For most of my entire life now, ever since I studied physics, with
one of my majors for my ma+phy PhD in the early 1970s, I've been wondering why absolutely nobody seem to realise that what I've been saying might be true.
Well, I guess I wasn't even able to understand the question. What /exactly/ are you proposing? After the last condensation step in the plant, the water temperature is usually between 30C and 40C. There is
not much you can do with that (apart from feeding it back). Or what are you thinking about? And why would this only apply to nuclear plants?
Coal power plants are pretty much the same in that respect.
It's about to reduce the produced water down to normal temps and pressure and use it to heat our homes directly, without taking the
30% efficiency turning electricity route into heat.
Oh, wait, now maybe I get what you mean: Are you crazy Scandinavians
using electricity directly for heating your homes? That's technology we built here sometimes in the 1970ies (and phased it out soon).
Oh, wait, now maybe I get what you mean: Are you crazy Scandinavians
using electricity directly for heating your homes? That's technology
we built here sometimes in the 1970ies (and phased it out soon).
Yes we are. We abandoned coal almost a century ago, and never
phased it out to Russian gas.
Electricity is the most expensive form of energy we have. Back in the 1970ies some people thought that nuclear power would make it so cheap
that it would be feasible to heat homes with it. Never happened.
Hello Bjrn! 22 Mar 22 02:53, Bjrn Felten wrote to Gerrit Kuehn:It's frustrating, nuclear power is by far one of the safest forms of power production, and other than a small amount of nuclear waste, which is fairly easy and safe to store/dispose, it's incredibly clean.
Oh, wait, now maybe I get what you mean: Are you crazy
Scandinavians using electricity directly for heating your homes?
That's technology we built here sometimes in the 1970ies (and
phased it out soon).
Yes we are. We abandoned coal almost a century ago, and neverElectricity is the most expensive form of energy we have. Back in
phased it out to Russian gas.
the 1970ies some people thought that nuclear power would make it
so cheap that it would be feasible to heat homes with it. Never
happened. So yes, we do operate heating plants, usually by burning
waste or biomass, or as combined heat and power plants ("Blockheizkraftwerk" in German). Nuclear energy was never as
cheap as advertised 50 years ago, and meanwhile it is one of the
most poisoned policy issues we ever had. Someone suggesting to use
it for heating homes would be sent to the funny farm (if lucky - otherwise they might be tared and feathered straight away).
Electricity is maybe the most expensive form of energy you have in Germany.
And if you still use coal and Russian gas to heat your
homes, well, maybe you should not mock the crazy Scandinavians for
rather using our excessive amount of electricity of what we are net exporters from our grid, that even Germany is connected to.
We have the cleanest air in the entire Europe.
SWB (solar, wind, battery) power plants are nowadays a much
cheaper form of producing clean and environmentally friendly
electricity than even a Russian gas powered Blockheizkraftwerk can.
If we in Scandinavia could stop wasting the 70% energy now wasted
in our nuke plants and started using it to heat our homes, that would mean that we could export around 30% more of the hydro and SWB
generated electricity we produce to e.g. Germany and other countries connected to our Scandinavian grid.
It's frustrating, nuclear power is by far one of the safest forms of power production, and other than a small amount of nuclear waste,
which is fairly easy and safe to store/dispose, it's incredibly
clean.
But some people with loud voices decided it was scary because they
didn't understand it, so There We Are Then.
"long-distace" distribution for hot water is rather inefficient. You
would have to move the people close to your nuclear power plant (or the other way round) to make that work.
"long-distace" distribution for hot water is rather inefficient. [...]
I get this knee jerk comment a lot. Ever since I first published my suggestion in the early 1980s. Everyone knows that hot water cools down fast when transported long distances, right?
http://eljaco.se/files/Unnur_Margret.pdf
But what you know, based on your intuition, is mostly not based on scientific facts. Unlike all the people that publishes such cock sure statements based on intuition, I am a scientist.
Interesting. I never heard of rock wool.
I'm not into pissing contests, I'm out. However, I get the idea now why nobody ever responds to your bright ideas.
Removing people suffering from the Dunning-Krger effect, from any
kind of discussions, is only positive. I increases the S/N ratio considerably.
Removing people suffering from the Dunning-Krüger effect, from any
kind of discussions, is only positive. I increases the S/N ratio
considerably.
And with one blow, Google is flooded by searches for "Dunning-Kruger"
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