Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
The nuclear accident at Fukushima Daiichi is now rated as a level 7 "Major Accident" on INES. Level 7 is the most serious level on INES and is used to describe an event comprised of "A major release of radioactive material with widespread health and environmental effects requiring implementation of planned and extended countermeasures".
IAEA
Τι σημαίνει αυτό πρακτικά για την Ιαπωνία και όλη την ανθρωπότητα, δεν γνωρίζω ακριβώς και ο χαρακτηρισμός "Σαν το Τσερνομπιλ" δεν φτάνει... πάντως είναι πολύ λυπηρό.
(Αν και τολμώ να πω, πως κατά κάποιο τρόπο αυτή η είδηση, επιβεβαιώνει αυτά που μας έλεγε πριν λίγες ημέρες ο epote.)
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Έχουμε θέμα αφιερωμένο σ' αυτό...ξερεις τι ειναι αυτο? Λεγεται pale blue dot ψαξε το στο γκουγκλ.
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Δυστυχώς καμία δεν έχει Ελληνικούς υπότιτλους ακόμη (έχουν όμως Αγγλικούς), αλλά ήδη ζήτησα την πρώτη και εντός της εβδομάδας πιστεύω θα την ολοκληρώσω.
Debate: Does the world need nuclear energy?
Transcript:
So, in favor of the proposition, possibly shockingly, is one of, truly, the founders of the environmental movement, a long-standing TEDster, the founder of the Whole Earth Catalog, someone we all know and love, Stewart Brand.
Stewart Brand: Whoa. (Applause) The saying is that with climate, those who know the most are the most worried. With nuclear, those who know the most are the least worried. A classic example is James Hansen, a NASA climatologist pushing for 350 parts per million carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. He came out with a wonderful book recently called "Storms of My Grandchildren." And Hansen is hard over for nuclear power, as are most climatologists who are engaging this issue seriously.
This is the design situation: a planet that is facing climate change and is now half urban. Look at the client base for this. Five out of six of us live in the developing world. We are moving to cities. We are moving up in the world. And we are educating our kids, having fewer kids, basically good news all around. But we move to cities, toward the bright lights, and one of the things that is there that we want, besides jobs, is electricity. And if it isn't easily gotten, we'll go ahead and steal it. This is one of the most desired things by poor people all over the world, in the cities and in the countryside. Electricity for cities, at its best, is what's called baseload electricity. That's where it is on all the time. And so far there are only three major sources of that -- coal and gas, hydro-electric, which in most places is maxed-out -- and nuclear. I would love to have something in the fourth place here, but in terms of constant, clean, scalable energy, [solar] and wind and the other renewables aren't there yet because they're inconstant. Nuclear is and has been for 40 years.
Now, from an environmental standpoint, the main thing you want to look at is what happens to the waste from nuclear and from coal, the two major sources of electricity. If all of your electricity in your lifetime came from nuclear, the waste from that lifetime of electricity would go in a Coke can -- a pretty heavy Coke can, about two pounds. But one day of coal adds up to one hell of a lot of carbon dioxide in a normal one-gigawatt coal-fired plant. Then what happens to the waste? The nuclear waste typically goes into a dry cask storage out back of the parking lot at the reactor site because most places don't have underground storage yet. It's just as well, because it can stay where it is. While the carbon dioxide, vast quantities of it, gigatons, goes into the atmosphere where we can't get it back, yet, and where it is causing the problems that we're most concerned about. So when you add up the greenhouse gases in the lifetime of these various energy sources, nuclear is down there with wind and hydro, below solar and way below, obviously, all the fossil fuels.
Wind is wonderful; I love wind. I love being around these big wind generators. But one of the things we're discovering is that wind, like solar, is an actually relatively dilute source of energy. And so it takes a very large footprint on the land, a very large footprint in terms of materials, five to 10 times what you'd use for nuclear, and typically to get one gigawatt of electricity is on the order of 250 sq. mi. of wind farm. In places like Denmark and Germany, they've maxed out on wind already. They've run out of good sites. The power lines are getting overloaded. And you peak out. Likewise, with solar, especially here in California, we're discovering that the 80 solar farm schemes that are going forward want to basically bulldoze 1,000 sq. mi. of southern California desert. Well, as an environmentalist, we would rather that didn't happen. It's okay on frapped-out agricultural land. Solar's wonderful on rooftops. But out in the landscape, one gigawatt is on the order of 50 sq. mi. of bulldozed desert.
