French President-Elect Macron Urges Action On Climate Change (newsweek.com) 174
After Sunday's election in France, Macron's victory "is likely to be a boon for the French digital economy and its startup scene," writes a foreign policy think tank blog, "but the country's frosty relationship with U.S. tech companies is likely to remain over the next five years." Yet even before he was elected as France's new president, Emmanuel Macron was already warning the U.S. that withdrawing from the international Paris Climate change agreement could cost America its brightest innovators. Thelasko writes:
French President elect Emmanuel Macron has a message to U.S. scientists and engineers working on climate change. "Please, come to France. You are welcome. It's your nation. We like innovation. We want innovative people. We want people working on climate change, energy renewables and new technologies. France is your nation."
Newsweek reports this week that without America's involvement, the Paris Climate agreement "will have no way of meeting its goals of reducing global net carbon emissions" -- but that Macron could persuade the U.S. to honor its agreement. ("It reportedly took just one phone call conversation between Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the president for Trump to reconsider withdrawing entirely for NAFTA, another international agreement signed into law prior to his tenure in the Oval Office.") And in the meantime, Macron has also promised not to cut France's energy-research budget, and will even reinforce it "to accelerate our initiative."
Newsweek reports this week that without America's involvement, the Paris Climate agreement "will have no way of meeting its goals of reducing global net carbon emissions" -- but that Macron could persuade the U.S. to honor its agreement. ("It reportedly took just one phone call conversation between Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the president for Trump to reconsider withdrawing entirely for NAFTA, another international agreement signed into law prior to his tenure in the Oval Office.") And in the meantime, Macron has also promised not to cut France's energy-research budget, and will even reinforce it "to accelerate our initiative."
As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
As the US continues falling into a post-intellectual, foreigner-fearing state, the brain drain will only continue.
Vast parts of the scientific progress the US "gave" the post WWII-world was built on immigrants, but now the tide is turning - the empire falling apart at the seams.
Re:As the US (Score:5, Interesting)
You're making a prediction about the future -- you are asserting what *will* happen. Barring any psychic abilities you may have, which I wouldn't deny, the question is how do you know. Yours is not a trivial prediction, and many major non-trivial predictions regarding Trump have turned out to be false: from his inevitable loss in the elections through Paul Krugman's forecast that if Trump wins "the stock market will crash and will *never* recover" and so on. So what gives rise to the absolute certainty of this upcoming brain drain?
Re:As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
Trump, and even the whole Republican party, is hardly the only source of anti-intellectualism in the US, it's been ongoing for quite a while.
You've got colleges and universities that can't handle debate, and appear to value the contributions of their sports teams far above any science produced.
Ideological interests have been shaping your school books for decades, and the problem's getting worse.
The right disbelieves global warming, the left disbelieves GMO and nuclear safety - two of the most important tools to actually solve some of the problems caused by said global warming.
Federal science funding has been stagnant / dropping in real value since the 80s.
Your corporates are raiding the most successful university labs - turning them from basic to applied science, and locking that science up to the point where they're blocked from even discussing in general terms what they're working on with their peers.
This is just off of the top of my head, I'm sure the slashdot community can come up with more examples.
And, of course, if Trump gets his budget through thousands of US scientists will be unable to get funding and be forced to look for employment elsewhere.
That the US is going to see significantly more brain drain in the years to come does not seem to me like a very controversial prediction.
Here's to hoping things change or that I'm just wrong.
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You've got colleges and universities that can't handle debate, and appear to value the contributions of their sports teams far above any science produced.
Not that it's anything to brag about, but we are still doing quite well compared to Europe, and China so just where are the brains going to drain to ?
France and Germany are trying to larp Caravan of the Saints. India ? the worlds largest diploma mill ? Japan they are perfectly happy not having you.
