celestialvisionz
Padawan Learner
I have to write an Energy Policy for one of my Classes and was wondering if anyone had any ideas to help heal the world?
celestialvisionz said:I have to write an Energy Policy for one of my Classes and was wondering if anyone had any ideas to help heal the world?
celestialvisionz said:I have to write an Energy Policy for one of my Classes and was wondering if anyone had any ideas to help heal the world?
celestialvisionz said:Correct Buddy exactly like a National Energy Policy that the government should implement.
Laura said:First thing that comes to mind is that an education policy should be implemented that encourages birth control. Then, good care of children that are born. Reducing the population thereby would lessen demands for energy.
Better utilization of human resources, too. If a technology excludes humans, it is wasting energy and people don't have jobs. Thus, making sure that any industrial process utilizes at least 50% human input for production. That would equal better utilization of available energy, including human. Giant corporate farms should be broken up and distributed to families who can use their human energy to grow things.
People should be encouraged to live off the grid, to utilize solar and wind power for minimal electronic needs. Society in general should give up a lot of technology that uses energy in unnecessary ways, including social interactions, and be encouraged to get back to human basics of working and playing together without such intermediaries.
We've become a society of waste and our technology is going to make US disposable in addition to requiring more and more external/artificial energy.
China’s next lunar step? China intends to build a mine on the moon to harvest Helium-3, a rare helium isotope. Scientists believe that mining Helium-3 from the moon may be the energy miracle the world has been waiting for. According to Ouyang Ziyuan, chief scientist of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program, the moon is rich with Helium-3. Ziyuan says that mining the moon for the isotope could solve the world’s energy problems by providing renewable energy through nuclear fusion.
Whereas nuclear fission is the splitting of atoms to create energy, nuclear fusion is fusing two or more lighter atoms into a larger one to achieve a similar effect. Though nuclear fission doesn’t normally occur in nature, nuclear fusion occurs naturally in stars. The energy produced via nuclear fusion is three to four times greater than the energy produced by nuclear fission.
Matthew Genge, a scientist and lecturer at the Faculty of Engineering at the Imperial College in London, says that utilizing Helium-3 allows nuclear fusion to produce a tremendous amount of energy without the excess of radioactive waste produced in nuclear fission reactions. Nuclear fusion does not produce any extra neutrons. The interesting thing is that it wouldn’t take much Helium-3 to get the job done.
Scientists say that a mere 40 tons of Helium-3 harvested from the moon, (an amount that could be carried in the cargo bays of two space shuttles), could power the entire United States for over one year at its current energy consumption
http://www.inquisitr.com/1754279/helium-3-china-intends-to-strip-mine-the-moon-to-solve-worlds-energy-problems/#50BAKegAZ3wGdZE0.99
How will lunar infrastructure develop?
Scientists, including experts from the Russian Institute of Biochemistry, are currently selecting the exact location for the landing. According to the Head of the Russian Federal Space Agency, Oleg Ostapenko, super-heavy space rockets are scheduled for testing over the next decade.
“This is when the full-blown exploration of the Moon will begin,” Ostapenko said. “Program planning is almost complete and we are now in the process of confirmation. When this stage is over, we will wait for a decision from the government. We estimate that this will happen by the end of 2014.”
Russia’s rocket designers go back to the drawing-board:
According to program participants, the first operations to create infrastructure, which involves the construction of an inhabitable base on the Moon, will begin 15-18 years from now. By 2040, the first space stations for shuttles will be created. In the mid-2050s, a full-fledged scientific and mining base with an observatory will be constructed.
Solar power plants and possibly nuclear-powered generators will be installed on the Moon, Vladimir Koshlakov, Deputy Director General of the Keldysh Research Center, told RBTH.
"By the middle of the next century, or to be more exact, by the time that permanent bases are established on the Moon, we will need more powerful sources of energy,” Koshlakov said. “A possible alternative to solar power plants, which are now scheduled to be installed on the Moon, can be generators powered by nuclear fuel. This option is also being studied today.”
http://asia.rbth.com/science_and_tech/2014/10/26/moon_exploration_will_reduce_the_shortage_of_rare_earth_meta_40887.html
lilies said:Demolish current wind generators around the world, because they are faulty design and frequently break down requiring large amount of resources to fix and just left there to rust, these just eat up resources unnecessarily.