Results 31 to 45 of 155
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15th June 2006, 11:18 AM #31
1. Congratulations Grunt the more this sort of discussion is brought in to the public eye the better we all are.
2. Personally I think the photo essay is a gret piece of work.
3. This sort of work is exactly the reason I do NOT watch the TV news and read newspapers. It gives one side to a story on a subject that I can do jack %$^ about and just makes me frustrated and depressed ... I'd pefer to be designing my next project.
4. I think of my self towards the green side of things
5. Do I think Nuke power has a future in Oz ... depends on if we can get enough information to prove it's any worse than coal fired power stations ... here's one in Qld (cleaner than the brown coal from Vic)
6. Mark Diesendorf (UNI NSW): Australia has the biggest per capita emissions of greenhouse gases in the world. Australia’s biggest single source of emissions is burning coal to generate electricity. Coal-burning also emits dangerous air pollutants, including oxides of sulphur and nitrogen, sulphuric and hydrochloric acid, boron, fluoride, particulate matter, mercury and even low-level radioactivity. In addition, coal is responsible for much water pollution, water consumption, land degradation, and occupational health and safety hazards ... from Ockham's Razor about 2 months ago.
7. How about we all panic about the damage we're already doing to the current generation ... and our kids ... why is Cancer so high in Australia already?
8. I wish I had an answer
9. Great to see some level-headed argument about the whole subject (I can forgive a little emotion when the thread starts something made to do exactly that)
10. Thanks guysRamps
When one has finished building one's house, one suddenly realizes that in the process one has learned something that one really needed to know in the worst way--before one began.
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15th June 2006, 11:24 AM #32Originally Posted by Grunt
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15th June 2006, 11:42 AM #33
By the way:
there are 442 "new clear" power plants operating around the world (over 100 in the US) producing nearly 370 000 MW of power and another 31 in construction.
there more NPP's commissioned 21-22 years ago than any other time in history ... hmm when was Cherobyl '86.
the cost of producing clean power from coal will triple our power bill (see this article from the Australian)
The info from Ockhams razor that I quoted above is here for those genuinely interested in alternatives
The average coal fired power station runs at about 31% efficiency.
... no opinion here just sime factsRamps
When one has finished building one's house, one suddenly realizes that in the process one has learned something that one really needed to know in the worst way--before one began.
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15th June 2006, 12:29 PM #34Banned
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An estimate of 60,000 deaths in the nuclear industry is certainly not trivial. But take a look at this link.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_mining
Admittedly estimates, but 20,000 deaths IN ONE YEAR in China ALONE in coal miners. This does not include deaths in the general population directly caused by illnesses caused by breathing the smoke and fumes from burning the stuff.
Makes me wonder if there are any figures on how many have died mining this stuff over the years??
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15th June 2006, 04:40 PM #35
Everything will run out anyway.....
Apparently (according to Auntie yesterday) the current and planned Nuke stations will exhaust the known supply of Uranium in about 9 years.
Johnny didn't tell you that.The only way to get rid of a [Domino] temptation is to yield to it. Oscar Wilde
.....so go4it people!
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15th June 2006, 04:48 PM #36
You blokes are kidding yourselves if you think that we won't go to nukuler power AND your really playing with it if you think that Chernobyl is a good comparison to make to current plants. It's like comparing a sand castle to the Taj Mahal.
From what I've read, Nuclear power is the cheapest and cleanest power there is. I would have thought the Greenies would love it. It will stop the shyte we're currently putting into the atmosphere burning millions of tonnes of coal. Then again, logic and reasoning are not their strong suits are they?
DanIs there anything easier done than said?- Stacky. The bottom pub, Cobram.
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15th June 2006, 04:59 PM #37
OK all you anti-nuclear knowledgeable types, what's the go with Thorium then?
From what I gather, it's biggest drawback (apart from having a much safer "spent" form) is that it isn't particularly suitable for weapons-grade proliferation, which makes it a bit uncool in the only country that is allowed weapons of mass destruction, and why that particular country (see how diplomatic I am Moderator Zed?) is actually sponsoring work in Russia to see what gives.
