Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Jeez hope ours are too. Am not confident as since start of summer we have had hi humidity then a thunderstorm on most days.As long as it's a dry heat I'm fine with that.
Terry we cant go alone with only renewables as much as we'd like that to be the case. So we need a mix of energies, green hydrogen, hydro, retain gas and personally I'd like to have nuclear in the mix too if we build the small modular variety. Not in our lifetimes probably but for the next gen. That or some other alternate energy form that our visionary Aussie scientists may discover.Back up is an issue with some having pipe dreams wishing for nuclear reactors on decommissioned coal power plants. They're safe enough now but too expensive to build and too late to affect climate change imho. Also more costly electrical power to consumers.. However, to back up a sometimes unreliable green power input, solutions need to be found apart from Nuclear in the context of Australia's present position. Hydro storage is costly to build but Oz's mega SnowyRiver 2.0 hydro project is nearing completed
How about these two theories.Terry we cant go alone with only renewables as much as we'd like that to be the case. So we need a mix of energies, green hydrogen, thermal, hydro, retain gas and personally I'd like to have nuclear in the mix too if we build the small modular variety. Not in our lifetimes probably but for the next gen. That or some other alternate energy form that our visionary Aussie scientists may discover.
Fast trains as we know them today will probably be obsolete soon. We need to be looking at building a next generation national hyperloop network.How about these two theories.
At $500 billion, Peter Dutton’s 2045 nuclear plan is not only late, it’s expensive. At that price, we could put $33,000 worth of batteries on each of Australia’s 15.2 million buildings and abandon the grid altogether.
Rather than pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into nuclear submarines, our money would be better spent on building a national fast train network to the advantage of all Australians. The estimated cost of the submarines is $368 billion, while the estimated cost of a national fast train network is $150 billion. The days of manned submarines are limited, and nuclear subs bring with them all the attendant problems of basing, manning and maintenance – for a questionable defense benefit.
There are more Here:
I don't object to Nuclear or even Fusion power for Australia in the future, but not now with the urgency needed to combat global warming NOW!How about these two theories.
At $500 billion, Peter Dutton’s 2045 nuclear plan is not only late, it’s expensive. At that price, we could put $33,000 worth of batteries on each of Australia’s 15.2 million buildings and abandon the grid altogether.
Rather than pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into nuclear submarines, our money would be better spent on building a national fast train network to the advantage of all Australians. The estimated cost of the submarines is $368 billion, while the estimated cost of a national fast train network is $150 billion. The days of manned submarines are limited, and nuclear subs bring with them all the attendant problems of basing, manning and maintenance – for a questionable defense benefit.
There are more Here:
Very similar, but mine is electric, just plug it into the mains and it lights up the coals and artificial flames.So it is gas Jessica ,same as this one. That is a relief.
View attachment 3122
Yes well done Terry. Sorry I missed your email Jessica as I dont log in daily as too much spam and useless stuff. I will be handing Chief a stern complaint. What and when were the precise details.'m back Terry, thanks for your email!
All I can vaguely remember is that research into it was to be intensified. I wasn't aware that an Aussie company is on board yet it doesn't surprise me either. However, Quantum Brilliance cooperating with an Austrian company is one of six companies one of them being a German startup which are engaged in the project but will work on different aspects. Apart from the know-how, it's always a question of funding which, in turn, is based on a national or corporate strategy. It seems that Germany is ambitious to become a player in this field for which cooperation is vital and inevitable.Earlier this year, Germany’s Cyber Agency awarded Australian company Quantum Brilliance a contract to develop the worlds first mobile quantum computers by 2027.
You aware of this Thomas. Bewildered as I'd have expected this the other way round. Shows you how hi tech savvy my nation has become in the past decade.
Good to see German/ Aussie tech co- operation.Quantum Brilliance cooperating with an Austrian company is one of six companies one of them being a German startup
I like Twiggy Forrest, he's a very decent billionaire philanthropist. Totally opposite to Clive the Palmer.Dr Andrew Forrest's Fortescue Zero technology arm is developing a 6 megawatt (MW) fast charger unit that will convert their hundreds of huge haul trucks into electric powered. The fast charger will be by far the most powerful in the world and could promise huge export dollars for the Aussie mining giant. Fortescue aims to reach “real zero” terrestrial emissions for its operations at its giant Pilbara (WA) mines, which means ceasing the burning of fossil fuels for power generation, transport and mining operations by the end of the decade.
View attachment 3132