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by rbanffy
6027 days ago
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Solar cells are promising, but they cannot solve this problem - at the very least, they can't generate power at night - we would have to rely on either an integrated planetary grid or a huge amount of batteries. Nuclear has only that much fuel to use. Uranium is non-renewable. And fusion is yet to prove it can provide enough energy. We need better reactors. |
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In short, I am arguing about developments that will come home to roost in less than a decade -- and disprove your statements. Even if these developments take five times as long, you are still vertigo-inducing wrong...
You are arguing like some sort of inverse Kurzweil. :-)
>>Solar cells are promising
They will never help much where I live. But not many live here.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8386460.stm
People in the highly populated parts of Europe will literally need a reason to not put them on the house -- in just a few years. Then add 80 more years of tech development...
Consider how much energy you'll get from solar cells in a city's total roof area. 1 square meter under the equator is 1 kW. If every person have 10 square meters of solar cells, it should be enough for all energy use (below the polar circle).
(The same goes for energy storage, developed over 90 years.)
>>Uranium is non-renewable.
Check up on Thorium reactors (and also on more modern versions of normal reactors, which burns a larger fraction of the fuel).
Then add 90 more years of development...
There is lots of Uranium in the ground. Raise the prices and it will come up.
>>And fusion is yet to prove it can provide enough energy.
We will know about e.g. General Fusion, Polywell and TriAlpha in just a few years.
Realistically, I'd not give that large chance for the individual projects (10%? 20%?). But I'd be surprised if nothing like that comes along in 90 years. Just consider space based solar, with the next-next-next-next generation of super cheap launch systems.