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Alternate energy sources
Back on 2-6 I wrote a response to the lefts views on alternate energy. It was as follows:
Check out todays, 2-2-06, Wall Street Journel, Editorial page on energy sources. Just like I stated there is NO alternate source of energy. And even the most significant source, hydroelectric is only in the 2 percent of the total range, and the tree huggers want to get rid of many of the dams that create that power. Explain that! Point is that source is nearly maxed out. Theres a bunch of other articles in todays WSJ related to Bushes proposed energy solutions. Then theres those famous electric cars. Set back the hybrid car industry over 40 years, politics wins over science. No one bothers to mention the witches brews of the most fowl, lethal, chemicals and elements that go into making all those high tech batteries. I suspect they are a major disaster waiting for a place to happen. Alternate energy is the lefts version of Intelligent Design. Execpt Intelligent Design is at least theoretically possible, alternate energy sources do not seem to be at this time. No responses to date so I assume this settles this argument for good/ |
I haven't seen your earlier post, and haven't read the WSJ editorial, but anyone who says "there is NO alternate source of energy" really needs to get something into their head!
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Only high oil costs seriously affect the economy something will happen in congress. Energy policy won't change unless there is a crisis.
I still haven't figured out why we can't just pay off Mexico to develop their oil? |
Gererators!!! Only 1.59 mil left to go. Free energy for all!
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Re: Alternate energy sources
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I thank you for posting your sources. However, if you want alternative energy you are on your own. There are a lot of farms and rural people here in Nebraska that are harvesting Methane, making their own Bio-Diesel, and installing wind and solar power on their property. Apparently, the WSJ is looking for some kind of a hand out? You have the means to get off foreign oil, as well as create your own energy. In order for this to happen, you have to make it happen. |
I'm tellin' you guys, wind-powered cars are going to catch on!
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1139758852.jpg Most of central Nebraska is powered with hydroelectric dams, btw. Quote:
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See, the beauty of the wind powered car is, the faster you go, the more power you gereate!!!!11 ;)
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YES GERERATORS! Free energy from the force of the magnet
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Jack,
Totally agree and we need to start finding other options immediately. France (my least favourite country btw) gets 80% of their electricity from nuke power plants. Not one mishap that I know of. Why are we not pushing to open a few more plants and do it right this time? Wind and sun power. Why are we not doing all we can in this area? Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico have millions of acres where you could put solar cells and generate electicity for almost free after installation costs were paid off. Wind farms? Yes, I know that they can be noisy and yes a bird or three does get killed at times but you know thats life. Hydrogen power for cars? Put some more funds into them and see if we can make it work. Doing nothing will not work and eventually we will run out of oil. Then the pundits will wake up and ask why nothing was done... Joe A |
Solar cells produce about as much energy over their usefull life as it took to manufacture them in the first place!
What is that system that uses the constant temp of the earth? It is something like a constant 57 degrees ten feet below ground. Cooling in summer, warming in winter... I think you need a heat pump.. |
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BTW, I've heard that nuclear energy is, at best another break-even. The amount of energy it takes to construct a nuclear power plant is about equal to its power output over its lifetime. |
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A rooftop solar panel to harness the energy, mated to a garage mounted battery or capacitor array. The array would then charge the battery pack of your electric car at night thereby preparing it for its coming day of service....rinse and repeat:) Can't you just see the effiency and net energy savings in that one:) |
Geothermal. I have it at my home. It does work and saves a lot on the electric bill. It gets your A frame coils up to temp (50-55) so your heat pump, heater or AC doesn't have to. Well worth the money. Lets say you buy a AC or Heat unit with a SEER rating of 14. Add the geothermal and it becomes 18. Another good thing is the sprayed foam insulation. Great insulation and soundproofer as well. Power Company came out to my house and changed the meter thinking I was up to something or the existing meter was bad. Quite funny. They were thinking that a house this big has to have a higher power bill. Wrong.
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We have very little choice, its either find another source or die... Most of us prefer the first option. Have spent a lot of time underground and thats a good idea. Always wondered why more houses did not have a basement. Cooler in summer and warmer in winter, and its free. |
they can make synthetic gasoline from the same stuff they make bio diesel from...germans did it in the 40's. if we went to the bio diesel route, we are completely self reliant on energy for our country in fact, we would most likely have excess still. we produce way more grains, corn and soy than we can ever use, why not put it to good use? naaa...Bush is an oil man, can't happen
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As soon as there's an alternate energy source that's viable without government subsidy or interference, it will be grasped by the market and succeed.
Until that source is found, we'll have what we have today. |
I like wood. They say it only takes a few acres and you can grow enough trees in perpetuity to heat a house. And it is a closed loop as far as CO2. Trees grow and lock it up, you burn them and it releases..
But how to run the p-car?? Turpintine? |
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http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/002881.html It's still great stuff on a hobbyist/small business level as long as there's a supply of free or cheap used oil, but it couldn't even come close to meeting our current energy needs. |
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While the generation of energy is important, i think that getting it to places and the ability to store it for use later is just as important. |
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As I suggest to Snowman, get something into your head! |
O.K. Professor enlighten me.:confused:
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There is only one ready to go alternative energy source: Nuclear Fisson power generation.
Our Electric power consumtion is around 4 Trillion kWh per year. We need about 500,000 mW of Power Generation. Installed cost of a Nuclear Power plant is around $1,000,000 per mW, or it would cost about $500 Billion to replace the Electrical Generation with Nuclear. We need a standardized design, which our government is already familiar - I suggest the same basic design as used on Aircraft Carriers. This may reduce the costs, since we can setup factories to build the components. We should build them as 600MW plants and build aproximately 1,000 of them, which will allow us growth in our electrical generation. Next, we move from a gasoline based vehicle economy to a CNG based one. We can even produce some hydrogen and mix it with the CNG for the cars (max 5%). Oil can then be used for plastics and polymers industry. Coal can be left where it is, and used in the plastics and polymers industry if we run out of oil. In addition to saving tremedous amounts of money on fuel, the fuel we use should be the stocks of enriched uranium we have left over from the Cold War. There is only one way to prevent it from ever being used in a bomb, and that is to 'burn' it in a nuclear cycle. And as far as the waste goes, nuclear waste is _less_ radioactive than the fuel. Uranium exists all around us. Nuclear plants actually _clean_ the environment, turning hazardous naturally occuring elements into safer, less radioactive ones. The final step is to research into 2 things: #1: Find a _use_ for the nuclear by products. Gasoline used to be a by product from Kerosene production! #2. Start looking now for the next power source |
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Nor should it be. |
Bravo Red-Beard. Its the truth. I find it interesting that people get upset about 5% Plutonium nuclear reactors sitting on huge concrete pads with safe guards, but no one bats and eye over 95% enriched Thorium reactors in nuclear subs cruising hundreds of feet below the ocean surface. Nuclear waste management isn't a technical problem, its a political problem. Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactors would have reduced the amount of nuclear waste from power plants even more. My biggest bone about nukes is that they didn't have a solid, permanent disposal solution nationally before they started commercial nuke power plants.
Perhaps the Nuclear Waste Isolation Pilot Project in Carlsbad, NM and the high level repository being built in Deaf Smith County, NV (can't remember the name of it right now) will help solve the waste problem. |
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competentone Please explain. Hope you are correct as we can use as many options as possible. Red Beard Totally agree. Other countries have realized this years ago. Lets get going and eliminate gas and oil fired generation of power. Grab loads of ex-Navy people with nuke experience and put them to work generating power for the country. |
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Since government regulations such as the useless, for animals (but a godsend to fascists) Endangered Species Act would be abandoned along with many other roadblocks, perhaps the 1950's proposals of doing away with power meters for homes would become reality. Nah, only kidding. But that was once thougt to be possible, they'd just send you a small bill each month, the same for everyone. Sort of like a fixed garbage collection fee. |
OK sorting out all the BS to date. There is NO alternative energy source. Its oil and Nuclear.
