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Paigntonian | 21:29 Mon 24th May 2021 | News
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Space flights damage the environment. I expect they do but to such a small amount it's probably the same as five farting cows in Cumbria. They couldn't even try to measure it.
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Sure the environment can cope fine. Still, all the hype, yelling at passers by and protesting by gluing themselves to bridges gives the unemployable something to do.
And volcanoes don't apparently?
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Despair of people continually manufacturing facts to fit their argument.
The truth is, no one knows one way or another at the moment, NASA are making a study.
But more rocket launches are being made as Space flights have been privatised in the US. 44 flight in 2020, and a lot more projected this year. So it will be useful to have some data.

// Despair of people continually manufacturing facts to fit their argument. //

From the poster of..

// it's probably the same as five farting cows in Cumbria //

LOL

Question Author
Five farting cows wasn't meant to be a serious point.
You asserted
// its such a small amount //
- something you don’t really know.

You might have made up the farting cows bit, but your intention was to dismiss the possibility that it might be a problem.

They are not going to stop space exploration, it will continue no matter what NASA’s bean crunchers decide.
// Five farting cows wasn't meant to be a serious point. //

Assuming Cumbria was, note that releasing gasses directly into the ozone layer has a much larger damage to the environment than releasing them in Ambleside.
depends if the next one crashes down in the middle of the Pacific or in my garden, I suppose.
Only the ones with "Made In China" do that jno.
Ymb,

90% of all rockets* crash into the sea (or ground) after take off.
The good news is that the private US rocket contractors are developing and introducing vehicles which are recyclable.
Space-X is already flying missions to the ISS in fully reusable rockets.

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