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by dotancohen
1546 days ago
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> I have already addressed that point in this thread. The emissions from coal
> plants are being addressed with a 10x reduction already in the works.
What about the remaining four orders of magnitude? I've already factored in the 90% -> 99% reduction in my comments.This is why I feel that such "feel good" efforts, such as focusing on the space industry, actually distract from the coal burning issue. You feel that things are being done to rectify coal, and I'm demonstrating that a 90% reduction in emissions (from 90% to 99% scrubbed) still pollutes four orders of magnitude (10,000 time more, though I accidentally said 1,000 more previously) than the proposed satellite constellations. |
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This thread started with a statement that satellite thrusters are at "first thought ... about 7 orders of magnitude less" than coal power plants, but where did that number come from? Others are noting that some proposed constellation would have emitted more mercury than the US, which contradicts that thought:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30841820:
> The US emits 52 tonnes/year into the air, apparently. The article claims _hundreds_ of tonnes for one constellation. Which does seem concerning if correct.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30840666:
> Apollo Constellation Engine designed their propulsion systems for mega constellations to use mercury, which is what got PEER involved in this. Popular Mechanics also reported on their plans. Even if Apollo changed their minds since, that's a pretty significant 'near miss'.
> https://ecfsapi.fcc.gov/file/111998371507/11_19_18_FCC_compl...
> https://www.popularmechanics.com/space/rockets/a25242578/apo...