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Study Suggests Buried Internet Infrastructure at Risk as Sea Levels Rise (eurekalert.org)

Thousands of miles of buried fiber optic cable in densely populated coastal regions of the United States may soon be inundated by rising seas, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Oregon. From a report: The study, presented Monday at a meeting of internet network researchers, portrays critical communications infrastructure that could be submerged by rising seas in as soon as 15 years, according to the study's senior author, Paul Barford, a UW-Madison professor of computer science. "Most of the damage that's going to be done in the next 100 years will be done sooner than later," says Barford, an authority on the "physical internet" -- the buried fiber optic cables, data centers, traffic exchanges and termination points that are the nerve centers, arteries and hubs of the vast global information network. "That surprised us. The expectation was that we'd have 50 years to plan for it. We don't have 50 years."

The study, conducted with Barford's former student Ramakrishnan Durairajan, now of the University of Oregon, and Carol Barford, who directs UW-Madison's Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment, is the first assessment of risk of climate change to the internet. It suggests that by the year 2033 more than 4,000 miles of buried fiber optic conduit will be underwater and more than 1,100 traffic hubs will be surrounded by water. The most susceptible U.S. cities, according to the report, are New York, Miami and Seattle, but the effects would not be confined to those areas and would ripple across the internet, says Barford, potentially disrupting global communications.

191 comments

  1. Stuff underground gets wet already by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Stuff underground gets wet already, just in case you didn't know about "rain" and such.

    1. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Plenty of electrical and control cabling is installed in duct bank and they are full of water depending on water table anyway. Sumps can never keep up it seems. Nothing to see here apparently.

    2. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Getting wet is not the same as being submerged.

      Take your water resistant watch sometime and go diving with it.

    3. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Locke2005 · · Score: 1, Redundant

      I guess all those cables laid across the ocean floor must be DOOMED then...

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    4. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess all those cables laid across the ocean floor must be DOOMED then...

      The cables under the ocean were placed there and intended to be submerged. The cables buried underground that are currently not underwater, is the point of the article.

    5. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This comment would have been -1, troll in 1997.

    6. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      News flash: Salt water is a lot more corrosive than fresh water.

    7. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stuff underground gets wet already, just in case you didn't know about "rain" and such.

      We should just get the Dutch to build the Internet infrastructure. Their whole country is more or less under water, and their Internet stills runs . . . along with everything else.

      I think they have invented some kind of anti-gravity water control technology, and just are keeping it as a secret to themselves.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    8. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "Stuff underground gets wet already, "

      Still, you don't need specialized divers to fix a problem. Yet.

    9. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Obfuscant · · Score: 4, Informative

      Their whole country is more or less under water,

      A large part of the country is below sea level. That's not the same as underwater. Yes, there are parts that are underwater: the canals, for example.

      I think they have invented some kind of anti-gravity water control technology,

      It's called a "pump", and some of them are driven by windmills. They didn't invent the pump, they just use a lot of them.

      and just are keeping it as a secret to themselves.

      Damn, now that I've told you, I'll have to kill you.

    10. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New York, New York
      That's my kind of pool!

    11. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Stuff underground gets wet already, just in case you didn't know about "rain" and such.

      That sounds like common sense until you actually see how infrastructure is designed. Most stuff underground most definitely does not get wet. Most of this stuff has many services that exist in order to keep it dry while underground.

      A sump pump works great during a storm, not so much for draining an ocean. Also infrastructure typically doesn't cope well at all with flood waters, so even heavy rain is a problem.

    12. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more like "washes up on shore because mommy won't let him go past the surf"

    13. Re: Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you have not tasted American coastal groundwater

    14. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      News flash: Salt water is a lot more corrosive than fresh water.

      Not to fiber it isn't.

    15. Re: Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All OSP (Outside Plant) fiber optic cable is rated for full immersion. And since measured sea level rise is far less than 0.1 inches per year, in 100 years mean sea level will go up about 10 inches. Assuming it doesnt reverse itself. So move along, ignore the chicken littles.

    16. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by blindseer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The cables under the ocean were placed there and intended to be submerged. The cables buried underground that are currently not underwater, is the point of the article.

      We know how to manage underwater cables. We know how quickly the water will rise. We know how deep these cables are. Therefore we know where and when the cables would need to be replaced with submerged rated versions to keep operational. Given that maintenance and upgrades are a thing with any infrastructure that means that there is a budget for this. I understand that it's quite possible for submerged rated cables to cost more than underground rated cables but that only means upgrades might be delayed, or the budget needs to be increased.

      If the worst case of sea level rise is some people having their internet be on the blink as the upgrades are going into place then this is a non-problem. I'd be more concerned about things like subway tunnels and such being under water.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    17. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by HiThere · · Score: 1

      No, we don't know how quickly the water will rise. We've got decent guesses. This is one of them.

      I agree that upgrades of the infrastructure are an on-going need, but this is a statement that the upgrades in certain areas need to be designed differently, and may need to be done on an accelerated schedule.

      It's fine to disagree with what they say is going to happen, but it would be better to not misstate what they are saying. They aren't saying "This is the worst that will happen", they're saying "This is something that will probably happen". One thing happening doesn't exclude other things happening.

      That said, I haven't read the report, and even if I did I couldn't properly assess its validity. Summaries often misstate the articles. E.g., I don't know whether they're talking about more frequent flooding (i.e. storm surges, etc.), or whether they're talking about the results of an expected sea level rise. Or, more probably, whether they discuss both cases in different sections.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    18. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are they rated for SALT water?

    19. Re: Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are they rated for immersion in SALT water?

    20. Re: Stuff underground gets wet already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent is ignorant to compare something as complex as a watch to something as simple as a strand of glass/silica. Idiota!

    21. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by DethLok · · Score: 1

      I would like to know about these "internet stills", what kind of proof alcohol do they produce and how much does it cost?

      And where can I get some?

    22. Re: Stuff underground gets wet already by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Are they rated for immersion in SALT water?

      Yes.

      AGW will cause many serious problems. This isn't one of them.

      Stupid ignorant alarmism does nothing but provide ammunition to the denialists.

    23. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Did you read the words you quoted? "Most likely" doesn't imply knowledge, it implies a "best guess".

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    24. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by samwichse · · Score: 1

      Salt water is a whole other level of environmental hazard for... just about anything utility-related that's exposed to it.

    25. Re:Stuff underground gets wet already by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      I would like to know about these "internet stills", what kind of proof alcohol do they produce and how much does it cost?

      It may run in some fashion, but it is horribly inefficient. They have to throw away the HEADs from all the web page requests or else they'll go blind.

  2. silver lining by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 5, Funny

    Less likely to be cut by a backhoe then ...

    1. Re:silver lining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or...MORE likely to get cut by a backhoe than to suffer damage by "rising oceans."

      Holy Fuck. Can anyone point to ANY PLACE that has an issue with the so-called rising seas that isn't actually an example of sinking land?

    2. Re:silver lining by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's not an issue, it's been the reality of living near the sea for generations. The sea has steadily been rising for a long time.

      There is also a very simple solution to stop the sea level rise accelerating near your shoreline, just put down a tidal gauge, it will scare the sea away to locations only observed by satellite and return your rise to the one from 100 years ago. Don't ask me how it works, but it most definitely works.

    3. Re:silver lining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But more likely to be tapped by a whole submarine.