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Fair enough. I'd only like to point out that the sense of doom being around the corner has been present in this country since at least the Great Depression and possibly much longer (I watched HBO's John Adams and they captured that feeling well too), certainly in the 50s and 60s and so on -- but it never really materializes. Even if the inflow and outflow of smart people change by 10-20% (I admit haven't looked up the trends) I imagine we'll still be far from a net negative. I may be wrong too but hoping th
Unlikely to Attract Americans (Score:2)
That the US is going to see significantly more brain drain in the years to come does not seem to me like a very controversial prediction.
That's very probably true but I very much doubt it will be to France where at least ~15 years ago you used to pay over 50% of your income in tax, academic salaries were far lower than the US and Canada and the VAT/sales tax is 20%. There are many non-financial advantages such as the food, country, culture, people etc. but while I loved all of that when I lived there I've noticed that Americans seem to care quite a bit more about the financial side and on the US scale the politics is probably somewhere left
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To pay 50% income tax, you need to have a very high income.
I doubt a mere university professor has such a high income.
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Re:As the US (Score:4, Insightful)
The right disbelieves global warming, the left disbelieves GMO and nuclear safety...
Almost all left-leaning people I talk to believe in GMO and nuclear safety, and the few that don't are always open to listening to my persistent arguments for them. I'm open to hearing who I should be talking to, I'm just sharing that it's hard for me to see these people being powerful voices based on my admittedly anecdotal experiences. Hrm, maybe it's because I live in Texas?
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"Almost all left-leaning people I talk to believe in GMO and nuclear safety,'
These exist, even in Texas?
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You can say that she would have been better than Trump but unlike predictions of future this one is unverifiable in principle. I believe -- and likewise can't prove it -- that she would have been far worse. She tried to compare herself with Macron after he won, but she's nothing like Macron. My very strong impression is that Macron wants to serve, and Hillary wanted to rule. I believe she has a deep seated psychological need to control the world for the sake of her self. Everything she has done points out t
Re:As the US; GMO, nuclear safety (Score:3)
Lots of people "on the left" simply do not believe the promises of the companies and trade groups that their products are known to be safe (GMO) or known to be managed safely (nuclear).
Something that I do not see enough is documentary evidence that the decisionmakers in technical agriculture or in management of nuclear facilities could give two shits about the long term effects of their work (GMO) or costs of waste management (nuclear).
I for one fully trust decisionmakers to increase their profits to the ex
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Trump, and even the whole Republican party, is hardly the only source of anti-intellectualism in the US, it's been ongoing for quite a while.
You've got colleges and universities that can't handle debate, and appear to value the contributions of their sports teams far above any science produced.
Ideological interests have been shaping your school books for decades, and the problem's getting worse.
The right disbelieves global warming, the left disbelieves GMO and nuclear safety - two of the most important tools to actually solve some of the problems caused by said global warming.
Federal science funding has been stagnant / dropping in real value since the 80s.
Your corporates are raiding the most successful university labs - turning them from basic to applied science, and locking that science up to the point where they're blocked from even discussing in general terms what they're working on with their peers.
This is just off of the top of my head, I'm sure the slashdot community can come up with more examples.
And, of course, if Trump gets his budget through thousands of US scientists will be unable to get funding and be forced to look for employment elsewhere.
That the US is going to see significantly more brain drain in the years to come does not seem to me like a very controversial prediction.
Here's to hoping things change or that I'm just wrong.
You don't need brain drain, you need affordable education. Why is it that all (each) G7 country has more than 65% of student population complete university. In the USA it is under 55%.
Yes, the innovation centers of the world are outside of the United States.
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Nuclear safety is basically reduced down to "where can we find somewhere remote to store toxic stuff that isn't already a national park, isn't at risk from earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, floods, droughts, subsidence, fault lines, landslides, forest fires, or property developers for at least 10,000 years".
Re:As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
Mod parent Informative. This is how terrorism works.
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Chicken shit. The terrorists have won...at least with your sorry ass.
The only way terrorists can win, is if we all roll over and go '"Shit, the terrorists have won". And even then, the most they can hope for is a Pyrrhic victory: all the most successful rulers, who based their dominance on the use of terror, have failed to establish anything more than a shortlived empire, and the reason is simple - a government that has to resort to oppression and violence, will fail if they don't keep up the oppression and violence. It's like balancing on a tightrope; you can do it for a wh
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I live in Germany 10 km from the French border, so let me tell you how it actually is.
Sure, the general population whines and bitches about islamists. They particularly whine about all the blacks who suddenly appeared together with the Syrian refugees because, well, they obviously did not come from Syria.
But. But. But. I work with several muslims. One of them, a Palestinian, is pretty much the nicest guy I know. He is a boffin with embedded electronics, and I like to talk to him about stuff like that. He wo
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You must be an idiot.
Muslims are winning what? The religion war? Most Europeans are atheists. What do we care what religion an immigrant has?
Rape is a serious crime, and luckily happens rarely.
Most rapes happen inside the family or people that know each other. The likelihood that a fresh immigrant, living in a 'concentration camp' rapes a citizen is basically zero.
If you plan to rape one, I suggest to look up what the word 'affect' means in german, and how it is treated when a rapist 'suddenly' meets a rela
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How many people died in Paris this year compared to say Chicago?
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From what I've read, China's internal dynamics prevent it from ever being what the US and Europe is/are in global terms. Every time China opens to the world, like it's been doing now, its coastal regions become very prosperous due to all the trade but the vast inland area remains unbearably poor in comparison. Then someone like Mao comes along, raises the army of a million peasants, takes over the country, redistributes the wealth (and poverty) and shuts it off. Then after some decades of peace the country
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I guess you're talking about the coming one. Because the one in 1776 was nothing like what you said.
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So how much land (and how many slaves) did these hicks take off George Washington, and to whom did they give them?
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Screw French though; I suspect Mandarin is going to be much more valuable to have as a secondary language, and a lot sooner than most of us were perhaps expecting.
Hm, hard to say. The french bonus is: french girls are definitely hot. And on top of that Paris is such a multi culture thing, you basically find hot girls from all over the world. Including China.
On the other hand, with Mandarin, you are limited to China. And there basically only live chinese girls. Many of them are hot, too! But depending on reg
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Brain drain does not represent politics, brain drain is a response to the other symptoms of corrupt governance and not just at federal level but across the board down to the tiniest county. What that corruption produces is shitty infrastructure, cheap ugly for profit law enforcement, toxic pollution, fucked up for profit charter schools, exorbitantly expensive medical services, inflated for profit higher education, corrupt banks and insane religiosity making . All of those combine to make the US a less desi
Re:As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
Krugman had said the market would crash immediately on Nov 9 if Trump had won and would never recover. An MIT professor Simon Johnson, a former chief economist of the IMF, said on Oct 29, "A big adverse surprise – like the election of Donald Trump in the US – would likely cause the stock market to crash and plunge the world into recession."
All I'm saying is, these are complex events, and the pattern has been that what what experts and lay people alike have said will "obviously" happen when it comes to Trump has been consistently wrong. I think we need to pause and look at things differently if we want to guess more accurately what will happen during his term.
Re:As the US (Score:4, Insightful)
As the US continues falling into a post-intellectual, foreigner-fearing state
Sweeping generalizations like this lack accuracy. There is a good possibility we can emerge from this slump with a more enlightened perspective on the world.
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A narrow minded cherry-picked story if I've ever heard one.
Yes many scientifically progressive people ESCAPED their home countries to work for the US in post WW2 timelines. If that's what you mean.
These scientists were not babies in the US, growing up here due to immigrant parents, we cannot claim them.
But it is a modern narrative to believe the latest generations of illegal immigrants are our future. No they are not, they are one of many contributors to the US's and the world's future...
So this whole "Wa
Re:As the US (Score:5, Insightful)
Where did I say anything about illegal immigrants? The fact is the US has been a significant brain drain on the rest of the world for ~70 years. You've had some of the best schools, the best labs and the best funding for science. This has attracted top-league scientists and entrepreneurs.
