Temperatures above 50C used to be a rarity confined to two or three global hotspots, but the World Meteorological Organization noted that at least 10 countries have reported this level of searing heat in the past year: the US, Mexico, Morocco, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran, Pakistan, India and China.

In Iran, the heat index – a measure that also includes humidity – has come perilously close to 60C, far above the level considered safe for humans.

Heatwaves are now commonplace elsewhere, killing the most vulnerable, worsening inequality and threatening the wellbeing of future generations. Unicef calculates a quarter of the world’s children are already exposed to frequent heatwaves, and this will rise to almost 100% by mid-century.

  • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    You can declare it to be thus and such all you like. I keel telling you, we will run out of what we know exists now within 80 or 90 years, at current usage.

    What do keels have to do with nuclear power? Unless we are talking about submarines?

    You just don’t like it and that’s not the same as it not being true.

    No it isn’t true. For a start you are focusing only on concentrated diposits. There is enough uranium to last humanity in sea water for 100 years, it’s just hard to get at. You’re also completely ignoring U-238, and Thorium. You haven’t even provided a source once. Since apparently sources aren’t necessary I might as well tell you that there is enough uranium in you’re house to power the entire world for a billion years and that you need to stop hoarding it. See I can make up things too.

    I keep telling you, the energy cost of doing it makes it non viable, as any kind of meaningful solution but you keep repeating it all the same.

    What energy cost? Reactors produce energy on average, not remove it. That’s as true for the fast breeder reactors I sourced as it is for conventional nuclear reactors. Do you actually have any evidence for any of this bullshit?

    • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Sources aren’t necessarily for widely accepted facts. You just don’t like what you’re hearing and want to sealion it away.

      Like I said, getting it and refining it is the problem.

      Don’t worry, its clear that you’ve been making things up the whole time. I’m happy to provide sources for serious people, having serious conversations. Not you and your jokes.

      You provided one source that fast breeder reactors were built in the former soviet union. Had you been refuting me saying “no other fuel can ever be used” it might have been a useful link. However, I didn’t. So, it wasn’t useful.

      Reactors don’t produce or create energy. They release it. Are you trying to tell me that you literally can’t understand a scenario where the energy cost of refining and or gathering something could be more than what is eventually released?

      If you think I’m going to waste my life researching links to prove, to your personal satisfaction, everything that you just plain don’t like then you really are deluded.

      • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Sources aren’t necessarily for widely accepted facts. You just don’t like what you’re hearing and want to sealion it away.

        It’s not a widely accepted fact at all. Ask three different scientists and you will get three different anwsers.

        It isn’t sealioning when I provide sources and you don’t.

        Don’t worry, its clear that you’ve been making things up the whole time. I’m happy to provide sources for serious people, having serious conversations. Not you and your jokes.

        Where have I done that? I am the one coming at you with actual sources and reading material. You have no proof. They say every accusation is a confession, and that’s exactly what this is.

        You provided one source that fast breeder reactors were built in the former soviet union. Had you been refuting me saying “no other fuel can ever be used” it might have been a useful link. However, I didn’t. So, it wasn’t useful.

        Actually I did. Twice no less. I gave you the Thorium fuel cycle, where you make your own Uranium from Thorium. I also gave the fuel cycle using U-238, which is a different isotope to the U-235 used by current reactors.

        I am out right now but I can point you to more sources and better explanations of fuel cycles than mine feel free to ask. Honestly though I think you would just ignore them anyway. If you want to find them yourself look at the molten salt reactor experiments, progress made on LFTR reactors, or the third shipping port reactor in the USA. Those are all experimental I will admit, which is why I pointed to the Soviet and Russian reactors first that produce and use Plutonium, as those are less experimental.

        Note I am not talking about fusion reactor technology, as while that’s very promising it isn’t even close to being implemented. If that does become viable at some point then all of this becomes irrelevant anyway, as fusion is likely to be the best available power source at that point.

        Reactors don’t produce or create energy. They release it. Are you trying to tell me that you literally can’t understand a scenario where the energy cost of refining and or gathering something could be more than what is eventually released?

        Okay so maybe my wording is a little off I will give you that. You are correct that energy is neither created nor destroyed.

        • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          They say every accusation is a confession, and that’s exactly what this is.

          Yeah, I stopped reading at the lazy recycled rhetoric.

          As you love sources to much, provide a source showing that our energy consumption can increase perpetually

          Or is that not how things work?