Yeah. :roll: You're an idiot. — James Riley
Cool, I wasn't aware as I'm only familiar with the oil and gas industry. That's pretty interesting. You should work out the numbers boethius has asked for. How much square meters of rock do you need and what will be the recharge rate. Then you also need to prove it's an economical viable option aside from some obvious engineering challenges of operating equipment under high pressure and high temperatures with moving parts. Generally, engineers aren't happy with both high pressure and high temperature. — Benkei
I'm beginning to see why people think you are flakey. I didn't say anything about murder. I didn't say you were unrealistic. I don't want to engage with you any more. — James Riley
We should put the pyramid back right side up and have about 500k to 1m people on the planet... — James Riley
I didn't say anything about murder. — James Riley
Indeed. Despite it being explained to you over and over again. I guess some people just need to believe they have a secret that solves the world's problems, despite knowing next to nothing about it. Oh well. — Xtrix
Here's 157 degrees celsius, our current record for drilling at high temperatures: — Benkei
And yeah, great fucking idea to drill close to areas proven to be under pressure (there are volcanoes) and fuck around with the structural integrity of the rock above it. And while we're at it, let's add water! That will definitely go well. — Benkei
You keep repeating this number as if it's some sort of problem for solar energy. Your 225 000 square miles is about 580 000 square kilometres. Surface area of earth is 510 000 000 square kilometres. — boethius
Furthermore, by reducing and reversing large scale infrastructure (that not only occupies a lot of land in itself, such as those 20 lane highways, but also divides the ecosystem making it less efficient), would actually be a net-positive in terms of land bio efficiency (the ecosystems being the primary value of land). — boethius
Glad you realise you're an idiot then. — Benkei
The geothermal claims were vague. References to magma are confusing with respect to geothermal energy. I'll remind everyone of the operating temperatures of drilling equipment and what happens when you open up a hole to something under tremendous pressure. — Benkei
The geothermal claims were vague. References to magma are confusing with respect to geothermal energy. I'll remind everyone of the operating temperatures of drilling equipment and what happens when you open up a hole to something under tremendous pressure. — Benkei
Over population is a real and horrible thing. It is morally repugnant and patently arrogant to think otherwise. All the clap-trap about what could be, but is not, is the proof of it. — James Riley
"anyway i think an apt way to think about climate change is that there are 'no non-radical futures.' either we change everything or the earth changes everything for us. anyone selling you 'realistic' incremental change is performing the work of charlatans and denialists." roshan — James Riley
You are wrong. Over-population is a thing. — James Riley
We should not gather it all up when nature is doing it for us for free. She's been doing exactly that for millions of years. All that sun gathered up for photosynthesis, converted to protein steaks so we can sit around, burp, fart, fuck, craft, laugh, dance, science, innovate, and generally enjoy a garden Eden paradise. We have the technology now to make everyone live like kings, without all the negatives of tooth and claw that our forefathers had to deal with. The problem is, too many of us. That's on us. Everything we want is there for the asking. We are not as bright as we think we are when we think that we must continue to do what got us where we are because it worked so far. Edjumacations is what we need. Fewer, smarter, wiser people. — James Riley
I have been reading these sorts of press releases for over 20 years. — boethius
There's actually plenty of energy sources "we really have enough of": — boethius
The problems I describe are inherent to the geothermal energy source, they apply to all implementations of geothermal energy. — boethius
It's not about "sub optimal", it's about needing to drill a lot of pipe, and then cooling that volume of rock, which doesn't recharge at the same rate of depletion, requiring more drilling. — boethius
These processes are pretty close to optimal. — boethius
Hydrogen needs to be made, which costs energy, as it's not a source, — boethius
Petroleum pays the energy cost itself to transport it — boethius
700 C rock isn't all that much energy; it sounds more impressive than it is. Heat capacity of rock isn't so high, and if we're talking super heated steam at 400 C, then there's only 300 C difference to work with.
To power a whole major country we're talking massive amount of rock, that costs money to put pipes through. If the heat extracted is equal to the recharge rate, no problem. However, even in incredibly convenient places for this technology, like iceland, the idea of powering a substantial part of Europe is just not remotely feasible. — boethius
the energy is far from where people live and you'd need a massive and costly transport infrastructure even if the energy was there (which it isn't). — boethius
I plan to convert electrical energy into liquified hydrogen fuel for transport. Liquified hydrogen gas contains 2.5 times the energy of petroleum per kilo - and we ship petroleum around the world. — counterpunch
There's a basic physical problem called the "recharge" rate, which reduces to simple geometry. To extract energy efficiently from rock, we don't dig down and then install a big metal plate as a single surface heat exchanger. Rather, we dig a bunch of tubes over a volume or then use natural occurring tubes of water in fissures and cracks that's is already down there. — boethius
In addition, volcanoes are in inconvenient locations, so even if the recharge rate was better than elsewhere, there's a large added cost of transporting the energy. — boethius
In general, Geothermal is, along with tidal, bio-energy, hydro, an energy source that is not globally applicable, there's just some impressive "sweet spots" (some bays, big forests, large rivers, Iceland). Those sweet spots aren't so great that you could transport energy all over the globe. — boethius
Not strange at all. The "I told you so" aspect of it refutes the open conspiracy of ignorance and forgiveness. I think it's important for future generation to know we were lying sacks of shit when we pretended that we didn't know better. — James Riley
No, it does not need to be attractive. It needs to work. If that's magma, fine. I've got no truck with your magma gospel. Get out there and get it done. But in the mean time, people should be forced to own up to what they are doing. — James Riley
On the point of "knowing better", while I haven't vetted this, check it out, from 1912: https://www.businessinsider.com/newspaper-in-1912-linked-coal-to-climate-change-2018-8 — James Riley
knuckle-dragging muscle truck moron rolling coal. — James Riley
In fact, some of our best work comes out of exigency. — James Riley
Any of these would force an honest assessment of the science out into the daylight of the market where people would put up or shut up. — James Riley
:lol: — Xtrix
Just be happy with knowing that you've cracked the climate crisis -- I just hope humanity starts listening to your extraordinary solution! Well done! — Xtrix
You offer to evidence, no research, and refuse even to provide a single link. — Xtrix
So you've been "thinking about, reading about, and worrying about" this for 25 years, yet provide no references whatsoever? Interesting. — Xtrix
No, it isn't. Because capitalism doesn't exist anywhere. What we have is a state-capitalist system, with massive state intervention on all levels. Subsidies, bailouts, a central bank, etc. etc. We have what boils down to a corporate welfare/socialist system. It's easy to see, when you look around. — Xtrix
I wasn't closely following the debate with the crackpot, — SophistiCat
So is absolutely any source whatsoever according to your current usage of 'potentially', which seems to include anything anyone reckons. — Isaac
Why? — Isaac
And the equivalent costs for geothermal are...? Let me guess, you just reckon they'd be less. — Isaac
You're transparent. Ideological opposition to left wing politics (and therefore existing renewables by association) supported post hoc by a shambolic edifice of speculation. — Isaac
No, it can’t. I’ll present just as much evidence to support this claim as you have with yours: my gut feelings.
