Launching large industrial projects never works well without the support of the locals. The way Miliband (or the Telegraph?) frames it makes me think of Yucca Mountain. That is NOT the way to run things.
If you just explain the pros of accepting wind power parks or nuclear waste facilites, communities are bound to fight over who gets them. If you try to impose them on people in a top-down process people will fight them no matter the pros, as they should. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
Though windparks hardly qualify as national sacrifice areas. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
Though windparks hardly qualify as national sacrifice areas.
Would that your world of ceramic bubbles without risk for 10,000 years was as miniscule. (In other words, i don't want to hear about Sweden's unbelievably safe storage methods, unless you're willing to write a book about the entire supply chain)
Just because Burrough's insects masquerading as citizens clamor for something doesn't corelate to value. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
Personally I'd much rather live next to the spent fuel storage than a wind farm (which is exactly what's going to happen as they're building that site in my backyard but won't build any windfarms) but I understand perfectly well if other people feel the opposite way. The important thing is listening to the locals so no community have unwanted things imposed upon them. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
And, I suppose that you will try to tell us that 100% of the copper in the windings will be recycled. Ha! 100%???? As if anything is ever 100%.
While you have us swimming in solvents and copper dust, I'll have you know that nuclear materials are natural products, some even on the periodic table fer chissake. Radiation is everywhere. The sun's energy is radiation. You don't want to put that down in some tunnel for 10 billion years, do you? Never underestimate their intelligence, always underestimate their knowledge.
Frank Delaney ~ Ireland
somebody will always object, one way or another. Anything the Govt wants done has to be bulldozed through. So this story in the Telegraph reflects exactly how any project happens while describing the paper's attitude towards it. keep to the Fen Causeway
Can't you just bring all the local communities, companies, politicians, labour unions and NGO's together, sit down and sing kumbayah? Consensus, my friends, consensus. ;) Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
If we wanted consensus, we'd be in Europe.