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The World's First Osmotic Power Plant

ElectricSteve writes "Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway officially opened the world's first osmotic power plant prototype on November 24. The prototype has a limited production capacity and will be used primarily for testing and data validation, leading to the construction of a commercial power plant in a few years time. Statkraft claims that the technology has the global potential to generate clean, renewable energy equivalent to China's total electricity consumption in 2002 or half of the EU's total power production" What's osmotic power? Wikipedia to the rescue!

2 of 262 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Nuclear power plants are offtopic, but here goe by dbIII · · Score: 0, Troll

    In that post you provide one fact in one sentence, and it's nit-picky and deceptive.

    A single real example disproves an ignorant blanket statement and you are reading far too much emotional baggage from elsewhere into a simple statement.
    I suggest you reread my initial statement above before labelling me a troll - it is one mild sentence which gets my entire point across.
    If you want more information please google for the German Government-commissioned World Nuclear Industry Status Report from August this year, anything I state in my own words here will be called a lie by those that have been tricked by those that wish to see a lot of antiquated plants built at taxpayers expense. Nuclear advocates should find out for themselves that power plants were not perfect 40 years ago and that the assumption that it was has held the industry back more than anything else.

  2. Re:Impact by drinkypoo · · Score: 0, Troll

    And yes, since you brought up per capita, you are talking rates per some arbitrary measure, and rarely can someone not pick some other arbitrary measure that shows the exact opposite.

    I would conversely argue that per capita is the only reasonable measurement when you're trying to make a statement about a group of people. It's what per capita means, per head. If you want to make generalities about the average american, first you have to define it.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"