Nortempeh

joined 2 years ago
[–] Nortempeh 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Without proper info and data we are swimming in opinions and anecdotes and not able to vote for something rational.

Tax exemptions for aviation is a problem. A bigger problem yet is that the environmental costs are not charged to the user (in both aviation or trains).

But even considering that, I suspect the train tickets would still be to expensive, relative to aviation. And that is, in my opinion, due to the inherent lack of competition in trains and relatively easy to implement competition in aviation. Train and train infrastructure companies need more accountability


big vehicles in dedicated tracks should result in very inexpensive tickets, why aren't they?

[–] Nortempeh 3 points 2 years ago

The link above requires a download that does not even have extension. Beware.

[–] Nortempeh 1 points 2 years ago

vulnerable to overheating, pollution and dangerous wind gusts.

It's not a good way to solve pollution, is it?

[–] Nortempeh 2 points 2 years ago

Yes.

Even when taking waste and sourcing as not a big issue, if we take then out of the discussion, nuclear is not that great option.

[–] Nortempeh 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (2 children)

I don't agree. Even the industrial military complex is more prone to diversity in terms of incentives, centralisation and consequences.

The nuclear energy industry is:

Very dependent on investment costs. More than everyday costs. So public funding is frequently demanded, with contracting being a politically toxic environment. The taxpayer pays today without knowing with clarity what he will have to pay on the future.

The risk management brings about a lot of low probability X high consequence cases. So, for safety keeping we need regulations and oversight, lots of it.

Everyday costs thus are heavily dependent on regulations. With a massive difference in operating costs between 99.999 Vs 99.9999% safety levels. Thus lobbying politicians, regulator/overseer capture, and plain old corruption have big relevance to everyday costs

Security issues also demand that inicial clearance as to who can enter the industry, and does not allow having so many players that the probability of losing track of them becomes higher. Thus a massive big incentive for centralisation, on top of the 'every-other-industry wants it's own monopoly' incentive.

Thus, for me, the slippery slope is so slanted that the risks outweigh the benefits, even for a very good democracy.

EDIT: beyond the issues I was talking about, nuclear energy production, as we can build now, has lot of practicality issues. And a lot of people don't have/take time to explore those issues. Like, the power output is not flexible, as required by consumption


because of that it has only been useful to have nuclear for baseline consumption, and that only represents about 6% of total electricity needs, 94% of the electricity has to come from other sources.

[–] Nortempeh 7 points 2 years ago (4 children)

My biggest issue with nuclear is that as an industry it is lobby-promoting, politically-toxic, corruption promoting and thus anti-democratic in a fundamental way.

Just because of that we should not pursue nuclear.