Just stop already. You don’t know what you’re talking about. You offer no evidence. You have no expertise. You admit there’s no research on this yet. So why continue on? The fact that you think you’re “really on to something” just sounds embarrassing.
I’m sure your heart is in the right place, but now you’re just sounding ridiculous. Your point has been made— move on. — Xtrix
But you've yet to demonstrate this. That you think it's possible without any expertise in the matter at all, is utterly irrelevant to the question of whether it is, in fact, possible. — Isaac
Why? What's special about your guesswork that makes it worth thinking about? — Isaac
No, you have to prove that it's technologically feasible to extract that heat without insurmountable consequential factors. — Isaac
No, you're just declaring it to be the case without any evidence presented whatsoever. — Isaac
As an illustration, let me ask you this. You seem opposed to solar power, yes? The sun provides 37 Petawatts of energy, our global needs only amount to about 4, so there's plenty of energy there to provide all our needs. so why oppose solar? Your oppose it on the grounds of the limitations of current technology, yet when it comes to your pet theory, you ignore limits of current technology and assume we'll find a way. — Isaac
You given nothing to indicate the underlined. Everything you say might be nonsense for all we know because you refuse to cite anything. — Isaac
What makes you think we'd be a) interested enough that your posts are worth your while writing yet b) not interested enough to read papers on the subject. You must have a very high opinion of yourself to consider you might hold our attention in a way no other source could. — Isaac
Because its a reasonable assumption. I really shouldn't have to explain this. — Isaac
To posit a world where no one but you has thought of a brilliant solution to global energy supply is a fantastic claim, definitely requires support. — Isaac
More of a view of Scientism than Science. — ssu
Well good, but the rest of us aren't going to just take it on faith are we. — Isaac
I presume people far more knowledgable than me have looked into it already. It's not the strategy I'm fiercely opposed to, it's the maniacal advocation of it without a shred of supporting evidence. — Isaac
Science is a method of study. — ssu
I understand your point, but just like with the discussion you have had with Xtrix about fusion energy where your opinion is just "I'm not optimistic", so too can it be that others are "not too optimistic" about geothermal as a silver bullet answer to everything (as it has high initial capital cost and with the present technology you don't find hot rocks everywhere). Yes, increasing geothermal energy production surely is one thing to do. — ssu
In fact many renewables could make the claim to handle all our energy needs "if only" enough should be invested in them and the technology would be improved. But it simply won't happen like that: energy production methods will compete against each other on the market and the price mechanism will select the ones which will dominate the energy sector. — ssu
It was rhetorical. The point is that, as far as publicly debatable issues are concerned, unless we're going to have good ground for believing what we believe then there's no point in talking about it. — Isaac
I could simply believe that CO2 emissions do not cause global climate change and so maintain the hope that we'll be fine without having to do anything at all. — Isaac
If you just 'believe' that geothermal energy can support our current levels of material consumption then that's of no interest to a discussion community unless you have some ground to believe it which you can present. — Isaac
Yes but you have no empirical basis for this. If it’s simply a gut feeling— who cares? — Xtrix
A global approach that is the sum of the most important nation states, perhaps 20 or so of the largest energy producers, that in aggregate tackles the crisis is what we should aim for. — ssu
What you or I believe is possible is of no relevance or consequence. — Isaac
Geothermal energy is an existent facet of energy science and engineering. There are already thousands of experts in the field. It's what they believe that is of relevance. — Isaac
I could simply believe that CO2 emissions do not cause global climate change and so maintain the hope that we'll be fine without having to do anything at all. Such a belief would be irrelevant if the actual scientists studying the matter disagreed. — Isaac
We just need fusion reactors. We'll have them eventually. — frank
Yet what energy policies we choose on this planet is the aggregate sum of the various energy policies the nations states choose and what competition on the free market gives us. — ssu
The fact is that energy production is such an existential question for our societies that it will be a question of national security to every country. They won't give up the independence to choose their energy production (they are called sovereigns for a reason). — ssu
There simply isn't one "logical" answer to this. As everybody has noticed, we here on this Planet do not decide these questions as one entity (or have them decided for us by one entity). — ssu