PV is specifically what you described - it runs 10 years, and then you need a new one.
Per 1 W of energy mining requirements are much higher for PV than other sources.
Then you need a whole lot of them due to low surface power density.
Then you need even more due to low capacity factor.
And then you need storage.
@mithrandir @lain @kravietz
Love how they have this little black sliver "Geological repository". Cost of storing the waste 100,000 years is way higher than that, but I guess that's close to the cost of giving it to the Mafia to dump off the coast of Somalia.
@cjd That’s the problem most people have with nuclear power, after the elephant in the room, dirty bombs all over your country. It’s hard to convince a people who couldn’t hold their country together for 300 years that there’s a good plan for the next 10,000 years. (Did you write 100,000 on purpose?) @mithrandir @lain @kravietz
But it's based on three fundamental misconceptions:
1) that only nuclear reactors produce radioactive waste
2) that it needs storing for 100'000 or 10'000 years
3) that radioactive waste is the *only* one that needs safe storage for a long time
> mean small amounts like for medical purposes
This is the funny part: nuclear industry is so regulated, that anything anything used anywhere in a nuclear plant or X-ray machine is "nuclear waste". Most of these drums shown in scary German movies about leaky storages are filled with old gloves, clothes, tools, parts of machinery and all that crap that is "radioactive" only by legal definition. In terms of volume it's a lot, but in terms of emissions, it's nothing.
@epic @lain @mithrandir @kravietz
I grew up nearby to the Rowe Yankee powerplant which was in decommissioning all through my childhood. I remember when they pulled the reactor and drove it out of there, lots of people protested for some reason but allowed the truck to pass, my parents took me to see the spectacle.
They're still keeping some waste on-site because they judged it safer than transporting it.
@epic @lain @mithrandir @kravietz
That was in decommissioning from 1992 until 2007, and there were a good number of people employed there. It's hard for me to imagine how a nuclear power project posts a bond big enough to pay that kind of bill since they're very likely to be bankrupt when they have to clean up...
@epic @lain @mithrandir @kravietz
If you want to drill oil, you need to post a bond large enough to plug the well if you disappear or go bankrupt. I have a hard time imagining how you would conceivably post a bond big enough to pay for taking a nuclear plant apart.
The other thing is if you've got an old powerplant which *should* be shut down, if you're a business you have a perverse incentive to keep it running as long as possible.
Keep running -> make money
Shut down -> massive cost
@epic @lain @mithrandir @kravietz
The other thing is insurance... How do you insure against the risk of everything 30 miles in every direction becoming uninhabitable.
What kind of insurance company is going to offer that?
I think the answer is they don't actually have the coverage to pay the cost of a meltdown and if it happens they walk away and make it the state's problem. Clean energy until it isn't.
How do we exactly insure today against the actual deaths of hundreds of thousands of people of air pollution caused by burning coal and biomass? How do we insure about catastrophic effects of climate change causes by burning fossil gas?
@kravietz @cjd @epic @lain @mithrandir
"I don't think anybody supports fossil fuels in this thread, so this argument is irrelevant."
@kravietz There’s a mountain in Idaho with tunnels full of drums of nuclear waste. After a few decades, the drums were leaking and the tunnels were caving in on top of them. They can’t get anyone to go in there to fix it, and they can’t get anyone to let them dump it anywhere near where they are. It ain’t old gloves. @lain @cjd @mithrandir