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kosanovskiy , in hip boi reppin that style from when he was 2

What ever happened to those cups? They run out of busienss?

traches , in Nuclear isn't perfect, but it is the best we have right now.

Cost billions and have 10 year lead times?

Lmaydev ,

We’re reaching the point where discussing cost in regard to the energy crisis makes us look like fucking idiots.

Imagine what kids reading the history books are going to think of these discussions.

And 10 years isn’t that long really. If someone said we could use no fossil fuels in energy generation in 10 years time that doesn’t sound long at all.

mormund ,

Cost is a proxy for productivity and resources. So while it is stupid to say that the energy transition is too expensive, shouldn’t we rather invest our productivity and resources into a faster and cheaper solution? Drawing focus away from renewables is dangerous as others have mentioned, because it is too late to reach our goals with nuclear.

suburban_hillbilly ,

shouldn’t we rather invest our productivity and resources into a faster and cheaper solution?

We sure should. Do tell of this this faster, cheaper solution that is also adequate to meet all of our needs.

Aurenkin ,
suburban_hillbilly ,

Really gives me the warm fuzzies when someone looks at changes to physical systems over time then draws a trend line into the future indefinitely without any citations or discussion of plausibility for the part they drew on.

Aurenkin ,

Which part specifically do you take issue with? It’s a bounded timeframe with over 60 references. We’re already 4 years into their predicted trends and on track so it seems like they are into something.

suburban_hillbilly ,

All the charts on page 15. The ones where they extrapolate exponential improvement for a decade while only citing themselves. Their prediction is 15% annually for storage cost improvements in Li-ion batteries which they call ‘conservative’

Our analysis conservatively assumes that battery energy storage capacity costs will continue to decline over the course of the 2020s at an average annual rate of 15% (Figure 3).

Let us check if their souce updated. $139 for 2023? That isn’t a 15% decrease since 2019’s $156, let alone year over year since then, which would be under $90. In spite of last year’s drop that is still more than the 2021 price of $132. I don’t know what ‘on track’ means to you but it must be something different than it means to me.

Aurenkin ,

Thank you, appreciate you showing specifically what your issue is. I agree the timeline for the battery costs hasn’t worked out exactly because of some anomalies over the last year or two but the trend is sharply down again. So it seems like we are on track to achieve a cost of around $90 by 2025 now rather than 2024 at least according to Goldman Sachs.

If your issue is with the exact timeline, I say that’s fair enough, but being off by a year with battery costs isn’t too bad I don’t think. Of course as with all forecasting we’ll have to see exactly how it pans out in reality but it’s a pretty big risk if you want to start building a nuclear reactor now, factoring in construction time plus payback period.

someacnt_ ,

Why do they do this? The battery companies would want compensation, too!

Lmaydev ,

No I don’t think so. Nuclear is super effective and consistent, especially for large setups.

Using renewables while we get our nuclear up makes complete sense. And subsidising nuclear with renewables after that also makes sense.

But the technology to rely entirely on renewables isn’t really there either.

frezik ,

But the technology to rely entirely on renewables isn’t really there either.

Yes, it is.

books.google.com/books/…/No_Miracles_Needed.html?…

This is a book by a professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering that goes into the details. We don’t need nuclear. All the tech is there.

Imgonnatrythis ,

Yes. Should have started more 10years ago, but doesn’t mean don’t start now.

deegeese ,

If you start building a new nuclear plant today, it’ll start generating power around the year 2045, by which time renewables with storage will have gotten even cheaper.

Bet you the public will be on the hook to pay for that white elephant because utility companies privatize profits and socialize losses.

someacnt_ ,

Why do you assume it takes that long? Are you assuming US circumstances?

deegeese ,

That’s how long they actually end up taking to build.

Look up the project history of your local NPP and see how long it was from planning approval to putting power on the grid.

someacnt_ , (edited )

It says it took 60 months on average. I guess from approval, it often took 8 years, so a decade makes sense.

deegeese ,

Which country builds a NPP in only 5 years, China?

someacnt_ ,

South Korea

frezik ,

Except we have better options than we did 10 years ago.

I’d be all for nuclear if we rolled back the clock to 2010 or so. As it stands, solar/wind/storage/hvdc lines can do the job. The situation moved and my opinion moved.

someacnt_ ,

Wdym 10 year lead times?

massive_bereavement , in Napoleon Dynamite is 20 years old now.

