- #421
mheslep
Gold Member
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That's a moving the goal post fallacy. Your premised was that world wide primary energy usage is ~15 TW(t) and then calculated the amount of oar required to produce that thermal power, fair enough. You can not then logically reduce that load assuming all of combustion powered travel (ground/air) the space heating and needs become much more efficient and credit the difference to nuclear, as if oil/gas could not also be used to make electricity. You are then actually reassuming the thermal load as something less, maybe 10-12TW(t).signerror said:No, that's silly: it makes much more sense to compare like with like (thermal with thermal). For example: (nuclear electricity) EVs need to carry much less energy than petroleum cars, because they store electricity rather than thermal energy. So comparing oil joules with electricity joules would overestimate their electricity requirement by a huge factor. But if you compare oil joules with nuclear reactor heat joules, you get the right numbers - modulo differences in the efficiencies of the heat engines (internal combustion engine vs. steam turbine).
Not at all. Obviously that Th reserves figure was for land mined reserves only. For land mining Uranium and Thorium worldwide reserves are the same order of magnitude.That's negligible compared to the U figures I showed.