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Alternative Energies Title: China’s wind farms can now produce more energy than all of America’s nuclear plants China is building more than a third of the world’s nuclear reactors currently under construction, and has plans to triple its nuclear power capacity by 2020. That has some observers worried about the country’s opaque and politicized nuclear safety regulations. But amid all the hype over nuclear power, China has been expanding its wind power capacity at an even faster clip. Last year, China’s wind farms reached a capacity of 115,000 megawatts, compared with just 20,000 megawatts from its nuclear sector. (To be sure, capacity is different than the actual amount of energy created.) Working at full pace, China’s wind farms could now produce more energy than all of the nuclear power plants in the US. Despite the government’s ambitious goals to keep developing its nuclear energy capacity, for the foreseeable future, nuclear is unlikely to match wind in China. After the 2011 disaster in Fukushima, Japan, the Chinese government put the brakes on building nuclear power stations in the west of the country, as this is an area prone to earthquakes. Meanwhile, the north of China famously struggles with a lack of water, something nuclear power stations require plenty of to keep reactors cool, and the east coast, where there is plenty of water, is home to China’s most developed cities, which are increasingly turning to NIMBY-ism. Beijing says it plans to increase China’s wind power capacity to 200,000 megawatts by 2020, but its own figures see nuclear rising to just 58,000 megawatts in the same time frame. It’s encouraging to think that wind power may be a leap-frog technology in China, skipping over the potentially messy and dangerous issues related to nuclear power. But wishing nuclear away could be unwise, and most of China’s massive—and growing—energy needs are still met by burning coal. If barriers to nuclear persist, the energy gap will likely be plugged by more fossil-fuel power plants, which would render the cleanliness of China’s wind farms academic. (1 image) Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9. #1. To: Willie Green (#0) (Edited) Title: China’s wind farms can now produce more energy than all of America’s nuclear plants 24/7/365? LOL. Get serious.
Working at full pace, China’s wind farms could now produce more energy than all of the nuclear power plants in the US. Tellingly, the article does not report that China's nuclear plants actually have ever produced more electricity for even a single moment than America's nuclear reactors.
#2. To: TooConservative (#1) US Nuclear Power In Decline We're not building enough nukes to replace the old ones that are shutting down, and the total number has fallen below 100 for the first time in over 30 years.
#3. To: Willie Green (#2) We're not building enough nukes to replace the old ones that are shutting down, and the total number has fallen below 100 for the first time in over 30 years. America has a supply of natural gas and oil that will last through the 21st century. That's before you consider alt energy and improvements in coal-burning tech, hydrogen, etc. There is no shortage of energy, particularly here in the States.
#4. To: TooConservative (#3) America has a supply of natural gas and oil that will last through the 21st century. No... we have an abundant supply of low-grade, carbonaceous crap that contaminates the air we breath, the water we drink and the food we eat.
#5. To: Willie Green (#4) America has far cleaner water and air virtually everywhere in the country than we had at the end of WW II.
#7. To: TooConservative (#5) Of course... it was in the post-war period that we first enacted federal air & water regulations: The Modern Environmental Movement that the GOP/Tea Party -- Oil & petrochemical industry want to gut. October 30-31, 1948Although I'm too young to recall Pittsburgh being that smoggy, I do recall my father stoking the coal fired furnace in the basement of the home we lived in until I was 4-years-old. And I was 6 when my grandfathers (both of them) were required to convert their furnaces from coal to gas. And I can recall most of the buildings & stone churches being black with soot, and natural color of the stone being gradually revealed by the weather 15~20 years later. And I vividly remember the orange glow of the coke ovens & open hearth furnaces on the horizon like a sunset, long after the sun went down. And the acrid sulfur stench of the air pollution and the burning/stinging sensation in my eyes. And I remember elderly relatives and neighbors, who never smoked tobacco, suffering from emphysema & other breathing difficulties And I remember streams & rivers being void of fish because the water was literally orange with industrial pollution. And I've seen firsthand the devastation that strip-mining inflicts on the landscape. The more I think about it, the less tolerance I have for the Oil & petrochemical industries. As far as I'm concerned, the Bush family, Koch Brothers, Dick Cheney, Condoleeza Rice and all those others who advocate Fossil Fuel Production Uber Alles are guilty of genocide on a grand scale.
#8. To: Willie Green (#7) The more I think about it, the less tolerance I have for the Oil & petrochemical industries. And here I thought you were such a Koch puppet.
#9. To: TooConservative (#8) And here I thought you were such a Koch puppet. Willie's more of an Occupy liberal.
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