Antigravity
Ah, it's one of your less-serious side notes. I should have seen it coming!
I know it falls into that category, but can I please slip this link in if I promise to be good for a while?
The baseline of the video, trains produce a half of plane emissions, is flawed. Trains are electric, so emissions will depend on electricity production. If we assume they produce a half of plane emissions today ok, but that number is constantly decreasing as renewable energy increases its share of total energy production, and some day it may be zero emissions or at least it will be much lower than todayBig Tea wrote: ↑25 Aug 2021, 22:13I know it falls into that category, but can I please slip this link in if I promise to be good for a while?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_phicOPoQT8
In The Netherlands trains (apart from a handful of old diesel trains) all run on 100% renewable energy.Andres125sx wrote: ↑26 Aug 2021, 08:09The baseline of the video, trains produce a half of plane emissions, is flawed. Trains are electric, so emissions will depend on electricity production. If we assume they produce a half of plane emissions today ok, but that number is constantly decreasing as renewable energy increases its share of total energy production, and some day it may be zero emissions or at least it will be much lower than todayBig Tea wrote: ↑25 Aug 2021, 22:13I know it falls into that category, but can I please slip this link in if I promise to be good for a while?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_phicOPoQT8
Blimps are too weather dependant, and too slow to be a viable alternative IMHO
Just contractual. In practice, indeed, the energy mix used is not fully green. Although contractual commitment of large players like the national railways can of course speed up the transition to a greener energy mix by increasing specific demand for renewables, and hence one may indeed allocate a different energy mix to the railways than the national average to account for that... that's all still a matter of book-keeping.
What do you expect exactly? Airliners pollute a lot, but they´re just a fraction of the problem, a 2.4% according to that article exactly. A partial reduction of a small fraction will barely be noticeable
This is even more irrelevant with only a hundred launches a year in the whole planet. Who cares? It´s peanutsJ.A.W. wrote: ↑27 Aug 2021, 04:05Also of interest, given the likes of EV champ Lron Musque's input via huge hydrocarbon-efflux rockets:
https://everydayastronaut.com/rocket-pollution/
They do already have a commercial niche market, providing storage for lifts (elevators). As you say they can be recharged by replenishing the fluid, or by recharging it, and for static installations they make some sense - you can make the energy storage bigger simply by making the tanks bigger. They aren't amazingly efficient at 80% round trip, not a number that is widely publicised for many battery types. That is, if i deliver X kWh to your battery facility, and later get Y kWh, leaving the battery in the same state of charge, what is Y/X? All the electrical jiggery pokery and hotel loads should be accounted for by that method.
Not sure what you mean, but...
Agree, pick-ups and SUVs are an even a bigger problem. And contrary to rockets, there´s a viable alternative for all of them
Trying to divert attention JAW? I´ll remember this is the "viability of EVs" thread, a hundred rocket launches a year will never be a comparable problem to hundreds millions cars driving daily, many of them with engines much much bigger than necessary, with emission levels several orders of magnitude higher than necessary, just because some humans feel the need to own a car with much much, much more power than he really need.