But the growing security state, the rising xenophobia and the very public hostility to science is now leading many of the same kinds of people to avoiding visiting the US altogether, much less wanting to immigrate.
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the brain drain will only continue.
What brain drain are you talking about here? Have scientists been leaving America in droves to seek out better opportunities in other countries? You are the first person I've heard mention this.
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It is capital that drives the place where talent resides, not morons like Macron.
But climate research is a non profitable activity, hence no capitalist is going to invest on it.
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Other than the pointless NYT comment, I'm not sure why the parent is downmodded.
We've been hearing some at least the 80s that the US is somehow on its way down, and each decade a new tip top high growth industry pops up, and whatdya know, the US is dominating it.
I think I see the reason why this keeps on repeating itself over and over: The best and the brightest typically want a high income and strong personal liberties above all else, and Europe, with France being the worst offender, has official policies
The scientists are talking, who is listening? (Score:5, Informative)
France cannot achieve a significant reduction in emissions of greenhouse gases from electricity production while also reducing the share of nuclear in its energy mix, the country's Academy of Sciences says.
"Simple common sense leads one to conclude that production of electricity that can meet the country's needs requires the availability of 'on demand' energies, which do not suffer from intermittency and which can be called upon at all times," it said. This means, in the absence of energy storage solutions, significant use will need to be made of thermal and nuclear power plants if France is to increase its use of renewable energy.
Nuclear power last year accounted for 13% of electricity production in Germany, which decided in 2011 to phase out its use of this form of energy. In 2010, nuclear power had accounted for 22%. The academy noted that, even though renewable energy accounted for 30% of power production last year, the share of fossil fuels was unchanged at 55% because Germany has had to open new fossil fuel plants to provide the back-up required for intermittent renewable energy. Germany thus remains one of Europe's largest CO2 emitters.
France, through its high dependence on nuclear energy, is one of the lowest emitters of greenhouse gases per capita: about half as much as Germany. France produces around 540 TWh of electricity with emissions of 46 million tonnes CO2 per year, compared with Germany, which produces about 631 TWh from 334 million tonnes.
"Nuclear energy is objectively the most effective way to reduce the share of fossil fuels in the production of electrical energy," it said. "Within this general framework, there is a real contradiction in wanting to reduce emissions whilst reducing the share of nuclear power. In fact, many studies show that the total share of renewable energy cannot exceed 30-40% without leading to an exorbitant cost of electricity and the emission of greenhouse gases."
The academy said "realistic and coherent" scenarios show that it is impossible to have an energy system based wholly on renewable energy sources, which also "indicate a reasonable trajectory towards an energy solution where nuclear power will have its place in the coming decades".
In February, the French Nuclear Society issued a white paper stating the country needs to maintain its nuclear power generation capacity in order to raise the share of electricity from renewables without increasing the cost of electricity production.
http://www.academie-sciences.f... [academie-sciences.fr]
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The variability in output from wind and solar energy requires the use of other forms of energy to offset this intermittency, the academy said. "One might think that energy exchanges at the European-level could mitigate this problem, but long nights are everywhere at the same time in Europe, and anticyclones are often with us and our neighbours simultaneously."
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If you want to say 'storm' say storm. ... (I mean, unless you are an weather expert)
The word 'anticyclone' is only understood by people who are sailing or flying, and hence have an understanding of 'weather slang', Hint: on the northern hemisphere, we have no 'anti anti cyclones', if we talk about cyclones, we call them cyclones. I guess no one actually knows in which direction low pressure zones rotate
But my point actually is: there are no storms thinkable that would shut down whole Europes wind plants.
Fir
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An anticyclone is a low pressure area, that rotates anti clockwise.
Unlike an cyclone that is a southern hemisphere phenomena that is rotating clockwise.
Hence the names.
If you want to talk about periods of no wind then call it like that.
And again: Europe, and even small countries like Germany or Denmark are to big to have 'no wind' on a meaning full timescale.
