Which energy source offers the most encompassing solution, for the smallest environmental impact  

120 members have voted

  1. 1. Energy sources

    • Wind
      14
    • Solar
      28
    • Tidal
      9
    • Geothermic
      20
    • Nuclear Fusion
      37
    • Population control (free up current resources)
      12


Recommended Posts

You can only do so in a very ineffective way, either by creating vast timebombs of great volume hydrogen stores, or by creating hydro storage. Both are not actual realistic proposals.

im talking about solar panels along with lower power, higher efficiency devices, a lot of the devices being used in the house are fairly inefficient.

as for the power storing, each house would have its own couple panels and a couple deep cycle batterys, or whatever battery we use a couple years from now.

each house would be off the grid with solar panels, and it would have less of an impact on the environment then making giant hydro dams (im in BC, so all of our power is hydro)

Meh... Honestly, I think nuclear fission plants are bad enough.... I dont think we need to move toward FUSION... I mean, seriously, we'd effectively be recreating (albeit on a much smaller scale) the SUN on earth.... Sounds kinda scary to me.

Meh... Honestly, I think nuclear fission plants are bad enough.... I dont think we need to move toward FUSION... I mean, seriously, we'd effectively be recreating (albeit on a much smaller scale) the SUN on earth.... Sounds kinda scary to me.

With that attitude we would still be in the Middle Ages.

Well,they can do fussion,with deuterium but deuterium costs a lot and it's very expensive to produce energy this way. The resulting nucleoses are pretty stable so they don't emit harmful radiation.

The bulk of the radiation consists of the free subatomic particles that some reactions might produce. Hydrogen can be produced in mass quantities from ocean water. The big problem is getting hydrogen to the required temperature in order to start the nuclear fussion. First of all, the temperature is enormous and secondly it is very challenging to contain such a hot mass because anything that gets in contact with it is instantly vaporized.

The only way that I've read about so far to contain that hot mass is to generate a strong electromagnetic field which keeps the hot mass in the center of the reactor without directly touching any of it.

I would say that nuclear fussion is the biggest hope that we have.

I'd rather we focused on one thing and do it right rather than start a lot of researching projects.

they should just start a roll out in these new energies, instead of constantly telling "stop driving, eating, living cos your killing!"

most the bulbs in our house are now energy efficient, but they take a while to power up, and dont feel as bright as they should be :(

i think solar panels on houses is a real possibility, at least in the UK where energy costs are just getting toooooooo high......

it would help if the energy companies didn't post their MASSIVE profits the day before they jack the prices up!

I tend to let the experts advise me. :p They seem quite sure they'll get there sooner or later. The hardest part has been done, proof of concept. Going by past results with new inventions, once proof of concept has succeeded real life implementation follows.

Solar and wind, when integrated into our general structures, combined with increased efficiency construction, is without a doubt the best option. However, it does not fully meet our demands. Nuclear power, as in fission, remains the cleanest form of power we have. It's a shame it's been so stigmatized.

I do believe fusion will one day be realized, but it would be foolish to bet the farm on it, so to speak.

Betting the farm on impractical inefficient systems as Solar and Wind is much worse.

Both are not consistent in output, also you can't ramp them up in case of excess demand. Since on average these systems run at 30% efficiency, varying wildly over a 24 hour period from zero to 100% it can only be a workable realistic system if a radically new system electricity storage/distribution has been invented.

Since batteries are a no go area, they are pretty much maxed out already, that leaves either hydro storage or hydrogen storage. Both highly inefficient, impractical and in hydrogens case very dangerous.

Betting the farm on impractical inefficient systems as Solar and Wind is much worse.

Both are not consistent in output, also you can't ramp them up in case of excess demand. Since on average these systems run at 30% efficiency, varying wildly over a 24 hour period from zero to 100% it can only be a workable realistic system if a radically new system electricity storage/distribution has been invented.

Since batteries are a no go area, they are pretty much maxed out already, that leaves either hydro storage or hydrogen storage. Both highly inefficient, impractical and in hydrogens case very dangerous.

what...

solar panels ALWAYS use batterys.

over the last few years there have been a couple companys claiming to be close to new battery technology that would increase battery capacitys 10x.

what...

solar panels ALWAYS use batterys.

over the last few years there have been a couple companys claiming to be close to new battery technology that would increase battery capacitys 10x.

I guess you should read up on batteries first: http://www.batteryuniversity.com/

What is the ultimate miracle battery?

The ultimate miracle battery is nowhere in sight and the battery remains the 'weak link' for the foreseeable future. As long as the battery is based on an electro-chemical process, limitations of power density and short life expectancy must be taken into account. We must adapt to this constraint and design the equipment around it.

