evilgenius wrote:But you can use renewables to pump water uphill, from where it is plentiful. From the top of the hill it can flow down, all the way across the country. Along the way, it can flow through I don't know how many turbines. All you need is a plumbing system designed to respond to the vagaries of climate change. It would use the water being transferred to also make power.
evilgenius wrote:But you can use renewables to pump water uphill, from where it is plentiful. From the top of the hill it can flow down, all the way across the country. Along the way, it can flow through I don't know how many turbines. All you need is a plumbing system designed to respond to the vagaries of climate change. It would use the water being transferred to also make power.
jedrider wrote:At least, Planet of the Apes has a happy ending, or I think it does
C8 wrote:I am not going to go into full prepping mode, but I am going to institute a milder version (what I call suburban prepping). The rush on supplies that the lock-down created really jarred me into just how fast things can disappear from stores and not be back for a long time. I have a real taste for the fragility of our "just in time" inventory system and how much it hangs by a thread.I heard that meat is going to be gone for a while now, and sure enough, the shelves are getting empty.
Panic and hoarding are incredibly powerful forces in a market economy.
sparky wrote:.
Being conscious of human actions as causes and consequences on our planet is fine ,
what I cannot abide is the fraud of mainstream environment activists
they peddle snake oil solution to middle class suburbia ,
that they can keep their lifestyle if some public money is thrown at the problem
the only result is to feed shonky schemes which very often have marginal disastrous consequences for nature
official Green propaganda is a Santa Claus promise for technological illiterate
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