There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

memes

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Sadrockman , in It's like the Bacon game, but funnier
@Sadrockman@sh.itjust.works avatar

Life ain’t about how hard you can get hit. Its about how hard you can get hit,and keep getting back up you piece of shit.

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

stop shilling for industry, bootlicker

bremen15 ,

Actually, the industry is fully investing in wind and solar and wouldn’t touch nuclear with a long pole, because excessively expensive.

LANIK2000 ,

In case of Germany, they’d quite literally fire up coal over nuclear. Like holy shit…

friendlymessage ,
LANIK2000 , (edited )

Looks like I’m a bit behind on the latest news, I mean in 2015 it (basically) alone was still half of their energy production. That’s quite the explosion, too bad it’s largely wind power and…biomass??? Right it’s “renewable©® (in theory)”, not “sustainable right now or benefitial to the current situation”. Same to the natural gass growth, guess it’s better than coal, but come on… And to my original point, in your graph we can see a negative corelation between coal+lignite over nuclear at a few ranges (when they shut down nuclear over fucking coal), roughly starting after 2005. Also wow, they actually fucking killed nuclear last year… JESUS…

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/fda7c52f-7fc0-46d2-b8f1-05b882fc4fa8.jpeg

friendlymessage ,

Solar is ahead of biomass and while solar and wind is growing, biomass is not. You’re also misreading the graph. Nuclear was never such a huge part of Germany’s energy production and killing nuclear was a 25 year long process, Germany let most of the plants run and just did not build new ones https://www.cleanenergywire.org/sites/default/files/styles/paragraph_text_image/public/paragraphs/images/fig2-gross-power-production-germany-1990-2023.png?itok=cn90szXe

While I agree that getting rid of coal first would have been the better strategy, I don’t get this nuclear power fetish and constant bashing of Germany on this while most countries are doing worse than Germany. Nuclear power is extremely expensive, we have as of now no storage solution for nuclear waste in Germany and Germany has no source of nuclear material itself. There are quite a few drawbacks

ShortN0te ,

Just want to throw in this link. energy-charts.info/?l=en&c=DE

Very detailed info on Energy and power usage in Germany

LANIK2000 , (edited )

Nothing generates more than nuclear (like it’s not even comparable), it has basically zero emissions and there are countries like Finland who’ll happily let you burry it there, tho you ofc don’t need to go that far away. You don’t need to dispose it nearly as often as coal ash, so it being in another country ain’t really that big of a deal.

Ofc solar is also a great option, because of the versatility, sadly German seems to really fucking love wind.

LANIK2000 ,

I didn’t say nuclear was ever big in Germany. The whole point is about Germany being against it. If you mean the part where I said it was half their energy production, I meant coal+lignite.

uis ,

Coal, gas and oil could be zero instead of nuclear.

cammoblammo ,

In Australia the coal and gas industries appear to be pushing nuclear quite hard, mainly because they distract from the renewable options preferred by the market. They know that while we’re arguing over literally every other power source, they can just keep burning holes in the ground.

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

im fact they’re closing one of the last scaled down power plant simulator, where scientists and students could have a hands down experience in learning about It

im not german, but its so sad, the thing was even made of glass so you could literally see the process

Kyle’s video

LANIK2000 ,

Oh thank god… Apparently they aren’t destroying it YET. There is hope. Personally, I’d feel a lot safer if it went into more nuclear loving hands, like the French or Czech, actually, most of Germany’s neighbors would do.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9e7ecb2a-5dd8-477e-a30d-2be558efdb7a.jpeg

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

hell yeah, sometimes problems just need a bit of internet exposure

Wilzax ,

They solve different problems. Nuclear is cheaper than the batteries needed to make solar/wind reliable.

kaffiene ,

Overproduction is cheaper than batteries

Wilzax ,

Overproduction doesn’t cover when large swaths of land have low wind speeds at night

kaffiene ,

Wind is always blowing somewhere

MehBlah ,

Stop projecting your fetish on to us.

BonesOfTheMoon , in Mood

I gave up conventional social media recently, and I do paid surveys instead. I made 225 dollars in four weeks.

Brickhead92 ,

What do you do paid surveys on?

I only do google rewards, but that’s generally how I pay for any new apps I want.

BonesOfTheMoon ,

My phone. HeyPiggy, Five Surveys, and Qmee apps are the best. I’ve made about 5K in three years, this is Qmee alone. It’s a grind but I’ve really made lots of cash. I went through my Amazon account one day and discovered I’ve bought 117 items with my survey cash.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4aace176-00b5-43f1-8814-fb17ab80286e.png

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy ,

If you work out your hours invested into this are you below or above minimum wage?

