jonesy
Guru
Night Train said:... the promotors of nuclear power always gloss over the waste issue claiming some future technology will sort it out one day (hopefully).
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No they don't. The waste disposal problem is political, not technological.
Night Train said:... the promotors of nuclear power always gloss over the waste issue claiming some future technology will sort it out one day (hopefully).
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linfordlunchbox said:As an alternative, why not focus more effort on waste dump energy extraction ?
It is something we cannot get away from. They generate heat and methane which could both be tapped for heating (obviously) and power generation. We as a race are going to carry on producing it, and it is always going to be a problem to resolve.
Perhaps User482 or other kings of the pile can shed some light on this avenue![]()
linfordlunchbox said:As an alternative, why not focus more effort on waste dump energy extraction ?
It is something we cannot get away from. They generate heat and methane which could both be tapped for heating (obviously) and power generation. We as a race are going to carry on producing it, and it is always going to be a problem to resolve.
Perhaps User482 or other kings of the pile can shed some light on this avenue![]()

domtyler said:Not a bad idea there Linf!
On a similar note, I am currently watching Murray - Santoro and as I am watching in HD it is easy to see that they are both perspiring heavily. Naturally I have begun to wonder if there is any mileage in tapping this rich energy source? We could just link anyone engaging in physical exercise into some kind of steam generation plant and feed the resulting power back into the grid. Why anyone has not thought of this before is beyond me? I reckon it would be much cheaper than nuclear too.
Ben Lovejoy said:There's also an 'eco disco' near Kings Cross where the sound system is powered by the dancers via an under-floor compression system of some kind.
Ben

Flying_Monkey said:In jest, you aren't too far away from some things that are being trialled. There's a system they were trying out in Shinjuku Station in Tokyo that powers the ticket gates via tapping the energy of the footfall of the passengers passing through. I recently saw a similar system being proposed by a British inventor but with motorway on and off ramps.
domtyler said:Okay, getting back to all seriousness, clever and efficient small scale systems like this definitely have a part to play in the future and I love to hear about them. Whether or not they will ever play an important enough role to have any effect on global climate or save the human race from extinction through our own profligacy though is another matter entirely.

Germany is very different to the UK. First, the population density is massively lower, so it is easy to build large numbers of windfarms that are far from the nearest people. Second, the landscape is very different. There are plenty of areas where the addition of windfarms doesn't have too great a visual impact. This is totally different to the UK, where the appearance of the landscape would be ruined.simon l& and a half said:German precedent. If they can do it without turning the country into a giant windmill, why can't we?
Ben Lovejoy said:Germany is very different to the UK. First, the population density is massively lower, so it is easy to build large numbers of windfarms that are far from the nearest people. Second, the landscape is very different. There are plenty of areas where the addition of windfarms doesn't have too great a visual impact. This is totally different to the UK, where the appearance of the landscape would be ruined.
But even in Germany (where I've spent a lot of time), these things are still a blight on the landscape.
Ben
When you include the East (where the cities are much denser) the difference isn't as great (231 vs 246), but the West has much larger swathes of semi-populated land, and that's where you find the windfarms.Crackle said:That doesn't ring true. Population density in the West and North is not low, perhaps in the East where I've not spent much time.
It is certainly different; whether or not it is better is a different question. It's a much more restrictive society, and a lot of the legislation in Germany wouldn't sit well in the UK (for example, being banned from washing your car in the street).The whole mentality towards green issues, quality, planning, long termism (is that a word?) is different, always has been.