That's the movie that someone shown me saying "It's hilarious, funniest shit I've ever seen", then I sown my friends and no one enjoyed it..

Unironically, someone asked me if this was a "home movie".

sharkfucker420 ,
@sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml avatar

Thats genuinely tragic, I’m sorry

Thcdenton ,

F

Num10ck ,

I’ve had that with Crippled Masters.

HereIAm ,

Don’t feel too bad. The movie is a bit infamous for being tricky to recommend. I got it recommended to me and absolutely loved it.

Holyginz ,

When I was young my hair was longer and it poofed out. Add to that glasses and me being awkward and a bunch of people would call me napoleon dynamite. Definitely contributed to me not liking it that much.

ColeSloth ,

You should have embraced the heck out of that.

ColeSloth ,

I rewatched it a few years ago. Didn’t much care for it. But remember when it first came out (I was around 20 at the time) and liked it.

On a side note; I totally owned the Huffy Sledgehammer bike just like the one in the movie. I had gotten it when I was around 13 years old. I got it out of grandma and grandpa’s garage and sold it on Craigslist for $100, when it should have been worth like $25.

Also, yes. I did take it on some pretty sweet jumps.

Pacmanlives ,

Even at the time it was polarizing. And yeah it basically was filmed in the style of a home movie. Movie cost 400,000 to make and made almost 50 million as a fun fact

tiredofsametab ,

I remember seeing it when it made it to DVD at some point and not making it all the way through the movie due to not enjoying it. I never tried to rewatch it after the fact.

Snowclone ,

It’s more a group movie.

goferking0 ,

I laughed slightly at it when it was on TV and it made an aunt thing it would be a good Christmas present

sverit , in Nuclear isn't perfect, but it is the best we have right now.

What? Do you live in the 1950s? Have you heard of nuclear accidents? How many people did wind and solar energy kill so far?

…wikipedia.org/…/List_of_nuclear_power_accidents_…

homesnatch ,

If you want the answer, here’s the data. Solar is slightly safer than Nuclear, Nuclear is slightly safer than Wind. The three are WAY safer than fossil fuels.

ourworldindata.org/…/death-rates-from-energy-prod…

mojofrododojo ,

this is ridiculous. when a windmill cumples or a solar panel gets hit by hail, they don’t poison the region.

Pripyat and Fukushima don’t happen with windmills and solar cells.

Such a patently stupid argument.

Killer_Tree ,

When a car crashes, there’s usually a magnitude less people impacted then when a plane crashes. But you know what? Air travel is still much, much safer than car travel. Large but infrequent incidents can be much less dangerous than smaller but more common incidents in the aggregate.

mojofrododojo ,

This argument would make sense if the aircraft, when they crashed, left radioactive debris with hundreds of years of threat.

Thank fuck we don’t let the nuclear industry make aircraft.

Otherwise your premise disregards the long life of the threat involved.

oo1 ,

They’re just looking at death rates, not the reduced economic activity due to restrictions in usable land, and the transition costs for moving. They also looked at, say, the mortality rate for the thyroid cancer and count the 2-8% death rate only The other 92% suffered nothing I guess. . . /s

But i’ll grant them that coal seems way way worse. Though basing on 2007 study is a time before the IED kicked in and a lot of LCPD plants were running limited hours instead of scrubbers - modern coal has to be cleaner by the directive - unfortunately the article is paywalled so hard to tell what their sample was based on time-wise and tech-wise.

Hydro estimate is interesting because it shows the impact of the one off major catastrophic event.

cqst ,
mojofrododojo ,

lolol

nomous ,

Does this look poisoned to you?

Yeah it looks bombed-out as fuck to anything more complicated than plant-life. I’m not saying we shouldn’t be pursuing nuclear energy, just that this argument feels very poorly constructed and intentionally misleading.

knowablemagazine.org/…/scientists-cant-agree-abou…

cqst ,

It having an inconclusive effect on wildlife, but wildlife clearly being able to survive in the region, doesn’t really detract from what I originally thought.

From the article you linked:

“No matter what the consequences of lingering radiation might be, there were massive benefits to people leaving.”

nomous ,

Yeah I think we both agree that nuclear is worth pursuing, it’s not 100% safe but nothing is; even windmills catch fire or spin apart. It’s far safer than fossil fuels.

nomous ,
partizan ,

Not just plants, wolfs and other animals are quite frequent there also and from studies they have less than 2% birth defects…

That just shows us, that how huge is the nuclear scare propaganda…

kungen ,

Yep, I’m also afraid of taking airplanes because a handful of them have crashed. But per TWh produced, nuclear is statistically the safest method… just like that it’s statistically safer to fly across the country than to drive there, but I’m too scared for that :/

kaffiene , in Nuclear isn't perfect, but it is the best we have right now.

