Anybody know a good average figure? Trying to figure out how much electricity it takes to replace 160 million barrels of crude.
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Anybody know?
According to the interwebs, we import about 1.3M barrels of oil from Saudi Arabia every day. Based on the earlier number of 1694kwh/barrel, that's a daily total of 1.3M barrels/day * 1694kwh/barrel = 2.2B kwh/day.Cool, so 7 Los Angeles class subs running at 70% power providing hydrogen (figuring in a 75% energy loss making the hydrogen) for fuel cells can replace all the oil imported from Saudi Arabia. Thanks guys.
We really should be building nuke plants like FRANCE. Most places in the U.S. are stable, so don't use the recent Japan experience as a canard. Then electric cars may actually make sense.
According to the interwebs, we import about 1.3M barrels of oil from Saudi Arabia every day. Based on the earlier number of 1694kwh/barrel, that's a daily total of 1.3M barrels/day * 1694kwh/barrel = 2.2B kwh/day.
Also according to the interwebs, the nuclear reactor on a Los Angeles class sub produces about 165MW. So in the same 24 hour period, that provides 165000 kw * 24 hrs/day = 4M kwh/day.
If we ignore efficiency, you need about 550 subs.
-harry
The US has much more coal and natural gas...But the US has a much stronger nimby movement.
The US has much more coal and natural gas...
Once battery/capacitor technology makes a big enough leap to make electric a reality for transportation, we'll be worried about running out of battery goop in 20 years instead of oil and we'll have more oil and oil infrastructure than we'll ever need again.
We really should be building nuke plants like FRANCE. Most places in the U.S. are stable, so don't use the recent Japan experience as a canard. Then electric cars may actually make sense.
I dunno. Get a really bad blizzard, and stuff could break. Or a flood. Or any number of things. Those plants operated in Japan for many, many years. But when they went FUBAR, they did it big. That's the problem with nuclear. Perhaps it never happens in France, but if it does, kill a good-sized portion of the country goodbye, pretty much permanently.
A better fuel than uranium
http://energyfromthorium.com/
As far as risks from current nuclear technology I would like to see the numbers on increased somatic and genetic damage attributed to the fossil energy fuel cycle compared to the nuclear fuel cycle before I'd make any subjective statements on their relative "riskiness".
So it sits, poisoning everything around it. And there is no other plan.
So it sits, poisoning everything around it. And there is no other plan.
nimby
Is the nuclear record, in terms of human and environmental impact, better or worse than oil and coal?... Nuclear plants are a disaster...
That is a statement based purely on emotion. Even the Sierra Club acknowledges the environmental advantages of nuclear power. Hundreds of thousand utility workers have been safely employed for decades at nuclear power plants in this country. Even the worst industrial accidents at nuclear power plants in the U. S. have had minimal offsite releases of radioactive materials.
Your one dimensional arguement neatly avoids addressing the effects of pollution, industrial accidents, including mining, drilling, and transportation accidents, and end use accidents that accompany use of hydrocarbon based fuels. Ignoring the truth does not diminish it's reality.
Is the nuclear record, in terms of human and environmental impact, better or worse than oil and coal?
-harry
I'm not so sure, even if you ignore CO2. Fossil fuels release pollution other than CO2 that lead to smog and respiratory problems, coal mining is a dangerous occupation with frequent fatalities, oil spills have wreaked havoc on coastlines, there are dubious questions surrounding fracking, there was a big ash flood in Tennessee a couple years back.... Take that out of the equation, and fossil fuels win, big time.
I'm not so sure, even if you ignore CO2. Fossil fuels release pollution other than CO2 that lead to smog and respiratory problems,
coal mining is a dangerous occupation with frequent fatalities,
oil spills have wreaked havoc on coastlines,
there are dubious questions surrounding fracking, there was a big ash flood in Tennessee a couple years back.
The real question is hard to answer, which is "how many people have died as a result of respiratory problems triggered by fossil fuel exhaust"? It's hard for people to get a handle on these questions because the cause and effect are so loosely coupled.
It's a complicated comparison, I'm not sure if I've seen it attempted in a comprehensive way before.
-harry
and are biologically remediatable, given time measured in decades in the CONUS. Nuclear contamination is not biologically remediatable in any time frame.
Half of the pilots hired in 1918 to fly air mail for the USPS had died in crashes by 1920.... Can I interest anyone in some real estate in Pripyat?
Half of the pilots hired in 1918 to fly air mail for the USPS had died in crashes by 1920.
The world has had commercial nuclear power plants for about 55 years. The two major incidents are from designs that are 30-40 years old.
So are we evaluating the risk of new power plants based on the (relatively minor) accidents of plants built 30-40 years ago?
-harry
Fill up the 78 oz Mountan Dew corn syrup brominated stew, get into the car and catch up on Facebook on your iphone at 15 mph over the speed limit, don't use the seatbelt because it's safer to be thrown clear of an accident, eat all of the french fries you can stuff in your mouth, and make sure you take a few smoking breaks on some cool menthols in between. But whatever you do, avoid radiation exposure ... that stuff is DANGEROUS. Oh well.
According to the interwebs, we import about 1.3M barrels of oil from Saudi Arabia every day. Based on the earlier number of 1694kwh/barrel, that's a daily total of 1.3M barrels/day * 1694kwh/barrel = 2.2B kwh/day.
Also according to the interwebs, the nuclear reactor on a Los Angeles class sub produces about 165MW. So in the same 24 hour period, that provides 165000 kw * 24 hrs/day = 4M kwh/day.
If we ignore efficiency, you need about 550 subs.
-harry
The point, of course, is that we shouldn't plan our future actions based on the risks that existed long ago if significant improvements have been made since then. If we looked at the record of air mail pilots we'd determine that flying is too dangerous to attempt.The pilots who died knew it was dangerous and only took out themselves....