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An anticyclone is a low pressure area, that rotates anti clockwise. Unlike an cyclone that is a southern hemisphere phenomena that is rotating clockwise. Hence the names.
If you want to talk about periods of no wind then call it like that.
And again: Europe, and even small countries like Germany or Denmark are to big to have 'no wind' on a meaning full timescale.
I used the same term the scientists used. If you want to attack me for the choice just because you made a fool of yourself, well if it makes you feel better go ahead.
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Scientists don't use the term 'anticyclone' for a period without wind.
And: I did not attack you. If you felt attacked that is only in your mind.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
Here, anticyclone, high pressure area. Rotating clockwise. Mixed it up in my previous post as I assumed you were talking about american hurricanes.
Cyclone or Anticyclone, nothing implies: no wind. Except in the center of it, obviously.
So your posts about anticyclones make no sense whatsoever. And as I pointed out: no one understands
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The centre of an anticyclone has a characteristic pattern of air circulation, with subsiding air and horizontal divergence of the air near the surface. The name anticyclone comes from the circulatory flow of air within the system; anticyclonic circulation has a local circulation that is opposed to the Earth's rotation. Winds, generally light, circulate around the high pressure centre in a clockwise direction in the Northern Hemisphere and anticlockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
The subsiding air compresses as it descends, causing adiabatic warming. The eventually warmer and drier air suppresses cloud formation and thus anticyclones are usually associated with fine weather in the summer and dry, cold, and sometimes foggy weather in the winter. Calm settled weather is usually synonymous with anticyclones in temperate latitudes. Anticyclones are typically relatively slow moving features.
http://www.weatheronline.co.uk... [weatheronline.co.uk]
You are impressively persistent on your quest to demonstrate your ignorance.
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So we agree that Europe is to big to be covered by an anti cyclone, (why you not call it a high pressure area is beyond me) or we do not agree?
I suggest again to look on a map, and perhaps find some links that tell you how big the "low wind speed" area in the center of a high pressure zone is. (*facepalm*)
The link you posted actually has a nice picture. The High pressure zone is surrounded by *5* low pressure zones. I suggest to learn what that actually means for wind.
You are impressively persistent on your
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We are working on that with Smart Grids and Smart Meters.
So a washing machine or dish washer etc. can shut down when supply is low.
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Oh stop with your facts and reasoning. These people have gotten so much harm done with shouting people down.
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says one of the biggest spewers of bullshit and dismisser of facts on /.
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Oh please, coming from a guy who has made green his religion.
Tell me oh wise one, just how are you going to power a fleet of electric cars that charge at night off solar power ?
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a) germany has a so called base load of about 40% of peak
b) nuclear power used to provide about 20% of peak
c) meanwhile we produce about 30% of our power with renewables, hence nuclear has to power down to 10% - we are phasing it out anyway (at night, otherwise we would pump more energy into the grid, than is needed)
d) germany has not build 'new coal plants to back up renewables'. We have huild very few new coal plants and decomissioned old ones in parallel.
France btw. is silently decomissioning its nuclear
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You mean except the points that what they say is wrong?
E.g. the claim Germany had increased its amount of coal plants?
Or power produced from coal?
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https://www.cleanenergywire.or... [cleanenergywire.org]
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I linked you the frauenhofer sources ... so go figure. :)
No idea what your agenda is.
Germany has reduced its CO2 footprint over the last decades by 25 - 30 %
Claiming otherwise makes you look like an idiot, but go ahead. You seem not to listen to any argument I send you
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Mr Ds post shows you are wrong.
Facts don't matter to Angelo. Clearly total coal and gas production has risen, even from the Fraunhofer site he references. He even argued with my numbers yesterday, then presented a link as an argument, within that link was proof my numbers were correct, but yet no admission on his part that he was wrong, not even when his own source says it. Everything he says is opinion or re-hash of some headline he's read. He even believes the market price of power has no bearing on retail price, something completely r
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"This is just an opinion, which ignores some renewable not deployed in France yet, such as tidal energy."
