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fusie

 

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Lees ook die kommentaar: neutrone sal nie 'n probleem wees nie, omdat fusie nie bewerkstellig kan word nie en daar gevolglik geen neutrone gaan wees nie....


Re: Einde van die wereldwye plutonium ekonomie vir kragopwekking

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Fout -- Kommentaar ontbreek

On 2024/11/15 06:48, bernhard wrote:


'n Lang stryd gevoer deur 'n


Einde van die wereldwye plutonium ekonomie vir kragopwekking

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


'n Lang stryd gevoer deur 'n


Re: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Ja.? Om nie eens te praat van radioaktiwiteit wat daardie neutrone gaan induseer nie.? En daardie wand wat die neutrone moet keer, moet ook nogal naby 'n plasma van sowat 150 miljoen C (of K) wees. Tungsten verdamp (sublimeer) onderkant 3 000 C, en moet dus aktief verkoel word.? En neutrone wat deur die wand en verkoeling kom, tref en beskadig dan die ultraduur kriogene supergeleidende magneetspoele.? Sal laasgenoemde meer as 'n minuut van kontinue plasma fusie kan oorleef?? Meer as 'n dag??

On 2024/11/14 21:28, Pieter Van der Walt via groups.io wrote:

Die idee van metale wat self stralingskade herstel klink maar vergesog.

On Thu, 14 Nov 2024, 19:59 bernhard via , <bernhard=[email protected]> wrote:

Hierdie is uitstekende artikels.? Lees ook die kommentaar aan die einde van die Eerste artikel (Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?).? Die koste van die teiken was $100 000, en dit het maar 3.15 MJ gelewer -- minder as 1 kWu se neutron supersnel neutrone, en dalk 0.1 kWu se hitte wat dalk eendag in nog minder elektrisiteit omgesit kan word.? En sowat 90 kWu was nodig om die lasers te pomp om heelwat minder as 0.1 kWu se elektrisiteit te lewer.

In die tweede artikel (Feretting out the truth about Fusion) se^ Rosner:? "Embrittlement won¡¯t be a showstopper for fusion energy."? Daarvan verskil ek nogal.? Soos ook dr Klaus Isebeck-- destydse hoof van Stralingsbeskadiging by SA se AEK (of dalk destyds reeds Kernkor).? Hy het in 'n kursus oor daardie onderwerp by UP se Dept Fisika onomwonde gese^:? "People who believe in Nuclear Fusion, do not understand Radiation Damage".

On 2024/11/14 18:13, Pieter Van der Walt via wrote:

Hierdie ouens vertel dieselfde storie as Bernhard. Nie in ons leeftyd nie, nie in ons kleinkinders se leeftyd nie.
PW

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt=[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 5:20?PM
Subject: [ZA-energie] Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: ZA_energie <[email protected]>

From: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists <newsletter@...>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 4:23?PM
Subject: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: <pwvanderwalt@...>


UK Nuclear Notebook | Bob Rosner Interview | More? ? ? ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Read a shareable version of this newsletter .
Was this email forwarded to you? to stay current.

Presented in partnership with

November 14, 2024

?
?
A researcher in the interior of the magnetic fusion experiment known as Alcator C-Mod at MIT. The interior of the donut-shaped device confines plasma hotter than the interior of the sun, using high magnetic fields. (Image courtesy of Bob Mumgaard / Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT.)

DAN DROLLETTE JR

The Bulletin's November 2024 magazine investigates nuclear fusion's potential. Will it become a commercial energy source within the next decade, or will we still be waiting a century from now??

DAN DROLLETTE JR

Can nuclear fusion be developed quickly enough to make a difference for climate change? Theoretical physicist, former head of Argonne National Laboratory, and self-described "plasma guy" Bob Rosner discusses?fusion, climate change, and other reasons to pursue it. Part of our November magazine, this article is available to all for a limited time.?


Advertisement


HANS M. KRISTENSEN, MATT KORDA, ELIANA JOHNS, MACKENZIE KNIGHT

For decades, the United Kingdom has maintained a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads¡ªup to 120 of which are available for delivery by four?Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines.?The stockpile is now increasing, according to the latest Nuclear Notebook by experts at the Federation of American Scientists.?
?