When you add all these things up -- Saul Griffith did the numbers and figured out what it would take to get 13 clean terawatts of energy from wind, solar and biofuels, and that area would be roughly the size the United States, an area he refers to as "Renewistan." A guy who's added all this up very well is David Mackay, a physicist in England, and in his wonderful book, "Sustainable Energy," among other things, he says, "I'm not trying to be pro-nuclear. I'm just pro-arithmetic."
(Laughter)
In terms of weapons, the best disarmament tool so far is nuclear energy. We have been taking down the Russian warheads, turning it into electricity. 10 percent of American electricity comes from decommissioned warheads. We haven't even started the American stockpile. I think of most interest to a TED audience would be the new generation of reactors that are very small, down around 10 to 125 megawatts. This is one from Toshiba. Here's one that the Russians are already building that floats on a barge. And that would be very interesting in the developing world. Typically, these things are put in the ground. They're referred to as nuclear batteries. They're incredibly safe, weapons proliferation-proof and all the rest of it. Here is a commercial version from New Mexico called the Hyperion, and another one from Oregon called NuScale. Babcock & Wilcox that make nuclear reactors ... here's an integral fast reactor. Thorium reactor that Nathan Myhrvold's involved in. The governments of the world are going to have to decide that coal needs to be made expensive, and these will go ahead. And here's the future.
(Applause)
CA: Okay. Okay. (Applause) So arguing against, a man who's been at the nitty, gritty heart of the energy debate and the climate change debate for years. In 2000, he discovered that soot was probably the second leading cause of global warming, after CO2. His team have been making detailed calculations of the relative impacts of different energy sources. His first time at TED, possibly a disadvantage -- we shall see -- from Stanford, Professor Mark Jacobson. Good luck.
Mark Jacobson: Thank you. (Applause) So my premise here is that nuclear energy puts out more carbon dioxide, puts out more air pollutants, enhances mortality more and takes longer to put up than real renewable energy systems, namely wind, solar, geothermal power, hydro-tidal wave power. And it also enhances nuclear weapons proliferation. So let's just start by looking at the CO2 emissions from the life cycle. CO2e emissions are equivalent emissions of all the greenhouse gases and particles that cause warming, and converted to CO2. And if you look, wind and concentrated solar have the lowest CO2 emissions, if you look at the graph. Nuclear -- there are two bars here. One is a low estimate, and one is a high estimate. The low estimate is the nuclear energy industry estimate of nuclear. The high is the average of 103 scientific, peer-reviewed studies. And this is just the CO2 from the life cycle.
If we look at the delays, it takes between 10 and 19 years to put up a nuclear power plant from planning to operation. This includes about three and a half to six years for a site permit. and another two and a half to four years for a construction permit and issue, and then four to nine years for actual construction. And in China, right now, they're putting up five gigawatts of nuclear. And the average, just for the construction time of these, is 7.1 years on top of any planning times. While you're waiting around for your nuclear, you have to run the regular electric power grid, which is mostly coal in the United States and around the world. And the chart here shows the difference between the emissions from the regular grid, resulting if you use nuclear, or anything else, versus wind, CSP or photovoltaics. Wind takes about two to five years on average, same as concentrated solar and photovoltaics. So the difference is the opportunity cost of using nuclear versus wind, or something else. So if you add these two together, alone, you can see a separation that nuclear puts out at least nine to 17 times more CO2 equivalent emissions than wind energy. And this doesn't even account for the footprint on the ground.
If you look at the air pollution health effects, this is the number of deaths per year in 2020 just from vehicle exhaust. Let's say we converted all the vehicles in the United States to battery electric vehicles, hydrogen fuel cell vehicles or flex fuel vehicles run on E85. Well, right now in the United States, 50 to 100,000 people die per year from air pollution, and vehicles are about 25,000 of those. In 2020, the number will go down to 15,000 due to improvements. And so, on the right, you see gasoline emissions, the death rates of 2020. If you go to corn or cellulosic ethanol, you'd actually increase the death rate slightly. If you go to nuclear, you do get a big reduction, but it's not as much as with wind and/or concentrated solar.