BonesOfTheMoon ,

Well below, but it’s something to do besides scrolling.

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy ,

You should channel this energy into a business or something

BonesOfTheMoon ,

I have two jobs already. I’m just doing this while I work. It’s kind of a long story.

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Wait, where did you find this job?

BonesOfTheMoon ,

Not a job, paid survey apps. HeyPiggy, Five Surveys, Qmee are the best ones.

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

I see. Thanks!

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 :/

match , in Nuclear isn't perfect, but it is the best we have right now.
@match@pawb.social avatar

Did we ever figure out toxic waste disposal?

mojofrododojo ,

we tried to, then the state we were gonna stick it all in said "eh maybe we don’t want to the country’s home for spent fuel, considering how it will stay hot for tens of thousands of years.

so our solution was to just… ignore it. store it in cooling pools at every plant spread all over the country. because hundreds of different waste holding ponds are SURE to be better than the thing we were planning lol.

glitchdx ,

solved for quite some time. it gets mixed with concrete and stuck in a bigger concrete container called a “dry cask”.

Link, because I believe in “outsourcing critical thinking”.

youtu.be/lhHHbgIy9jU?si=Qc0-Z6rVcmS3x78R

kaffiene ,

Has this been demonstrated to last as long as the waste is radioactive?

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

it literally lasts forever, forever as in humankind existence on the planet

kaffiene ,

“demonstrated”

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

awesome source, i love Kyle’s videos, hes a big nerd and explain things so easily that a neanderthal could understand

MeatPilot , in hip boi reppin that style from when he was 2
@MeatPilot@lemmy.world avatar

Good, nothing is exclusive because of when you were born.

no_comment OP ,
Sam_Bass , in Mood

Then its timeto put down the phone/laptop/tablet, get up off your butt and move around. Maybe even do something while youre up

BlastboomStrice OP ,
@BlastboomStrice@mander.xyz avatar

Lol, people here do a lot of assumptions. I typically do like ~9k steps each day, I spent a lot of time outside, go to gym etc. but 1)having hard tasks to do and 2)spending a lot of time alone (alone meaning without interacting face to face with real friends) for various reasons contributes to this.

Sam_Bass ,

Yep.

Potatos_are_not_friends ,

Eww gross but moving around can lead to death I watched a YouTube video on that. I’m not falling for that

Sam_Bass ,

Heres a little known secret: breathing leads to death. So stop it if you want to live forever

PM_ME_YOUR_ZOD_RUNES , in Just Want to Improve my Workplace

Am I the only one who immediately saw the World of Tanks logo?

Akasazh ,
@Akasazh@feddit.nl avatar

No

Exusia OP ,
@Exusia@lemmy.world avatar

Shhh I’m pretending it’s not there so people gib updoots

hswolf ,
@hswolf@lemmy.world avatar

usually, western languages have a set flow of reading, from left to right, top to bottom

seeing as there is text in the meme, and the logo is literally at the starting point of a conventional western text…

no, I don’t think so

10_0 , in Also "parasite".

Someone I strive to be, more money for the money pit, more food for the fridge, more education for my kids, more opportunities for the family, more money for charity

10_0 , in Hey Elon, wanna hear a joke?

Normalise context

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar
10_0 , in The British be like

That’ll never happen

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

I’m pro nuke energy but to pretend there are no downsides is what got us into the climate mess we are in in the first place.

Cost, being a major drawback, space being another. And of course while they almost never fail, they do occasionally, and will again. And those failures are utterly catastrophic, and it’d hard to convince a community to welcome a nuclear plant, and if the community doesn’t want it then it can’t or shouldn’t be forced onto them.

They also represent tactical strike sites in time of combat engagement. Big red X for a missile.

There are also significant environmental concerns, as we really have no good way to dispose of nuclear waste in a safe or efficient manner at this time.

It’s likely that nuclear based energy is the future, but you need to discuss the bad with the good here or we are just going to end up at square one again. There are long term ramifications.

Kit ,

Worth noting that all modern failures have been GE models or ancient Westinghouse models. Modern nuclear reactors built by Westinghouse are virtually immune from meltdown, and Westinghouse is the lead player in new builds. Nuclear safety has come miles since the like of Fukushima, and especially 3 Mile Island. I’d feel perfectly safe living near a new Westinghouse nuclear plant.