Nah renewables are the best we’ve got

match , in Mood
@match@pawb.social avatar

goonin’ time

Captain_Baka , in Nuclear isn't perfect, but it is the best we have right now.

“Safe”. Yeah. Let’s talk about Chernobyl, Three Mile Island and Fukushima. All that was kinda not so safe, don’t you think?

BachenBenno ,

Impossible with modern reactors, technologyimproved a lot since then.

Captain_Baka ,

You mean the modern reactors who are still not in a commercial productive state? But even if these would be NOW ready to actually be available it’s still so that there are a vast overwhelming majority of the old reactors which are not as safe as the meme was insinuating.

elfahor ,

All of those were caused by human mistake. But this does not mean that they must be discarded. Because human mistake happens. If it is with a solar panel, it’s inconsequential. Not with a nuclear reactor. So yes, it is an issue to consider, but in truth all it means is that we have to be VERY careful

RippleEffect ,

I work with people Human mistakes are inevitable

Captain_Baka ,

If it is so that a human mistake can cause a big number of casualties and massive environmental damage it is far from safe, even if you are very careful.

Godnroc ,

Comparatively speaking, it’s safer than coal mining. Wikipedia Nuclear Accidents by Death Toll

Mining Accidents

Diplomjodler3 ,

This is just so fucking dumb. Yeah coal sucks. We should get rid of coal as quickly as possible. But saying nuclear is safer than coal while ignoring all other forms of energy that are orders of magnitude safer is as disingenuous as it gets.

winterayars ,

Nuclear power is actually safer than almost everything, period. Even with the major accidents. Yes, even renewables and other “green” energy.

See this comment’s chart, for example: lemmy.ml/comment/11910773

Captain_Baka ,

200 years vs. 70 years. IDK if this is comparable. Also it is so that with nuclear accidents theres a lot of additional environmental damage, not just the human casualties.

Not defending coal mining here, coal is no good energy source by all means.

EldritchFeminity ,

Coal is often radioactive when it comes out of the ground, and thanks to poor regulations, is often radioactive when it goes into the powerplant, leading to radioactive particles coming out of the smokestacks and landing anywhere downwind of the plants.

More people have died from radiation poisoning from coal than from all of the nuclear accidents combined. But, as you said, 200 years vs. 70 years. But, also, nuclear is much more heavily regulated than coal in this regard due to the severity of those accidents. The risk of a dangerous nuclear power plant is nowhere near as large as commonly believed. It doesn’t take long to find longlasting environmental disasters due to fossil fuels, from oil spills to powerplant disasters. They’re used so heavily that it’s just so much more likely to occur and occur more often.

All this to say that fossil fuels suck all around and we should be looking at all forms of replacement for them, nuclear being just one option we should be pursuing alongside all the others.

grue ,

Still less radiation than coal plants release in normal operation.

Thorry84 , (edited )

Nuclear is by far the safest form of energy production. Even with the big accidents, the impact hasn’t been that big.

Chernobyl was by far the biggest, but that was 40 years ago, in a poorly designed plant, with bad procedures and a chain of human errors. We’ve learned so much from that accident and that type of accident couldn’t even have happened in the plants we had at the time in the west. Actually if the engineers that saw the issue could contact the control room right away, there would not have been any issue. In 1984 that was a problem, in 2024 not so much, we have more communication tools than ever. The impact of Chernobyl was also terrible, but not as bad as feared back in the time. In contrast to the TV series, not a lot of people died in the accident. With 30 deaths directly and another 30 over time. Total impact on health is hard to say and we’ve obviously have had to do a lot to prevent a bigger impact, but the number is in the thousands for total people with health effects. Even the firefighters sent in to fix stuff didn’t die, with most of them living full lives with no health effects. And what people might not know, the Chernobyl plant has had a lot of people working there and producing power for decades after the disaster. It’s far from the nuclear wasteland people imagine.