    4. Re:silver lining by Layzej · · Score: 0

      It's been pretty flat for several thousands of years. Except recently it's been rising and is accelerating.

    5. Re:silver lining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Less likely to be cut by a backhoe then ...

      ... and more likely to be cut by a Russian submarine.

    6. Re:silver lining by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      It takes a lot of massaging to get to that from raw long term datasets like this :

      http://www.psmsl.org/data/obta...

    7. Re:silver lining by Layzej · · Score: 1

      That is just one station. That you can find one station with little acceleration is not surprising. In aggregate though, there is acceleration.

    8. Re:silver lining by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It's been pretty flat for several thousands of years. Except recently it's been rising and is accelerating.

      Someone's really not a fan of the facts to have modded this down to 0. The Holocene data is from Fleming et al. 1998, Fleming 2000, & Milne et al. 2005. The more recent data is from CSIRO. The fact that sea level rise is accelerating may not be popular, but it should not be surprising. It's a natural consequence of thermal expansion and melting land ice due to global warming.

  3. So all the stuff above ground? by Revek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is in no danger. These are some of the stupidest ideas I've seen lately. Its like the world is static to them and one tiny change triggers a "oh noes all is lost!" response

    1. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AHHH! HURRY Noah, build us an ark, we're all drowning!!!

    2. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NOBODY SAID THAT THOUGH. What they said is that underground internet infrastructure will be the first to go and is in danger NOW, and that's accurate. Reading is key, try it without the blinders.

    3. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so glad you corrected me. I've been living underground and glub glub glub.

    4. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by snapsnap · · Score: 2

      And, the claims are blown out of proportion. I've been hearing warnings about rising sea water for around forty years, but the Sound in Seattle hasn't risen any. It would be obvious since most of the seawall was built in 1934.

    5. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is in no danger. These are some of the stupidest ideas I've seen lately. Its like the world is static to them and one tiny change triggers a "oh noes all is lost!" response

      Have you ever seen kids running around crying when they can't get on the Internet? :D Make me think of South Park, Season 12 Episode 6.

    6. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is in no danger. These are some of the stupidest ideas I've seen lately. Its like the world is static to them and one tiny change triggers a "oh noes all is lost!" response

      Catastrophe is nigh! Give us all your wealth and civil rights or we'll all drown! All drown!!

    7. Re:So all the stuff above ground? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're declaring all those decades of satellite and tidal gauge data from the entire globe to be "blown out of proportion", because you personally didn't notice the mean sea level rising 2.5 mm every year where you live.

      And hey, maybe it isn't rising in Seattle. That's perfectly possible since the sea isn't uniformly flat, and levels change in different places based on a whole bunch of factors. Except no - you're just wrong. It actually has risen over 8 cm in that 40 years, and you simply didn't notice.

  4. Why even bring sea level into the story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Underground cables are ALWAYS at risk from any type of water accumulation. Sea level has nothing to do with that risk.

    A broken underground pipe can cause the same exact damage as surging water from higher sea level. The risk is from long term water exposure, not sea level.

    1. Re:Why even bring sea level into the story? by tattood · · Score: 1
      According to TFA,

      Many of the conduits at risk are already close to sea level and only a slight rise in ocean levels due to melting polar ice and thermal expansion as climate warms will be needed to expose buried fiber optic cables to sea water.

      They are talking about cables that are buried underground. Right now, if you need to service the cables, you just dig up the ground to get to the cables and service them. If the ground in which the cables are buried is underwater, it makes it more difficult dig them up and service them.

      --
      WTB [sig], PST!!!
    2. Re:Why even bring sea level into the story? by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      Underground cables are ALWAYS at risk from any type of water accumulation. Sea level has nothing to do with that risk.

      A broken underground pipe can cause the same exact damage as surging water from higher sea level. The risk is from long term water exposure, not sea level.

      Sounds like you don't know how the ground works.

      Normally, there is a level of water underground called "water table". It is where the water level sits all the time. Anything below the line is submerged. When there is rain, the water line goes up. This water line is also related to the sea level when the area is near by the sea. When the sea level rises, the water line also goes up. So yes, sea level has an impact on water table line specifically the areas near by the sea (coast).

    3. Re: Why even bring sea level into the story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sea water is salty. This can be an issue, especially if multiple metals are exposed, as that can induce voltages that can accelerate corrosion. This is a issue on oil rigs, for example.

    4. Re:Why even bring sea level into the story? by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 1

      Yea, but in a whole lot of places these cables are at risk anyway.

      Let's take sea level rise out of the equation for a minute. That saves you right? Wrong. Places like the southern US coast are dependent on re-sedimentation to maintain (and grow) above sea level. Modern water management and bathymetry practices mean that is not going to occur. Even if humans were good little stewards of CO2, the coast is still sinking, and will keep sinking as sediment compaction occurs over the next few hundred million years.

      The ocean is not static. The land is not static. If we want to avoid replacing cables around the ocean due to land level/sea level changes, starting an ice age is about the only solution. An extremely stupid solution at that.

  5. This was already happening under Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why didn't Obama stop this?

    1. Re:This was already happening under Obama by Locke2005 · · Score: 0

      Thanks, Trump!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  6. They will just move the termination points by nanoflower · · Score: 1

    Unless we are going to see sea levels rise by a multiple feet in a year I don't see the problem. The sea is rising slowly so there will be plenty of warning before any termination point goes underwater so there is plenty of time to move the termination point to further inland so it's safe(ish) from hurricanes and other issues associated with rising sea levels. Moving the people is going to be a much bigger issue.

    1. Re:They will just move the termination points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moving the people is going to be a much bigger issue.

      Only islands smaller than the cyclones that pass nearby are a problem.

      For continent-dwellers, there already is a significant "flee or risk the brunt of riding it out" duality in storm situations. Additionally, the vast majority of personally owned shoreline is in the hands of extremely wealthy individuals, and they can (trivially) buy the next block inward to relocate their mansions if that's cheaper than hiring someone to rebuild the beach.

      If someone stays and dies, that is seen as their own fault. If someone leaves and their property is destroyed, they call up insurance and start rebuilding. If someone leaves and the land they once owned no longer exists, they still have their own life and whatever skills or other resources earned them enough to buy that land the first time.

    2. Re:They will just move the termination points by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      Just in case anyone would like some actual data, NOAA has data for a great many tide gauges accessible on the internet. Here's a l;ink to the chart of roughly 150 years worth of data for the gauge at the battery in New York City. https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.... They've even done a linear fit to the data -- 11 inches a century. About 25% of apparent Sea Level Rise at The Battery is thought to be due to the site sinking a few inches a century. The rest is actual SLR.

      Anyway, feel free to examine the data. See if you can eyeball any post 1950 acceleration in sea level rise (I can't. I doubt even a Slashdot editor can). You may want to check other NOAA gauges to confirm that The Battery isn't some sort of weird anomaly. For sites elsewhere on the planet, try the Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level.http://www.psmsl.org (You may have to do your own data fit).

      My conclusion. Engineers in New York City and Seattle probably aren't building unprotected critical communication infrastructure 3 or 6 or even 12 inches above high water. MIami? Who the hell knows? We're talking Florida here. Recommended reading: Anything by Carl Hiaasen. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
  7. UW-Madison's Center for Sustainability and the Glo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Gee...never saw something like this study coming from people at a place like this.

