Guys, thanks for
the reports about this thread going a little wild
Sorry, I don't have
the time
to wad through all
the posts, so I renamed
the thread. I'll split it as soon as I have more time. For
the moment, let's try
to educate (or indoctrinate, I'm not sure...

)
the forum.
Please, feel free
to discuss here any of
the two issues:
Nuclear energy or BMW Megacity (altought
the last one has been forgotten even by
the person that started
the thread, that's
the reason why I think it's better
to change
the name).
If I can contribute with something,
I must say thanks to Edis, xpensive and Just a fan.. You're my kind of guys, supporting
the less popular (but correct, from my point of view) idea.
Of course Flynfrog doesn't need
to be encouraged... he ALWAYS follows
the Straight Dope slogan. That's why we love you, man.
As
nuclear energy does not produce global warming gases, it
is better for
the environment (I mean, for me and you). We already discussed this theme and it seemed
to me that after reviewing
the figures,
the forum agreed that
the way to go is nuclear.
If you want
to understand Fly, Just a fan, X and Edis position, please, by all means, stop ranting and read.
FACTS:
A coal plant produces 100 times the amount of radioactive material produced by a nuclear plant.
France produces 72% of its energy using nuclear plants. Finland started to build one recently. Why?
To comply with Kioto
These people are in favor of
nuclear plants, changing their minds after reviewing
the numbers:
- James Lovelock
(author of Gaia theory)
- Patrick Moore
(founder of Greenpeace)
- Hugh Montefiore
(long time head of Friends of Earth)
... so, it's unjust
to claim that some members have swallowed
the arguments of green movement: they are outdated, simply. They still believe what they read in
the 80's...
(
the numbers say that
the world could triple its demand of energy: China could build a Three Gorges Dam every year and still not cope with its demand)
However,
the "granola crowd" thinks a lot about efficiency. Well, guys, we're engineers (or have
the soul of one). Efficiency won't take us far. Energy
is not something we can live without. So, it's time
to say goodbye
to the nuclear bogey man and start
to think with our brains.
I'm sure people with more time than me can provide
the links and figures this post sorely needs (I'm afraid this thread will become ugly until someone does). Anyway, there you have
the simplest of notions:
"Despite all the hype, tax breaks, and incentives, the proportion of US electricity production from renewables has actually fallen in the past 15 years, from 11.0 percent to 9.1 percent."
So? What are we going
to do? Claim that (sorry, Pandamasque) because one
nuclear plant goes wild (lack of maintenance, in a very irresponsible
way, if you ask me) we have
to stop using
the tools at hand? Same
way you could ask for banning all chemical plants after
the Bhopal disaster (also, gross negligence bordering on criminal intentions, if you ask me).
If someone (
if I change just one mind, then you made by day, buddy) wants
to explore
the new world I foresee, check
the article that changed me:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.02/nuclear.html
It's five pages long, don't stop after
the first one, please.
So, final quote from it:
"The trick is to start building nuke plants and keep building them at a furious pace. Anything less leaves carbon in the climatic driver's seat."