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Goodbye Exxon, Texaco, Shell, Chevron and BP. Good riddance!

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Wordslinger

Wordslinger

Scientists are now seriously working on sending power beams of electricity collected by solar satellites to furnish unlimited energy from outer space. Bye bye fossil fuel companies. Bye bye Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc. Don't let the door hit you in the ass as you murdering bloodsuckers leave! LOL

http://www.takepart.com/feature/2016/06/27/solar-farms?cmpid=tpdaily-eml-2016-06-27-B

Telstar

Telstar

Wordslinger wrote:Scientists are now seriously working on sending power beams of electricity collected by solar satellites to furnish unlimited energy from outer space. Bye bye fossil fuel companies. Bye bye Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc. Don't let the door hit you in the ass as you murdering bloodsuckers leave! LOL

http://www.takepart.com/feature/2016/06/27/solar-farms?cmpid=tpdaily-eml-2016-06-27-B


Bye bye scientist that dare upset the status quo. I'm reminded of the final scene from "Raiders Of The Lost Ark."

ZVUGKTUBM

ZVUGKTUBM

Now this was a truly fascinating article, Wordslinger. The trend toward renewable energy is unstoppable. It will not be turned back or delayed, and will only accelerate from here.

However, before we take-down big oil and fossil fuels, we must realize that they will be needed as the new energy era unfolds. Also, there are innumerable uses for oil and gas, besides burning them for fuel. In fact, petroleum will likely become a part of the new solar satellite arrays themselves. Plastics and composites are likely to be used in building the satellite arrays, and these materials are made from petroleum.

http://www.best-electric-barbecue-grills.com

Wordslinger

Wordslinger

ZVUGKTUBM wrote:Now this was a truly fascinating article, Wordslinger. The trend toward renewable energy is unstoppable. It will not be turned back or delayed, and will only accelerate from here.

However, before we take-down big oil and fossil fuels, we must realize that they will be needed as the new energy era unfolds. Also, there are innumerable uses for oil and gas, besides burning them for fuel. In fact, petroleum will likely become a part of the new solar satellite arrays themselves. Plastics and composites are likely to be used in building the satellite arrays, and these materials are made from petroleum.

You are correct, of course. But I'm not sure about the gassing of the environment of these other petroleum processes, compared to the exhaust from burning fossil fuel. Are you?

ZVUGKTUBM

ZVUGKTUBM

Wordslinger wrote:You are correct, of course.  But I'm not sure about the gassing of the environment of these other petroleum processes, compared to the exhaust from burning fossil fuel.  Are you?

I do not have any particular knowledge in the area you discuss. I do know that we will not bridge to renewables without petroleum. We will not get the solar satellites into orbit without using petroleum, and will not construct the rockets and satellites without it.

If you shutdown the world's petroleum industry, which the most radical climate change fanatics want to summarily do right now, you have doomed 80% of the human race to death by starvation. Perhaps a billion or so survivors would eke out a subsistence existence at a standard of living set back about 500 years.

Make no mistake, we need to make this transition because during the current century, demand for energy will only rise, while the world's petroleum supplies dwindle. There is not enough oil remaining in the ground to satisfy the world's future energy needs if we continue to burn it as fuel.

The future of energy is in electricity. Electricity generated from wind, solar, space solar (as your article explained), hydro-power, enhanced geothermal systems (basically, heated rock formations), advance modular nuclear reactors, and fusion reactors. The fusion reactor should come online within a few decades. This should also act as a bridge to developing ways to power space ships without using rockets. The storage dilemma for electricity will also be solved. As the 21st century evolves, the internal combustion engine will become as obsolete as the steam engine is.

http://www.best-electric-barbecue-grills.com

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