Why space colonization never happened as envisioned
In article ,
Ultimate Buu wrote:
"G EddieA95" wrote in message
...
optimisticly, most fossil fuel reserves will be gone in 30-50
years, and there is a real chance of the production peaking in not more
than
10.
No, there's lots of coal out there, and using it will still be cheaper
than
SPS, tho all the natureworshippers will need to be told to sit down and
shut
up.
You're forgetting nuclear as well. There's enough uranium to last at last
150 years if not more. Beyond that, fusion will most likely be a reality.
Actually, there's 6000 ppb of thorium in the Earth's crust and
1800 ppb of uranium, totalling very roughly 10^30 joules to play with.
If you assume a civilization that consumes one hundred times more energy
than we do now, that's enough for over thirty million years and by the end
of that period we should be no more than thirty years away from commercial
fusion.
I've been noodling around with ideas for deep crustal mining,
too. There's an entire subterranian ecology down there that has not been
made human oriented yet, although the paltry amount of energy it has to
use limits what one can do with it.
--
It's amazing how the waterdrops form: a ball of water with an air bubble
inside it and inside of that one more bubble of water. It looks so beautiful
[...]. I realized something: the world is interesting for the man who can
be surprised. -Valentin Lebedev-
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