Assisted Dying, Here's Where It...
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This has been in the news recently with the governement saying that Nuclear power is the only viable way forward. The Green oriented (not just the green party) argue that it is unnecessary and that renewable sources will be viable in the future. Of course they are against using fossil fuels also so Is it possible to manage without Nuclear power? are the alternatives ever going to be up to the job?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What is wrong with wind power and pretty much all "green" power sources is that they're not controllable ( you can't rely on the wind to blow or the sun to shine on cup final day)
And they tend to be limited location wise which means you have to transmit the power a long way from say Lincolnshire to get to somewhere like Birmingham. Thats incredibly inefficient.
I think the UK uses about 40GWatts (correct me If I'm wrong) that's about 30 nuclear power stations like Sizewell B or 20,000 wind farms like Delabole in Cornwall
I agree about hydrogen/oxygen but disagree about the long term solution. The real future is Fusion but I'll think myself very lucky if I live to see it.
Wind energy will always be expensive because you need to build so much over capacity in order to cover the low production days
And how are you going to supply large inland cities?
The current position with Fusion is that ITER is being built in France and is the last step before DEMO the first fusion power reactor.
It's massively cleaner than either fission or coal and no Uranium will need to be mined or plutonium disposed of.
check out www.iter.org