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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Sunday, August 5th, 2007 04:07 pm

100 gigawatts of geothermal power for a $100 $1 billion investment, with no associated carbon load and no radioactive waste storage problem, sounds pretty damn good to me.  According to this article, we'd only need to tap 0.0007% of the shallow geothermal heat beneath the United States (where "shallow" is 3-4 miles) to meet the US demand for electrical power.  Double that, and we could easily convert most transportation to electric traction without wondering where the power would come from.

Now this is sustainable energy.  Individual sites may cool and need to recover, but over the long run, geothermal heat will outlast the human race.  Even if we manage to somehow exhaust all the shallow geothermal sources, it'll take us long enough that by that time we may be ready for a mantle tap.

Edit:

I read "$100 million to $1 billion" in the article, decided to take the high number to be safe, and fluently typo'd "$100 billion".  Corrected above now.  That makes the construction investment on the order of one cent per watt.

(Article pointer from [livejournal.com profile] mrmeval)

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Tuesday, August 7th, 2007 02:37 am (UTC)
I thought proton polymer would work out but it seems to be stuck at low capacity. The things could discharge at very high amperage and charge in under 5 minutes. NEC had them.

I can get supercapacitors now that have interesting ratings but not nearly enough for vehicles. They may work for something like small items such as MP3 players.