Why are you even on this forum? I live here and you don't.
You left Australia to live in the EU which is run by a bunch of lunatics like Guy Verhofstadt and Ursula Von Leyen. Stay in your lane and butt out of our affairs.
Why are you even on this forum? I live here and you don't.
Nobody made you the judge of who can comment.
he's calling me a redneck because I live in the place this forum is supposed to be aboutrubberman wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:24 pmNobody made you the judge of who can comment.
Talk to the mods if you think there's an issue.
Do you or do you not believe the proponents of starting a nuclear power industry in Australia genuinely want to build nuclear power plants? Simple question.
Allergynong, I'm not a proponent of nuclear, however don't see why this country should be against it given it has vast resources of uranium and thorium currently being mined and exported from this state.Algernon wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:41 pmDo you or do you not believe the proponents of starting a nuclear power industry in Australia genuinely want to build nuclear power plants? Simple question.
Are you as 1. A proponent of nuclear and 2. Someone who hates foreign things, aware that you're not going to Bunnings and getting an off the shelf nuclear reactor? That the expertise to set it up and run it is in the short to medium term, necessarily foreign imported? Possibly from Europe? Or even.... Choyna
Because the numbers don't stack up.abc wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:42 pmAllergynong, I'm not a proponent of nuclear, however don't see why this country should be against it given it has vast resources of uranium and thorium currently being mined and exported from this state.Algernon wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:41 pmDo you or do you not believe the proponents of starting a nuclear power industry in Australia genuinely want to build nuclear power plants? Simple question.
Are you as 1. A proponent of nuclear and 2. Someone who hates foreign things, aware that you're not going to Bunnings and getting an off the shelf nuclear reactor? That the expertise to set it up and run it is in the short to medium term, necessarily foreign imported? Possibly from Europe? Or even.... Choyna
Secondly I don't hate foreign things, where do you get this idea from? What I don't like are leftist extremists foisting their ideology from afar onto this nation to its detriment. You sound like one of those hateful teal drip attack dogs one sees on twitter that go around harassing anyone who doesn't submit to their lunacy.
Tell me why its not feasible in Australia but is in France and China?Nort wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:53 pmBecause the numbers don't stack up.abc wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:42 pmAllergynong, I'm not a proponent of nuclear, however don't see why this country should be against it given it has vast resources of uranium and thorium currently being mined and exported from this state.Algernon wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:41 pm
Do you or do you not believe the proponents of starting a nuclear power industry in Australia genuinely want to build nuclear power plants? Simple question.
Are you as 1. A proponent of nuclear and 2. Someone who hates foreign things, aware that you're not going to Bunnings and getting an off the shelf nuclear reactor? That the expertise to set it up and run it is in the short to medium term, necessarily foreign imported? Possibly from Europe? Or even.... Choyna
Secondly I don't hate foreign things, where do you get this idea from? What I don't like are leftist extremists foisting their ideology from afar onto this nation to its detriment. You sound like one of those hateful teal drip attack dogs one sees on twitter that go around harassing anyone who doesn't submit to their lunacy.
For the millionth time, prove us wrong by showing us a financial case for Australian commercial nuclear power.
You'll be waiting a long time, because they can't. All you'll get is them telling you to prove the opposite. Given that there's been so many links to reports and studies showing that nuclear energy isn't feasible in Australia without massive subsidy, which they then ignore, it's safe to assume that they cannot support their arguments.Nort wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:53 pmBecause the numbers don't stack up.abc wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 1:42 pmAllergynong, I'm not a proponent of nuclear, however don't see why this country should be against it given it has vast resources of uranium and thorium currently being mined and exported from this state.Algernon wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:41 pm
Do you or do you not believe the proponents of starting a nuclear power industry in Australia genuinely want to build nuclear power plants? Simple question.
Are you as 1. A proponent of nuclear and 2. Someone who hates foreign things, aware that you're not going to Bunnings and getting an off the shelf nuclear reactor? That the expertise to set it up and run it is in the short to medium term, necessarily foreign imported? Possibly from Europe? Or even.... Choyna
Secondly I don't hate foreign things, where do you get this idea from? What I don't like are leftist extremists foisting their ideology from afar onto this nation to its detriment. You sound like one of those hateful teal drip attack dogs one sees on twitter that go around harassing anyone who doesn't submit to their lunacy.
For the millionth time, prove us wrong by showing us a financial case for Australian commercial nuclear power.
There are plenty of higher priorities. Why spend time and money on something with zero priority?
1. No commercial entity wants to do so, making it a waste of time.
1. Australia doesn't have an existing commercial nuclear industry. As such the costs involved would be higher because they would include the startup costs. Both China and France already have large existing nuclear industries. Interestingly though, France electricity costs per KWH are similar to those in South Australia, suggesting that a large amount of nuclear isn't necessarily the cheap energy solution it is being spruiked as. In terms of moving to renewables wholesale it wouldn't make financial sense for France because right now they could almost certainly keep the plants supplying 75% of their power running for much cheaper than it would cost to decommission them and build new sources of any kind.
If you don't believe we need to stop increasing the carbon in the atmosphere that's a different discussion we can have but lets keep to one at a time. Which one should we focus on first?Show me the financial case for so called 'renewables' compared to natural gas.
The financial case is make the public pay more via directly and/or via government subsidies.
For sure, if that was the plan, but it isn't. You build so that peak capacity in ideal conditions is above usual requirements, with the overall networks designed such that they can supply power in the worst case weather scenarios.Spurdo wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 5:31 pmI just feel kind of uneasy about running 100% on a form of generation that completely relies on perfect weather to operate efficiently. It also doesn’t help that quite a few people I’ve spoken to about this (not on here) act as if this is intermittency is some kind of advantage and go on about really crazy stuff that makes it seem their aim is more towards complete deindustrialisation and other malthusian “degrowth” ideals
this highlights how absurd your position is... no matter how much capacity you build you cant make the wind blowNort wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 6:15 pmFor sure, if that was the plan, but it isn't. You build so that peak capacity in ideal conditions is above usual requirements, with the overall networks designed such that they can supply power in the worst case weather scenarios.Spurdo wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 5:31 pmI just feel kind of uneasy about running 100% on a form of generation that completely relies on perfect weather to operate efficiently. It also doesn’t help that quite a few people I’ve spoken to about this (not on here) act as if this is intermittency is some kind of advantage and go on about really crazy stuff that makes it seem their aim is more towards complete deindustrialisation and other malthusian “degrowth” ideals
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