    You can pretty much predict the kind of crap they will publish.

  8. Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I thought the sea levels were already supposed have risen? Lots of doom and gloom predictions based on bad models.

    I for one would simply place a bunch of tiny life-vests on cables to keep them happy, you know, just in case.

    1. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do not believe the deniers! We are already hip deep in the rising oceans! Do not believe your lying eyes!

      Oh, and the world IS NOT flat - it is shaped like a burrito! (kudos if you get the reference).

    2. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, and the world IS NOT flat - it is shaped like a burrito! (kudos if you get the reference).

      "...and that, my liege, is how we know the world to be banana-shaped."
      "This new learning amazes me, Sir Bedevere. Explain again how sheep's bladders may be employed to prevent earthquakes."

    3. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite is this:

      Many of the conduits at risk are already close to sea level and only a slight rise in ocean levels due to melting polar ice and thermal expansion as climate warms will be needed to expose buried fiber optic cables to sea water

      Apparently we don't need to worry about any causes of rising ocean levels except for global warming - any other cause of rise in ocean levels will not cause harm.

  9. But the sea level is only rising a few mm per year by Nutria · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Specifically, averaging 3.2mm, according to Wikipedia. In 15 years, that's only 48mm (less than 2 inches).

    How's that going to flood a bunch of stuff that's not on some coral atoll in the South Pacific?

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  10. Re:Fake news by postbigbang · · Score: 0

    A clear preponderance of scientific research refutes your opinion. No one will censor your for your opinion, but when your facts are clearly and undeniably bad, indeed you may get modded down.

    The petrochemical/oil industry's clear mandate is to not be sued or cited as a decent part of the problem.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  11. What about the buildings, streets, homes, &sub by Proudrooster · · Score: 2

    If water is going to rise as predicted, the Internet infrastructure may be the least of the problems, especially if New York City is under sea level, unless the subway is converted into an underwater subway system.

  12. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 inches can do a lot, ask you girlfriend- i'm sure she's familiar with that size.

  13. Oooo, I got some Troll food! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why didn't Obama stop this?

    It's because the Republican controlled Congress stopped him.

    Whatever Obama wanted, the Republicans didn't. I bet if Obama tried to make abortion illegal, the Republicans would have said, "no!" just because they were out to ruin his Presidency.

    Why?

    Because they're constituents wanted it that way.

    Why?

    Because their constituents couldn't stand a Black man as President. There was no other explanation.

    "Didn't like Obama because of his 'policies'"? Suuuuure you did.

    1. Re:Oooo, I got some Troll food! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why didn't Obama stop this?

      It's because the Republican controlled Congress stopped him.

      LOL.. You DO remember that Obama started his presidency with a majority of the house and a cloture proof super majority in the senate. He had that for almost 2 full years.

      IF he really wanted to have done something, anything, there wasn't any reason to even ask Republican's permission, democrats could do anything they wanted. That's how we got the ACA...

      My guess is that it wasn't important then because it's not really important. It's only important now for political reasons..

    2. Re:Oooo, I got some Troll food! by Bodhammer · · Score: 1

      "[T]his was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal,"


      https://www.investors.com/poli...

      Obama's a tool...

      --
      "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
    3. Re:Oooo, I got some Troll food! by blindseer · · Score: 1

      It's because the Republican controlled Congress stopped him.

      Demonstrably false, try again.

      The only thing stopping the Democrats were other Democrats that valued staying in office more than implementing the DNC platform.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    4. Re:Oooo, I got some Troll food! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because the Republican controlled Congress stopped him.

      Demonstrably false

      OK, feel free to do so.

  14. Re:Fake news by sycodon · · Score: 3, Funny

    No.

    Clearly it is a case of us not throwing enough virgins into the volcano.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  15. Re:Fake news by suutar · · Score: 1

    what mechanism of a warming climate increases volcanic activity?

  16. How much of a rise is "slight"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It drives me nuts when publications use these relative terms as if we all know what they mean. How much is a "slight" increase in sea level A foot? An Inch? The current yearly rise in sea level is 3.2 mm. That's about 2 inches over 15 years. Is the paper based on this, or a much higher rise?

    Numbers matter, and not giving them in the summary borders on dishonesty.

    1. Re:How much of a rise is "slight"? by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      It's a link to a press release, which doesn't even link itself to the "study". There's no real information, nor details on the assumptions behind the supposed catastrophe. The closest they have is a computer generated image of speculative flooding in the future. It's pretty much as close to global warming bait as you're going to get, released only to say "Worry about this, too!" without any actual information content.

      I guess it's more difficult to have your alarmism debunked if you leave it all hand wavey and vague. I'm sure there's probably an back of the envelope calculation somewhere behind this "study", but this doesn't even contain that much actual information.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  17. Sooner and spread out is better by RhettLivingston · · Score: 2

    We are fundamentally incapable of long term planning. If we faced a scenario of nothing happening for 50 years and then everything happening at once, we'd be devastated. If things happen throughout the 50 years though, great. It is much easier to handle many little disasters than one big one when you can't plan. It also helps to keep the issue in the public consciousness.

    1. Re:Sooner and spread out is better by Train0987 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It makes no sense to plan for something that *might* happen 50-100 years for now when we don't even fully understand what that something is, not to mention all of the other unforseen things that *will* happen during that time.

    2. Re:Sooner and spread out is better by avandesande · · Score: 1

      Unless an asteroid strikes, yeah most things happen in a kind of dribble. So we are doing a good job of planning by doing nothing.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    3. Re:Sooner and spread out is better by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. We can plan to not have to do anything - ever. Building codes and zoning should be planning for times on this scale and longer. When looking at 100 year scales, most costs should be avoidable by simply making sure that replacement infrastructure happening during that time take into account natural expectations. Coastal construction and infrastructure should be required to be flood and hurricane proof (or simply nonexistent).

      Of course, we are very bad at avoiding known hazards too. We rebuilt New Orleans with few meaningful changes after Katrina and we rebuilt Earth City, Missouri after the '93 flood. In both cases, many were questioning the decisions but businesses that specialize in getting taxpayers to pay for their infrastructure ruled. We will pay even more for both the next time.

    4. Re:Sooner and spread out is better by blindseer · · Score: 2

      We are fundamentally incapable of long term planning.

      Then explain this to me. On my daily commute I'd drive by this building that had a 10 or 15 foot wall around it with the building sitting on top of the dirt inside. I searched the internet and found that the building was completed in 1966. A couple years ago the city started filling in dirt around the building to raise the street in front of it about 10 or 15 feet. They will likely finish this in the fall.

      Why did they raise the street level? Because across the street is a river. You see every ten years or so this street would end up under water from spring thaw and rains. An inconvenience at first since in the 1960s the city wasn't as populated as it is now. Now, 50 years later, they are finishing what was likely started even before that building was being planed in managing the city flooding along the river front. With the higher street level they expect the flooding will be reduced to once in a century.

      What was likely a muddy horse path 100 years ago is now a four lane road. To make a path for this road meant having the power lines, water lines, building set backs, street drainage, all laid out in at least a general detail decades in advance.

      That's just one example of a city project that was planned over a very long term. There's many examples all over the world. Some of this planning is centuries old.