Royal Navy Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine HMS Victorious departs HM Naval Base Clyde?in?Scotland. The other three Vanguard-class SSBNs are also based at Clyde. (Credit: Will Haigh / UK Ministry of Defence.)

ROBERT ALVAREZ

Yesterday marked 50 years since the death of?Karen Silkwood, a union activist and whistleblower?at a plutonium fuel plant.?Robert Alvarez recounts the efforts he, his wife, and others made in successfully seeking justice for her.?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Because we haven't seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there's been some complacency around trying to control this virus [H5N1], but I've always said we shouldn't wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them. I just don't think you should gamble with people's lives like that."

¡ª Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center and?professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,? The Guardian
?

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Learn about frameworks for governing advanced AI and proposals to mitigate extreme risks.

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Re: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?

 

Die idee van metale wat self stralingskade herstel klink maar vergesog.


On Thu, 14 Nov 2024, 19:59 bernhard via , <bernhard=[email protected]> wrote:

Hierdie is uitstekende artikels.? Lees ook die kommentaar aan die einde van die Eerste artikel (Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?).? Die koste van die teiken was $100 000, en dit het maar 3.15 MJ gelewer -- minder as 1 kWu se neutron supersnel neutrone, en dalk 0.1 kWu se hitte wat dalk eendag in nog minder elektrisiteit omgesit kan word.? En sowat 90 kWu was nodig om die lasers te pomp om heelwat minder as 0.1 kWu se elektrisiteit te lewer.

In die tweede artikel (Feretting out the truth about Fusion) se^ Rosner:? "Embrittlement won¡¯t be a showstopper for fusion energy."? Daarvan verskil ek nogal.? Soos ook dr Klaus Isebeck-- destydse hoof van Stralingsbeskadiging by SA se AEK (of dalk destyds reeds Kernkor).? Hy het in 'n kursus oor daardie onderwerp by UP se Dept Fisika onomwonde gese^:? "People who believe in Nuclear Fusion, do not understand Radiation Damage".

On 2024/11/14 18:13, Pieter Van der Walt via wrote:

Hierdie ouens vertel dieselfde storie as Bernhard. Nie in ons leeftyd nie, nie in ons kleinkinders se leeftyd nie.
PW

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt=[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 5:20?PM
Subject: [ZA-energie] Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: ZA_energie <[email protected]>

From: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists <newsletter@...>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 4:23?PM
Subject: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: <pwvanderwalt@...>


UK Nuclear Notebook | Bob Rosner Interview | More? ? ? ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Read a shareable version of this newsletter .
Was this email forwarded to you? to stay current.

Presented in partnership with

November 14, 2024

?
?
A researcher in the interior of the magnetic fusion experiment known as Alcator C-Mod at MIT. The interior of the donut-shaped device confines plasma hotter than the interior of the sun, using high magnetic fields. (Image courtesy of Bob Mumgaard / Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT.)

DAN DROLLETTE JR

The Bulletin's November 2024 magazine investigates nuclear fusion's potential. Will it become a commercial energy source within the next decade, or will we still be waiting a century from now??

DAN DROLLETTE JR

Can nuclear fusion be developed quickly enough to make a difference for climate change? Theoretical physicist, former head of Argonne National Laboratory, and self-described "plasma guy" Bob Rosner discusses?fusion, climate change, and other reasons to pursue it. Part of our November magazine, this article is available to all for a limited time.?


Advertisement


HANS M. KRISTENSEN, MATT KORDA, ELIANA JOHNS, MACKENZIE KNIGHT

For decades, the United Kingdom has maintained a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads¡ªup to 120 of which are available for delivery by four?Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines.?The stockpile is now increasing, according to the latest Nuclear Notebook by experts at the Federation of American Scientists.?
?

Royal Navy Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine HMS Victorious departs HM Naval Base Clyde?in?Scotland. The other three Vanguard-class SSBNs are also based at Clyde. (Credit: Will Haigh / UK Ministry of Defence.)

ROBERT ALVAREZ

Yesterday marked 50 years since the death of?Karen Silkwood, a union activist and whistleblower?at a plutonium fuel plant.?Robert Alvarez recounts the efforts he, his wife, and others made in successfully seeking justice for her.?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Because we haven't seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there's been some complacency around trying to control this virus [H5N1], but I've always said we shouldn't wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them. I just don't think you should gamble with people's lives like that."

