• @UnderpantsWeevil
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    -17 months ago

    You understand that there are already too many greenhouse gases, right?

    The rate at which we produce green house has exceeded the rate at which it is absorbed and fixed.

    Carbon capture attempts to accelerate the rate of carbon fixing at a very high per-ton economic cost. Meanwhile, turning off fossil plants and replacing them with renewable energy reduces the rate of per-ton generation at a comparably low cost.

    If you’re on a sinking ship, there’s little point in bailing when you haven’t plugged the hole.

    I can understand why the USA doesn’t want to use Chinese reactors

    Pure reactionary xenophobia. Chinese thorium reactors are cutting edge, and we’re adding degree points to the global average by not adopting it ASAP.

    Putting all our bets in China or France might not be the best idea.

    Putting money on Westinghouse has consistently cost us enormously.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      27 months ago

      We need to be doing both. Once the grid is fixed or close to it then we will need carbon capture to reverse the damage. It’s either that or massive reforestation or using algae or something (liquid trees anyone?).

      Pure reactionary xenophobia. Chinese thorium reactors are cutting edge, and we’re adding degree points to the global average by not adopting it ASAP.

      If they own the plant they could theoretically sabotage it. Would they in practice? No idea but so long as the USA believes they might they won’t use Chinese technology.

      Neither the USA or China are good regimes. To be honest I want to see them both either broken or re-formed.

      Westinghouse aren’t the only people in the USA doing nuclear research afaik. I believe the DOE national laboratory does research on fusion for example. There are private companies like NuScale also working on fission designs in the USA.