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Here's just the sort of home-generation idea that we need: solar roof tiles from SRS Energy.  They are supplied just like ordinary pantiles, and they are installed by roofers, just like ordinary pantiles - not by some expensive tech guy.  Details are a bit thin but they look just awesome to me.

This is the kind of thing which will make the passive home - a building that just consumes energy - an anachronism fairly soon. 

Date: 2008-03-06 10:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] simoneck.livejournal.com
I'm with you. Fantastic idea.
It'll be interesting to see what turns up over then next few years.
Global warming has only really been mainstream and accepted for what, 5 years maybe 10. People are only just coming up with the sensible practical workable ideas (dumping iron in the ocean etc doesn't count) like the tiles.
I still think we need fusion working large scale, or the sort of changes that a democracy can't handle, to have a real impact. But my predicting the future powers are pretty poor.

Date: 2008-03-07 04:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] teahisme.livejournal.com
Cold fusion seems a myth as of my last researching of it. I rather think anything else similarly related in the way of nuclear is the wrong way to go. Carbon degrades much more quickly than nuclear waste.

I'm totally excited about roof tiles like that. I really hope they become feasible. Yay for finding really cool things on the net Andy. :D

Date: 2008-03-08 08:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] andygates.livejournal.com
He's talking about hot fusion - which works, but not well enough for reliable power generation yet. Problem is, that "yet" has been around for at least twenty years - it's a problem which requires a lot of hard science and massive engineering to overcome, and without a Manhattan Project-scale effort, development is naturally slow.

*Purely* in terms of climate change, nuclear would be great. If there was enough of it, which is disputed.

Date: 2008-03-08 08:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] andygates.livejournal.com
"the sort of changes a democracy can't handle"

Aye. And this is what depresses me. The closest I can think of in terms of a lifestyle-altering grass-roots change that has no immediate benefit to the people being asked to change is the Chinese "one child" policy. And that had to be imposed by a Communist centre.

Much of the world won't accept a statist imposition of rules, not yet (and by the time the evidence is great enough, the damage may be too great). A religion might do it: if emitting more carbon than you sequester becomes a new sin, with a reward in the afterlife for otherwise nurturing the Garden, and social opprobium for sinners, that might work. But I doubt it would take off.

Date: 2008-03-09 02:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jonnycowbells.livejournal.com
And Virgil led Dante from Limbo into the second circle, and as he did so there was laid wide a great plane populated of the middle classes, chasing supermarket plastic bags that they could never catch wafted on some unseen breeze.

"Behold those who recycled but never carbon-balanced their air travel."

I figure we're about 700 years too late.

Date: 2008-03-09 05:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] andygates.livejournal.com
That's exactly why I'm embracing hedonism. If we're going to hell, we may as well get a tan.

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