¡ª Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center and?professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,? The Guardian
?

PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Join a free course exploring AI policy challenges, developed with MIT and Oxford experts.

Learn about frameworks for governing advanced AI and proposals to mitigate extreme risks.

Our alumni shape policy at governments, international organizations, and leading think tanks.





Your gift fuels our mission to educate and empower. Together we will work to ensure science serves humanity.
?
?

??? ? ?? ? ?? ? ?? ? ??
?

Copyright ? 2024?Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

All Rights Reserved | newsletter@...

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Don't miss an email! Please add newsletter@... to your address book.
?

?


Re: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Hierdie is uitstekende artikels.? Lees ook die kommentaar aan die einde van die Eerste artikel (Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?).? Die koste van die teiken was $100 000, en dit het maar 3.15 MJ gelewer -- minder as 1 kWu se neutron supersnel neutrone, en dalk 0.1 kWu se hitte wat dalk eendag in nog minder elektrisiteit omgesit kan word.? En sowat 90 kWu was nodig om die lasers te pomp om heelwat minder as 0.1 kWu se elektrisiteit te lewer.

In die tweede artikel (Feretting out the truth about Fusion) se^ Rosner:? "Embrittlement won¡¯t be a showstopper for fusion energy."? Daarvan verskil ek nogal.? Soos ook dr Klaus Isebeck-- destydse hoof van Stralingsbeskadiging by SA se AEK (of dalk destyds reeds Kernkor).? Hy het in 'n kursus oor daardie onderwerp by UP se Dept Fisika onomwonde gese^:? "People who believe in Nuclear Fusion, do not understand Radiation Damage".

On 2024/11/14 18:13, Pieter Van der Walt via groups.io wrote:

Hierdie ouens vertel dieselfde storie as Bernhard. Nie in ons leeftyd nie, nie in ons kleinkinders se leeftyd nie.
PW

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt=[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 5:20?PM
Subject: [ZA-energie] Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: ZA_energie <[email protected]>

From: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists <newsletter@...>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 4:23?PM
Subject: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: <pwvanderwalt@...>


UK Nuclear Notebook | Bob Rosner Interview | More? ? ? ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Read a shareable version of this newsletter .
Was this email forwarded to you? to stay current.

Presented in partnership with

November 14, 2024

?
?
A researcher in the interior of the magnetic fusion experiment known as Alcator C-Mod at MIT. The interior of the donut-shaped device confines plasma hotter than the interior of the sun, using high magnetic fields. (Image courtesy of Bob Mumgaard / Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT.)

DAN DROLLETTE JR

The Bulletin's November 2024 magazine investigates nuclear fusion's potential. Will it become a commercial energy source within the next decade, or will we still be waiting a century from now??

DAN DROLLETTE JR

Can nuclear fusion be developed quickly enough to make a difference for climate change? Theoretical physicist, former head of Argonne National Laboratory, and self-described "plasma guy" Bob Rosner discusses?fusion, climate change, and other reasons to pursue it. Part of our November magazine, this article is available to all for a limited time.?


Advertisement


HANS M. KRISTENSEN, MATT KORDA, ELIANA JOHNS, MACKENZIE KNIGHT

For decades, the United Kingdom has maintained a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads¡ªup to 120 of which are available for delivery by four?Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines.?The stockpile is now increasing, according to the latest Nuclear Notebook by experts at the Federation of American Scientists.?
?

Royal Navy Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine HMS Victorious departs HM Naval Base Clyde?in?Scotland. The other three Vanguard-class SSBNs are also based at Clyde. (Credit: Will Haigh / UK Ministry of Defence.)

ROBERT ALVAREZ

Yesterday marked 50 years since the death of?Karen Silkwood, a union activist and whistleblower?at a plutonium fuel plant.?Robert Alvarez recounts the efforts he, his wife, and others made in successfully seeking justice for her.?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Because we haven't seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there's been some complacency around trying to control this virus [H5N1], but I've always said we shouldn't wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them. I just don't think you should gamble with people's lives like that."

¡ª Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center and?professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,? The Guardian
?

PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Join a free course exploring AI policy challenges, developed with MIT and Oxford experts.

Learn about frameworks for governing advanced AI and proposals to mitigate extreme risks.

Our alumni shape policy at governments, international organizations, and leading think tanks.





