• MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    But if the magic rocks (facility) cost more than creating energy from the water the magic rocks need for cooling…

  • drake@lemmy.sdf.org
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    12 minutes ago

    There is a huge lobby of pro-nuclear think tanks who try to astroturf pro-nuclear shit onto social media. We, scientifically literate, rational people, need to counteract these harmful narratives with some facts.

    FACT: Renewable sources of energy are as cheap or cheaper per kwh than nuclear.

    FACT: Renewables are faster to provision than nuclear.

    FACT: Renewables are as clean, or cleaner, than nuclear.

    FACT: Renewables are much more flexible and responsive to energy fluctuations than nuclear.

    FACT: Renewables will only get cheaper. Nuclear will only get more expensive, because uranium mining will get harder and harder as we deplete easily accessible sources.

  • Draedron@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 hours ago

    Anon is dumb. Anon forgets the nuclear waste. Anon also forgets that the plants for the magical rocks are extremely expensive. So much that energy won by these rocks is more expensive than wind energy and any other renewable.

    • InputZero@lemmy.world
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      29 minutes ago

      Anon isn’t dumb, just simple. Nuclear energy can be the best solution for certain situations. While renewables are the better choice in every way, they’re effectiveness isn’t equally distributed. There are places where there just isn’t enough available renewable energy sources year round to supply the people living there. When energy storage and transmission methods are also not up to the task, nuclear becomes the best answer. It shouldn’t be the first answer people look to but it is an answer. An expensive answer but sometimes the best one.

      Also nuclear waste doesn’t have to be a problem. If anyone was willing to cover the cost of burning it in a breeder reactor for power or burry it forever. It just is because it’s expensive.

      • drake@lemmy.sdf.org
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        21 minutes ago

        When energy storage and transmission methods are also not up to the task, nuclear becomes the best answer.

        Obviously, the best answer is to improve energy storage and transmission infrastructure. Why would we waste hundreds of millions on a stupid toy power plant when we could spend 10% of that money on just running decent underground cables.

    • iii@mander.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      As long as you don’t care when the electricity is produced

      • marx2k@lemmy.world
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        18 minutes ago

        Nuclear: As long as you don’t care about the magic rocks once the magic has decayed to a level where they’re not boiling water anymore

      • uniquethrowagay@feddit.org
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        5 hours ago

        Storage is a solvable problem. Whereas we don’t have the resources to power the world with nuclear plants.

        • iii@mander.xyz
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          4 hours ago

          Storage is a solvable problem

          I’m not convinced it is. Storage technologies exist for sure, but the general public seems to grossly underestimate the scale of storage required to match grid demand and renewables only production.

          • Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de
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            4 hours ago

            I think you underestimate how much storage power is currently being build and how many different technologies are available. In Germany alone there currently are 61 projects planed and in the approval phase boasting a combined 180 Gigawatts of potential power until 2030. Those of them that are meant to be build at old nuclear power plants (the grid connection is already available there) are expected to deliver 25% of the necessary storage capacity. In addition all electric vehicles that are assumed to be on the road until 2030 add another potential 100GW of power.

            Of course these numbers are theoretical as not every EV will be connected to a bidirectional charger and surely some projects will fail or delay, however given the massive development in this sector and new, innovative tech (not just batteries but f.e. a concrete ball placed 800m below sea level, expected to store energy extremely well at 5.8ct / kilowatt) there’s very much reason for optimism here.

            It’s also a funny sidenote that France, a country with a strong nuclear strategy, frequently buys power from Germany because it’s so much cheaper.

            • iii@mander.xyz
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              2 hours ago

              It’s not just power that’s needed (MW), also stored energy (MWh).

              Germany consumes on average 1.4TWh of electricity a day (1). Imagine bridging even a short dunkelflaute of 2 days.

              Worldwide lithium ion battery production is 4TWh a year (2).

              It’s also a funny sidenote that France, a country with a strong nuclear strategy, frequently buys power from Germany because it’s so much cheaper.

              Isn’t that normal? The problems with renewables isn’t that they generate cheap power, when they are generating. Today windmills even need to be equipped with remote shutdown, to prevent overproduction.

