Quote:Lots of things are possible, but battery storage opens another can of environmental worms.
As opposed to the 'environmentally sound' practice of concentrating radioactive isotopes, dumping their excess heat energy into the atmosphere and oceans and then burying them in the ground? Substances with a half life measured in millennia?
Quote:Which is why renewables have their own sets of environmental problems. If sustainabilty is to be paramount then ALL inputs and outputs need to be weighed
Exactly, and renewables use more environmentally sound principles than nuclear power.
Quote:No..they aren't. Not on a large scale, not without associated costs to the environment, not without significant infrastructure costs and associated problems and not without either directly or indirectly increasing damage to the environment...which brings us back to square one in trying to replace coal fired base load power.
Nuclear costs exactly the same as wind and solar plants, but while wind and solar are ready and IN USE (south australia - 20% renewables TODAY, look it up) nuclear is not ready, nor will it be any time soon. There will always be costs with energy production and this is why freedivers point is the most important, we need to pay more for power. This is the only way to send the right message to the consumer.