Now if you consider the fact that nuclear weapons proliferation is associated with nuclear energy proliferation, because we know for example, India and Pakistan developed nuclear weapons secretly by enriching uranium in nuclear energy facilities. North Korea did that to some extent. Iran is doing that right now. And Venezuela would be doing it if they started with their nuclear energy facilities. If you do a large scale expansion of nuclear energy across the world, and as a result there was just one nuclear bomb created that was used to destroy a city such as Mumbai or some other big city, megacity, the additional death rates due to this averaged over 30 years and scaled to the population of the U.S. would be this. So, do we need this?
The next thing is: What about the footprint? Stewart mentioned the footprint. Actually, the footprint on the ground for wind is by far the smallest of any energy source in the world. That, because the footprint, as you can see, is just the pole touching the ground. And you can power the entire U.S. vehicle fleet with 73,000 to 145,000 five-megawatt wind turbines. That would take between one and three sq. km. of footprint on the ground, entirely. The spacing is something else. That's the footprint that's always being confused. People confuse footprint with spacing. As you can see from these pictures, the spacing between can be used for multiple purposes including agricultural land, range land or open space. Over the ocean, it's not even land. Now if we look at nuclear -- (Laughter) With nuclear, what do we have? We have facilities around there. You also have a buffer zone that's 17 sq. km. And you have the uranium mining that you have to deal with.
Now if we go to the area, lots is worse than nuclear or wind. For example, cellulosic ethanol, to power the entire U.S. vehicle fleet, this is how much land you would need. That's cellulosic, second generation biofuels from prairie grass. Here's corn ethanol. It's smaller. This is based on ranges from data, but if you look at nuclear, it would be the size of Rhode Island to power the U.S. vehicle fleet. For wind, there's a larger area, but much smaller footprint. And of course, with wind, you could put it all over the east coast, offshore theoretically, or you can split it up. And now, if you go back to looking at geothermal, it's even smaller than both, and solar is slightly larger than the nuclear spacing, but it's still pretty small. And this is to power the entire U.S. vehicle fleet. To power the entire world with 50 percent wind, you would need about one percent of world land.
Matching the reliability, base load is actually irrelevant. We want to match the hour-by-hour power supply. You can do that by combining renewables. This is from real data in California, looking at wind data and solar data. And it considers just using existing hydro to match the hour-by-hour power demand. Here are the world wind resources. There's 5 to 10 times more wind available worldwide than we need for all the world. So then the finally ranking. And one last slide I just want to show: this is the choice. You can either have wind or nuclear. If you use wind, you guarantee ice will last. Nuclear, the time lag alone will allow the Arctic to melt and other places to melt more. And we can guarantee a clean, blue sky or an uncertain future with nuclear power.
(Applause)
CA: All right. So while they're having their comebacks on each other -- and yours is slightly short because you slightly overran -- I need two people from either side. So if you're for this, if you're for nuclear power, put up two hands. If you're against, put up one. And I want two of each for the mics. Now then, you guys have -- you have a minute comeback on him to pick up a point he said, challenge it, whatever.
SB: I think a point of difference we're having, Mark, has to do with weapons and energy. These diagrams that show that nuclear is somehow putting out a lot of greenhouse gases -- a lot of those studies will include, "Well of course war will be inevitable and therefore we'll have cities burning and stuff like that," which is kind of finessing it a little bit, I think. The reality is that there's, what, 21 nations that have nuclear power? Of those, seven have nuclear weapons. In every case, they got the weapons before they got the nuclear power. There are two nations, North Korea and Israel, that have nuclear weapons and don't have nuclear power at all. The places that we would most like to have really clean energy occur are China, India, Europe, North America, all of which have sorted out their situation in relation to nuclear weapons. So that leaves a couple of places like Iran, maybe Venezuela, that you would like to have very close surveillance of anything that goes on with fissile stuff. Pushing ahead with nuclear power will mean we really know where all of the fissile material is, and we can move toward zero weapons left, once we know all that.
CA: Mark, 30 seconds, either on that or on anything Stewart said.
MJ: Well we know India and Pakistan had nuclear energy first, and then they developed nuclear weapons secretly in the factories. So the other thing is, we don't need nuclear energy. There's plenty of solar and wind. You can make it reliable, as I showed with that diagram. That's from real data. And this is an ongoing research. This is not rocket science. Solving the world's problems can be done, if you're really put your mind to it and use clean, renewable energy. There's absolutely no need for nuclear power.
