strad wrote: ↑26 Sep 2018, 19:29
i thought they are reducing the coal usage
a few months old article in Reuters
From what I read they are using a lot more coal.
They have not shown any real concern for the environment.
And why should everyone else be content with slashing theirs so that China can use more?????
There may be value in developing within self imposed constraints such as efficiency targets. It may offer the potential advantage of increasing security through independence from various resources, while being an intellectual exercise that could benefit other areas.
Big Tea wrote: ↑26 Sep 2018, 20:48
I wish every country would spend half as much on fusion research as they waste on standing still land making other problems.
You may say 'what if it turns out not to be viable' ?
Fine. Really disappointed, but we then know not to hold our breath waiting for it or wasting time trying to develop it when they could look at something else.
With research like this it seems difficult to know what work, completed and ongoing, is valid. It's a pretty complex topic, fusion. I imagine very difficult to get funding for, and to audit the funding in situ, due to that very reason. Think of the orbital rocket industry. For fifty years it stagnated, lost a vision for exploration, remained expensive, got inflated with nepotists. Then one guy who got a sweet $180 mil tech-startup payout founded a new company and now there's tail sitter rockets quickly becoming normalized, and people are talking about humans on the moon and mars with a 1950s level of fervency. So maybe someone with a fat wallet and no risk of going hungry needs to start a fusion project.