              The problems arise when they aren’t generating.

              • Teppichbrand@feddit.org
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                1 hour ago

                Another problem arises when you’re generation 63.688 after today and still have to keep maintaining deadly waste from nations that don’t exist anymore, because they produced “cheap” and “clean” energy for a couple of decades.
                Come on, Jesus died like 2000 years ago, this stuff will haunt us for centuries. Arguing in favor of nuclear energy is just selfish and shortsighted.

              • Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de
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                1 hour ago

                Your estimation goes way off because you still believe lithium ion to be the only viable solution. By now Sodium-Ion batteries are already installed even in EVs and can be produced without any critical resource like lithium.

                And then of course there are all the other storage solution. Like I said, there even are storage solutions like concrete balls. Successfully tested in 2016, here an article from 2013.

                By now it wouldn’t be wise to stifle this enormous emerging market of various technologies by using expensive, problematic technology (not just because the biggest producer of fuel rods is Russia).

              • barsoap@lemm.ee
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                2 hours ago

                The watthours is what gas is for. Germany’s pipeline network alone, that’s not including actual gas storage sites, can store three months of total energy usage.

                …or at least that’s the original plan, devised some 20 years ago, Fraunhofer worked it all out back then. It might be the case that banks of sodium batteries or whatnot are cheaper, but yeah lithium is probably not going to be it. Lithium’s strength is energy density, both per volume and by weight, and neither is of concern for grid storage.

                Imagine bridging even a short dunkelflaute of 2 days.

                That’s physically impossible for a place the size of Germany, much less Europe.

            • Ooops@feddit.org
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              4 hours ago

              Another important note about France: They are the second country alongside Germany heavily pushing for an upscaled green hydrogen market in the EU. Because -just like renewables- nuclear production doesn’t match the demand pattern at all. Thus it’s completely uneconomical without long-term storage.

              The fact that we seem to constantly discuss nuclear vs. renewables is proof that it’s mostly lobbying bullshit. Because in reality they don’t compete. It’s either renewables+short-term storage+long-term-term storage or renewables+nuclear+long-term storage. Those are the only two viable models.

              • iii@mander.xyz
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                2 hours ago

                upscaled green hydrogen market

                That’s been the talk in town for 40 years now. Green hydrogen has never gotten beyond proof-of-concept.

                The fact that we seem to constantly discuss nuclear vs. renewables is proof that it’s mostly lobbying bullshit.

                Sadly, it’s because the political green parties available to me are anti-nuclear.

                It’s either renewables+short-term storage+long-term-term storage or renewables+nuclear+long-term storage.

                Why is nuclear+short term storage not an option, according to you?

                • Ooops@feddit.org
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                  1 hour ago

                  Why is nuclear+short term storage not an option

                  Because cold winter days exist. Yes you can only build nuclear capacities for the average day and then short-term storage to match the demand pattern. But you would need to do so for the day(s) of the year with the highest energy demand, some cold winter work day. What do you do with those capacities the remaining year as throttling nuclear down is not really saving much costs (most lie in construction and deconstruction)?

  • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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    7 hours ago

    No it’s about nuclear waste and where to store it, it’s about how expensive it is to build a nuclear power plant (bc of regulations so they don’t goo boom) and it’s about how much you have to subsidize it to make the electricity it produces affordable at all. Economically it’s just not worth it. Renewables are just WAY cheaper.

    • el_abuelo@programming.dev
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      7 hours ago

      Funny how people think waste is why we don’t use nuclear power.

      You noticed how we’re all fine breathing in poison and carcinogens? Still haven’t banned burning fossil fuels.

      It’s a money problem and a PR problem

      • Hoimo@ani.social
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        2 hours ago

        And much of the PR problem is related to waste. The main push towards alternative energy sources comes from people worried about the long term consequences of burning fossil fuels. These same people worry about the long term consequences of nuclear waste production, so nuclear sabotages itself on this front.

    • bouh@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Renewable are so cheap, especially when we don’t need as much energy! Fortunately we won’t need as much energy in winter now. :-)

  • Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Funny how nuclear power plants are taboo, but building thousands of nuclear warheads all over the globe is no issue.

    • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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      10 hours ago

      Funny how building nuclear power plants that can only (if you have dipshits running them) kill a nearby city is taboo, but climate change that will kill everyone is acceptable to the moralists.

      • oyo@lemm.ee
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        8 hours ago

        Funny how solar, wind, and batteries are way cheaper and faster to build yet people are still talking about nuclear.

        • ClamDrinker@lemmy.world
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          13 minutes ago

          Solar and wind are cheaper yes. Batteries, no. If batteries were that cheap and easy to place we’d have solved energy a long time ago. Currently batteries don’t hold a candle to live production, the closest you can get is hydro storage, which not everyone has, and can’t realistically be built everywhere.

          Look at the stats. The second largest battery storage in the US (and the world) is located near the Moss Landing Power Plant. It proves a capacity of 3000 MWh with 6000 MWh planned. That sounds like a lot, but it’s located next to San Jose and San Fransisco, so lets pick just one of those counties to compare. The average energy usage in the county of San Clara, which contains San Jose (You might need to VPN from the US to see the source) is 17101 GWh per year, which is about 46.8 GWh per day, or 46800 MWh. So you’d need 8 more of those at 6000 MWh to even be able to store a day’s worth of electricity from that county alone, which has a population of about 2 million people. And that’s not even talking about all the realities that come with electricity like peak loads.

          Relative to how much space wind and solar use, nuclear is the clear winner. If a country doesn’t have massive amounts of empty area nuclear is unmissable. People also really hate seeing solar and wind farm. That’s not something I personally mind too much, but even in the best of countries people oppose renewables simply because it ruins their surroundings to them. Creating the infrastructure for such distributed energy networks to sustain large solar and wind farms is also quite hard and requires personnel that the entire world has shortages of, while a nuclear reactor is centralized and much easier to set up since it’s similar to current power plants. But a company that can build a nuclear plant isn’t going to be able to build a solar farm, or a wind farm, and in a similar way if every company that can make solar farms or wind farms is busy, their price will go up too. By balancing the load between nuclear, solar, and wind, we ensure the transition can happen as fast and affordable as possible.

          There’s also the fact that it always works and can be scaled up or down on demand, and as such is the least polluting source (on the same level as renewables) that can reliably replace coal, natural gas, biomass, and any other always available source. You don’t want to fall back on those when the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. If batteries were available to store that energy it’d be a different story. But unless you have large natural batteries like hydro plants with storage basins that you can pump water up to with excess electricity, it’s not sustainable. I’d wish it was, but it’s not. As it stands now, the world needs both renewables and nuclear to go fully neutral. Until something even better like nuclear fission becomes viable.

        • CybranM@feddit.nu
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          5 hours ago

          If only people weren’t fearmongering about nuclear 50 years ago we’d have clean energy today.

          “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, second best is now”

          • Hoimo@ani.social
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            2 hours ago

            That saying works for trees. We didn’t make trees obsolete with better technology.

            • CybranM@feddit.nu
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              23 minutes ago

              Reliable clean energy isn’t a solved issue today either. Until we have grid-level storage we need something that can provide a reliable base and had enough mass/momentum to handle grid fluctuations.

        • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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          8 hours ago

          Stopping nuclear from being built is the problem.

          We would have had a lot more clean energy than we do by now if we let the nuclear power plants that “would take too long to build!” be built back then, because they’d be up and running by now.

          More letting perfect be the enemy of good.

          • drake@lemmy.sdf.org
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            3 hours ago

            Nuclear may have been good 10 years ago, but it isn’t really good anymore. This is like saying “if I had bought a PS2 in 2002 then I would have had fun playing Final Fantasy XI Online. Therefore, I should buy a PS2 and FFXI Online so I can have fun in 2024”. That ship has sailed

        • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          Funny how being polite didn’t convince you so now you’re trying to sell that being mean is going to stop you. You were always useless.

          • meliaesc@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            Hey, I hear you, life is stressful and there’s a lot going on. It’s okay to be upset, I hope whatever you’re going through gets easier.