Your gift fuels our mission to educate and empower. Together we will work to ensure science serves humanity.
?
?

??? ? ?? ? ?? ? ?? ? ??
?

Copyright ? 2024?Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

All Rights Reserved | newsletter@...

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
1307 E. 60th St.
Chicago, IL 60637

Don't miss an email! Please add newsletter@... to your address book.
?

?


Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?

 

Hierdie ouens vertel dieselfde storie as Bernhard. Nie in ons leeftyd nie, nie in ons kleinkinders se leeftyd nie.
PW

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt=[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 5:20?PM
Subject: [ZA-energie] Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: ZA_energie <[email protected]>




---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists <newsletter@...>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 4:23?PM
Subject: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: <pwvanderwalt@...>


UK Nuclear Notebook | Bob Rosner Interview | More? ? ? ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Read a shareable version of this newsletter .
Was this email forwarded to you? to stay current.

Presented in partnership with

November 14, 2024

?
?
A researcher in the interior of the magnetic fusion experiment known as Alcator C-Mod at MIT. The interior of the donut-shaped device confines plasma hotter than the interior of the sun, using high magnetic fields. (Image courtesy of Bob Mumgaard / Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT.)

DAN DROLLETTE JR

The Bulletin's November 2024 magazine investigates nuclear fusion's potential. Will it become a commercial energy source within the next decade, or will we still be waiting a century from now??

DAN DROLLETTE JR

Can nuclear fusion be developed quickly enough to make a difference for climate change? Theoretical physicist, former head of Argonne National Laboratory, and self-described "plasma guy" Bob Rosner discusses?fusion, climate change, and other reasons to pursue it. Part of our November magazine, this article is available to all for a limited time.?


Advertisement


HANS M. KRISTENSEN, MATT KORDA, ELIANA JOHNS, MACKENZIE KNIGHT

For decades, the United Kingdom has maintained a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads¡ªup to 120 of which are available for delivery by four?Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines.?The stockpile is now increasing, according to the latest Nuclear Notebook by experts at the Federation of American Scientists.?
?

Royal Navy Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine HMS Victorious departs HM Naval Base Clyde?in?Scotland. The other three Vanguard-class SSBNs are also based at Clyde. (Credit: Will Haigh / UK Ministry of Defence.)

ROBERT ALVAREZ

Yesterday marked 50 years since the death of?Karen Silkwood, a union activist and whistleblower?at a plutonium fuel plant.?Robert Alvarez recounts the efforts he, his wife, and others made in successfully seeking justice for her.?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Because we haven't seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there's been some complacency around trying to control this virus [H5N1], but I've always said we shouldn't wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them. I just don't think you should gamble with people's lives like that."

¡ª Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center and?professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,? The Guardian
?

PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Join a free course exploring AI policy challenges, developed with MIT and Oxford experts.

Learn about frameworks for governing advanced AI and proposals to mitigate extreme risks.

Our alumni shape policy at governments, international organizations, and leading think tanks.



Your gift fuels our mission to educate and empower. Together we will work to ensure science serves humanity.
?
?

??? ? ?? ? ?? ? ?? ? ??
?

Copyright ? 2024?Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

All Rights Reserved | newsletter@...

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
1307 E. 60th St.
Chicago, IL 60637

Don't miss an email! Please add newsletter@... to your address book.
?

?


Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?

 



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists <newsletter@...>
Date: Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 4:23?PM
Subject: Fusion, forever the energy of tomorrow?
To: <pwvanderwalt@...>


UK Nuclear Notebook | Bob Rosner Interview | More? ? ? ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Read a shareable version of this newsletter .
Was this email forwarded to you? to stay current.

Presented in partnership with

November 14, 2024

?
?
A researcher in the interior of the magnetic fusion experiment known as Alcator C-Mod at MIT. The interior of the donut-shaped device confines plasma hotter than the interior of the sun, using high magnetic fields. (Image courtesy of Bob Mumgaard / Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT.)

DAN DROLLETTE JR

The Bulletin's November 2024 magazine investigates nuclear fusion's potential. Will it become a commercial energy source within the next decade, or will we still be waiting a century from now??

DAN DROLLETTE JR

Can nuclear fusion be developed quickly enough to make a difference for climate change? Theoretical physicist, former head of Argonne National Laboratory, and self-described "plasma guy" Bob Rosner discusses?fusion, climate change, and other reasons to pursue it. Part of our November magazine, this article is available to all for a limited time.?


