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- Xref: sparky sci.space:19026 talk.politics.space:1687
- Newsgroups: sci.space,talk.politics.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!rpi!batcomputer!cornell!rochester!dietz
- From: dietz@cs.rochester.edu (Paul Dietz)
- Subject: Re: Justification for the Space Program
- Message-ID: <1993Jan8.190043.24897@cs.rochester.edu>
- Organization: University of Rochester
- References: <jfelder-070193115431@latvia.lerc.nasa.gov> <1993Jan7.205156.13655@cs.rochester.edu> <jfelder-080193105134@latvia.lerc.nasa.gov>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1993 19:00:43 GMT
- Lines: 123
-
- In article <jfelder-080193105134@latvia.lerc.nasa.gov> jfelder@lerc.nasa.gov (James L. Felder) writes:
-
- > I see societal problems even bigger than those facing the space
- > program in siting breeder reactors and the attendent fuel reprocessing
- > facilities and waste disposal sites. The Japanese government is
- > already beginning to face severe pressure to slow or halt their
- > breeder program.
-
- Ultimately, the reason for this is that breeders are not now competitive.
- This is also a significant reason why Britain and Germany are stopping
- breeder development. Fortunately, they aren't needed now.
-
- The Japanese have chosen a breeder cycle that uses large amounts of
- plutonium. Alternate cycles (for example, denatured U-Th) would
- produce 2 orders of magnitude less plutonium, and fuel shipments would
- be of denatured U-233 with no plutonium, which cannot be used in bombs
- without enrichment. These cycles are more proliferation resistant,
- and are compatible with reactors evolved from current commercial
- designs, rather than an economy with mostly fast reactors.
-
-
- > A further problem I
- > see is that all the energy conversion to useable form (electricity) occurs
- > within the biosphere. I do not have a feel for how much thermal energy can
- > be released into the biosphere before it contributes a significant amount
- > directly to global warming (as opposed to CO2's indirect contribution
- > through increased solar absorbtion).
-
- I posted a number on that. Today, direct thermal pollution is
- globally insignificant, compared to insolation, or even to the heat
- flux from increased greenhouse gases or that caused by human
- modification of earth's albedo. Primary energy use could be pushed up
- a couple of orders of magnitude without it becoming unmanagable.
-
-
- >> is very hard to replace with some substitute. Fossil fuels are
- >> an example -- there is no reason why we should not be able
- >> to survive indefinitely without them, if some other source of
- >> energy is available.
-
- > And no matter what we will have to learn to do without them. And will
- > probably be cursed by future generations for burning such a useful
- > commodity simply to heat our homes.
-
- Just like we curse the shortage of whale oil? Hardly -- they will
- view fossil fuel use as a curious historical anomaly, and pity
- us for being (so) relatively poor and ignorant that we could not
- use cleaner alternatives.
-
-
- >> In the short term, however, there is no reason why resource use
- >> on earth cannot be increased. There is no reason why we could
- >> not supply several times the current population with several times
- >> the current US per capita energy consumption indefinitely.
-
- > Yes, but at what cost to the environment?
-
- Nuclear or solar have much lower impacts on the environment than
- current energy sources, so the cost would be lower than what we are
- already paying.
-
-
- > No, to unreliable. Terrestrial solar energy has a problem because of
- > intermittent illumination. Either a large storage capacity must be
- > included in the system, or another source must come on-line at night and
- > during periods of cloud cover. The large required land area makes solar
- > problematic for large portion of the world. Plus places like Cleveland
- > goes days or weeks with hardly a glimpse of the sun.
-
- Surely, means to move energy in both time and space would be needed.
- There are serious economic limits on this today, but there is no
- reason to think these limits cannot be extended.
-
- As for land area: current world energy use is only 1/10,000 of the
- sunlight hitting earth's surface. Restricting ourselves to
- continents, and assuming a 20% efficieny, we end up using a couple of
- percent of the land area of the planet.
-
-
- > It might be a misconception on my part based on media coverage, but it
- > seems that nuclear plants have frequent shut downs for one reason or
- > another, often times for days or weeks. A system that relied on a majority
- > of its energy from nuclear power would have to have a significant extra
- > capacity included, or a more reliable source ready to come on line at a
- > moments notice.
-
- This is a misconception; nuclear plants are usually quite reliable,
- and can be made more reliable (and will be more reliable, if we have
- experience operating tens of thousands of them). In a world with more
- nuclear reactors, one could even tolerate less reliability, as long as
- the failures are independent (and not polluting) and power can be
- wheeled.
-
-
- > Without a track record, though, nothing can be said for powersats, so this
- > again probably isn't a compeling argument. It at least doesn't share the
- > intermittent illumination problem of land based solar, plus the power
- > source never goes off-line :-).
-
- Powersats as usually described can't hack it as the primary energy
- source for earth, since there's not enough room in GEO. They'd have
- to be farther away. That drives up cost. I am also not convinced the
- orbital debris problem would be managable -- there'd be tens of
- thousands of square kilometers of collectors that would be out there
- to be hit and breed more debris fragments. Construction and
- maintenance of the powersats would involve billions of tons of
- material -- surely some would escape into orbit?
-
-
- > The price of raw materials in the space program is trivial, but that isn't
- > my point. It is the price of raw materials and energy to the entire
- > economy that is the problem. I think that an increasing drag on the ecomomy
- > will be felt as these prices go up.
-
- I still don't buy it. Raw materials prices a small input to the
- economy. The biggest raw material input is energy, but I've argued
- that's not going to get scarce. The high dollar volume non-fuel
- minerals will not get scarce either (iron and aluminum, for example),
- or can be largely substituted for. I don't see just what is going to
- cause the drag.
-
- Paul F. Dietz
- dietz@cs.rochester.edu
-