Climate in the 21st Century

Will Humankind see the 22nd Century?

  • Not a fucking chance

    Votes: 41 28.5%
  • Maybe. if we get our act together

    Votes: 35 24.3%
  • Yes, we will survive

    Votes: 68 47.2%

  • Total voters
    144

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
I had forgot about that. I'm staying at the riverhouse tonight, so I might give it a go. Covid and my buddy Smoke dying down there has messed up my camp schedule for sure. I think I've stayed three times since Thanksgiving.
go for it, it will be between the little dipper and draco tonight, they say best view will be Feb 2, all ya need is clear skies and a good set of binos, it will look like and i'm guessing a green smudge.....
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
If you ever have a chance to invest in a Dutch car, don't.

This is 2-day old news, Lightyear 1 cancelled to focus on $40k model Lightyear 2:

The news today: Lightyear went bankrupt. 620 employees lost their job. Factory is in Finland. It's not the end yet, the technology, the concept, is part of on paper another company. They still want to go on with Lightyear 2 but yeah don't put any money on it.
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
It was nice last night … spot of good weather here. I shlepped the 20x100s onto the back porch. Just barely maybe made it out with the unaided eye using averted vision. Moon’s becoming an issue though.
It was clear here, but cool and windy. The moon is waxing, so. . . . . .

I have taken a couple of pair of bino's down to the riverhouse, and there was a few already there. I have one bad neighbor across the river. (mean to his kids) I tried to run them off with constant observation. While that didn't work out completely, they don't come outside very much anymore, so at least I don't have to hear it. (they may think I'm the bad neighbor)
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't say we have all the technologies we need to go green, but the next decade should see cheap powerful batteries for EVs and grid storage, perhaps using different technologies. A decade should also provide an answer about deep geothermal possibilities and fusion.

Cheap, powerful enough batteries will make EVs cheap to produce, much cheaper than an ICE vehicle. I'm waiting for someone to come out with the Model T EV, even call it that. A dirt cheap compact EV with a 200 mile range minimum that can be topped up from home on 120V to 50 miles of range overnight, over double that in Europe or on 220V in North America. Make it cheap, useful and reliable, the commute for the Average American is under 50 miles round trip, mostly to work 5 days a week, or just running around town. Such a vehicle would probably have a range of 300 or 400 miles anyway in a 5 years, with new generations of batteries in development. I figure they would sell like hotcakes, if the price point was low enough, many people want transportation, not the bells and whistles they don't need to pay for.


 

Dr.Amber Trichome

Well-Known Member
Yeah, I agree. Noyo, especially is a quirky town that is tucked into a bowl with cliffs all around and a small harbor. A picture in IMBD showed a beach that had a beach with small pebbles instead of sand. That area gets hammered by storms all winter long. Dark, gloomy cold. A perfect setting for the film.

Weird movie. From the descriptions it sounds like Rosemary's Baby meets Alien in a B-movie horror film at the sea.
That movie has it all! Great explosion scenes, political commentary, cultural issues, environmental issues, romance, horror, great acting, cool landscapes, music and festival and ends with a live birth. The monsters are very well done. A true cult classic.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
With what local electric prices have been doing, I am not even a little surprised.

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
With what local electric prices have been doing, I am not even a little surprised.

With increased renewable and storage, I would expect power prices to go down eventually, especially during peek generation times in places that use solar for instance. There is also the future possibility of a home battery bank to take advantage of renewables and off peak rates, a form of distributed storage. I think the home charging crowd with compacts will get the best deal and a considerable discount if one has solar and some storage. IMHO batteries are about to get a lot cheaper over the next 5 to 10 years. If ya wanna own and electric F150 or Hummer, then buy a big home charger, upgrade your power entrance or go pay through the nose at a fast charger down the road. The point is you will have increased options for powering your EV and some might go for energy independence by making most of their own and even storing it.

They still need to collect taxes for roads and bridges no matter how you power it, except with your feet.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
With increased renewable and storage, I would expect power prices to go down eventually, especially during peek generation times in places that use solar for instance. There is also the future possibility of a home battery bank to take advantage of renewables and off peak rates, a form of distributed storage. I think the home charging crowd with compacts will get the best deal and a considerable discount if one has solar and some storage. IMHO batteries are about to get a lot cheaper over the next 5 to 10 years. If ya wanna own and electric F150 or Hummer, then buy a big home charger, upgrade your power entrance or go pay through the nose at a fast charger down the road. The point is you will have increased options for powering your EV and some might go for energy independence by making most of their own and even storing it.

They still need to collect taxes for roads and bridges no matter how you power it, except with your feet.
which adds irony to “foot the bill”
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
That movie has it all! Great explosion scenes, political commentary, cultural issues, environmental issues, romance, horror, great acting, cool landscapes, music and festival and ends with a live birth. The monsters are very well done. A true cult classic.
It was a summary of all that is good about today's society. Amazing that I never heard of it before you brought it up.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
read://https_www.reuters.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.reuters.com%2Fmarkets%2Fcommodities%2Fnorway-finds-substantial-mineral-resources-its-seabed-2023-01-27%2F

Norway finds 'substantial' mineral resources on its seabed


OSLO, Jan 27 (Reuters) - A Norwegian study has found a "substantial" amount of metals and minerals ranging from copper to rare earth metals on the seabed of its extended continental shelf, authorities said on Friday in their first official estimates.
The Nordic country, a major oil and gas exporter, is considering whether to open its offshore areas to deep-sea mining, a process that requires parliament's approval and has sparked environmental concerns.

"Of the metals found on the seabed in the study area, magnesium, niobium, cobalt and rare earth minerals are found on the European Commission's list of critical minerals," the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD), which conducted the study, said in a statement.

The resources estimate, covering remote areas in the Norwegian Sea and Greenland Sea, showed there were 38 million tonnes of copper, almost twice the volume mined globally each year, and 45 million tonnes of zinc accumulated in polymetallic sulphides.

The sulphides, or "black smokers", are found along the mid-ocean ridge, where magma from the Earth's mantle reaches the sea floor, at depths of around 3,000 metres (9,842 feet).

About 24 million tonnes of magnesium and 3.1 million tonnes of cobalt are estimated to be in manganese crusts grown on bedrock over millions of years, as well as 1.7 million tonnes of cerium, a rare earth metal used in alloys.


The manganese crusts are also estimated to contain other rare earth metals, such as neodymium, yttrium and dysprosium.

"Costly, rare minerals such as neodymium and dysprosium are extremely important for magnets in wind turbines and the engines in electric vehicles", the NPD said.

ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
Environmental groups have called on Norway to postpone its seabed mineral exploration until more studies are conducted to understand the organisms living on the seabed and the impact of mining on them.

There is "a great lack of knowledge" of deep oceans, where new and undiscovered species are potentially to be found, Norway's Institute of Marine Research said in a consultation letter.

The NPD said its estimates showed resources "in place", and further studies were needed to establish how much of those could be recovered with acceptable environmental impact.
 
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