Advertisement


HANS M. KRISTENSEN, MATT KORDA, ELIANA JOHNS, MACKENZIE KNIGHT

For decades, the United Kingdom has maintained a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads¡ªup to 120 of which are available for delivery by four?Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines.?The stockpile is now increasing, according to the latest Nuclear Notebook by experts at the Federation of American Scientists.?
?

Royal Navy Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine HMS Victorious departs HM Naval Base Clyde?in?Scotland. The other three Vanguard-class SSBNs are also based at Clyde. (Credit: Will Haigh / UK Ministry of Defence.)

ROBERT ALVAREZ

Yesterday marked 50 years since the death of?Karen Silkwood, a union activist and whistleblower?at a plutonium fuel plant.?Robert Alvarez recounts the efforts he, his wife, and others made in successfully seeking justice for her.?

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Because we haven't seen severe illness and deaths yet, I think there's been some complacency around trying to control this virus [H5N1], but I've always said we shouldn't wait for farm workers to die before we take action to protect them. I just don't think you should gamble with people's lives like that."

¡ª Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center and?professor of epidemiology at Brown University School of Public Health,? The Guardian
?

PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Join a free course exploring AI policy challenges, developed with MIT and Oxford experts.

Learn about frameworks for governing advanced AI and proposals to mitigate extreme risks.

Our alumni shape policy at governments, international organizations, and leading think tanks.



Your gift fuels our mission to educate and empower. Together we will work to ensure science serves humanity.
?
?

??? ? ?? ? ?? ? ?? ? ??
?

Copyright ? 2024?Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

All Rights Reserved | newsletter@...

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
1307 E. 60th St.
Chicago, IL 60637

Don't miss an email! Please add newsletter@... to your address book.
?

?


Re: Waterstofdraer

 

Enige kleur - solank dit groen is!??


On Wed, 13 Nov 2024, 12:41 Dieter Holm via , <dieterholm=[email protected]> wrote:
Sogenaamde ?€?Wit Waterstof?€ (Geogenic H2) kan dalk met hierdie tegnologie vinniger as in 20 jaar beskikbaar wees
Vriendelike groete
Dieter?


Tel ?012 371 3389
Sel 083 287 3220
Posbus 58?
Hartbeespoort
0216 Suid-Afrika








On 13 Nov 2024, at 11:11, Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt@...> wrote:



Re: Waterstofdraer

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Sogenaamde ¡°Wit Waterstof¡± (Geogenic H2) kan dalk met hierdie tegnologie vinniger as in 20 jaar beskikbaar wees
Vriendelike groete
Dieter?


Tel ?012 371 3389
Sel 083 287 3220
Posbus 58?
Hartbeespoort
0216 Suid-Afrika








On 13 Nov 2024, at 11:11, Pieter Van der Walt via <pwvanderwalt@...> wrote:



Magnete

 


Waterstofdraer

 


Musk & Trump on Global Warming

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


"... does he try to influence Trump to recognize that as an economic matter, clean energy is a huge opportunity for the United States to outcompete China?"

So nie, vrees ek, gaan dit andersom wees -- China gaan wen!? Ons nasate sal almal Chinees moet leer lees en skryf!

Musk Believes in Global Warming. Trump Doesn¡¯t. Will That Change?

The Tesla billionaire is a key figure in the president-elect¡¯s orbit. One question is whether his views on climate and clean energy will have any sway.

Listen to this article?¡¤ 7:26 min?
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Donald Trump shakes hands with Elon Musk and speaks into his ear at a campaign rally.
Elon Musk is expected to have a direct line to the White House in the coming months.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

Elon Musk has described himself as??and??But he also threw himself wholeheartedly into electing as president someone who has dismissed global warming as a hoax.

Now, as President-elect Donald J. Trump prepares to enter the White House, one big question is how much sway ¡ª if any ¡ª Mr. Musk¡¯s views on climate change and clean energy might have in the new administration.

During the campaign, Mr. Trump??on electric vehicles as he grew more friendly with Mr. Musk, the billionaire chief executive of Tesla. After months of bashing plug-in cars and promising to halt their sales, Mr. Trump backtracked slightly this summer.

