

Earth Hour
#41
Posted 12 April 2008 - 08:28 AM
#42
Posted 12 April 2008 - 09:03 AM
skisox34, on Apr 12 2008, 09:28 AM, said:
A perfect example of what I meant when I said "no harm". One person can make a difference, if we all do something it will make a significant difference.
#43
Posted 12 April 2008 - 10:07 AM
Life happens, death happens. Just the way it goes.
I'm done ranting.
#44
Posted 15 April 2008 - 03:36 PM
It was early in the tourist season, and a particularly cold austral winter had resulted in even more sea ice than usual.
GAP Adventures bought the historic ship—the first purpose-built to carry tourists to Antarctica in 1969—in 2004. In the past it had been sending 12 cruises a year into the Antarctic.
#45
Posted 15 April 2008 - 07:07 PM
Skier, on Apr 11 2008, 03:50 PM, said:
#46
Posted 15 April 2008 - 08:54 PM
WBSKI, on Apr 15 2008, 07:07 PM, said:
As the recent oil find in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana demonstrates. No one knows how much oil or coal is in the ground, we may have more than that. But how can having all of that oil and coal in the ground be a problem? Jimmy Carter said we'd be running out of oil in the 1990's, with prices at $100 per GALLON; showed what he knew. The best thing the government can do is get the hell out of the way of the free markets. Look what their 'ethanol incentive' is doing. Helping to raise food prices world wide, contributing to global inflation of food prices. I think that the next 10-20 years will see the 'ultra refinement' of internal combustion engines to much higher efficiencies than seen today and by then some other technology will be ready to take over in their place. As for power production, this country is so ignorant to the advantages and safety of nuclear power it is ridiculous. Thanks to the environmentalists of the 70's the public and government won't let them be built based on exaggerations and doomsday scenarios. The same tactics used today to prevent driling in ANWAR and off of either coasts.
#47
Posted 15 April 2008 - 08:58 PM
As for ANWR, there isn't even enough oil there to sustain us for a year, so why destroy it for such a temporary fix?
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#48
Posted 15 April 2008 - 09:54 PM
France relies heavily on Nuclear power and it actually cleans its nuclear rods by putting them into big pools of water for about 12 years.
#49
Posted 16 April 2008 - 07:36 AM
SkiBachelor, on Apr 15 2008, 10:54 PM, said:
HUH??!! How can 12 years in water speed up the radioactive decay???
http://www.ieer.org/...et/uranium.html
#50
Posted 16 April 2008 - 07:47 AM
http://www.ocrwm.doe...oeymp0411.shtml
http://www.wtopnews....220&sid=1329639
#51
Posted 16 April 2008 - 08:16 AM
SkiBachelor, on Apr 16 2008, 08:47 AM, said:
http://www.ocrwm.doe...oeymp0411.shtml
http://www.wtopnews....220&sid=1329639
Read 'em. Only metions reprocessing, nothing about what 12 years in water does.
#52
Posted 16 April 2008 - 02:51 PM
Solar power is a joke, you could cover the whole US with solar panels and it still wouldn't be enough. They are made in China too and the factories produce horrible pollution themselves.
The answer does not lie in any one of these technologies. I believe the solution will be a mix of solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, and an increase in efficiency so we don't need as much energy in the first place.
Liftblog.com
#53
Posted 16 April 2008 - 03:36 PM
10-4. I am recently acquainted with a very large, well-engineered, well-funded solar installation that is totally "off-the-grid". Mr. Kunczynski's most recent calculations show that he has paid nearly $.085 per kilowatt-hour - more than ten times what most of us on the grid pay. The needed Watt-density just isn't there.
Another downside is that the production of photovoltaic arrays has a huge "carbon footprint" - unlikely to be negated by clean solar output. Then there is the small matter of large battery banks that must be maintained... and replaced every three years (private installations only).
This planet IS a solar collector - always has been. It's also been very good at storing solar energy - in the form of all sorts of living things, ocean currents and air currents. Even the solar energy absorbed by living things that die is kept - we burn it as oil, gas and coal. The "earth collector" is still working as well as it ever did - we're just over overwhelming the planet's "batteries".
Too much demand... by WAY too many of us.
#54
Posted 16 April 2008 - 03:51 PM
http://www.reia-nm.o...l_electric.html
Add;Manufacturing Costs
Concentrating solar power is the least expensive solar electricity for large-scale power generation, and has the potential to make solar power available at a very competitive rate. As a result, government, industry, and utilities have formed partnerships with the goal of reducing the manufacturing cost of concentrating solar power technologies
This post has been edited by k2skier: 16 April 2008 - 04:07 PM
#55
Posted 17 April 2008 - 05:09 AM
Interesting that you ask - I have been told that this is Jan's next move. The use of molten salt as a heat storage medium is an effective way to even out the the sometimes unpredictable solar input. Makes me wonder if we'll someday be driving electric vehicles that use molten salt "batteries".
#57
Posted 02 May 2008 - 08:16 AM
easier link http://www.youtube.c...h?v=8ZyW2-vSqV8
Here's the original skit, Will Ferrell on SNL http://www.youtube.c...h?v=Q5r6TqpOQGc
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This_Kid_Deserves_an_Oscar.wmv (1.82MB)
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This post has been edited by k2skier: 02 May 2008 - 01:37 PM
#58
Posted 04 May 2008 - 10:36 PM
Awe, Enter global warming. This is a trend! I've seen the data (not by personal observation, which is a stupid way to track change, but by looking at the hard numbers) for a few local sites, and I see warming. And I can also see why there is dispute about what is going on. Thousands of data points (ie daily temperature observations) over decades and decades--and not just at one site, but at thousands more. True, we've seen warming at many sites here in Utah, after a cooling period during the 1960's and 70's. Let's blame it on something.
Don't you see? This is the latest fad! We extrapolate and extrapolate--and then extrapolate some more for interesting news. At the rate of warming that occurred this morning between 9:00 and 11:00, we will hit a million degrees by 2009, and all the polar bears will have drowned in the Arctic Ocean. "Green" is the newest purr-word. If you are not green by now, you are ignorant--or so they say. Sure, why don't you just save my farm from me, its steward? Sure, tell me what I can and cannot do. Who do you think you are? If you want to be green, then go ahead and do it. Stop pushing your religion on me.

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Figure 1. Long-term world population growth, 1750-2050. (Source: United Nations Population Division, ''The World at Six Billion'')
#59
Posted 11 May 2008 - 10:25 AM
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#60
Posted 12 May 2008 - 01:19 PM
The bigger questions are whether humans are causing it and whether it is more extreme than any natural variation. I don't know the answer to these questions, but I do know that we are altering the planet in ways I think we shouldn't. So I choose to believe the scientists who are warning us about this. Even if it turns out that the Earth can somehow absorb the excess carbon that we are creating without getting warmer, I would rather our government acted now and turned out to be wrong than to ignore the problem until it is impossible to fix.
As far as ozone and rainforests, those problems didn't simply go away on their own. The ozone problem is fixed because the world powers got together and banned CFC's. And since when is rainforest deforestation a problem that we are no longer concerned about? It is unfair to link these completely unrelated world problems to global warming.
As for environmentalism being a religion, sustainability is something I wish we would all think about without government intervention. However, as with the ozone example you mentioned yourself, it took government regulation to fix the problem. The Clean Air Act and the Clean WaterAct are other examples.
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