              • meliaesc@lemmy.world
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                9 hours ago

                Is there a particular reason you think everyone, here specifically, believes those things?

                Edit: I absolutely share your passion about climate change, as a preface. Calling someone, who agrees with you or not, “useless” makes them dismiss your opinion. It just means we can’t engage in any meaningful discussion and others are less likely to take action.

  • OprahsedCreature@lemmy.ml
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    13 hours ago

    The problem isn’t that they exploded one time. The problem is that that one explosion is still happening and likely will be for quite a while.

    On the other hand, modern rock exploding plant designs are so much better that it’s very unlikely to repeat itself, so there’s that.

    • Baylahoo@sh.itjust.works
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      11 hours ago

      I’m sure the other rock/liquid/gas burning plants have had no issues along their lifetime and had no hand in demonizing the “new” slowly exploding rock technology after extreme negligence let the one big one happen. /s

      I’d take the band aid of nuclear in my backyard vs what we rely on now after learning all of the insider knowledge of someone who personally worked in energy generation that did all of this plus renewables almost their entire professional life.

  • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    Paraphrased but this is right.

    And the people were taught to talk about the horrible nuclear accidents that killed a few but completely glance over the unimaginable millions perished in the name of oil, mustn’t even mention the mass extinction events we launched with oil.

    We even spread exaggerated bullshit about radiation mutation (wtf? thats superhero comic books fiction!!) and cancer rates (only one really), ignoring how much overwhelmingly more of the both we get from fossil fuel products.

    We are like prehistoric people going extinct bcs of the tales how generations ago someone burned down their house so fire bad. Well, actually not like that - we are taking with us a lot of species & entire ecosystems too.

    • Mr Fish@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      It’s more like “Bob and Jim died in a fire a while ago, so everyone decided to put up with heaps of people dying to hypothermia and uncooked meat”

    • Mbourgon everywhere@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      “Ted Kennedy killed more people than Three Mile Island” - Bumper sticker.

      That’s said, I facepalm at Fukushima. And desperately want more modern systems

  • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    You’re right to reject the logic behind that because it’s nonsense. Its not making sense to them because they still presume some kind of good faith when it come to these sorts of things.

    The reason we haven’t built more nuclear power stations is because oil, gas and coal companies will make less money, if we build more nuclear power stations.

    They have the means, the motive and they have a well recorded history of being that cartoonishly villainous. Nothing else makes sense.

    • Baylahoo@sh.itjust.works
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      10 hours ago

      It’s crazy that Mr. Burns from the Simpsons was in nuclear and not coal or oil. Probably a product of the propaganda at the time.

    • Screen_Shatter@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Three Mile Island and Chernobyl really did change things. Prior to those incidents there were plans to build over 50 more nuclear plants in place which got canceled as a result. Currently oil and gas industries will do all they can to keep nuclear from making a come back, but for a long time they didn’t have to do shit thanks to those catastrophes.

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    19 hours ago

    Burning down your house doesn’t poison people thousands of years later, so it’s not a perfect analogy.

    Plus we have magic mirrors and magic fans that do the same thing as the magic rocks just way cheaper.

    • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      We’ve upgraded from burning our houses down to burning our atmosphere down which will absolutely poison humans for centuries to come. And since we now burn larger fires with black rocks, those release far more magic rock dust that poisons people than the magic rock water heaters do. Not to mention that fire has both killed more of us cave dwellers than magic rocks ever have (including the flying weaponry runes made from them) and have caused more ecological disasters, so fire is much worse.

      Then we talk magic mirrors, they have evil rocks in them that get in our rivers and we don’t contain well. That aside, we show tradition to our ancestors by making much of them with slavery.

      And the magic fans? The design is very human. They’d be a gift from the gods if only the spirit of the wind were always with us.

      Summary: Magic rock still good, black rocks and black water make bad fire and hairless monkey make sick more.

        • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          One must be very careful when digging for magic hot rocks or else you expose the evil spirit vapors. Our ancestors knew that where there is magic, some evil lurks. As they did then, we do now when we accept a better evil in return for the magic we believe may do more good than before.

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        13 hours ago

        This is exactly, factually right, and eloquently put using the same meme terminology people here understand.

    • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      We had magic mirrors and magic fans for centuries tho.

      Yet we decided to release way more poison and even way more radiation by mining and burning fossil fuels. We just poison larger areas than any nuclear disasters. And with fossil fuels people actually get cancer, and with toxic byproducts, mutations and birth defects.

      People in polluted areas die sooner. Except around nuclear disasters sights - the air gets cleaner once all the people are thrown out.

      • Hegar@fedia.io
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        9 hours ago

        We had magic mirrors and magic fans for centuries tho.

        We’ve had solar and wind electricity generation for centuries?

        • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          4 hours ago

          Eccentricity generators were invented before mass oil or coal use (1830s by Faraday).

          We’ve had windmills, hydro, and even animal/human powered devices that could result in turning cranks for the generator to produce electricity - all for centuries at even that point. I would have to look up about when we first used solar to boil water, but I’m guessing there about.

  • NONE@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Well, you see, the “Anti Magic Rock” Lobby has immense amount of power because of the money of the still lucrative “burning stuff and pollute everything” business.

    • drake@lemmy.sdf.org
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      19 minutes ago

      Nuclear isn’t in competition with fossil fuels, it’s in competition with renewables. Renewables are better than nuclear by pretty much every conceivable metric. So fuck nuclear power, it’s a waste of money and time.

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        13 hours ago

        Yeah, oil oiled the “green” anti-nuclear protests.

        You can tell that’s how it was because the cops didn’t beat them as much (or in some big cases at all) as they do even the most insignificant anti-oil protesters.

      • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        It has that low death rate precisely because it is heavily regulated.

        The typical nuclear booster argument works on the following circular logic:

        “Nuclear is perfectly safe.”

        “But that’s not the problem with nuclear. The problem with nuclear is its too expensive.”

        “Nuclear is expensive because it’s overly regulated!”

        “But nuclear is only safe because of those heavy regulations!”

        “We would have everything powered by nuclear by now if it weren’t for Greenpeace.”

        • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          12 hours ago

          It feels like it is otherwise we wouldn’t possibly use it.

          Imagine dangerous drilling, all the complex refining, the mass transpiration systems around the world moving billions of tonnes, etc. It’s stupid and complex. The system to enable it was somewhat forced & def forced to maintain it, it’s well documented actually.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      Most of those didn’t involve the magic rocks, and most didn’t hurt anyone.

      More people die creating the building materials for a powerplant (or a windmills, or a solar panel) than ever during operation. The numbers really don’t matter.

      I honestly don’t care what we do, as long as we stop burning coal, oil and gas. The way I see it, every nuclear plant and windmill means we all die a little later.

    • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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      16 hours ago

      Just put it somewhere noone lives like the Dakotas or places people who don’t matter live, like west Virginia. All the coal miners getting cancer anyway, why not double tap?

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          The coal mining industry employs about 38,000 people. Dunkin Donuts alone employs seven times as many people as the whole coal mining industry. There just aren’t that many coal miners anymore. And everyone currently involved with it joined up knowing full well the days of coal were numbered.

  • Comment105@lemm.ee
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    17 hours ago

    Not even a joke, that’s a very concise way to put the argument.

    • Agent641@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Except the retard didn’t just burn his house down, he burned thousands of people’s houses down in such a way that nobody could ever live there again, and came very close to burning down the whole continent in the same way.

      (I’m still in favour of spicy rock steam)

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        Isn’t nuclear energy like super safe and have killed incredibly few people compared to all the other energy sources?

        Or are you talking about destilling the magic rocks very much and putting them in a bomb?

        • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          13 hours ago

          Exactly.

          The whole clusterfuck of mishandled Chernobyl cleanup & everything there before and after only claimed a few lives (via direct radiation tissue damage or just accidents).

          Compare that with the daily average of thousands of killed in various (ultimately) oil wars.

          But we don’t even get news about that.

          But western propaganda sure showed us malformed babies & claimed it was from radiation - it turns out it was all bullshit, it was always a toxic chemical behind it (unregulated industries selling toxic shit by the tonnes - fertilisers, paints, even biological warfare).

          We just take radiation super seriously and completely disregard toxic chemical pollution of eg industrial spillages. People just get to live in polluted areas and die sooner because of that. Instead of living for longer & with less health hazards but with a little radiation.

          And lastly - burning coal released way more radiation into air than nuclear accidents.

      • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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        16 hours ago

        Or to put it another way, we almost ruined a large swath of land and learned from that mistake, but chose not to use it so when we do have to switch to nukes because destroyed our planet we will have forgotten all those lessons and do it again.

    • moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 hours ago

      Na it’s dumb. The issue with the magic rocks isn’t the direct consequences like with the fire. The issues with these rocks are long terms with the consequences on humans and the environment thousands of years later.

      • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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        14 hours ago

        Yeah, the environmental issues that are orders of magnitude less problematic than literally pumping the toxic chemicals into the atmosphere like with fossil fuels, vs comparatively miniscule amount of solid waste to store inert.

        • moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 hours ago

          The comparison is dumb. The subject was the comparaison, and not what type of energy is better for the environment.

          You’re interpreting.

        • T156@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          Coal smoke is more radioactive than the outside of a fission reactor anyhow.

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        14 hours ago

        What consequences?
        There are no consequences for animals in Chernobyl, they are thriving in all aspects, even mammals living underground (mutations are fiction).

        People that didn’t leave the exclusion zone died of old age there.

        Life on Earth had to deal with all sorts of radiation.

        What caused mass extinction was ecosystem change, eg via global climate change.

      • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        14 hours ago

        these rocks are long terms with the consequences on humans and the environment thousands of years later.

        You bury them in concrete, done. Nuclear waste isn’t an issue and hasn’t ever been

        • spirinolas@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Yeah, just bury it and make it someone else’s problem in the future.

          I’ve seen this train of thinking somewhere. Spoiler alert, it was a bad idea.

          • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            34 minutes ago

            someone else’s problem in the future

            Nope, if you bury it in a few inches of concrete it’s literally never a problem again unless society somehow completely collapsed and all knowledge of nuclear waste is lost

            I’ve seen this train of thinking somewhere. Spoiler alert, it was a bad idea.

            I’ve seen this level of confidence from people who don’t know what they’re talking about before. Spoiler alert, it’s embarrassing for you

            • spirinolas@lemmy.world
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              21 minutes ago

              I’ve seen this level of confidence from people who don’t know what they’re talking about before. Spoiler alert, it’s embarrassing for you

              Ahahahahahah! Oh the irony! Drop the smugness.

              Dude, you don’t know as much about nuclear energy as you think. But you know even less about concrete.

              if you bury it in a few inches of concrete it’s literally never a problem again

              I’m putting this one on Facebook for my civil engineer friends to laugh at. It’s going to be a riot. Concrete is pourous as hell and doesn’t last much on a grand scale. And on top of that you think a few inches is enough? This is nuclear waste, it’s not Emma Dorothy from Sunday school!

              Stop embarrassing yourself.

              • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                6 minutes ago

                Drop the smugness.

                Nah, you want to start it when you’re talking out your ass, imma keep it when I’m correcting you.

                Dude, you don’t know as much about nuclear energy as you think. But you know even less about concrete.

                Oh wow, good scientific counterpoints! If only you could Google it and find out for yourself…

                Stop embarrassing yourself

                You really should, 5s in Google and I found exactly what I’m talking about:

                I simplified with just using “concrete” because “they fill a container with inert gas and pour concrete around it and it’s fine” is easily shortened to “dump concrete around it”

                Shit, theres a YouTube video of someone kissing one of those, standing next to it for the whole video, nothing happens at all. You have no idea what you’re talking about

                Facebook

                Oh, I see I’m dealing with a mental deficient here, I apologize for assuming you were of standard mental functionality

  • kbal@fedia.io
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    20 hours ago

    Step 1: Get magic rocks.

    Step 2: Now design the rest of the nuclear reactor.