DBT
Contributor
Well, they are idiotsThe concept of economic growth (the need for growth) is an issue that is brought up by our political leaders practically on a daily basis.
Of course they are. We can agree on that point.
Well, they are idiotsThe concept of economic growth (the need for growth) is an issue that is brought up by our political leaders practically on a daily basis.
Well, they are idiots
Of course they are. We can agree on that point.
Good post arkirk
I'm use a fairly standard definition for the term 'economic growth'
Economic Growth
''An increase in the capacity of an economy to produce goods and services, compared from one period of time to another. Economic growth can be measured in nominal terms, which include inflation, or in real terms, which are adjusted for inflation. For comparing one country's economic growth to another, GDP or GNP per capita should be used as these take into account population differences between countries.''
Challenging the Economic Oxymoron
''Economists will complain that growth in GNP is a mixture of quantitative and qualitative increase and therefore not strictly subject to physical laws. They have a point. Precisely because quantitative and qualitative change are very different it is best to keep them separate and call them by the different names already provided in the dictionary. To grow means "to increase naturally in size by the addition of material through assimilation or accretion." To develop means "to expand or realize the potentialities of; to bring gradually to a fuller, greater, or better state." When something grows it gets bigger. When something develops it gets different. The earth ecosystem develops (evolves), but does not grow. Its subsystem, the economy, must eventually stop growing, but can continue to develop.'' (My emphasis)
Your post indicates you do see what I am talking about, albeit in different language. One of the reasons I did not use the word develop is because as an environmental activist, I fought "developers" who in reality were galloping consumers of ecosystems without thought of replenishing what they changed and growth was their goal. Landfill fight all the time to "grow." Mining and food production just seem to be de-linked from any need to consider how their actions on the environment create changes that must ultimately be undone. My field was wastewater treatment. The nuances of that business are discouraging to say the least, we always faced the ugly problem of problem transfer,...Clean up the water....send the solids to landfill....dirty the groundwater below the landfill....etc. just one example.
Yes, original is much better.Two Stanford PhDs working at Google on their alternative energy program said "It won't work" wrt global warming.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/1...simply_wont_work_google_renewables_engineers/
The Register is a little hyped.. The original article is better:
http://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/renewables/what-it-would-really-take-to-reverse-climate-change
Google shut down the project and paid these guys to reflect. I remain unconvinced.
Yes, original is much better.Two Stanford PhDs working at Google on their alternative energy program said "It won't work" wrt global warming.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/1...simply_wont_work_google_renewables_engineers/
The Register is a little hyped.. The original article is better:
http://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/renewables/what-it-would-really-take-to-reverse-climate-change
Google shut down the project and paid these guys to reflect. I remain unconvinced.
They took some specific CO2 doomsday scenario and found out that getting rid of Coal plants will not be enough to prevent it. Don't see much effort on proving that Solar is not good enough to replace the whole thing.
Yes, they claim all that. Don't see much of the proof behind these claims.Yes, original is much better.
They took some specific CO2 doomsday scenario and found out that getting rid of Coal plants will not be enough to prevent it. Don't see much effort on proving that Solar is not good enough to replace the whole thing.
Their argument is that solar power, although effective, wouldn't be enough by itself. They mention power transmission technologies, an increase in basic research, and alternative turbine and generation techniques, all of which need to go on top of renewables, in order to get the earth back to the carbon levels it used to have.
Wait, who have this notion? The article that cites their work may have spun their research in that way, but the original article doesn't say any of that.Yes, they claim all that. Don't see much of the proof behind these claims.Their argument is that solar power, although effective, wouldn't be enough by itself. They mention power transmission technologies, an increase in basic research, and alternative turbine and generation techniques, all of which need to go on top of renewables, in order to get the earth back to the carbon levels it used to have.
They have this naive notion that expensive renewable energy will kill "growth" (whatever that is) and make poor even more poor. Of course they exclude environmental costs and define growth as simple function of amount of energy produced. I think you can have growth from having more efficiency
Yes, original is much better.
They took some specific CO2 doomsday scenario and found out that getting rid of Coal plants will not be enough to prevent it. Don't see much effort on proving that Solar is not good enough to replace the whole thing.
Their argument is that solar power, although effective, wouldn't be enough by itself. They mention power transmission technologies, an increase in basic research, and alternative turbine and generation techniques, all of which need to go on top of renewables, in order to get the earth back to the carbon levels it used to have.
Their argument is that solar power, although effective, wouldn't be enough by itself. They mention power transmission technologies, an increase in basic research, and alternative turbine and generation techniques, all of which need to go on top of renewables, in order to get the earth back to the carbon levels it used to have.
