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"No it shouldn't depend on what it looks like. It should depend on whether it's economically viable. Which wind farms are not." Ive read the stats and the opinions and know the general rip off thats going to have to be funded by those of use unfortunate enough to live in the time period they are introduced, but we have to accept looking to the future is going to be costly in the here and now. It will be a business like any other business. I personally do not see why all new homes should be built with solar panels on them but this wont be compulsory because of revenue from oil is making the powers that be drag their heels. Even the greedy will have to wake up soon and change will come about by desperation long after we are gone. We are living in a technological age and pay the price - same as miners paid the price for something that is no longer used. Doesn't mean we dont have to stop trying to find renewable resources. None of them will ever be economical to the individual - we know we are cash cows. But the wind farms do produce electricity. Its business that makes it costly. Like everything else in this world. | |||
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"I personally do not see why all new homes should be built with solar panels on them but this wont be compulsory because of revenue from oil is making the powers that be drag their heels. " That of course is a typo and I meant shouldn't. | |||
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"No it shouldn't depend on what it looks like. It should depend on whether it's economically viable. Which wind farms are not. Ive read the stats and the opinions and know the general rip off thats going to have to be funded by those of use unfortunate enough to live in the time period they are introduced, but we have to accept looking to the future is going to be costly in the here and now. It will be a business like any other business. I personally do not see why all new homes should be built with solar panels on them but this wont be compulsory because of revenue from oil is making the powers that be drag their heels. Even the greedy will have to wake up soon and change will come about by desperation long after we are gone. We are living in a technological age and pay the price - same as miners paid the price for something that is no longer used. Doesn't mean we dont have to stop trying to find renewable resources. None of them will ever be economical to the individual - we know we are cash cows. But the wind farms do produce electricity. Its business that makes it costly. Like everything else in this world." +1 simples | |||
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"It's a case of NIMBY "not in my back yard" with a lot of the people who protest against such things. The only way forward at the moment as far as I can see is nuclear power. The recent events in Japan will have put the frighteners on people but I still think it's the only option that will cater for our ever growing demands for electricity. We really need to harness the power of the sea." I've always been pro nuclear much to the hooror of a lot of my peers. Statistically it is safer. But when it goes tits up it really goes! Can we ever be assured anything involving harnessing nature and power sources is ever going to be without loss of life and harm on a local level. I don't think so. Fatalities are life. Look at all of the people killed digging for flint hundreds and thousands of years ago fossilised in the caves... | |||
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" There was nothing more ugly or downright dangerous than slag heaps created from the coalmines. " coalmines didn't create slagheaps, steelworks did British Coal found many ways to recycle the gypsum and silt brought up and washed away from coal post-mining, (our coal was/still is the best in the world; most of it exported) unlike imported trash where the sulphur and dross that we'd normally take out of the product was left in, like the kind you see on garage forecourts full of pitch and other benzine derivatives that is just bad for your health as your hearth hearth In power stations where the coal was pulverised before instantaneous burn the ash was collected, and made into fletton blocks for building. Steelwork slag left over from blasting containing cyanides and other undesirable by-products is a completely different animal entirely. On farms where the farmer wishes to make a few more bob from his land, a wind turbine represents an ideal solution. A steady earner - I have no objections. Those that complain about the impact of such things have little thought for the benefits those devices bring, and the impact is minimal really - and that is fastly becoming tolerated - they're everywhere these days Wolf | |||
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" There was nothing more ugly or downright dangerous than slag heaps created from the coalmines. coalmines didn't create slagheaps, steelworks did British Coal found many ways to recycle the gypsum and silt brought up and washed away from coal post-mining, (our coal was/still is the best in the world; most of it exported) unlike imported trash where the sulphur and dross that we'd normally take out of the product was left in, like the kind you see on garage forecourts full of pitch and other benzine derivatives that is just bad for your health as your hearth hearth In power stations where the coal was pulverised before instantaneous burn the ash was collected, and made into fletton blocks for building. Steelwork slag left over from blasting containing cyanides and other undesirable by-products is a completely different animal entirely. On farms where the farmer wishes to make a few more bob from his land, a wind turbine represents an ideal solution. A steady earner - I have no objections. Those that complain about the impact of such things have little thought for the benefits those devices bring, and the impact is minimal really - and that is fastly becoming tolerated - they're everywhere these days Wolf " Im sorry dialect clash. Anything in a huge pile from the coalmines is called a slagheap in Newcastle. I had never called it anything other than what it is called locally. Thanks for the education of different types of slagheap. | |||
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"Modern grandchildren are very demanding. I don't expect mine to be born for at least a decade and yet I'm expected to make make lifestyle changes just so they won't have to 'pay the price' when they grow up. All I wanted from my Grandad was 50p and some sweets." 50p then equates to £5 now. A magazine costs £2.50-£3 and then you got a sweet treat of some description - 70p-£1, a bottle of pop - £1. Not much is it. My £1 pocket money got me a comic, and enough sweets to keep me in nirvana for the rest of the day while mum and dad went shopping. | |||
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" Im sorry dialect clash. Anything in a huge pile from the coalmines is called a slagheap in Newcastle. I had never called it anything other than what it is called locally. Thanks for the education of different types of slagheap. " no worries...know what ya mean Wolf | |||
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"Modern grandchildren are very demanding. I don't expect mine to be born for at least a decade and yet I'm expected to make make lifestyle changes just so they won't have to 'pay the price' when they grow up. All I wanted from my Grandad was 50p and some sweets. 50p then equates to £5 now. A magazine costs £2.50-£3 and then you got a sweet treat of some description - 70p-£1, a bottle of pop - £1. Not much is it. My £1 pocket money got me a comic, and enough sweets to keep me in nirvana for the rest of the day while mum and dad went shopping." A quid! A whole quid! My two half crowns (5 shillings, 25p) got me to the morning cinema matinee on the bus, where I could have an everlasting strip of toffee (not allowed under trades description now) throughout the show and a drink of kiaora. bus home, collected my swimming things back on the bus then in the pool for a few hours. Out to a bag of potato puffs. Walk home via shop for some sweets and a superman comic (we got the beano dandy bunty and later the jackie delivered as an extra to pocket money) My granda dug coal for about £4 quid a week back then. Now wonder all we got was a stick of rhubarb and a bag of sugar from him! | |||
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"You were lucky. We lived for three months in a paper bag in a septic tank. We used to have to get up at six in the morning, clean the paper bag, eat a crust of stale bread, go to work down t' mill, fourteen hours a day, week-in week-out, for sixpence a week, and when we got home our Dad would thrash us to sleep wi' his belt. " Its ages since we had a you were luckier than me thread - go on - start one off ..... | |||
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