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| Enviromental Issues Discuss Environmental Issues here. |
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McGuire also generates about 1/6 of the electricity used in both North and South Carolina. ![]() Actually McGuire is on a 290 acre campus, which includes Duke Energy administrative offices, an “EnergyExplorium”, a portion of the dam, two lakes making up about 60 acres, and about 70 acres of wooded land. So about ½ of the lot is available for wildlife habitat. " GIS Link" Parcel ID#: 00119103 GIS ID#: 00119103 Owner Name: DUKE POWER CO AND % TAX DEPT - PB05B Last edited by Southern Man : 06-04-2008 at 08:01 PM. |
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I don't necessarily think there's some hidden agenda behind them digging their heels. I just think it's ignorance of Nuclear power. They are afraid of it because they think it's dangerous and they have some bizarre ideas about storage problems.
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http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electri...s/sept04nc.xls
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Set your destination with your heart, get there with your mind. "The wisest men follow their own direction." - Euripides |
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I also assumed LPG from Natural Gas resources. Apologies if this has already been discussed at length, i have to fly and don't have time to read the dozen or so pages ![]() |
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That’s a heck of a lot more than solar could ever produce, unless we roofed over every parking lot with PV cells. (If the damn things were affordable, then I would enthusiastically support that.) |
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1. Methane (natural gas) is under pressure in the ground, and therefore leaks out into the atmosphere. The more pressure, the more will leak. 2. Methane is 20 times more damaging as a “greenhouse gas” that the CO2 produced when it is burned. Natural gas is therefore a natural pollutant. 3. Reduce the gas pressure by drilling and extracting, therefore less “natural pollutant” will vent to the atmosphere. Distribute the gas to be used as a fuel, converting it to a much less harmful CO2. 4. Along with the environmental and economic benefits, lives and treasure may also be saved. It is now widely speculated that “Bermuda Triangle” type events are caused by methane eruptions. If gas pressures are reduced the eruptions should be less frequent. |
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Solar's current effiecency is about 15%, or 200 W/m2 (watts per meter squared), those two powerplants at McGuire produce 2,300 MW (24/7/365). So for a solar field to hold the same amount of power it would need to be 11,040 MW (2300*24/5, because the Nuclear plant runs 24 hours a day and the solar would run 5 hours a day). 200W/m2 = 200 MW/km2, so we get 55.2 km2, or 13,800 acres, for those that can't picture how big this is, it is about a square chunck of land 4.5 miles on each side of the square. (in AZ, were you average 6.5 hours, you'd only need 10,600 acres, freeing up over 3,000 acres just based on location). Just to show where I got the hours of total sun a day, Cape Hatteras (5.31), Greensboro (4.71), Charleston (5.06), so I averaged 5 for the area. And these are yearly averages, not just summer. But what you are missing is the growth that solar has been experiencing. Effeciency up 600% in 40 years, cost down 96% in 40 years, that comes out to averageing 7.5% drop in price each year, with a 5% increase in efficency each year, No other power source can come close to that growth. Meaning that if it keeps to it's 40 year average, than in 10 years, it will be about 63% more efficent (meaning that the land needed would be cut by over 5,300 acres) and the cost would be less than 1/2 (about 46%) of what it is now.
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Set your destination with your heart, get there with your mind. "The wisest men follow their own direction." - Euripides |
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That works great in AZ where land is useless, but here in NC that would displace wildlife or farmland. Plus, it provides no electricity for most of the 24 hour day. What would a solar farm that size cost anyway?
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