I understand that. I'm not convinced. Anyhow, I'd do straight up nuclear for baseload. Remove the regulation bullshit that takes 20 years to get a reactor working. This would give us a buffer to develop renewables. Give some immunity from lawsuits. We could make a set of universal plans and modular parts. In this instance I don't see the bullshit correlating with safety.
I understand that. I'm not convinced. Anyhow, I'd do straight up nuclear for baseload. Remove the regulation bullshit that takes 20 years to get a reactor working. This would give us a buffer to develop renewables. Give some immunity from lawsuits. We could make a set of universal plans and modular parts. In this instance I don't see the bullshit correlating with safety.
It's not the regulation per se that causes the delays. It's the fact that the system allows opponents to delay and delay and delay--and then they can change their mind and not allow the plant to operate after it's built.
The fix is simple: All paperwork comes *FIRST*. You make your plans, you do the environmental impact study etc. You submit the plans. Once they're approved the state has no say other than if the approved plans aren't being followed.
Likewise, if an inspection is needed the state has a reasonable time window to do it. A delay is deemed approval.
(Note that I would apply this to all such things, not merely nuke plants. I would also impose a reasonable time window to evaluate plans, a failure to act is deemed approval.)
You mean the Fukushima where despite a massive earthquake and tsunami, resulting in severe damage to an outdated design of plant, not one single person died or became seriously ill as a result of radiation exposure?It's not the regulation per se that causes the delays. It's the fact that the system allows opponents to delay and delay and delay--and then they can change their mind and not allow the plant to operate after it's built.
The fix is simple: All paperwork comes *FIRST*. You make your plans, you do the environmental impact study etc. You submit the plans. Once they're approved the state has no say other than if the approved plans aren't being followed.
Likewise, if an inspection is needed the state has a reasonable time window to do it. A delay is deemed approval.
(Note that I would apply this to all such things, not merely nuke plants. I would also impose a reasonable time window to evaluate plans, a failure to act is deemed approval.)
Nukes...you guys ever heard of Fukushima? You ought to visit Japan and go to that location. There's plenty of nuclear material there. Just because we built a fossil fuel house of cards is no reason to jump into the fire with lax rules for nuclear plants that just boil water and pollute and leak constantly. In my estimation, there is no move more unwise than building any more nuclear plants. We are a society that is wallowing in our own chemical waste. Why add nuclear waste to it? Because somebody wants to live a life of ease and have it all powered by nature? Is that a reason? I am not against modern technology. We should abandon this quest for a safe way to boil water with fission reactors. When you find a fatal flaw (waste, leaks, meltdowns, catastrophic failures) it is time to look elsewhere for A BETTER ANSWER. I recommend a DELAY TILL FOREVER for this ridiculously unsafe and polluting technology.
You mean the Fukushima where despite a massive earthquake and tsunami, resulting in severe damage to an outdated design of plant, not one single person died or became seriously ill as a result of radiation exposure?
All of them more deadly than nuclear.
Your rant is just mindless propaganda with no knowledge of, nor respect for, the facts. You are bent on imposing your beliefs on the world, just like all the rest of the fundamentalists.
It's not the regulation per se that causes the delays. It's the fact that the system allows opponents to delay and delay and delay--and then they can change their mind and not allow the plant to operate after it's built.
The fix is simple: All paperwork comes *FIRST*. You make your plans, you do the environmental impact study etc. You submit the plans. Once they're approved the state has no say other than if the approved plans aren't being followed.
Likewise, if an inspection is needed the state has a reasonable time window to do it. A delay is deemed approval.
(Note that I would apply this to all such things, not merely nuke plants. I would also impose a reasonable time window to evaluate plans, a failure to act is deemed approval.)
Nukes...you guys ever heard of Fukushima? You ought to visit Japan and go to that location. There's plenty of nuclear material there. Just because we built a fossil fuel house of cards is no reason to jump into the fire with lax rules for nuclear plants that just boil water and pollute and leak constantly. In my estimation, there is no move more unwise than building any more nuclear plants. We are a society that is wallowing in our own chemical waste. Why add nuclear waste to it? Because somebody wants to live a life of ease and have it all powered by nature? Is that a reason? I am not against modern technology. We should abandon this quest for a safe way to boil water with fission reactors. When you find a fatal flaw (waste, leaks, meltdowns, catastrophic failures) it is time to look elsewhere for A BETTER ANSWER. I recommend a DELAY TILL FOREVER for this ridiculously unsafe and polluting technology.
cite please?