Fukushima was pretty bad, but the impact on human life and health has been pretty much nonexistent. The circumstances leading up to the disaster were also very unique. A huge earthquake followed by a big tsunami, combined with a design flaw in the backup power system, combined with human error. I still to this day don’t understand how this lead to facilities being closed in Germany, where big earthquakes don’t happen and there is hardly any coast let alone tsunamis. It’s a knee jerk reaction that makes no sense. Studies have indicated the forced relocation of the people living near there has been a bigger impact on people’s health than anything the power plant did.

Compare this to things we consider to be totally normal. Like driving a car, which kills more people in a week than ever had any negative impacts from nuclear power.

Or say solar is a far more safe form of power, even though yearly hundreds of people die because of accidents related to solar installations. Or for example hydroplants, where accidents can also cause a huge death toll and more accidents happen.

And this is even with the non valid comparison to the current forms of energy where we know it’s a big issue. But because the alternative isn’t perfect, we don’t change over.

robocall , in Napoleon Dynamite is 20 years old now.
@robocall@lemmy.world avatar

What was that movie about? All I remember is there was no swearing

Iheartcheese ,
@Iheartcheese@lemmy.world avatar

He was somebody that was rising the ranks of competitive grocery bagging but then he broke his hand

Alenalda ,

No that was employee of the month. Hes thinking of the one with Justin Long as a side character waiting tables during the day and partying at night.

Qkall ,
@Qkall@lemmy.ml avatar

Seemed more a slice of life type of movie.

HereIAm ,

There is a bit of hero’s journey narrative in it. A loser with nothing goes on a quest to win the class presidency or whatever. Even rides towards the sun set on a white horse with the girl at the end if I recall correctly.

Rubisco ,

Tater tots

Foggyfroggy ,

It’s kinda weird and boring and the characters are quirky enough to be funny but also relatable in a vaguely nostalgic, innocence of mid teens kinda way. No one is good or bad and the climax is Napoleon dancing in front of the whole school so his friend wins the student council vote. And then everyone clapped.

It’s like the Big Lebowski, where the absurdity gets funnier with each watch. Definitely fun to rewatch with friends when you see the jokes coming.

Eat the food, Tina

robocall ,
@robocall@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks for the refresher. I think I recall Pedro running for class president or something. I’d totally rewatch it with friends if I had any.

Asafum ,

Everyone has “that movie” they’re kind of ashamed to admit they’ve never watched. The Big Lebowski is that movie for me. I know I really need to make time for it one of these centuries…

zerotozero ,

The dude abides

neo ,

A master of Karate
and friendship
for everyone

Marin_Rider ,

its actually quite a wholesome movie now I think about it

Alteon , in Mood

Boredom breeds innovation. It’s okay to be bored. In fact, I really wish our society would get “legitimately” bored more often.

Dorkyd68 , in Napoleon Dynamite is 20 years old now.

Damn. Sadness setting in, time passing by while I’m standing still, age progessing too fast to notice. Am old now, wut do?

jimmydoreisalefty , in I wish this wasn't a real thing
@jimmydoreisalefty@lemmy.world avatar

Keep fighting the good fight, OP!

ericbomb OP ,

There’s always next weeks call deflection meeting for me to try again!

I haven’t been uninvited from it yet! But yeah gotta love these “problem solving” meetings from management, where they don’t actually want to give any resources or allow any policy changes to come from them.

eezeebee ,
@eezeebee@lemmy.ca avatar

They want you to feel heard, and then feel personally responsible for the incessant call volume.

synae , in Napoleon Dynamite is 20 years old now.
@synae@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I don’t care for this movie, even though pretty much everyone else I know loves it

Gosh pit, though, is hilarious

moncharleskey ,

I’m with you on both counts.

ignotum , in Mood
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allywilson ,
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asbestos ,
@asbestos@lemmy.world avatar

404media maybe?

umbrella ,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

the misinformation combo would be complete with a zucc app and youtube

jballs ,
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  1. Lemmy - sort by top 12 hours
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pelespirit ,
@pelespirit@sh.itjust.works avatar

Can I suggest sorting by new for your favorite communities? There are a lot of downvoters that have gamed the system.

Potatos_are_not_friends ,

If you forget about Lemmy, straight to jail. No question.

HotsauceHurricane ,

I’m in this comment And I’m fine with it.

kambusha , in I wish this wasn't a real thing
Roopappy ,

M as in Mancy?

Sadrockman , in Project management
@Sadrockman@sh.itjust.works avatar

Talking to my bosses at work be like…

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