How the hell is that carbon reduction, as claimed in the article's subheadline? Even further down, they say:
> Shale gas is still a "fossil fuel", but it's much cleaner than coal
and again, WTF? So what if it's cleaner the coal? It's still digging up more carbon from where it's buried even deeper and chucking it into the atmosphere.
"The report, written by science writer Matt Ridley, was commissioned by the Global Warming Policy Foundation; Dyson sits on the Board."
Guess what the GWPF believe. That's right, no man-made global warming.
To be fair the article is just stating what Freeman Dyson thinks without saying "this is bullshit". Should they be saying it's bullshit? Do they give counterpoints when they print "Global warming is real" stories?
I honestly don't know. I certainly believe man-made global warming is real.
I skimmed the original report and their argument is that it produces less CO2 per unit of electricity than oil or coal and is cheaper than renewables and nuclear, although the conclusion does concede that improved & cheaper nuclear or solar power would be even better.
I'm particularly amused that they claim Matt Ridley's connection to oil and coal production means he has the opposite of a vested interest, when the whole report is a justification for continuing to invest in fossil fuels over renewables... *sigh*
(And depressed by the eejit who used a dodgy methodology to overestimate the impact of methane emissions from it, nicely playing into the whole 'environmentalist conspiracy' nonsense.)
There aren't many alternatives to digging up carbon at the moment apart from nuclear power, which people seem to be against right now, for reasons that escape me.
Eventually, with a fair number of technical advances, we may be able to get by without either of them. But not this week.
CO2 is being talked about like it's the only thing that matters in some places.
Water cost is also incredibly important and going to get much more so, unless you want your energy to come from very specific countries. Energy generation with a low cost in water would be a good thing to have.
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How the hell is that carbon reduction, as claimed in the article's subheadline? Even further down, they say:
> Shale gas is still a "fossil fuel", but it's much cleaner than coal
and again, WTF? So what if it's cleaner the coal? It's still digging up more carbon from where it's buried even deeper and chucking it into the atmosphere.
The Register really is a POS lately.
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Guess what the GWPF believe. That's right, no man-made global warming.
To be fair the article is just stating what Freeman Dyson thinks without saying "this is bullshit". Should they be saying it's bullshit? Do they give counterpoints when they print "Global warming is real" stories?
I honestly don't know. I certainly believe man-made global warming is real.
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I'm particularly amused that they claim Matt Ridley's connection to oil and coal production means he has the opposite of a vested interest, when the whole report is a justification for continuing to invest in fossil fuels over renewables... *sigh*
(And depressed by the eejit who used a dodgy methodology to overestimate the impact of methane emissions from it, nicely playing into the whole 'environmentalist conspiracy' nonsense.)
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Eventually, with a fair number of technical advances, we may be able to get by without either of them. But not this week.
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You noticed that nuclear plant in Japan, right?
Nuclear power is basically digging up *another* type of dangerous shit and having it and its consequences hang around where they cause harm.
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But if you cross out nuclear, then you have two options:
1) burn hydrocarbons
2) not have enough energy
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Then 2, logically.
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Water cost is also incredibly important and going to get much more so, unless you want your energy to come from very specific countries. Energy generation with a low cost in water would be a good thing to have.