DrDominate ,
@DrDominate@lemmy.world avatar

I’d rather a nuclear plant as my neighbor rather than a coal or natural gas one.

portalsentinel ,

One has a one in a million chance to kill you. The other has a 100 in 100 chance to cause you severe health issues in the longrun.

spirinolas ,

Those health issues while being a problem are in no danger of killing humanity. Wether they affect hundreds, thousands, even millions.

ONE really bad nuclear disaster can make a whole continent uninhabitable.

The risks are on totally different magnitudes.

spirinolas ,

There’s always a way to fail. Always.

There are no unsinkable ships. No matter how safe the Titanic is, keep enough of them on the sea and one will eventually sink the way least people expected. If life on Earth depends on a Titanic never sinking…we’re fucked eventually.

Life on Earth depends on no more than a couple on nuclear plants blowing up catastrophically.

someacnt_ ,

Wdym space with nuclear energy?

uis ,

Nuke energy! Actually, don’t. We need it.

They also represent tactical strike sites in time of combat engagement. Big red X for a missile.

Practice shows that in land wars instead of big X it is just burden for both sides. I’m talking Putin-Ukraine war.

LordSinguloth ,

That’s a single single war, and not indicative, power supply remains and always has been a high priority target.

Just cause putin and Kiev avoid chernobyl isn’t really evidence to the contrary

uis ,

power supply remains and always has been a high priority target.

I’m not denying this. But mostly power distribution instead of power generation was targeted.

spirinolas ,

I agree with everything you say. It really is spot on. What I don’t understand is how, with your awareness, do you still consider yourself pro-nuclear. Honest question, I really am curious.

LordSinguloth ,

This is a shocker for many on social media but you can accept that something you want is not perfect but still want it, or see good in a bad person, but still not want them on the throne.

Just because I can be realistic about it’s pros and cons instead of blindly parroting that I have been told to parrot doesn’t mean I can’t be pro nuclear.

Other power sources have more problems. And I say just launch the waste into space and eventually the reactors will just be out of the stratosphere and it won’t matter if it explodes.

But you got to walk before you can run.

I just dislike when people pretend there are no downside to nuke, EV, wind, etc, because if they make one little comment on a con suddenly they’re some anti enviro Trump sucker and get dogpiled

spirinolas , (edited )

There’s a difference in something being not perfect and being fundamentally flawed. My confusion is because you perfectly verbalized why I think it’s flawed.

I could understand being in favor of using nuclear temporarily until renewables are more reliable. I don’t agree but I understand the thought process. It’s a calculated risk, an acceptable gamble. But being aware of all the issues with nuclear and still be in favor of it long term, in my opinion, doesn’t make sense.

Mind you, I’m not trying to attack you, I’m genuinely intrigued and curious.

thegreenguy , in Mood
@thegreenguy@sopuli.xyz avatar

Lemmy doom scrolling!

grrgyle ,

Lemmy hopescrolling!!

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

There are downsides to nuclear these days. Incredibly high cost with a massive delay before they’re functioning. Solar + wind + pumped hydro + district heating is where it’s at in 2024.

ByteJunk ,
@ByteJunk@lemmy.world avatar

This.

Also, tie together more countries’ power grids to even out production and demand of renewables, and reduce the need for other backup sources.

For a fraction of the cost of nuclear, increase the storage capacity as well. We’ve had days where the price per MWh was negative in many hours, because of excess production.

The barriers to carbon free energy aren’t technical, they’re purely political.

olafurp ,

Yeah, back in 2010 and before nuclear was the way to go but with the incredible advancements in solar and wind it’s no longer the best option.

Still shame on Germany for decommissioning nuclear reactors and deciding to build Nordstream 2 and burn coal as a replacement.

cqst ,

with the incredible advancements in solar and wind it’s no longer the best option.

I haven’t heard of any advancement that makes solar generate energy when the sun doesn’t shine and wind generate energy when the wind isn’t blowing.

oo1 ,

it has got cheaper, but it has to get cheap enough that you can buy enough batteries with the difference. I’m not sure it has become that cheap. Maybe these sodium battery things will get developed.

PeriodicallyPedantic ,

You haven’t heard of any advancements in energy storage at all?

