Fusion and Large Scale Solar
From: "Thomas.Barclay" <Thomas.Barclay@c...>
Date: Tue, 16 May 2000 11:17:59 -0400
Subject: Fusion and Large Scale Solar
Fusion:
Someone brought this up. The Nova special I saw did not deal with Fusion
except to comment (IIRC) that it isn't there yet and they don't know if
it
will be soon. And that it is (sadly) covered in the same blanket
hysteria
(only somewhat justified) that surrounds various other styles of current
day
nuclear reactors. That public PR problem will have to be overcome first
as
well as the technical one. And as esteemed Nyrath points out.... "It's
fifty
years away.... It's still fifty years away....No, no, really, it's
coming..." - Fusion seems to be rather elusive.
But, from a justifier point of view, we do seem to have FGPs in the
Tuffleyverse, and that is a good point. It just makes these high tech
powerplants a key to how Earth of the period must look energy wise in
order
to be habitable and have power. I think we can figure much of Earth is
powered by this sort of power, but the interesting question might be
what
date this invention occurred... it has a transforming effect (I'm sure)
and
it would be interesting to know how bad things got before this power
supply
becomes available.
Large Scale Solar:
At present, it still costs more in energy to produce a solar panel than
is
returned over the mean lifespan of the panel (as I understand it). Ergo
unless this energy gap can be bridged, large scale solar projects will
be
unlikely. Plus then the next point becomes how to return this power to
the
surface - large microwave beams dropping TerraWatts of power to Earth?
What
if they get hit by a stray piece of space junk?
"And in other new, the government has released a statement that the
runaway
powerSat that baked Denver last monday causing 300,000 casualties was
NOT in
fact a terrorist incident, but an accident. Opposition parties are
calling
it a coverup..."
This still isn't the solution, though it may form part of the multifold
approach to solving energy issues.
Large Scale Population Growth:
Beth points out an across the board growth won't reflect subareas. This
I
understood, I was merely suggesting some place (Canada) will take to
growth
easier (physical resource wise, not necessarily culturally) than other
areas
of the world. Cultural perceptions of personal space and personal
liberties
and personal transport will need to change to grow. This could spur
(push)
some more colonists to pick up shop and go starward.
Thomas Barclay
Software Specialist
Defence Systems
xwave solutions
www.xwavesolutions.com
v: (613) 831 2018 x 3008
Alea iacta et pessimo resulto factura est.
Ave, Caesar! Te morituiri salutimas!