People want an inexhaustible pool of energy in a small package that is cheap, safe and clean. A radical turn will be needed to satisfy the unquenchable thirst for portable and mobile power. It is anyone's guess whether a superior electro-chemical battery, an improved fuel cell, a futuristic atomic fusion battery or some other groundbreaking energy storage device will fulfill this dream. For many, this break will not come in ones lifetime.

People want an inexhaustible pool of energy in a small package that is cheap, safe and clean. A radical turn will be needed to satisfy the unquenchable thirst for portable and mobile power. It is anyone's guess whether a superior electro-chemical battery, an improved fuel cell, a futuristic atomic fusion battery or some other groundbreaking energy storage device will fulfill this dream. For many, this break will not come in ones lifetime.

I'll go out on a rather safe limb to suggest that it will arrive before nuclear fusion becomes a practical and operational source of power.

Duly noted. I'm 54 and don't plan to live beyond the age i start to get fragile so it won't be in my lifetime that's for sure.

But it doesn't need a genius to imagine that any storage of energy is still bound by the laws of nature as we currently know them.

Currently we are at a daily consumption of about 15 terawatts and growing steeply.

Wind/Solar efficiency currently at 30% taking in all the variables means you'll need to store at the very minimum 10 terawatts to keep the world going for a day, and enough solar and wind generators to quickly charge it.

So to get 15 terawatts you need 50 terawatts of installed solar/wind generators given it's unreliability.

At present a 1 gigawatt of sea windfarm is budgeted at 5 billion euros.

So to get let's say, half of the daily needs from wind you'd need 25000 x 5 = 125 trillion euros as a base investment. Add to that the infrastructure, storage (which as yet is impossible) i guess half your 'free' energy clocks in at anywhere from 150 to 200 trillion euros to build.

Which gets us at cost of 200 trillion euros divided by 7.5 real terawatts = 26 euros/watt.

Even if you do the impossbile and you crank up current Solar/Wind efficiency by 100% you'd still end up at 13 euros/watt.

To get that down to the current prize of 5 eurocent per kilowatt, it'd better have a MTBF in the order of centuries :laugh:

Storing 10 terawatts safely will mean that you'll need a adequate batteries capable of handling that.

The only ones we have now that anyway near practical are chemical ones.

I don't want to be near any chemical that holds 1 terawatts of energy, nor is it a safe idea to have it within 100ths of miles. A chemical battery failing and releasing 1 terawatts at once will be an awesome sight. Let alone 10 terawatts.

So you'll need to redistribute 10 terawatts over a large global area, which means placing chemical bombs all over and wiring them up.

Not what you'd call a practical solution.

Duly noted. I'm 54 and don't plan to live beyond the age i start to get fragile so it won't be in my lifetime that's for sure.

But it doesn't need a genius to imagine that any storage of energy is still bound by the laws of nature as we currently know them.

...

Not what you'd call a practical solution.

Currently, a region would be hard pressed to generate more than 30% of its energy needs from renewable sources. That being said, many regions generate less than 15% so setting a minimum goal of 15% would be a good start. At least that will keep the R&D money flowing and generate jobs in the "green economy". Ontario, which is blessed with hydroelectric resources, gets 26% of its power from renewable sources.

I'm perfectly fine with using nuclear fission until renewable energy becomes more commercially viable. Ontario gets 37% of its energy needs from nuclear fission.

And that means that the remainder comes from fossil fuels which, if nothing else, offers near-perfect reliability. Ontario is closing all of its coal-fired generators because they are the worst of the worst when it comes to pollution (both in terms of carbon and smog).

My parents live in the Adalucian mountains in southern Spain, they're farm doesn't have a connected power supply and they run their entire lives from solar panels connected to a room the size of your average toilet cubical full of batteries.

The whole thing cost ?2000 to set up.

Unfortunatley the amount of sun i get over here in London, i'd be lucky to be able to make one luke warm cup of tea a fortnight!

Currently, a region would be hard pressed to generate more than 30% of its energy needs from renewable sources. That being said, many regions generate less than 15% so setting a minimum goal of 15% would be a good start. At least that will keep the R&D money flowing and generate jobs in the "green economy". Ontario, which is blessed with hydroelectric resources, gets 26% of its power from renewable sources.

I'm perfectly fine with using nuclear fission until renewable energy becomes more commercially viable. Ontario gets 37% of its energy needs from nuclear fission.

And that means that the remainder comes from fossil fuels which, if nothing else, offers near-perfect reliability. Ontario is closing all of its coal-fired generators because they are the worst of the worst when it comes to pollution (both in terms of carbon and smog).

All modern coal fired plants are smog free, there's an extensive exhaust cleaning process. It's the older ones which do the harm. Carbon is good for the plants the more the better.