¡°I¡¯m constantly talking about electric vehicles, but I don¡¯t mean I¡¯m against them. I¡¯m totally for them,¡± he told a crowd in Michigan. ¡°I¡¯ve driven them and they are incredible, but they¡¯re not for everybody.¡±

Advertisement

At the time, Mr. Musk claimed credit for Mr. Trump¡¯s apparent shift, telling Tesla shareholders at a June meeting, ¡°I can be persuasive.¡± Referring to Mr. Trump, he said, ¡°A lot of his friends now have Teslas, and they all love it. And he¡¯s a huge fan of the Cybertruck. So I think those may be contributing factors.¡±

Now Mr. Musk,??at Mr. Trump¡¯s Mar-a-Lago residence and??with the president-elect¡¯s family, is expected to have a direct line to the White House in the coming months. Mr. Musk¡¯s companies, including Tesla and SpaceX,?, and he is expected to seek additional advantages for his businesses.

But whether his persuasion might extend to other realms, such as climate issues, remains to be seen.

¡°It¡¯s a real question,¡± said Paul Bledsoe, a lecturer at American University Center for Environmental Policy. ¡°Does Musk only advocate for the interests of Tesla and SpaceX? Is he just a self-interested lobbyist? Or does he try to influence Trump to recognize that as an economic matter, clean energy is a huge opportunity for the United States to outcompete China?¡±

Mr. Musk and Mr. Trump¡¯s transition team did not respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Trump¡¯s views on??are no mystery. He has doubted whether the Earth is getting hotter. (Scientists are unequivocal that it is.) He has??climate change as ¡°where the ocean is going to rise one-eighth of an inch over the next 400 years.¡± (Sea levels??an average of roughly eight inches over the past century and are expected to rise several feet or more by 2100 as glaciers and ice sheets continue to melt.)

Advertisement

The president-elect?, yet again, from the 2015 Paris climate agreement, under which nearly 200 nations pledged to curb the greenhouse gas emissions that are heating the planet. He has attacked solar panels and wind turbines. And he told a crowd of supporters on Wednesday that the United States would amp up oil production even beyond current record levels. ¡°We have more liquid gold than any country in the world,¡± Mr. Trump said.

Mr. Musk, by contrast, has consistently said he thinks climate change is a problem ¡ª although he has sometimes wavered on how urgent that problem is. He has long been a major proponent of shifting to low-emissions technology like solar power, batteries and electric vehicles.

In a??published last year by Walter Isaacson, Mr. Musk was described as becoming interested in solar power and electric vehicles as a college student because he was worried about the dangers of global warming and the prospect of the world running out of fossil fuels.

Tesla¡¯s success in producing electric cars with mass appeal helped supercharge a global industry. Mr. Musk¡¯s company also sells rooftop solar panels as well as batteries that can provide backup power to homes or help balance wind and solar power on the grid. This year, battery storage accounts for roughly 10 percent of Tesla¡¯s revenue.

¡°I think we should just generally lean in the direction of sustainability,¡± Mr. Musk??during a two-hour, live-streamed chat the two men held on X in August. ¡°And I actually think solar is going to be a majority of Earth¡¯s energy generation in the future.¡±

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Mr. Musk has also supported nuclear power, which does not produce any greenhouse gases and which Mr. Trump has sometimes endorsed. ¡°Nuclear electricity generation is underrated,¡± Mr. Musk added during their chat. ¡°People have this fear of nuclear electricity generation, but it¡¯s actually one of the safest forms of generation.¡±

Yet Mr. Musk also suggested that there was no hurry to stop global warming. ¡°We still have quite a bit of time, we don¡¯t need to rush,¡± he said in August. He later added, ¡°If, I don¡¯t know, 50 to 100 years from now, we¡¯re mostly sustainable, I think that¡¯ll probably be OK.¡±

That puts him at odds with many world leaders and environmentalists, who have urged nations to??down to around zero by midcentury, to keep global warming at relatively low levels. Scientists agree that the longer it takes humanity to stop pumping greenhouse gases into the air, the greater the risks of deadly heat waves, wildfires, drought, storms and species extinction.

In recent years, Mr. Musk has urged caution about drastic societal changes to address climate change. ¡°I¡¯m super pro climate, but we definitely don¡¯t need to put farmers out of work to solve climate change,¡±?, commenting on farmers in Belgium who were protesting limits on nitrogen pollution.