NO one has even IDENTIFIED an alternate source of energy, let alone make it feasible. I understand Einstein’s theory’s, and can even derive many of them, but NO one has identified an alternate source of energy. I would give all my earthly possessions to ANYONE who can identify a single source of alternate energy that produces more than it consumes to produce. That’s a few Million bucks in short to anyone willing to try. I am sure the world is willing to offer unlimited bucks for such a source. People who talk about alternate sources of energy and just plain NUTS, without any common sense or a single ounce of rational thinking. THERE ARE NO SOURCES OF ALERNATE ENERGY, PERIOD!!!! Anyone who considers wind, geothermal or solar energy as an alternate source is just plain, STUPID. DO the calculations, an average 8th grade education is all that is required.. Is there a politically correct way to state this? Yes, Your just plain STUPID if you cannot do these calculations. In other words, God help us if we cannot add 2 plus 2 and get 4 for an answer. I wish there were an alternate source, I would be racing to identify it, to make it work, it would make me incredibly rich, but alas, I have not discovered it, and no one else has either. And if I, as an engineer and physicist cannot discover IT who can? |
NO one responded. Thats quite approiate.
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Jack,
Well, considering that estimates are that our fossil fuel will last only 20-40 more years, should we just shoot ourselves now and end it while life is good? |
Jack,
In some ways, your position reminds me of the livery stable owner of the late 1800s who might have asked, "Why would anybody want to travel on a powered buggy? They're slow, smelly, noisy, too expensive and you have to have a smooth road to travel on. And where are you ever going to get gasoline in these parts? Anyone who considers powered buggies is just plain STUPID!" The current cost-benefit ratio of wind, solar, hydro, tidal and wave action energy generation is unfavorable because we are undervaluing the fossil fuels currently in use. Sure carbon fuels are cheap, being basically chemically stored solar energy, we are only paying to get them out of the ground, do a bit of refining and transport. But they are finite. The laws of supply and demand are in effect. There will come a day when either the supply diminishes to the point where the price makes it a poor choice, or some other factor, such as politics, dictates a change to a more sustainable energy. Please note 'politics' can cover a broad range of circumstances. Much of Germany's work with bio-fuels in the early 1940s was a response to the Allied blockade which restricted the supply of fossil fuel stocks. What happens if the cost of Gulf crude doubles because of 'political' considerations? Stupid or not, if the 'alternate energy sources' become the only game in town, that's where we'll be playing. Les |
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Now as for alternative energy, there is a TON of money to be made by the individuals who manage to solve our oil dependency. IIRC, Iceland uses geothermal almost exclusively and I just heard last night on the radio that Spain gets 1/4 of its electricity from wind. And as a person who lives near the ocean, I am amazed we don't build wind farms off the coast the same way we build drilling rigs. There is a big debate right now in MA over an offshore wind farm where a bunch of so-called "environmentalists" are complaining the windmills will mess up the pretty view of the ocean. Frankly, I have been a hard core tree hugger my whole life and I think they are nuts. These same environuts are willing to pour tons of fertilizers and pesticides into the Earth to grow ethanol but won't erect a bunch of windmills out at sea. Seems like a no-brainer to me. |
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Wind, Tide, etc, all get their energy from the sun. Even our oil's energy came from the sun. Plants used the energy to make hydrocarbons, which where rapidly buried and turned into petroleum or coal. Its quite simple realy. |
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I am a big fan of nuclear power, but just like everything else, if we were able to build enough plants to really make a dent in the energy situation, then uranium reserves become an issue. Time for fusion!! Mike |
Fusion is the only wild card out there at this point. The theory isn't fully developed so its not known for certain if it is even possible to produce energy this way. It does look, at least at this point, possible, in theory.