      I remember a news program on the tsunami that hit Fukushima in 2011. In that program they showed a footpath that went past a small stone monument, probably no more that 15 feet in height and 3 feet square at the base. The carvings were in Japanese but the person showing it says it's a monument to the dead in a great tsunami centuries before, and a warning not to build a structure closer to the sea than the point on which it stood. It turns out that in the tsunami that hit in 2011 the structures built below that monument were washed out to sea and the buildings on higher ground survived.

      If that Japanese high water marker isn't some kind of long term infrastructure planning then I don't know what is. Granted, planners failed to heed the warning on that monument and did so at great cost. My guess is that this failure is not likely to be repeated for another century or three.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  18. Re:Fake news by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Obviously an increase in piracy, leads to increased in volcanic activity.
    Simple logic would tell you that.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  19. Re:What about the buildings, streets, homes, & by Nutria · · Score: 1

    Amsterdam figured it out, and so can New Amsterdam...

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  20. Fake News! by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    Balderdash! The Earth is flat! I mean we didn't come from no smelly monkeys, I mean vaccines cause autism, I mean ... dammit I forgot what was fake, but something is bogus about wet wire claims.

  21. Re:What about the buildings, streets, homes, & by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they didn't just change it because people liked it better that way.

  22. Re:Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it WILL be modded into oblivion.

    But hey, that's not censoring...riiiight?

  23. Re:What about the buildings, streets, homes, & by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If water is going to rise as predicted, the Internet infrastructure may be the least of the problems, especially if New York City is under sea level, unless the subway is converted into an underwater subway system.

    Well, we have to have our priorities.

    How will it affect download speeds and gaming latency? That's what I want to know ...

  24. Re:Fake news by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    It's more like social Darwinism. Geeks fight with mod points, rather than take pretty obvious facts and grind their heel into them. I've had great enlightenment here, as well as the sludge of over-ripe ego as well.

    Everyone's entitled to their opinions, but not their own set of facts.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  25. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having just 2 inches is not something to brag about.

  26. Re:Fake news by bobbied · · Score: 1

    A clear preponderance of scientific research refutes your opinion. No one will censor your for your opinion, but when your facts are clearly and undeniably bad, indeed you may get modded down.

    Excellent point, not that I agree with your option of the evidence we have, there certainly are a lot of folks making the claim that it's clear and that does justify getting modded down.

    The petrochemical/oil industry's clear mandate is to not be sued or cited as a decent part of the problem.

    Then you make a absolutely stupid statement... So the Oil industry doesn't have any valid facts to add to this discussion? Of all the industries, they are obviously one of the few interested parties and have likely funded a LOT of science on this. They may have an agenda in this, but you really cannot just toss anything that has an agenda because if you have that right, so do I...

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  27. Re:Fake news by postbigbang · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you're unaware of the disinformation campaign foisted by the oil companies over decades. The "science" funded was a mixture of great geology, totally bullshit oil resource studies designed to bias advancing prices, and an aggressive defense of increased consumption, deregulation of California's advanced MPG requirements, wicked amounts of distribution control to prop prices up, and the oil wars that we're still fighting 17 years later.

    But yeah, some great geology and chemistry.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  28. People rarely understand the land aspect by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Look, if sea levels rise a couple of feet, this affects the cable repeaters and the landing approaches. A couple of feet may impact whether a six foot raised building is viable, because it's now four foot, and the wave action is likely to wash away the support structures. Some cable landings may have been built on promontories that could be reached by roads which now get washed away, and the storm impacts can cause other problems.

    (caveat: not at that UW)

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:People rarely understand the land aspect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sea level isn't going to raise by a couple of feet in 15 years, unless someone nukes the south pole.

  29. OMFG!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're all going to DIE!!! Global Warming!!!! Pestilence!!! DONALD FUCKING TRUMP!!!! OOOOOOMMMMMFFFFGGGGG!!!

  30. -1 troll by citylivin · · Score: 1

    "Stuff underground gets wet already, just in case you didn't know about "rain" and such."

    sigh. you obviously havent done much infrastructure planning if you dont know the difference between water resistant and water proof. from TFA:

    Buried fiber optic cables are designed to be water-resistant, but unlike the marine cables that ferry data from continent to continent under the ocean, they are not waterproof.

    Plus there is the whole "there is nothing worse for equipment than seawater" thing, which if you had ever maintained anything around an ocean, you would be very aware of.

    --
    As a potential lottery winner, I totally support tax cuts for the wealthy
    1. Re:-1 troll by swb · · Score: 1

      I'd like more information on what constitutes "water resistance" and what violates a water resistance claim.

      My guess is anything buried in the ground anyplace other than a desert has some ability to withstand immersion in fresh water nearly indefinitely. A lot of low-lying areas can be prone to periodic flooding or other conditions which would amount to water immersion.

      I'd guess that water pressure is probably a key variable -- "water resistance" probably isn't guaranteed for continuous immersion beyond 5-10 bar, but I would wager that most water resistant cable would hold up indefinitely in fresh water at pressures below that.

      Resistance to sea water is probably a whole other standard, but again, it seems hard to believe that subterranean cable that's not resistant to sea water would be used close to coastal areas (for of course various definitions of close to coastal areas) because of the exact risk from runoff, storm surges, etc.

      I guess I remain mostly unconcerned, especially because this is optical we're talking about. It won't short. You usually have a poly conduit and then several layers of jacketing.

    2. Re: -1 troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I DO plan AND BUILD infrastructure for a living, including undersea fiber optic cables. All outside plant (OSP) carrier grade fiber optic cables are WATER PROOF at up to 3 atmospheres pressure. Thus they arenâ(TM)t at risk unless the sea level rises at least 100â(TM). Marine trans-oceanic cables are waterproof down to thousands of feet.

    3. Re:-1 troll by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Unless the conduit is breached you don't have to worry about it, which is what this pretty much boils down to. Look at the fibre line hanging off a utility pole. Same stuff they bury in the ground and even then it's usually a double conduit. The bigger danger is "shifting" of material in the ground and it breaking the conduit, in turn breaking the cable. We have this problem in Canada with winter freeze/thaw cycles where 4-6"+ movement in the ground is possible. It's why we usually bury at 5.5-6.5' these days or simply run above ground, but that presents another problem in some places. Especially where you get extremely strong t-storms off the lakes or building on the leeward side of the mountains.

      Generally, say in the US? The biggest thing that impacts equipment out in the wild is insects. Palm roaches, german cockroaches, crazy ants, fire ants, and so on love to build their nets in that stuff. They love the EM radiation wifi and internet equipment puts out. And are far more likely to knock it out. And in most cases, unless the idiot is trying to "cut costs" to show how good of a money saver they are(and not thinking long term), already plan on submersion for long periods due to hurricanes, heavy flooding and so on. As for the "salt water" issue, the only answer is the same thing it's always been. Equipment goes into a building, if needs antennas and outside for them, you find a solution where the antenna's can be exposed long-term but the equipment is away from the constant salty air. Plenty of companies make products for that.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    4. Re:-1 troll by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Most direct burial fiber optic cable is rated for IP68, which means direct water immersion (unlimited time) of at least 1 meter.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  31. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes with only two inches, she has already moved her hole to another location just as substations will have to do.

    Apparently what is needed is MORE sea level rise. Or maybe a thicker sea.

  32. Oh no... by Tulsa_Time · · Score: 1

    We will have to adjust....