He also said in his August chat with Mr. Trump, ¡°If we were to stop using oil and gas right now, we would all be starving and the economy would collapse. So it¡¯s, you know, I don¡¯t think it¡¯s right to vilify the oil and gas industry.¡±

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In the past, however, Mr. Musk has openly disagreed with Mr. Trump on climate issues.

In 2017, when Mr. Trump announced that the United States would withdraw from the Paris climate agreement, Mr. Musk stepped down from two presidential advisory councils in protest. ¡°Climate change is real,¡± he wrote. ¡°Leaving Paris is not good for America or the world.¡±

At the time, several officials in the Trump administration ¡ª including Rex Tillerson, then secretary of state ¡ª??the president to stay in the Paris accord. But in the end, Mr. Trump sided with those in his cabinet who dismissed climate change altogether and wanted to exit the pact.

Some observers point out that Mr. Musk isn¡¯t the only influential donor on the issue of energy in the president-elect¡¯s orbit. During the campaign, Mr. Trump??from oil and gas interests, including the billionaire Harold Hamm of Continental Resources.

Mr. Hamm has had Mr. Trump¡¯s ear since 2016 and pushed him then to appoint Scott Pruitt to run the Environmental Protection Agency, where Mr. Pruitt denied the science of global warming and unraveled various climate regulations. (Mr. Hamm did not respond to a request for comment.)

¡°One can only hope that Donald Trump will put conspiracy theories to the side and take the decisive action to address the climate crisis that the American people deserve,¡± said Dan Lashof, U.S. director of the World Resources Institute, an environmental group. ¡°But I won¡¯t hold my breath.¡±


EU support for Tubatse Pumped Storage

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


The biggest of 2 dams for this has already been completed years ago. Then after severe mismanagement, some fatal accidents and huge cost overruns at the Ingula pumped storage scheme, further work at the larger (1.5 GW,? 21 GWh) Tubatse scheme was stopped.


Re: Eskom wastes R840m on Wilge Project, then asks for 40% rate increase

 

O,o.Dis 'n probleem! Waarom doen Eskom eiendomsontwikkeling??
PW


On Tue, Nov 5, 2024 at 2:01?AM bernhard via <bernhard=[email protected]> wrote:

Legally, Eskom may only ask for increases to cover funds prudently, not wastefully spent.

On 2024/11/05 01:36, bernhard wrote:


Re: Small Modular Reactors

 

Met tweede probeerslag kon ek alles kyk. Die feite lyk inderdaad nie goed vir KMR nie. En hulle trek nog nie eens by die sekuriteitsprobleem nie.


On Tue, 05 Nov 2024, 06:56 Pieter Van der Walt via , <pwvanderwalt=[email protected]> wrote:
Daardie plaat haak vas!?

On Tue, 05 Nov 2024, 06:04 bernhard via , <bernhard=[email protected]> wrote:


Sabine has quite a sense of humour, excellent common sense, and in my view is right on most topics.? Also on the current reality of modular reactors.

But not on nuclear power generally or on renewables -- she after all trained as a particle physicist rather than a nuclear physicist, and does not really understand the practical effects of the complexity of radioactive decay products.


Re: Small Modular Reactors

 

Daardie plaat haak vas!?


On Tue, 05 Nov 2024, 06:04 bernhard via , <bernhard=[email protected]> wrote:


Sabine has quite a sense of humour, excellent common sense, and in my view is right on most topics.? Also on the current reality of modular reactors.

But not on nuclear power generally or on renewables -- she after all trained as a particle physicist rather than a nuclear physicist, and does not really understand the practical effects of the complexity of radioactive decay products.


Small Modular Reactors

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


Sabine has quite a sense of humour, excellent common sense, and in my view is right on most topics.? Also on the current reality of modular reactors.

But not on nuclear power generally or on renewables -- she after all trained as a particle physicist rather than a nuclear physicist, and does not really understand the practical effects of the complexity of radioactive decay products.


Re: Eskom wastes R840m on Wilge Project, then asks for 40% rate increase

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Legally, Eskom may only ask for increases to cover funds prudently, not wastefully spent.

On 2024/11/05 01:36, bernhard wrote:


Eskom wastes R840m on Wilge Project, then asks for 40% rate increase

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý