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submitted 1 year ago by L4s@lemmy.world to c/technology@lemmy.world

'Limitless' energy: how floating solar panels near the equator could power future population hotspots::New research shows densely populated countries in Southeast Asia and West Africa could harvest effectively unlimited energy from solar panels floating on calm tropical seas near the equator.

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[-] LadyAutumn 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Putting them on the ocean is certainly a zany idea. Salt. Water. Storms. Electronics. Brilliant.

And no that is not how solar panels work. Solar panels only work when sunlight is directly on them. Their peak electrical output is always when the sun is directly over them. Thats why solar farms are built in massive flat areas and the panels are mounted on rotating motor powered stands so they can angle the panels directly at the sun to get the most out of them. But still, sun goes down and bam youre at 0 electrical output. Leading to the need for very long lasting power storage facilities to adequately store power to be dispensed at night. Also, solar panels and very large capacity batteries capable of holding charges for extended periods use a LOT of precious metals. Of which we have very little. And which have massive environmental impacts when we mine them.

Photovoltaic technology has gotten much better than it used to be, but even then it's still not as much power as you seem to think. Modern nuclear plants can average outputs around a gigawatt. It depends on the plant. Some gen 4 nuclear reactors are anticipated to produce over a gigawatt per reactor core. Its also safer and much more efficient than it's ever been. All that nuclear waste will also probably be recycled, and significantly less of it will be produced as our technology continues to advance. Youre also acting as though we just chuck a bunch of uranium in a hole and cover it with some dirt and then just leave it. The entire process is secure and must pass a whole host of safety standards including with regards to the environment. And some of that waste as I said will probably be usable at some point in the future for other things. To say we just throw it in there and it cataclysmically ruins everything is just no true.

We use too much power as is. And solar panels are not that great for the environment when you look at their broader impact. A whole host of other sustainable options exist, each with their own merits and environmental impacts. None of them produces anywhere near as much power as a nuclear plant. None of them meet the same emissions standards as a nuclear plant does when accounting for resource acquisition and fabrication. Nuclear power has had its fair share of major disasters and scandals, but fossil fuels have killed hundreds of millions of people. They kill millions every year. And their impact may even just kill humanity outright. Nuclear energy is the only realistic option if we don't drastically overhaul how we produce and consume electricity as a society (which we should do either way).

this post was submitted on 04 Aug 2023
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