Interests: Science, boardgames, urbanism, public transport and cycling, sports (doing not following it), brighter future (while being way too cynical)…

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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • You basically need a few conditions to be met to make this useable: tide needs to be high enough, there needs to be suitable geological formation that enables building of such power plants, it has to be publicly acceptable to build there, and you need to connect it to the grid. The last two can especially cancel eachother out.

    However, this assumes you use potential energy. What you are envisioning might be more like current power (so kinetic energy) where I’m not sure what the limitations are. Perhaps it’s not too practical to build huge plants underwater in locations with relatively constant current and connect them to the grid






  • (Established) scientists have a long history of ignoring new theories not science itself. But that’s because at the end of the day scientists are still human.

    Science is not great at working on a very short time scales. But give it enough time so more evidence is gathered and possibly some stubborn influential people (that can’t accept a new theory) die and generally we get closer and closer to truth.