(Applause)
CA: We need someone for. Rod Beckstrom: Thank you Chris. I'm Rod Beckstrom, CEO of ICANN. I've been involved in global warming policy since 1994, when I joined the board of Environmental Defense Fund that was one of the crafters of the Kyoto Protocol. And I want to support Stewart Brand's position. I've come around in the last 10 years. I used to be against nuclear power. I'm now supporting Stewart's position, softly, from a risk-management standpoint, agreeing that the risks of overheating the planet outweigh the risk of nuclear incident, which certainly is possible and is a very real problem. However, I think there may be a win-win solution here where both parties can win this debate, and that is, we face a situation where it's carbon caps on this planet or die. And in the United States Senate, we need bipartisan support -- only one or two votes are needed -- to move global warming through the Senate, and this room can help. So if we get that through, then Mark will solve these problems. Thanks Chris.
CA: Thank you Rod Beckstrom. Against.
David Fanton: Hi, I'm David Fanton. I just want to say a couple quick things. The first is: be aware of the propaganda. The propaganda from the industry has been very, very strong. And we have not had the other side of the argument fully aired so that people can draw their own conclusions. Be very aware of the propaganda. Secondly, think about this. If we build all these nuclear power plants, all that waste is going to be on hundreds, if not thousands, of trucks and trains, moving through this country every day. Tell me they're not going to have accidents. Tell me that those accidents aren't going to put material into the environment that is poisonous for hundreds of thousands of years And then tell me that each and every one of those trucks and trains isn't a potential terrorist target.
CA: Thank you. For. Anyone else for? Go.
Alex: Hi, I'm Alex. I just wanted to say, I'm, first of all, renewable energy's biggest fan. I've got solar PV on my roof. I've got a hydro conversion at a watermill that I own. And I'm, you know, very much "pro" that kind of stuff. However, there's a basic arithmetic problem here. The capability of the sun shining, the wind blowing and the rain falling, simply isn't enough to add up. So if we want to keep the lights on, we actually need a solution which is going to keep generating all of the time. I campaigned against nuclear weapons in the 80s, and I continue to do so now. But we've got an opportunity to recycle them into something more useful that enables us to get energy all of the time. And, ultimately, the arithmetic problem isn't going to go away. We're not going to get enough energy from renewables alone. We need a solution that generates all of the time. If we're going to keep the lights on, nuclear is that solution.
CA: Thank you. Anyone else against?
Man: The last person who was in favor made the premise that we don't have enough alternative renewable resources. And our "against" proponent up here made it clear that we actually do. And so the fallacy that we need this resource and we can actually make it in a time frame that is meaningful is not possible. I will also add one other thing. Ray Kurzweil and all the other talks -- we know that the stick is going up exponentially. So you can't look at state-of-the-art technologies in renewables and say, "That's all we have." Because five years from now, it will blow you away what we'll actually have as alternatives to this horrible, disastrous nuclear power.
CA: Point well made. Thank you.
(Applause)
So each of you has really just a couple sentences -- 30 seconds each to sum up. Your final pitch, Stewart.
SB: I loved your "It all balances out" chart that you had there. It was a sunny day and a windy night. And just now in England they had a cold spell. All of the wind in the entire country shut down for a week. None of those things were stirring. And as usual, they had to buy nuclear power from France. Two gigawatts comes through the Chunnel. This keeps happening. I used to worry about the 10,000 year factor. And the fact is, we're going to use the nuclear waste we have for fuel in the fourth generation of reactors that are coming along. And especially the small reactors need to go forward. I heard from Nathan Myhrvold -- and I think here's the action point -- it'll take an act of Congress to make the Nuclear Regulatory Commission start moving quickly on these small reactors, which we need very much, here and in the world.
(Applause)
MJ: So we've analyzed the hour-by-hour power demand and supply, looking at solar, wind, using data for California. And you can match that demand, hour-by-hour, for the whole year almost. Now, with regard to the resources, we've developed the first wind map of the world, from data alone, at 80 meters. We know what the resources are. You can cover 15 percent. 15 percent of the entire U.S. has wind at fast-enough speeds to be cost-competitive. And there's much more solar than there is wind. There's plenty of resource. You can make it reliable.
CA: Okay. So, thank you, Mark. (Applause) So if you were in Palm Springs ... (Laughter) (Applause) Shameless. Shameless. Shameless. (Applause)
So, people of the TED community, I put it to you that what the world needs now is nuclear energy. All those in favor, raise your hands. (Shouts) And all those against. Ooooh. Now that is -- my take on that ... Just put up ... Hands up, people who changed their minds during the debate, who voted differently. Those of you who changed your mind in favor of "for" put your hands up. Okay. So here's the read on it. Both people won supporters, but on my count, the mood of the TED community shifted from about 75-25 to about 65-35 in favor, in favor.
You both won. I congratulate both of you. Thank you for that.
(Applause)
Steven Cowley: Fusion is energy's future
Transcript:
I've always been very worried about resource. I don't know about you, but when my mother gave me food I always sorted the ones I disliked from the ones I liked. And I ate the disliked ones first, because the ones you like, you want to save. And as a child you're always worried about resource. And once it was sort of explained to me how fast we were using up the world's resources, I got very upset, about as upset as I did when I realized that the Earth will only last about five billion years before it's swallowed by the sun. Big events in my life, a strange child. (Laughter)
Energy, at the moment, is dominated by resource. The countries that make a lot of money out of energy have something underneath them. Coal-powered industrial revolution in this country -- oil, gas, sorry. (Laughter) Gas, I'm probably the only person who really enjoys it when Mister Putin turns off the gas tap, because my budget goes up.
We're really dominated now by those things that we're using up faster and faster and faster. And as we try to lift billions of people out of poverty in the Third World, in the developing world, we're using energy faster and faster. And those resources are going away. And the way we'll make energy in the future is not from resource, it's really from knowledge. If you look 50 years into the future, the way we probably will be making energy is probably one of these three, with some wind, with some other things, but these are going to be the base load energy drivers.
Solar can do it, and we certainly have to develop solar. But we have a lot of knowledge to gain before we can make solar the base load energy supply for the world. Fission. Our government is going to put in six new nuclear power stations. They're going to put in six new nuclear power stations, and probably more after that. China is building nuclear power stations. Everybody is. Because they know that that is one sure way to do carbon-free energy.
But if you wanted to know what the perfect energy source is, The perfect energy source is one that doesn't take up much space, has a virtually inexhaustible supply, is safe, doesn't put any carbon into the atmosphere, doesn't leave any long lived radioactive waste, it's fusion. But there is a catch. Of course there is always a catch in these cases. Fusion is very hard to do. We've been trying for 50 years.
Okay. What is fusion? Here comes the nuclear physics. And sorry about that, but this is what turns me on. (Laughter) I was a strange child. Nuclear energy comes for a simple reason. The most stable nucleus is iron, right in the middle of the periodic table. It's a medium-sized nucleus. And you want to go towards iron if you want to get energy. So, uranium, which is very big, wants to split. But small atoms want to join together, small nuclei want to join together to make bigger ones to go towards iron.
And you can get energy out this way. And indeed that's exactly what stars do. In the middle of stars you're joining hydrogen together to make helium and then helium together to make carbon, to make oxygen, all the things that you're made of are made in the middle of stars. But it's a hard process to do because, as you know, the middle of a star is quite hot, almost by definition. And there is one reaction That's probably the easiest fusion reaction to do. It's between two isotopes of hydrogen, two kinds of hydrogen, deuterium, which is heavy hydrogen, which you can get from seawater, and tritium which is super-heavy hydrogen.
These two nuclei, when they're far apart, are charged. And you push them together and they repel. But when you get them close enough, something called the strong force starts to act and pulls them together. So, most of the time they repel. You get them closer and closer and closer and then at some point the strong force grips them together. For a moment they become helium 5, because they've got five particles inside them.
So, that's that process there. Deuterium and tritium goes together makes helium 5. Helium splits out, and a neutron comes out and lots of energy comes out. If you can get something to about 150 million degrees, things will be rattling around so fast that every time they collide in just the right configuration, this will happen, and it will release energy. And that energy is what powers fusion. And it's this reaction that we want to do.
