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#41 |
wat
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 7,177
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As if solar power wasn't expensive already, let's put our panels in space. Enough panels to power 20-30% of the globe that way?
Don't get me wrong, it's actually something I would be willing to pay towards (better than half the other things my taxes go to), and it forces improvements on the efficiencies of getting things into orbit, but it is a very obvious criticism. |
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#42 | |
Sent to the cornfield
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 870
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#43 |
wat
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 7,177
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I am aware of the many benefits of an orbital or space-based solar panel, however, the criticism still applies in full force.
Edit: And as an additional, if we did have large "farms" of solar panels spreading out in orbit, the fact that we also have massive amounts of space junk there could pose a problem of damaging said delicate panels, thus drastically reducing their effectiveness and, worse, costing more millions or billions of dollars. |
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#44 | |
Sent to the cornfield
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 870
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#45 | |||||||
Friendly Neighborhood Quantum Hobo
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Outside the M-brane look'n in
Posts: 5,403
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Further, the worse case scenario is nothing like banning commercial flights because they could crash. Its like banning commercial flights in planes that could crash in favor of using planes that are scientifically proven to not crash. Its not a hard concept to grasp. You have two energy systems one of which could potentially kill hundreds of thousands and the other can't even if you tried. Both share basically the same benefits and can give us the same amount of power. Its stupid beyond comprehension to go with the one that could potentially kill hundreds of thousands no matter how unlikely vs the one that could never kill anyone. The stupidity increases exponentially when you add in every other problem that comes with nuclear energy. Quote:
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We have plenty of space on earth to build these things. Like is said there is more than enough already paved area in terms of parking lots to meet our solar needs. There is 19,000 square kilometers of parking lots in the lower 48 and if we covered it all with solar panels we'd have 160% of our current electricity demand. The cool thing is that shading the parking lots with solar panels are actually better for the people that park there. Its also better for the environment because you keep the ran from running off the pavement and picking up the various oil derivatives that went into making the pavement. Not to mention there is basically no inconvenience in terms of repair. Now I don't know what's going on in your head but its thousands of times less convenient to have to repair something that's in orbit than something that's on the roof of a parking garage. Quote:
Fission and space based solar might be cool but the are impracticable, unnecessary, and just down right stupid. We have the means today in terms of wind power (especially off shore) and solar power (especially over parking lots) to meet all of our energy needs and then some more on top of that. The solution has been found we can stop looking and start building. Edit: Quote:
Also: We can totally build ways to store the solar energy that would be much cheaper and simpler than building orbital solar collectors. I mean batteries are cheap and getting cheaper and there are other ways to use solar energy in terms of using and storing the thermal part that can continue with power production into the night. Combined with wind and the drastically lower demand at night this really is not a problem. Last edited by Sithdarth; 03-29-2009 at 04:06 PM. |
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#46 |
Park the car well out of sight...
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 566
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Sithdarth, nearly every major technological advancement humanity has ever made can be turned into a weapon somehow. Not every one, but nearly. Most advancements that are inherently safe and peaceful required the creation of something that was not. Case in point: Fission research led to the study of Fusion. The joke? Fusion can just as easily create a destructive weapon. And since it yields a much, much higher energy than fusion, it will yield a much more destructive weapon. Or a reactor failure could also do it. And whether you use the technology or not, it still exists. Someone will use it for destructive potential. These days, figuring out how to enrich uranium and make a bomb out of it is no harder than figuring out how to make a cell phone. Someone knows how to do it, and the technology to do so it in front of you. You should at least try to harvest trhe positive side of a technology as best you can, instead of ignoring it, because it exists once discovered, like it or not.
Anyway, you are right in that wind farms are the way to go. And since the room they take up is a problem, you just put them on mountains. You know, where the wind is? Thing is, nobody really lives there or does much with the land. And, they put wind farms there already. Its never was a real problem. Also, I am an electrician. I just helped install one such wind farm. Oh, about 24 300' tall windmills visible from 10 miles away. Right next to a very large, very dirty coal plant. One of the largest. It helped pay for the wind farm. Oh, the irony. The roadplate generation thing? You'll be lucky if the plates at a single traffic stop can be used to generate enough electricity to power the traffic lights at just that stop. Much less the street lights at night. It just is barely efficient. My solution, is to move from centralized generation (power plants, wind/solar farms feeding everyone) to a balanced approach to individual and centralized generation. Individual generation is where each individual homeowner has his/her own means fo power generation. Their own small scale wind/water/solar on their roof or in their yard, depending on what they have. It has problems. First one is, not everyone has a yard. Well, you still need power plants for cities and more urbanized environments. But they should still be trying to maximize their generation potential. Second is, its expensive. Well, its only expensive at first. You start with big tax credits to lessen the blow, then as people buy the generation equipment and have it installed, it becomes cheaper. Mass production and specialist contracting. Wont ever be hundreds of dollars, but it can be cut to a few thousand. Which reduces the amount of time it takes to pay for itself. And the last problem I see it it doesnt generate as much as a homeowner will use at peak. But it will drastically reduce the need for huge coal plants, and lots of real estate.
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"...an undying shadow in the world of lights..." -Grey Fox, Metal Gear Solid blackmager won the first Trivia Topic! Meister won the second! POS Industries won the "third"! Last edited by Cid Highwind; 04-09-2009 at 07:49 PM. |
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#47 |
pretty cool guy
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 814
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As far as reducing individual energy demand goes, geothermal heat pumps can go a long way towards that end.
Even if solar panels or wind turbines may not be practical to install on private residences, a geothermal heat pump is effective almost everywhere and can reduce heating bills drastically. The downside? Initial cost. On average, however, the system can pay itself off in about five years. |
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#48 |
Park the car well out of sight...
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 566
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Geothermal is no less practical than any renewable energy installation is for a private residence. However, it needs to be implemented regardless.
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"...an undying shadow in the world of lights..." -Grey Fox, Metal Gear Solid blackmager won the first Trivia Topic! Meister won the second! POS Industries won the "third"! |
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#49 |
pretty cool guy
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 814
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Ground source heat pumps, not direct-heat geothermal power generation.
Geo-exchange (the short term) takes solar energy absorbed by the ground and moves it into a building. It's the same principle that a refrigerator uses, only in reverse. Direct-heat geothermal takes energy directly from the Earth's mantle, and typically involves drilling down at least 3 kilometers (almost 2 miles). Geo-exchange is extremely practical for residential use, while direct-heat is not, aside from a few locations. |
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#50 |
Park the car well out of sight...
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 566
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I was implaying that geo-exchange is just as viable an option as solar or wind, as they all cost similarly, require similar amounts work, and have similar yields.
And none of them completely remove the need for outside sources of heat or electricity, but reduce it greatly. So the sooner the implementation, the better.
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"...an undying shadow in the world of lights..." -Grey Fox, Metal Gear Solid blackmager won the first Trivia Topic! Meister won the second! POS Industries won the "third"! |
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