Not that we need them, the best energy storage is old AF and excellent

kaffiene ,

The wind is always blowing somewhere and overproduction is cheaper than batteries

cqst ,

You can’t overproduce electricity. You have to match the load.

kaffiene ,

I know. There are many solutions to this

fellowmortal ,

No, there is pumped storage. Honestly, despite the plethora of start-ups claiming to have a solution (sodium batteries, molten-salt, etc) The only really proven way to store electricity for later is pumped storage, but that relies on geography (hills) which not everyone has. Batteries are great for phones, and cars but they simply don’t scale to countries.

derGottesknecht ,

California is doing pretty good with their battery storage. And if all the electric car batteries get old we can use them as stationary grid storage.

fellowmortal , (edited )

That is actually very impressive. Thanks! I remain a bit skeptical as its only 1/5th of what they need and it’s only one region of one (rich) country. Still, 10GW of lithium battery would be one hell of a fire ;-)

kaffiene ,

South Australia implemented a 100mw battery for their power system in 2016

steuls ,

Overproduction is how you get blackouts from damaging the grid

uis ,

Lol, just dump energy into resistors. Or desync two generators.

kaffiene ,

Or convert excess to hydrogen and provide resilience, or have arrangements for industry to consume the excess. Or ramp down your generation at those times. Or shift excess to neighbouring grids.

fellowmortal ,

This is wrong. Right now, europe is experiencing high pressure and doesn’t have any wind. Check this out its map that shows you how much wind is being produced right now! Can you provide a source that says " the wind is always blowing somewhere" or is it just a platitude?

partizan ,

You probably also didnt heard about Thorium based molten salt reactors, they are much safer than conventional nuclear, also cheaper, and you can have a 50MW installation in space not much larger than a shipping container. A 50MW solar installation is close to 1km2 and thats without any storage included. It even can be modified to run on spent fuel of conventional nuclear power plants.

fellowmortal , (edited )

Please understand that negative prices are the market for electricity breaking down! That is not a good thing. It should mean that if you have solar panels on your roof you have to pay to participate in the national grid because you are dumping energy into the grid when it can’t use it, but special rules have been made for renewable plants. Literally, imagine a contract-to-supply for wind or solar…

uis ,

You don’t need to tie grids to transfer energy between them.

bountygiver ,

Still not a reason to not build them, the entire point is for nuclear to handle the load when solar/wind can’t provide due to weather. Other renewables will still be producing the bulk of the power we need, but at night nuclear will be handling any demand spikes, each of them would greatly reduce the number of batteries required to satisfy the demand. They can stay until our solar output is so high we can just start electrolyzing water into hydrogen as energy storage.

PeriodicallyPedantic ,

That’s why they mentioned “pumped hydro

JustEnoughDucks ,
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

Though pumped hydro is sometimes opposed by environmental groups because it does absolutely decimate local environments.

I have high hopes for sodium batteries. The ones that have been released on the market are simply perfect (if scaled up) for local grid storage in countries with a lot of space and will hopefully get better energy density in line with Lithium Iron Phosphate with time.

Salt batteries have been the cold fusion of battery tech for like 10 years, but now it is finally coming to fruition. I hope to install a solar installation with salt batteries in 5 years or so, myself.

olafurp ,

If you’re suggesting using Nuclear as a peaker plant or to turn it off and on whenever wind/solar is not up for it then I’m sorry to say that it’s not viable. Nuclear generators don’t handle well being turned off and on.

partizan , (edited )

You can make Thorium reactors much smaller and cheaper, basically a 50MW unit is not much larger than a shipping container, while being much more safe than standard nuclear plants. The largest issue is over-regulation of the nuclear power in general.

A 50MW of solar installation is HUGE, and thats 50MW at the sunniest part of the planet: newsaf.cgtn.com/news/2019-12-15/…/index.html, We are basically talking about close to a square kilometer installation…

there is simply no way to call a 50MW solar plant cleaner than nuclear and its probably not even that much cheaper in the end. Compare that to a shipping container sized reactor… Only thing in the way, is the nuclear scare and government regulations.

AEsheron ,

The cost is less from the design and more from the safety regulations. Best case scenario the state just starts making nuclear power plants, it’s just not a good idea to mix profit incentive with nuclear.

uis ,

district heating is where it’s at in 2024.

You don’t have those in 2024? Commies built central heating in every city.

olafurp ,

Iceland, where I’m from, has had it for ages in pretty much every house.

marcie , in Mood
@marcie@lemmy.ml avatar

lemmy, im a content piggy. make more content for me to stare at blankly. thanks

flambonkscious ,

… Best I can do is Meh?

grrgyle ,

Hail and well meh-t!

grrgyle ,

Here’s your content, open up!

a picture of a long haired cat with its mouth wide open looking at the camera

It’s my cat yawning, but it looks like he’s screaming at me (which he does do around 17h, his supper time).

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines