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Carlo: Nuclear is one option, but I am not so sure it's the only one. For
example, Denmark right now generates 15% of their electricity with wind factories. Of course, wind and solar, which are true renewable sources of energy, should be used wherever they are feasible. But, NIMBYs aside, the resulting electricity cannot power reciprocating engines. Hydrogen can, but it takes lots of energy to make it. The only feasible way is to use electricity -- the electrolysis method. But then, again, it would take a lot of electrical energy. Thus the only source of seemingly unlimited electricity is from a breeder reactor. Even for a conventional reactor there is something like 500 year's worth of uranium available. But the breeder would take care of the waste problem, too. The electrolysis method, which is certainly better than the negative result of converting methane, requires water, another commodity that is getting scare. There is, in Florida I believe, an experimental site that is mating a desalinating plant with a nuke power plant. The possibilities there seem endless. Between sea water and nuclear energy, all the water and energy needs of the world could be fulfilled. 73, Bill, K5BY |
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