    --
    5 out of 6 people enjoy Russian Roulette & 6 out of 7 Dwarfs are not Happy
  33. Re:Fake news by mnemotronic · · Score: 1

    ... fake news ...

    No such thing as global climate change.
    Even if there was such a thing as global climate change,it's completely irrelevant because it's definitely not caused by humans. It happens all the time.
    Even if humans did have something to do with it, it's completely irrelevant because there's nothing anyone can do at this point to eliminate, reduce or remediate it.
    Even if there was something we could do about it, it's completely irrelevant because that would cost too much money.
    Even if, in the overall scheme of things, it would cost less to do something about it than it would cost to not do something about it, either of those might cause my taxes to go up, and that's completely unacceptable. Bottom line - my 401k is more important than the future of humanity. Tough s**t guys. End of story.

    --
    The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
  34. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having just 2 inches is not something to brag about.

    On the other hand, if you have 2 more inches, that could make a lot different!

  35. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    I dunno. Some people like it that wide.

  36. Out of date by the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cables will be out of date, or even non functioning by the time seal levels rise enough to effect them. Or they will be replaced with water proof cables by then. SMH

  37. Re:Fake news by bobbied · · Score: 2

    All conspiracy theories, worthy of scorn... The oil companies have sanctioned many studies w/o conditions, actual science was done. And it was mostly the automobile industry that was pushing back on CAFEE standards, not the oil industry...

    Look, the "evidence" is not actually as one sided on this debate as you may think. There is a whole lot of obfuscation being done on BOTH sides of this for various political and economic reasons.

    Just look at the dire predictions from 10 years ago. There is a pile of "We are sure X will happen in 10 years" statements which didn't pan out. Much of that was alarmist claptrap, or, as in the case of Al Gore, a way to make money, fist on the movie then on Carbon Offset Credits.

    One must be careful not to put on the tin foil hat folded by either side in this. Why? Because the truth is someplace between Al Gore's Inconvenient truth and the 1970's fear of "global cooling".

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  38. progressive solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Station long lines of progressive slutlings to hoist-high the cabling. From Maine to Daytona. As the water rises balance one chirping slut atop another . Cable dry, Bezos income rages while hordes of progressives drown ... try to get a few migrant children into that line ... every emergency needs to be exploited ... what more can we ask for/ ?

  39. Re:Fake news by postbigbang · · Score: 0

    Citations, please.

    May I call your attention to the hottest summer in NA on record?

    How much evidence do I have to wave under your nose? It makes me suspect you're on the dole.

    There are bad people on both sides, but a clear preponderance of research says that rationalizing the clear results, atop clear evidence under your nose, the citations of political idiots (they're on both sides of the aisle in the US) means you're either in denial or paid. I appreciate a cogent skeptic, but you've only demonstrated your limited knowledge of dog whistles.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  40. If the Internet goes away tomorrow, I'll be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about you?

    1. Re:If the Internet goes away tomorrow, I'll be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure? Airports will be clogged with flights being cancelled. Passengers stuck at airports, traffice jam and all cabs fully occupied because Grab and Uber can't be accessed. Hotel bookings, banks, ATMs, could be frozen for security reasons, and the whole city where I am at might be in a standstill.

         

  41. unlike the marine cables, they are not waterproof by Layzej · · Score: 1

    From the article: "Buried fiber optic cables are designed to be water-resistant, but unlike the marine cables that ferry data from continent to continent under the ocean, they are not waterproof."

  42. No thought was given to climate change by Layzej · · Score: 2

    We should just get the Dutch to build the Internet infrastructure.

    Anyone could build infrastructure that can survive being submerged, Unfortunately, they didn't plan for that: "When it was built 20-25 years ago, no thought was given to climate change."

  43. Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

    What a bunch of bullshit. If there is a certainty of sea level rise wiping out large population centers if we don't do anything about CO2 output then I'd think we could take on some risk to avert it. What kind of risk? Building nuclear reactors kind of risk.

    Has anyone done a risk analysis on using nuclear power? It turns out lots of people have. We find that nuclear power is the safest energy source we have. How can that be? Because a nuclear power plant can produce 1.21 GW of electricity with a capacity factor exceeding 90% for close to 80 years and very few people are killed or injured. Compare this to wind, solar, and hydro which have a capacity factors around 35% and people still die from industrial accidents in building and maintaining them. Comparing total energy out to people dead means fewer people dead from nuclear power than anything we know of.

    They claim certainty of a many people dead in a global warming induced event and compare that to the risk of a nuclear power accident. If the global warming means 100% that people die then whatever risk nuclear power has must be lower than that.

    I'm thinking that since the people in government are not issuing licenses to build more nuclear power that they know global warming is bullshit, they are suicidal (because DC is at "certainty" of being under water), or they are so lacking in intelligence to understand some basic fucking math.

    If global warming is a problem then do something to fix it. If it's not a problem then at some point people will realize this and the scare mongering will have no effect. I left that scare mongering behind years ago. Now I'm simply pissed at being lied to over and over again.

    I need a drink.

    --
    I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    1. Re:Risk vs. certainty by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Given the economics of building nuclear power plants they don't have a chance against other more cost effective means of building power plants. Unless you're willing to give massive subsidies to nuclear power it can't compete. The free market won't even make loans to build a nuclear power plant unless it's backed by government loan guarantees.

    2. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Given the economics of building nuclear power plants they don't have a chance against other more cost effective means of building power plants.

      Do you mean power plants that burn coal and natural gas? Sure, then I'll agree.

      Unless you're willing to give massive subsidies to nuclear power it can't compete.

      Fine, then subsidize it.

      The alternative to nuclear power is New York being submerged by rising sea levels. How much would it cost to deal with the rising seas, compare that to the cost of building nuclear power plants, and choose accordingly. I'm trying to understand the problem here. I keep hearing that "the debate is over". Well, is it? If the debate is over then the government should be acting on it.

      The free market won't even make loans to build a nuclear power plant unless it's backed by government loan guarantees.

      Then subsidize nuclear power. Subsidize it like our lives depend on it. Because if the predictions are to be believed then in fact lives do depend on it.

      We've been dumping lots of money into wind, solar, and nuclear. Doing the math we get at least ten times the energy from the nuclear subsidies per dollar than from wind or solar. Here's an idea, take the money we used to put into wind and solar and invest that into nuclear. History tells us that with that level of investment we'd be far better off.

      I'll agree that ending subsidies for wind and solar may not be necessary. What is necessary is an "all the above" solution to the problem of CO2 output. I keep hearing politicians talk about the threat global warming poses, that "all the above" is on the table, but when applications for nuclear power plants come to the NRC then they sit on them for 10 years and maybe they issue a license. If global warming is any real threat then the government should be working with the industry to speed up the license process, assure the power plants will be operated safely, give them any financial and engineering resources they need, and make this happen.

      The alternative is rising sea levels, more coal mining, and more people dead.

      Don't give me shit about the free market not supporting nuclear power. We haven't had a free market in energy since at least the Department of Energy was created. This is do or die shit we are dealing with. If it's not global warming that's a threat then it's dependence on foreign energy. Maybe that foreign energy is oil shipped in from all over the world. Maybe that's wind and hydro from Canada, or solar energy from Mexico. If the USA is to continue as an independent nation then we need to be able to provide the energy we need to survive.