There is one trickiness about this reaction. Well, there is a trickiness that you have to make it 150 million degrees, but there is a trickiness about the reaction yet. It's pretty hot. The trickiness about the reaction is that tritium doesn't exist in nature. You have to make it from something else. And you make if from lithium. That reaction at the bottom, that's lithium 6, plus a neutron, will give you more helium, plus tritium. And that's the way you make your tritium. But fortunately, if you can do this fusion reaction, you've got a neutron, so you can make that happen.
Now, why the hell would we bother to do this? This is basically why we would bother to do it. If you just plot how much fuel we've got left, in units of present world consumption. And as you go across there you see a few tens of years of oil -- the blue line, by the way, is the lowest estimate of existing resources. And the yellow line is the most optimistic estimate.
And as you go across there you will see that we've got a few tens of years, and perhaps 100 years of fossil fuels left. And god knows we don't really want to burn all of it. Because it will make an awful lot of carbon in the air. And then we get to uranium. And with current reactor technology we really don't have very much uranium. And we will have to extract uranium from sea water, which is the yellow line, to make conventional nuclear power stations actually do very much for us. This is a bit shocking, because in fact our government is relying on that for us to meet Kyoto, and do all those kind of things.
To go any further you would have to have breeder technology. And breeder technology is fast breeders. And that's pretty dangerous. The big thing, on the right, is the lithium we have in the world. And lithium is in sea water. That's the yellow line. And we have 30 million years worth of fusion fuel in sea water. Everybody can get it. That's why we want to do fusion. Is it cost-competitive? We make estimates of what we think it would cost to actually make a fusion power plant. And we get within about the same price as current electricity.
So, how would we make it? We have to hold something at 150 million degrees. And, in fact, we've done this. We hold it with a magnetic field. And inside it, right in the middle of this toroidal shape, doughnut shape, right in the middle is 150 million degrees. It boils away in the middle at 150 million degrees. And in fact we can make fusion happen. And just down the road, this is JET. It's the only machine in the world that's actually done fusion.
When people say fusion is 30 years away, and always will be, I say, "Yeah, but we've actually done it." Right? We can do fusion. In the center of this device we made 16 megawatts of fusion power in 1997. And in 2013 we're going to fire it up again and break all those records. But that's not really fusion power. That's just making some fusion happen. We've got to take that, we've got to make that into a fusion reactor. Because we want 30 million years worth of fusion power for the Earth. This is the device we're building now.
It gets very expensive to do this research. It turns out you can't do fusion an a table top despite all that cold fusion nonsense. Right? You can't. You have to do it in a very big device. More than half the world's population is involved in building this device in southern France. Which is a nice place to put an experiment. Seven nations are involved in building this. It's going to cost us 10 billion. And we'll produce half a gigawatt of fusion power. But that's not electricity yet. We have to get to this. We have to get to a power plant. We have to start putting electricity on the grid in this very complex technology. And I'd really like it to happen a lot faster than it is. But at the moment all we can imagine is sometime in the 2030s.
I wish this were different. We really need it now. We're going to have a problem with power in the next five years in this country. So 2030 looks like an infinity away. But we can't abandon it now; we have to push forward, get fusion to happen. I wish we had more money, I wish we had more resources. But this is what we're aiming at, sometime in the 2030s -- real electric power from fusion. Thank you very much. (Applause)
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Τι τα θες τα ονόματα Semfer; Για ν' απαντήσεις "α, αυτοί είναι μαλάκες ενώ οι άλλοι είναι οι καλοί";Οκ, πες μου τα ονοματα των επιστημονων που ειναι ενεντιον της πυρηνικης ενεργειας και ποιες ειναι οι αποψεις τους πανω στο θεμα
Σε κανέναν επιστημονικό τομέα δεν υπάρχει απόλυτη συμφωνία μεταξύ των επιστημόνων,
πράγμα μάλλον θετικό, αφού δημιουργεί τις κατάλληλες συνθήκες για συνεχή πρόοδο.
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σημείωση: Το μήνυμα αυτό γράφτηκε 13 χρόνια πριν. Ο συντάκτης του πιθανόν να έχει αλλάξει απόψεις έκτοτε.
Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Ρε epote έλεος! Τηλεόραση βλέπαμε, δεν κρατούσαμε σημειώσεις για να δώσουμε εξετάσεις.Μπορεις να μου βρεις την εκθεση του WHO που λεει οτι δεν αυξηθικαν οι καρκινογεννεσεις? Γιατι εγω δεν βρηκα καμια και ειμαι πολυ σιγουρος οτι το βγαζεις απο το μυαλο σου (οπως και ολα τα υπολοιπα που εχεις πει EVER αλλα τεσπα)
Η κυρία τα είπε όπως τα λέει ο Χάουλας και το επιβεβαιώνω κι εγώ που βλέπαμε μαζί. Θα πρέπει να ζητήσεις τα ρέστα από εκείνη.
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Δεν είδα να ωραιοποιούν καταστάσεις, αντιθέτως ανακοινώνουν πράγματα που αναρωτιέμαι τι λόγο έχουν να τ' ανακοινώνουν (όπως π.χ. ότι βρέθηκαν ίχνη ραδιενέργειας στο πόσιμο νερό του Τόκυο σε πάρα πολύ χαμηλά επίπεδα, ακίνδυνα για την υγεία).
Αντίθετα τα Ελληνικά ΜΜΕ, επιδίδονται ως συνήθως στην αγαπημένη τους τρομολαγνεία με πομπώδεις τίτλους και ζοφερά άρθρα (αντιγραφή από τα ξένα, με την προσθήκη τραγικών επιθέτων).
Καλά έλεγε ένας φίλος μου πως η μετάδοση μιας είδησης, δεν θα έπρεπε να περιέχει κανένα επίθετο. Τα γεγονότα αρκούν.
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Δεν νομίζω ότι υπάρχει τέτοια πηγή Ντίνα μου, γι' αυτό καλό είναι να ψάχνει και να διαβάζει κανείς για την ίδια είδηση από πολλές και διαφορετικές πηγές, ώστε να έχει σφαιρικότερη εικόνα.Δυστυχώς δεν έχω να αντιπροτείνω κάποια πηγή ενημέρωσης της οποίας να μπορώ να εγγυηθώ την αξιοπιστία, ...
Ξέρεις πόσες φορές έχω ανακαλύψει πως διάφορα "σοβαρά" και καλά email που λαμβάνω κατά καιρούς είναι hoaxes; Κρίμα που ο κόσμος είναι τόσο ευκολόπιστος που τα προωθεί πριν τα ελέγξει.
Έμπιστος δεν είναι κανένας, είναι όμως επίσημη υπηρεσία κι αυτό σημαίνει ότι έχει την ευθύνη για τις πληροφορίες που μεταδίδει.η International Atomic Energy Agency πιστευεις οτι ειναι σοσο εμπιστη πρεπει?
Δεν υπάρχει λόγος να εμπιστευόμαστε τυφλά καμία πηγή πληροφόρησης, όλα πρέπει να τα αξιολογούμε κι αυτό λέει και ο epote (αν έχω καταλάβει καλά το πνεύμα του).
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σήμερα διάβαζα πως παρόλο που έχουν γίνει γνωστοί ως "Fukushima 50", δεν είναι μόνο 50 αλλά 200 που κάνουν βάρδιες. (Νομίζω το είχε πει και ο epote παραπάνω).Πρακτικά τα πληρώματα των ελικοπτέρων, όπως και οι 50 εργαζόμενοι που έχουν μπει μέσα στις εγκαταστάσεις πρέπει να θεωρούνται ως "απώλειες"
epote, σ' ευχαριστώ πολύ για την ανάλυση!
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Γι' αυτό δεν καθόμουν να τα μεταφράσω, επειδή φοβόμουν ότι θα κάνω κανένα τέτοιο.Λοιπόν γίνεται ένα μπέρδεμα με τις μονάδες:
150 microsieverts per hour= 150 μSi/h = 0,150 millisieverts per hour = 0,150mSi/h
Ευχαριστώ πολύ lugar!
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
The shore near Souma City, Fukushima Prefecture, before and after the tsunami.
REUTERS/Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
Η ακτή κοντά στην πόλη Souma της περιφέρειας Fukushima, πριν και μετά το τσουνάμι.
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Σου βάζω -1, επειδή δεν έλαβες υπόψη σου εμάς τους αγράμματους στην Αγγλική!