All other "sources" of energy, solar, wind , geothermal, ethanol are not even worth discussing as they consume as much energy as they produce or will never be capable of producing a significant amount of energy. Even Hydro, which is by far the best source, cannot produce enough energy to take care of over 2 to3 percent of the total demand. As to hydrocarbon sources running out in 30 or 40 years, I don't think so. As of now there is over 500 years of hydrocarbon left to consume, just in Canada, and this assumes that no more sources will be identified, which at this point, is a bad assumption. The price of hydrocarbon energy reflects its abundance, still very very cheep. Red-beard has presented the current thinking on the subject. This is good policy at this point as it makes sense and was made by people that know what they are talking about. Hopefully it will be adopted and the government will get out the way, enough, to allow it to happen. I would say get on the bandwagon, but they usually muck up more than they help, so they should stay as far out of it as possible. Pat is far to optimistic on the chances of government going away completely. What will work is to somehow channel donations to politicians as part of the program. Simply pay the government tithing and all will go well. ANYONE who proposes alternate energy and does not take the time to at least read articles by reasonable people, from a reasonable source, eg the Wall St Journal, OR take the time to research and do the calculatins, again only an 8th grade or less is required, will find the answer is not out there. It is not identified, even in theory. Its pretty hard to search for something thats not even there, and even harder to develop. |
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Nuclear fuel is not bombarded with neutrons. The are inherently produced. Typically they are too fast to interact with other nuclei. Moderators are required to slow down neutrons so they will interact. Water and graphite are good moderators. Water is especially good since if it get to hot and boils away, it stops moderating and the reaction slows down. In the process of fission, many different elements are produced. Some short-lived, some long lived. Some useful, some not. Many of the short-lived elements produced are what make nuclear power possible. They allow the reaction to be controlled. These isotopes are the source of delayed neutrons, which allow operation above critical, but not fast super critical. Chernobyl is the only commercial nuclear power reactor to go fast super critical. The good news, the spent fuel can be reprocessed and the good stuff removed. This has not been happening because of the anti-nuclear scaremongers. Instead it sits in pools of water, unprotected, next to power plants. The 'solution' to the waste issue is reprocessing and long term storage. However, we will be digging the 'waste' up at some point, when we find a use for the 'waste' like we did gasoline. As far as reserves, we could convert the world fully to nuclear fission and we have hundreds of years of proven reserves. There is a lot more out there and when we run out, we have the moon. And as far as fuel goes, the US has enough bomb grade enriched Uranium and Plutonium around to produce 40,000 bombs. Russia has enough to produce 100,000 weapons. This is more highly enriched than is needed for a nuclear power plant. We can use these materials to make Mixed Oxide fuel (MOX). We have enough material, when mixed with a lot of unenriched uranium, to fuel the 1000 reactors the US should have. Fusion is probably a pipe dream at least in the relative short term. One of my professors asked us what was the size of a critical mass of Uranium. He would then say something larger than a grapefruit, smaller than a melon. He would then ask what a critical mass for fusion would be? Everyone would shrug and then he would point out the window, at the sun. |
In the 1800's, the Southern production model was based on pretty cheap labor - adjustments made in the 1900's for unions and so forth so operating costs increased. Crude is cheap from Africa and the middle beast (to them) because of the low over head. Te same can be said for products made in Asia. If all products had the same cost models the imaginary prices would fall away and stability occur. This can be said for oil or energy.
Pursue any technology you want. If it becomes reasonable then the mfg folks and bean counters will figuer a way to squeeze out all imaginary costs, cut the overruns, increase the gross margins to gross levels and pay the workers as little as they can get by with . And by the way, it costs 10 times more in energy to produce a florescent light bulb that an incandescent one yet they are only about 3 fold more energy ecomonical? (That was from some application engineers at GE Lighting - I never ran the numbers but who would ever think someone from GE would not know anything?) |
LubeMaster77
What the F is this kind of jubberish??? Means NOTHING unless you expound on it, and then likely NOTHING. Energy out of nothing is entirely differen't than some slave type of thing. NO correlation, whatsoever. Basic science, and I mean BASIC science shows that there is NOTHING there. Its not like something is yet to be invented as even in 1800 the theory was there for what is todays science. There is NO science, even the most outrageous science, that even suggests a solution to todays problems. THis has never been true in the past, but it is true now. There is NO alternative energy. Only Nuclear energy is the likely savior, and even then its an IF.... In any case we have at least 500 plus years to fix it. |
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