      We see this happening with Germany. They can't provide for their own energy because they shut down their nuclear power. Now they are having to ship in nuclear power from France, natural gas from Russia, oil from the Middle East, and (oddly enough) coal from the USA. President Trump was right to berate them over this, they can't defend themselves from hostile neighbors like Russia if they hold the means to freeze them to death by turning a valve. The USA will be in a similar situation real quick if we don't start replacing the aging nuclear power reactors we depend on to power our industry.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    3. Re:Risk vs. certainty by mcswell · · Score: 1

      "1.21 GW of electricity with a capacity factor": Surely you mean "1.21 GW of electricity with a flux capacitor", right?

      "I need a drink." I'd settle for a DeLorean.

    4. Re:Risk vs. certainty by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      As far as sea level rise goes it's already too late to do much about it. It will take centuries for the big ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica to catch up with the warming that's already happened. I'd be surprised if 500 years from now sea level hasn't risen by at least 10 or 20 feet. The last time CO2 levels were over 400 ppm sea level was over 70 feet higher than it currently is. It may just be a matter of how long it takes to get there.

    5. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 0

      A rise of 20 feet in 500 years is just a couple inches per year. I think we can manage that without some kind of panic. Sure, that might mean some expensive changes to infrastructure at first but now that we've run through the models on a computer we can lay out plans for decades in advance. I'm at a loss on what the big deal is about.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    6. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Has anyone done a risk analysis on using nuclear power? It turns out lots of people have. We find that nuclear power is the safest energy source we have. How can that be? Because a nuclear power plant can produce 1.21 GW of electricity with a capacity factor exceeding 90% for close to 80 years and very few people are killed or injured.
      Capacity factor is irrelevant. You would grasp that if you tried to produce 100% of the power your country consumes with 90% CF plants.

      Compare this to wind, solar, and hydro which have a capacity factors around 35% and people still die from industrial accidents in building and maintaining them. Comparing total energy out to people dead means fewer people dead from nuclear power than anything we know of.
      Sure, and no one ever died in building a nuclear plant, or while mining or refining uranium ... lol.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    7. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      We see this happening with Germany. They can't provide for their own energy because they shut down their nuclear power.
      Germany produces about 50% more power than it uses, moron. Which is sold to its neighbours or other European countries.
      Germany has not shut down its nuclear power, you moron. It is in the process of doing so and has shut down a little bit less than half of it, moron.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    8. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      they can't defend themselves from hostile neighbors like Russia if they hold the means to freeze them to death by turning a valve.
      You are really an idiot, aren't you? What happens if Russia stops the gas deliveries to Germany? First off all we have stored gas for about 2 years of usage, secondly we will get our gas from Netherlands, Norway and: we have our own gas ... how can you be so stupid is beyond me.

      now they are having to ship in nuclear power from France
      You seem not to know that France is buying more power from Germany than other way around, however: I told you that already a dozen times, so stop spreading your stupid lies.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    9. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      I've learned not to believe anything you claim without sources. Give some links for me to click and review and maybe I'll believe you

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    10. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Then you are an idiot ... you can google everything yourself I "claim".

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    11. Re: Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did. You are full of shit. NG is a sizable part of their energy and Germany gets roughly half their NG from your buddy Putin.

      Google it.

    12. Re: Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I googled all this. You thought no one would. You are a liar just your your buddy Putin and his poodle, Trump.

    13. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Germany produces about 50% more power than it uses, moron. Which is sold to its neighbours or other European countries.

      This chart shows otherwise. https://www.energy-charts.de/exchange.htm

      Also, buying natural gas from Russia and using it to make electricity to sell to Switzerland is not "producing" energy. There's more to energy than electricity. France figured out how to become at least moderately energy independent with nuclear power, which that chart linked to above shows Germany buys plenty.

      Germany has not shut down its nuclear power, you moron. It is in the process of doing so and has shut down a little bit less than half of it, moron.

      Germany has not shut down its nuclear yet. About 1/3rd of capacity was shutdown in 2011 and the rest will be shut down in 10 years or so. Arguing that these reactors haven't been shutdown yet seems rather silly. There will soon be no nuclear power in Germany leaving them dependent on foreign sources of energy, except for what little coal they produce domestically. That is not a good idea for any nation, as a matter of national security and sovereignty.

      I'm sure Germany can be proud of being a net exporter of electricity. Lot of good that will do if Russia decides they need their natural gas more than Germany does.

    14. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      I did finally sit down to Google something about where Germany gets it's energy and Germany has put themselves in a very bad spot.

      Germany imports 90%+ of the natural gas they burn.
      Germany imports 90%+ of the oil they burn.
      Germany imports about half of the coal they burn.
      Germany gets about 15% of their electricity from domestic nuclear power and about 40% from coal with plans to shut down both in the near future.
      Germany gets 35% of their electricity from domestic wind, solar, hydro, and biomass.

      By comparison the United States is 80% to 90%+ energy independent and is a net exporter of both oil and coal.

      Your claims may be technically true but it is a lie by omission. You pointed out that Germany is a net exporter of electricity but with a large portion of that electricity derived from foreign coal and natural gas that just makes Germany an energy middleman.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    15. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Your claims may be technically true but it is a lie by omission.
      I did not lie or omit anything. The talk and your claims where about electricity, claiming we would import a lot, which is wrong, we are a net exporter.

      Germany imports 90%+ of the natural gas they burn.
      Germany imports 90%+ of the oil they burn.
      Germany imports about half of the coal they burn.

      Wow you are a smart ass, I wonder why we germans don't know that ... uh, actually: everyone knows that.
      Surprisingly the same is true for nearly every european nation, really surprised?

      large portion of that electricity derived from foreign coal and natural gas
      Nope, we don't produce much electricity with gas.

      By comparison the United States is 80% to 90%+ energy independent and is a net exporter of both oil and coal.
      By comparison the US are 200 times bigger than Germany and happens to have those resources, Germany has only very limited oil and gas and only very expensive hard coal as all the easy one is already mined away since 50 years. Half of the coal we burn is domestic lignite ... so we actually don't import that much. Bottom line it does not matter anyway as we plan to be coal free soon.

      Germany gets 35% of their electricity from domestic wind, solar, hydro, and biomass.
      Actually last year it was 38.5% this year it will be above 40%. You probably found links from 2015 or older ...

      So with 40% renewables and 10% nuclear we have about 50% left which is produced with various kinds of coal, and half of that is imported: so 25% of our electricity is produced by imported coal. That does not sound so bad, or does it?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    16. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your claims may be technically true but it is a lie by omission.
      I did not lie or omit anything. The talk and your claims where about electricity, claiming we would import a lot, which is wrong, we are a net exporter.

      Go back and look, the claim was energy. Electricity from nuclear is part of energy, the rest of the energy for Germany has to come from something.

      Germany imports 90%+ of the natural gas they burn.
      Germany imports 90%+ of the oil they burn.
      Germany imports about half of the coal they burn.

      Wow you are a smart ass, I wonder why we germans don't know that ... uh, actually: everyone knows that.
      Surprisingly the same is true for nearly every european nation, really surprised?

      All that means is Russia can send the entire EU into cold and dark by turning off the natural gas. You might want to do something about that. Saying you know about this and doing nothing about it makes you all look real stupid to the people that know this, at least to those outside Germany.

      large portion of that electricity derived from foreign coal and natural gas
      Nope, we don't produce much electricity with gas.