Τα βασικά σημεία λένε:
Το υπουργείο επιστημών της Ιαπωνίας, αναφέρει πως σχετικά υψηλές τιμές ραδιενέργειας έχουν μετρηθεί επί δύο συνεχόμενες ημέρες 30 περίπου χιλιόμετρα βορειοδυτικά από το κατεστραμμένο από το σεισμό πυρηνικό σταθμό Fukushima Daiichi .[..]
Η ραδιενέργεια μετρήθηκε σε 170mSi/h την Πέμπτη και 150mSi/h την Παρασκευή.[...]
Οι ειδικοί λένε πως η έκθεση σε αυτό το ποσοστό ραδιενέργειας για 6 με 7 ώρες, θα είχε ως αποτέλεσμα το μέγιστο επίπεδο απορρόφησης που θεωρείται ασφαλές για έναν χρόνο.[...]
Η περιοχή αυτή είναι μέσα στη ζώνη όπου οι κάτοικοι έχουν λάβει οδηγίες να παραμείνουν σε εσωτερικούς χώρους. [...]
(αν έχω κάνει κανένα λάθος, συμπαθάτε με -και διορθώστε με).
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Japan's science ministry says relatively high radiation levels have been detected on 2 consecutive days about 30 kilometers northwest of the quake-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
The radiation measured 170 microsieverts per hour on Thursday and 150 microsieverts on Friday.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano says the government will take appropriate measures if this level of contamination continues in the area for a long period. But he says this would be unlikely.
Radiation was measured for 2 hours from 10AM on Friday at 18 spots in areas 30 to 60 kilometers from the plant in Fukushima Prefecture.
The highest reading of 150 microsieverts per hour was detected at around 1:30 PM local time, about 30 kilometers northwest of the plant. The location is within the zone where residents have been instructed to stay indoors.
Readings of 170 microsieverts were recorded at the same location at 2 PM on the previous day, Thursday.
Experts say exposure to this amount of radiation for 6 to 7 hours would result in absorption of the maximum level considered safe for one year.
The ministry also observed radiation levels of 0.5 to 52 microsieverts per hour at other observation points within a 30 to 60 kilometer radius of the plant. It says these levels are all higher than normal, but not an immediate threat to health.
The government has evacuated residents living within a 20 kilometer radius of the plant, and instructed those in a 20 to 30 kilometer radius to stay indoors.
Friday, March 18, 2011 17:38 +0900 (JST)
Πες μου τώρα, τι και ποιον να πιστέψω... Δεν το λέω κακοπροαίρετα. Δεν γνωρίζω και προσπαθώ να ενημερωθώ.Αρχική Δημοσίευση από epote:Και μιλάω μόνο για τα κτήρια των αντιδραστιρων. Ούτε καν έξω απο το κτήριο.
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
A mother tries to talk to her daughter who has been isolated for signs of radiation after evacuating from the vicinity of Fukushima's nuclear plants, at a makeshift facility to screen, cleanse and isolate people with high radiation levels in Nihonmatsu, northern Japan, March 14, 2011.
REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao
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Isiliel
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https://nei.cachefly.net/newsandeven...anese-earthquake-and-reactors-in-that-region/
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
Ακόμη κι αν δεχτώ ότι έχεις δίκιο, αφού προφανώς κάτι παραπάνω γνωρίζεις, όσο εξαιρετικά ασφαλής κι αν είναι η ραδιενέργεια, αυτοί που την διαχειρίζονται είναι εξαιρετικά επικίνδυνοι όταν δεν φροντίζουν να κλείσουν παρωχημένες εγκαταστάσεις πριν φτάσουμε στο αμήν.Η πυρηνικη ενεργεια ειναι εξαιρετικα καθαρη, τα πυρηνικα εργοστασια εξαιρετικα ασφαλη (οπως ΑΠΟΔΕΙΚΝΗΕΙ η υποθεση στην φουκουσιμα πραγμα που θα καταλαβαινε ο κοσμος αν οι δημοσιογραφοι μετεφεραν πραγματικα γεγονοτα οχι τρομολαγνια).
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Isiliel
Επιφανές μέλος
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/12/world/asia/the-explosion-at-the-japanese-reactor.html
Εξαιρετική παρουσίαση, που μπορεί να βοηθήσει και τον epote να μας πει περισσότερα.
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