(Source)... 146 employees and 21 contractors received a dose of more than 100 millisieverts (mSv), the level at which there is an acknowledged slight increase in cancer risk. Six workers received more than the 250 mSv allowed by Japanese law for front-line emergency workers, and two operators in the control rooms for reactor units 3 and 4 received doses above 600 mSv, because they had not taken potassium iodide tablets to help prevent their bodies from absorbing radio*active iodine-131 (see ‘In the zone’). So far, neither operator seems to have suffered ill effects as a result of their exposure.
...
Experts agree that there is unlikely to be a detectable rise in thyroid cancer or leukaemia, the two cancers most likely to result from the accident.
(Source).Significance
There is a potential risk of human exposure to radiation owing to the March 2011 Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident. In this study, we evaluated radiation dose rates from deposited radiocesium in three areas neighboring the restricted and evacuation areas in Fukushima. The mean annual radiation dose rate in 2012 associated with the accident was 0.89–2.51 mSv/y. The mean dose rate estimates in 2022 are comparable with variations of the average 2 mSv/y background radiation exposure from natural radionuclides in Japan. Furthermore, the extra lifetime integrated dose after 2012 is estimated to elevate lifetime risk of cancer incidence by a factor of 1.03 to 1.05 at most, which is unlikely to be epidemiologically detectable.
Deadliness is a fairly easy thing to define. 'Safety' is not - how do you define it? Give me your definition of 'Safety', and I will see what I can find out about the relative risks of Nuclear vs Coal power based on that definition if you like. I am pretty confident that I can find good evidence that Nuclear is safer based on any reasonable definition of the term; but until you tell me what you mean, deadliness makes a pretty good proxy - if someone dies, that's a fairly sure pointer that the situation that killed them was unsafe.All of them more deadly than nuclear.
Why are you talking about deadliness, rather than safety? Is it because you have no evidence nuclear power is safer?
Your rant is just mindless propaganda with no knowledge of, nor respect for, the facts. You are bent on imposing your beliefs on the world, just like all the rest of the fundamentalists.
I'd point out that you're selectively quoting conclusions from a study based on a methodology you know others dispute. That's hardly treating facts with respect.
I think you can have growth from having more efficiency
And the total of future deaths is likely to be so small as to be undetectable; Maybe zero, maybe not - but certainly far fewer than are caused by typical Coal-fired power plant operations as a matter of course.
Deadliness is a fairly easy thing to define. 'Safety' is not - how do you define it?
Togo said:Your rant is just mindless propaganda with no knowledge of, nor respect for, the facts. You are bent on imposing your beliefs on the world, just like all the rest of the fundamentalists.
I'd point out that you're selectively quoting conclusions from a study based on a methodology you know others dispute. That's hardly treating facts with respect.
Until this reply, I quoted nothing from any study.
I didn't say it wasn't based on a study (or studies). I said that you were premature to talk about me 'selectively quoting' a study when I had yet to make a reference to (much less quote from) any such thing.Against a background of 130,000 people, with a host of cofounding variables, and with no specific means of telling radiation induced cancer from naturally occurring cancer, that's likely to be the case. Note this assumes the success of a government program to decontaminate the area, and the successful screening of fish and other seafood for large amounts of radioactive contamination before consumption.
What you said was that not one person died. What the study you've cited said is that the numbers of people who die are likely to be hard to detect against background deaths. Can you not see the difference between these two statements?
Deadliness is a fairly easy thing to define. 'Safety' is not - how do you define it?
The more usual standard is the morbidity rate. Mortality is generally used by pro-nuclear campaigners for the same reason that it was used by tobacco companies for so long - because it's very hard to drive a causal link between a given death and radiation exposure, just as it's hard to forge a link between a given death and smoking.
Togo said:Your rant is just mindless propaganda with no knowledge of, nor respect for, the facts. You are bent on imposing your beliefs on the world, just like all the rest of the fundamentalists.
I'd point out that you're selectively quoting conclusions from a study based on a methodology you know others dispute. That's hardly treating facts with respect.
Until this reply, I quoted nothing from any study.
Your conclusion is not based on a scientific study?
Well I fail to see how I need different evidence if you accept that the lifecycle mortality rate for coal is vastly higher than for nuclear.What is it based on then?
The last time we discussed this topic people were citing a study that claimed to add up the deaths from coal extraction transport and consumption, compared them to those for nuclear extraction transport and consumption, and concluded that coal killed more people. Do you have different evidence now?