      It's 12% now, what will that be once Germany shuts down the coal and nuclear that provides half of their electricity?
      citation: https://1-stromvergleich.com/strom-report/renewable-energy-germany/#germany-power-generation-mix-2016

      By comparison the United States is 80% to 90%+ energy independent and is a net exporter of both oil and coal.
      By comparison the US are 200 times bigger than Germany and happens to have those resources, Germany has only very limited oil and gas and only very expensive hard coal as all the easy one is already mined away since 50 years. Half of the coal we burn is domestic lignite ... so we actually don't import that much. Bottom line it does not matter anyway as we plan to be coal free soon.

      Coal is about the only energy source Germany has in any quantity, and you want to turn that off? That's suicide. Just because the rest of Europe is doing the same makes you all equally suicidal.

      Japan seems to have a plan, they are investing in means to extract uranium from seawater. Japan is also exploring the ocean for oil and natural gas. Germany used to synthesize liquid fuels. My guess is the people that knew how to do that are dead now, either from old age or being hanged for war crimes in Nuremberg.

      Germany gets 35% of their electricity from domestic wind, solar, hydro, and biomass.
      Actually last year it was 38.5% this year it will be above 40%. You probably found links from 2015 or older ...

      Being a nitpicking ass is not helping you.

      So with 40% renewables and 10% nuclear we have about 50% left which is produced with various kinds of coal, and half of that is imported: so 25% of our electricity is produced by imported coal. That does not sound so bad, or does it?

      That sounds real bad. Half of your electricity comes from coal and nuclear and you want to shut that off? What are you planning to replace that with? Windmills? Solar panels? This is supposed to happen when? In ten years? Do you even make your own windmills and solar panels? I kind of doubt it.

      You get your natural gas from Russia, and your solar panels from China. They don't need to declare a war on Germany, they just need to get you addicted to their energy, pull the plug, and watch you all die.

    17. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      So with 40% renewables and 10% nuclear we have about 50% left which is produced with various kinds of coal, and half of that is imported: so 25% of our electricity is produced by imported coal. That does not sound so bad, or does it?

      That sounds terrible. Germany gets nearly 1/4 of it's energy from natural gas.
      https://www.wingas.com/en/raw-...

      Nearly all of that natural gas is imported imported, 40% imported from Russia.
      https://www.wingas.com/en/raw-...

      3/4 of the natural gas is for residential heating and hot water.
      https://www.wingas.com/en/raw-...

      Germany is highly dependent on imported natural gas for their heat and electricity, and this will only increase.
      https://www.dw.com/en/nord-str...

      Actually last year it was 38.5% this year it will be above 40%. You probably found links from 2015 or older ...

      Okay, smart ass, if you don't like my numbers then show me where you got yours. You told me to look it up, I did, and then you tell me I'm wrong without showing where you got your numbers. So, show me where you got your numbers or shut the fuck up over what is likely just a rounding error on being 35%, 38.5%, or 40%.

      I did not lie or omit anything. The talk and your claims where about electricity, claiming we would import a lot, which is wrong, we are a net exporter.

      No, my claims were about energy.

      Nuclear energy has really only been used for electricity and marine propulsion so far but it doesn't have to be that way in the future. The US Navy has a program researching how to turn nuclear energy into fuel oil and aviation fuel for their ships and aircraft. This would be highly useful for producing fuel at sea on an aircraft carrier to keep the planes flying. It would also be useful in a time of war if scaled up to make up for lost imports of erdgas and mineral oil for domestic transportation, heating, cooking, and industry. Maybe your German navy sailors can talk to our American navy sailors and learn how to do this so if (or when) Russia shuts off their supplies of erdgas, oil, and coal you aren't just shivering in the dark until the US Navy comes to save you.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    18. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      You are again mixing up energy with electricity.
      Why do you insist on doing that? If you want to talk about either, use the proper term.
      Of course we use about 1/4 nat gas for _energy_ as in heating

      So what is your rant about germany importing gas and especially 40% from Russia about? Why do you care? From where else should we import when the best deal right now is offere by Russia?

      Germany has no ships big enough to warant a nuclear reactor. And as I said before, if Russia drops out as supplier - for what ever reason - we have enough fallback options, for natural gas.

      If Trump does not spoil it, there will never be another war in Europe anyway ...

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    19. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      You are again mixing up energy with electricity.

      No, I'm not. Try to keep up. Is there a language barrier here? You're English is excellent, far better than my German, Spanish, or French. I can read some German but do not ask me to write it or speak it.

      So what is your rant about germany importing gas and especially 40% from Russia about? Why do you care?

      As an American I care because if Germany can't defend itself from Russia's aggression, whether that be economic or military, then treaties require the USA to come in and help. As a descendant of German immigrants I have concern for my distant cousins in Germany. Have you no concern for your cousins in America? You freed yourself from Soviet influence and restored a beautiful nation because of it, don't let that happen again.

      Germany has no ships big enough to warant a nuclear reactor.

      Then you should get some. France, UK, Russia, China, and India all have some. Si vis pacem, para bellum.

      And as I said before, if Russia drops out as supplier - for what ever reason - we have enough fallback options, for natural gas.

      Right, you have two years of reserve in storage and a natural gas pipeline from Norway. You might be able to get sufficient supply from other places, but what happens to the PRICE of that natural gas should Russia not decide to sell? Russia may not start shooting bullets your way but they can wage an economic war. Being able to provide for a large portion of your electricity from nuclear and/or hydro, and heat from coal and oil, like some of your neighbors allows you some freedom to negotiate and time to look for options. The USA was able to build nuclear reactors in two years in the 1980s, but only after much practice in the 1970s. We're having to relearn how to do that again. Can Germany afford to lose the option of domestic nuclear for electricity and heat? Japan tried that and found out they could not.

      If Trump does not spoil it, there will never be another war in Europe anyway ...

      Maybe instead of having Trump speak to Russia on behalf of NATO and the EU, where he could screw things up, then maybe you need to speak softly to your neighbors on your own behalf. To be most effective in your speech you will need a big stick.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Something like this one:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Russia seems to have plans for a big stick of their own:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    20. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Germany is restricted by international treaties, after WWI ans WWII to build no ship bigger than a big destroyer.
      Regarding a war with Russia, that idea is utopic.
      If Russia is not selling it is violating 40 year old contracts, and most likely gets a boycott on everything they buy from europe and everything else they sell. Of course the north sea price of gas will increase, but we as well can buy liquified gas from the US or Canada.

      In Germany no one wants nuclear power, and if a government is so stupid to reintroduce it, the riots will look very small in comparision with a Russian invasion ;)

      Perhaps you want to look on a map, and point out where you could safely build one? All existing plants are build on seismic zones. So: find a seismic stable zone, that has enough water for cooling ... not so easy. Then we have the waste problem, we already have a nightmarish amount of waste. Soon all nuclear plants will be replaced with wind ...
      Then with global warming rivers often are low on water or already quite warm, so nuclear plants have to shut down to not overheat the river and kil, all the wildlife, like in France. That is the main reason why France is importing so much electricity from German: in summer they have to shut down plenty of their Nukes to keep the rivers ok.

      So, we could place some into the north sea ... alas, for what? We place off shore wind plants there already.