As an aside, Australia does have about a quarter of the known reserves, so that could be a handy thing.
More info please!
cheers,
P
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15th June 2006, 05:27 PM #38GOLD MEMBER
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worry worry worry
I used to worry that we would be leaving the future generations ....albeit those several hundred or thousands of years hence......nothing.
No water (global warming)
No fuel ( excessive use)
No arable land (urbanisation)
No fertile women or men (tight underpants)
No large herbivores ( food shortages)
No means of transport (as no fuel)
No hairy wombats, whales nor any large creatures that generate visual sympathetic pains on television left alive ( David Attenborough retires)
No Africans ( Aids)
But the reality is that the human race is really resiliant and just as intelligent humans built the pyramids around 5 thousand years ago and the Romans used cement for construction, I now firmly believe that future generations or a few pandemics will resolve the problem of power, population and all other concerns.
Yes, future generations will need to review their wasteful ways, but as the COST of goods and services increases, this will automatically happen. Look how a small increase in petrol has already altered the purchasing habits for new vehicles.....
Ou current stupid concerns will be resolved in time
Coal will run out in around a thousand or so years, so that will solve that problem.
Nuclear fuel will go fusion, so that will solve that problem.
We will begin to breed whales and hairy wombats so that will solve that problem.
Wood is a renewable resource and loves carbon dioxide, so that's OK for global warming.
Men and women will still seek to breed, but the breeding herd will limit the quantity of progeny, so over-population will be resolved as well.
What's the worry???
(Though I guess I will still worry about lawyers and where to dig for gold or find red cedar.... I mean a man's got to have something to amuse him at 3.00 am in the morning)
Greg
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15th June 2006, 05:41 PM #39Deceased
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One of the arguments that is always used against nuclear power is the matter of waste.
Can anyone tell us what quantity of waste we are talking about. How much waste does a nuclear power station generate in say one year?
Peter.
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15th June 2006, 05:46 PM #40Originally Posted by SturdeeStupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
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15th June 2006, 06:20 PM #41
Nuclear is not perfect, but I think it is the lesser of two evils (nuclear vs Fossil) - yes kiddies, solar, wind, geothermal, tide etc are not going to provide base load anytime soon. Look, for every bad statistic about nuclear energy, someone can and has sited a bad statistic about fossil fuel. Neither are perfect. People have got to get it through their thick skulls that we (life on this island in space) have a date with a radically different world if we do not kerb our use of fossil fuels. Nuclear is currently the only viable, fully contained energy source able to provide base load. Newer nuclear powerplants generate very little waste. Comparing the Chernobyl reactor with modern reactors is like comparing the model T Ford with the Toyota Prius.
I imagine this argument like lying in a bed with a gangrenous foot contemplating what future I have. If someone said hey, you can just lay there and do nothing and your future is assured, or we can take it off, you'll have a bit of pain for a while maybe you won't be able to walk, but then again you will still be around and who knows what the future holds? Perhaps someone will perfect a bionic foot that's even better than the old one. By which I mean, embrace nuclear fission, it might be the only thing that gets us to a better energy source such as fusion... At which point it should be abandoned.
Cheers
Michael
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15th June 2006, 06:48 PM #42Originally Posted by bitingmidge
Thorium can also be used as a nuclear fuel through breeding to uranium-233 (U-233).
mmmmmmmmmm........mood music, some essential oils, go you dirty little buggers
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15th June 2006, 07:51 PM #43Originally Posted by DanP
I think your assertion that Chernobyl is old/poor technology is the nearest you come to a reasonable argument Dan, the last bit about Greenies(environmentalists) is way biased, a very prejudiced view I would have thought. I won't continue with what I was going to say.
Keep debating, without the cr*p.
Regards,Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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15th June 2006, 08:16 PM #44Senior Member
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sturdee i heard they produce about 1 tonne of waste per year.
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15th June 2006, 08:16 PM #45
i remeber watching some show on teeve and they said that there was less than 100kg of "waste" aropund the joint, however this could be propoganda. either way its not that much physically - I still reckon send it to the sun....
Zed
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