One guestimates that there's enough coal to keep us going for centuries

energy.jpg

France does 80% fission. My wallet is very happy?:pp Electricity is dirtcheap compared to the rest of europe.

That's my idea. Do fission till fusion becomes workable.

'renewable' energy doesn't exist. The materials and machines necessary are costly and wear out, so you'll need constant maintenance at a high rate. Especially wind generators are very fragile devices.?

Solar for real time use is impossible. The cost per watt is just to high. On a per household basis it can serve as an addition to centrally distributed power for the greenies to make them feel good, but never replace it.

All modern coal fired plants are smog free, there's an extensive exhaust cleaning process. It's the older ones which do the harm. Carbon is good for the plants the more the better

Just because some PR-wiz managed to get the "Clean Coal" slogan to stick doesn't mean that coal is remotely clean. The best coal-fired plant is still worse than a natural-gas fired plant since Coal generates both smog and acid rain on top of the carbon emissions that you likely don't care about. Coal scrubbers do not prevent air pollution, but they do reduce it by filtering out some of the most harmful pollutants. Even with scrubbers and the tallest smokestacks the best you can hope for is to put the smog higher up in the atmosphere so that it doesn't disperse in your own back yard. That still is hardly responsible.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Those are some popular multiplayer games. But hardly "all". Just those that don't work on Linux currently due to specific anti-cheat implementations. I think it's also fair to point out the literally thousands of games that don't work on the PS5. And it's not locked at 1080p. That's the default, which you can change.
    • Ubuntu Livepatch arrives on Arm64 to eliminate system reboots for kernel updates by Paul Hill Canonical has just announced that its Livepatch service now supports computers with Arm64 processors. For those who are not familiar, Livepatch allows users to apply important kernel updates without any service interruption or rebooting. While home users will benefit from this, it’s even more important for critical machines that absolutely should not be going offline at all. The feature is available as part of Ubuntu Core 26 for Arm64 and Ubuntu Core 20 and onwards for AMD64. According to Canonical, this will improve the security of systems that aren’t security-maintained daily or weekly, and it helps organizations work towards Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) compliance. If you are familiar with Ubuntu, you probably know that most packages can be updated without having to restart the system. There is one big exception to this, and that’s the kernel; it typically requires you to reload the system to boot into the new kernel. With Livepatch, Canonical has done something so that you don’t need to restart to begin using the new kernel. Aside from Ubuntu Core 26, users with Arm64 chips running Ubuntu 26.04 LTS can also use Livepatch. If you want to learn more about Livepatch, check out its product page. There, you can also find a button to join Ubuntu Pro (it’s free for several home devices) so that you can enable Livepatch. By linking your computer to Ubuntu Pro, you will also extend the life of your Ubuntu install from five years to ten years. If you are running Ubuntu, let us know in the comments if you have been looking forward to this feature on your ARM-based computer. If you’ve had a compatible AMD64 machine for a while and never used this feature, let us know why in the comments!
    • Meta announces a major leadership change at WhatsApp by Pradeep Viswanathan Meta has announced a major leadership change at WhatsApp, with Will Cathcart stepping down after seven years of leading the world's largest messaging platform. CRED CEO and founder Kunal Shah will take over as the next global head of WhatsApp. CRED is an Indian fintech company focused on creditworthy consumers. As part of the transition, Meta is also making a minority investment in CRED through its Series H funding round. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Will Cathcart will remain at Meta and move into a new role focused on building new products from the ground up. Cathcart led WhatsApp during a major growth phase, helping the app reach more than 3 billion users worldwide. He also played a key role in expanding WhatsApp’s business offerings while keeping privacy and end-to-end encryption central to the product. Meta’s Chief Product Officer, Chris Cox, said Kunal Shah was selected after a search for a leader who understands WhatsApp’s global scale and future potential. In a leaked internal memo, Cox described Shah as a “serial founder” and one of India’s most respected entrepreneurs, adding that he brings “entrepreneurial energy” and a strong product mindset to the role. As part of the Series H funding round, CRED is raising ₹8,550 crore, or about $900 million, in a round led by Meta. The funding values CRED at ₹43,239 crore, or about $4.5 billion, on a post-money basis. It is important to note that this investment will not give Meta access to CRED customer information. Kunal posted the following on X regarding his new role at Meta: Although Kunal Shah will be stepping away from his operating role as CRED CEO, he will retain his personal shareholding in the company.
    • It wouldn't be hard for me to turn off my TV, if I had one. For one thing, I never scroll Instagram. The only reason I have an account is because Meta created one when it merged the account systems for its various services.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      504
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      207
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      98
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      89
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!