France has already tried all that crap years ago (tidal at Rance, solar concentrators at Odéillo, pathetic little scatterings of wind turbines in other places). Then they went whole-hog nuclear and solved the carbon problem within their own country. Now it's just a matter of waiting for the rest of the world to catch up.
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Hu?
You have the timescale in reverse order.
France first 'went nuclear', then installed a big tidal power plant.
And now is replacing the failing nukes with wind and solar. (1/3rd of Frances nukes are right now shut down because of safety issues)
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La Rance opened in 1966 and is still the only tidal installation in France.
The country's official power plan is to be 23% renewable by 2020. Half of this will be existing hydroelectric plants:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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France has not many places where a tidal plant makes sense.
So what is your point?
I doubt the official plan how France wants to become more 'green' is on wikipedia ...
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The French Academy of Sciences has determined significant CO2 reduction is not feasible if France if they reduce nuclear.
This is just an opinion, which ignores some renewable not deployed in France yet, such as tidal energy.
And as expected, we can find Vincent Courtilot in the the French science academy report authors. He is France's most famous climate denier and is former head of Institut de Physique du Globe, a research institution largely funded by oil industry.
Aahh. Find an excuse to dismiss. That's so typical. Do you dismiss everything the Academy says or just the stuff that doesn't conveniently fit your personal view? The oil industry has never supported nuclear. There is no climate denial, if fact there is climate change acknowledgement in this release.
This is a nice example of willful ignorance.
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Tidal energy has pretty much been universally abandoned as a waste of time.
Scotland produces 7,5 GW from Tidal power [wikipedia.org], and 14 GW from wave power. That is far from being a waste of time, especially given the all-time availability of these renewable energies.
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Tidal energy has pretty much been universally abandoned as a waste of time.
Scotland produces 7,5 GW from Tidal power [wikipedia.org], and 14 GW from wave power. That is far from being a waste of time, especially given the all-time availability of these renewable energies.
You should look past the wiki link, those numbers don't appear to be correct, they look like numbers that are 'projected', inaccurately represented. I could not find any other source to back it up so it is very questionable, other article show only a few hundred MW of prototype capacity.
And you don't 'produce' GW, you produce GWh. You can install 7.5 GW but it might not be generating much or often. This is simply another, much more expensive, intermittent source.
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Neither tidal nor wace power is intermittent.
You should really get a clue about the stuff you are posting since a few days.
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Neither tidal nor wave power is intermittent.
Add this to the list of stupid, ignorant things you stated today. smh.
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I suggest to look up what tides are.
Even in your country you might have a lexicon, dictionary or other means to learn the meaning of a word.
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Why should I? ... ...
In a period over roughly 25 hours we have two low tides and two high tides.
You can predict them millions of years in advance
Actually you can predict them till the end of the universe
Go back to school ...
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http://hydroearth.blogspot.com... [blogspot.com]
http://tidalpower.co.uk/advant... [tidalpower.co.uk]
http://energyeducation.ca/ency... [energyeducation.ca]
https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]
Just one of many.."Intermittent electricity is electrical energy that is not continuously available due to external factors that cannot be controlled, produced by electricity generating sources that vary in their conditions on a fairly short ti
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That is your definition.
But not the definition of a power company.
Tidal power runs completely predictable 20h a day and only stops 2 times during low tide and 2 times during high tide, completely predictable for about 1h each.
You are mixing up (and the articles you link to) "intermittent" with "dispatchable".
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I see what you mean. He just ignores the links you posted that prove your point. That is pretty weird behavior.
Its a classic example of willful ignorance. I quote and link a reference, and he says its 'my definition'. Every interaction with him goes like this.
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Waves are intermittent only in the strictest sense of the word.
Point is you can forecast them and you now how much energy you get from waves the next days or even weeks.
I doubt any energy company would call a tidal plant intermittent, though. It is intermittent in the same sense as a pumped storage plant is. Just consider it a pumped storage plant that produces no energy during the hour of high tide and the hour of low tide.
Pretty simple. And Mr D is just an idiot.
Some days, the surf is great - others, the
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Waves are as intermittent as the wind. I live about 200 meters from the beach, here in Ventura, CA. I can hear the surf when it's up. And it's quite often that it will go a week or two with less than 1m high waves. Now, we do get a good surfing season in (1-3m waves) a few times a year, but it's variable. Waves are as intermittent as the wind - which shouldn't be a surprise because waves are predominantly driven by wind. And I don't think anyone is arguing that wind is NOT intermittent.
As far as tide
Don't worry ! (Score:2)
Yeah, OK, thanks for that... (Score:2)
I know, I know, this is a tired meme, but is it a slow news day? I mean to say, what else would he say? There are very few "First World Countries" that have not bought into the Climate Change problem and urged action on climate change, most notably, of course, the United States of God Given Rights.... It would be more notable if he had said "fuck wind, hydro, and safe modern nuclear, let's build the biggest fucking open-pit coal mine the world has ever seen!"
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Hey, that's Australia mate.
King Emmanuel the Panderer (Score:2, Funny)
He's no centrist, but a royalist that panders to leftist causes.
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The new French President, in 2017, is a royalist? You'd better explain what you mean.
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Probably he means that he is accepting the Duke of Normandie's claim to rule over whole France?
I agree (Score:2)
From an American, to all American scientists working on climate change: PLEASE, go to France.
In fact, I hope everyone deeply concerned about climate change goes immediately to France. I'm sure you'll all get a great deal of important work done...there.
LOL. 1/3 to 1/2 of the emissions comes from china (Score:3)
Yet, idiots are worried about a nation that emits less than 14%, and is dropping fast.
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and it will continue to grow.
I think it's time you update your prejudice. China is doing more to stem emissions than most of the west while still rising out of poverty and increasing its energy demand at the same time. Compared to the USA it's CO2 emissions per person are far lower. Investment in renewables dwarf the USA, as does production of renewable energy sources.
Yet, idiots are worried about a nation that emits less than 14%, and is dropping fast.
Nope, smart people are worrying about idiots who rest on their laurels while the rest of the world is investing in solving the problem. The idiots here are the USA, comf
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and it will continue to grow.
I think it's time you update your prejudice. China is doing more to stem emissions than most of the west while still rising out of poverty and increasing its energy demand at the same time. Compared to the USA it's CO2 emissions per person are far lower. Investment in renewables dwarf the USA, as does production of renewable energy sources.
So much BS here.
1) China's electrify is around 82-85% from coal. Because china is adding 30-50 GW of NEW COAL PLANTS each year, while at the same time, adding less than 30 GW of wind/solar/hydro/nukes each year, they will actually maintain OR increase their emissions from coal by 2030. In fact, right now, they are around 1.1 TW of coal-powered electricity. In 2030, they are projecting to be ~ 1.75 TW. IOW, China will add more coal plants in the next 13 years, than America and EU28 can cut because togethe
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So much BS here.
You got that right. Thank you for you link to data from 5 years ago. Update your prejudice you filthy American.
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And it is obvious that ppl like you do not really care about the environment or CO2, just want to be dicks.
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Riiight (Score:2)
I have actually worked with the French research institute for Solar energy, in fact I am extending a project for them right now. It is a security and burocracy nightmare. Much worse than in Germany. There is also the language barrier, German is easier to learn for English speakers. Nice people though, and they have a lot of state money to blow.
Re:Innovate, but don't profit (Score:5, Insightful)
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The US already leads the world (as in, top 2-3 countries) on public spending per capita, in both education and healthcare. Source of the first, [ed.gov] source on the second [commonwealthfund.org]. Money isn't the problem, it's the state of the system overall, that is the problem.
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Yes, but what if you deduct the cost of football?
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Yes you pay more in taxes and you get more from society like affordable healthcare and education.
And for entrepreneurs, this means healthy and well-educated workers, which is a requirement to be productive.
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