      Neither Germany nor Japan used nuclear power for heating in a meaningful amount. People don't live close to nuclear plants, so direct heating with waste heat is not an option. Electricity is only very rarely used for heating.

      Why would we replace house heating with gas by coal and oil? Where should the oil come from? Arabia and surroundings? What is the point of that? Where would the coal come from? China? Or india or Australia? What would be the point of that?

      It makes much more sense to use wind power and produce H2 as replacement for natural gas (which we are actually already doing, the H2 is mixed into the gas grid)

      Your concerns about Russia are just because of the stupid fear mongering news in the US. Russia, as a "Putin led government" is playing out its strength in Syria and Ukraine. However Russia as a nation is a capitalist country, and its corporations want to make money.

      Going for a war with west Europe would leave Russia crippled for decades ... and for that we don't even need american NATO support nor nukes. There probably would not be any majour Russian corporation left after a brief war with West Europe. Tricky would be stuff like just attacking baltic nations. They are the youngest children in the NATO, and some people fear that the NATO could sacrisfice them, but I doubt that.

      Anywax, for 90% of the nations on the globe the situation is the same: they have to import all primary energy resources, and most other natural resources like ores, because they don't have them. And countries like the US import aluminium and steel because their 'ruling class' lacks the pride to keep a functional industry afloat and thinks it makes sense to buy from the cheapest seller on the world market.

      You are concerned about Germany and west europe? Well, the USA are going downhill more and more, soon they will only be a tourist attraction, but only briefly, the amount of homeless is scary.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    21. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Germany is restricted by international treaties, after WWI ans WWII to build no ship bigger than a big destroyer.

      First, without a citation I don't believe you. Second, that's provably false.

      The USA built 10,000 ton nuclear powered warships from 1960 to 1980. Russia operates 20,000 ton nuclear powered icebreakers today. There are nuclear powered submarines and surface warships operated by navies all over the world today and as small as 6000 tons displacement. Germany has a half dozen 6000 ton warships (more or less) and a half dozen military supply ships displacing 20,000 tons. Sauce for the Russian goose is sauce for the German gander.

      Saying Germany can't build nuclear powered ships is bullshit unless I see something to back that up. Saying they don't need nuclear powered warships is bullshit because their buddies in NATO found a need for them and Germany is treaty bound to come to their aid. Saying that they don't want them is irrelevant, if they don't want nuclear powered warships to keep up with their end of the deal then they should leave NATO.

      In Germany no one wants nuclear power, and if a government is so stupid to reintroduce it, the riots will look very small in comparision with a Russian invasion ;)

      That just makes them ignorant and/or stupid. Japan got over their fear of nuclear power, and they have much greater reason to fear it than Germany.

      Perhaps you want to look on a map, and point out where you could safely build one?

      I'm an electrical engineer, not a geologist. Go ask a geologist. I'm guessing that your nuclear powered neighbors of France and Russia could help you out.

      So, we could place some into the north sea ... alas, for what? We place off shore wind plants there already.

      Putting them in or near the north sea is an excellent idea. Russia has been building floating nuclear power plants for a long time now, maybe if you ask nice they will sell you some. I keep hearing how we can put solar panels under the windmills, it would seem possible to put nuclear reactors under the windmills too. Maybe put nuclear reactors under the solar panels, with the solar panels under the windmills, and get all kinds of low CO2 power.

      Neither Germany nor Japan used nuclear power for heating in a meaningful amount. People don't live close to nuclear plants, so direct heating with waste heat is not an option. Electricity is only very rarely used for heating.

      How did you plan on getting heat from all those windmills if there was no electric heat? I believe you didn't think this through.

      It makes much more sense to use wind power and produce H2 as replacement for natural gas (which we are actually already doing, the H2 is mixed into the gas grid)

      Now I know you didn't think this through. Electricity to hydrogen to heat is far less efficient than resistance heat (in all practical terms it's 100%) or heat pumps (effectively 200% efficient). What you describe with mixing hydrogen in natural gas is a nice transition measure but in the long run there will have to be a switch to electric heat in some form to be free from natural gas.

      Your concerns about Russia are just because of the stupid fear mongering news in the US. Russia, as a "Putin led government" is playing out its strength in Syria and Ukraine. However Russia as a nation is a capitalist country, and its corporations want to make money.

      Oh, they are capitalists? How does that make things better? They can create a false scarcity by limiting exports, drive up prices, and make more money. A good capitalist will want to be on good terms for negotiating price. Shutting down 3/4 of your electricity production (coal and nuclear), relying heavily on imported erdgas and mineral oil for heat and industry, does not put Germany in any place

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    22. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes much more sense to use wind power and produce H2 as replacement for natural gas (which we are actually already doing, the H2 is mixed into the gas grid)

      Wait a minute, if you can turn electricity from windmills into a substitute for natural gas then you can turn electricity from nuclear power into natural gas. One difference between using wind power to nuclear power is adding heat to the electrolysis makes it more efficient, and nuclear power has waste heat that's perfect for that.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-temperature_electrolysis

    23. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I did not say that Germany can not build nuclear powered ships.
      I said the contracts imposed on us after the lost wars prohibit us to build big ships.

      Small difference. And it makes not much sense to power a destroyer with nuclear power. Unless it gets equipped with a rail gun or several lasers perhaps.

      Germany has reduced it naval forces drastically, I think we have in total less than 20 ships/subs and 4 in phase of testing, no idea if they want to retire some if the new ones get into service.

      Shutting down 3/4 of your electricity production (coal and nuclear), relying heavily on imported erdgas and mineral oil for heat and industry, does not put Germany in any place to negotiate on price.
      And how would Russia do that? Perhaps you want to read one of your own recent posts again: nuclear power in Germany is about 10%, coal is about 40%, perhaps 45%. So: they only could shut down 50%, not 75% if we would get all our Uranium and Coal from Russia. Which we don't.

      Or, Russia can wage an economic war on Europe for decades and make a profit. They are, after all, capitalists. No?
      How should a nation that has a fraction of the GDP of the rest of Europe wage an economic war? That is like if Arizona is waging an economic war against the rest of the US ... Germany alone has a GDP 3 times higher than Russia. The GDP of the EU is 7 times higher than that of Russia.

      Electricity to hydrogen to heat is far less efficient than resistance heat (in all practical terms it's 100%) or heat pumps (effectively 200% efficient). What you describe with mixing hydrogen in natural gas is a nice transition measure but in the long run there will have to be a switch to electric heat in some form to be free from natural gas.
      Creating electricity is about 40% effective from a nuclear or coal plant. Converting that again to heat might be 100% (which it is not, but for sake of argument lets assume it is). Burning natural gas, is 100% effective. So when the question comes:
      a) do we shut down the damn wind mill that produces to much power?
      b) do we sell the power for a negative price (because we have no storage ready that can take it)?
      c) do we create H2 and pump it into / store it in the gas grid?

      C) obviously is an efficient decision, even considering that electrolysis is only 70% effective (higher than heat based power plants) and burning it later again is nearly twice as effective than heating with electricity from a coal or nuclear plant.

      relying heavily on imported erdgas and mineral oil for heat and industry, does not put Germany in any place to negotiate on price.
      This is true for 90% of all countries. So again: why do you care? Energy markets are world markets, if Russia gets to expensive we buy elsewhere. And again: Russia is fulfilling 50 year long contracts, that are 40 years old. What would they gain if they break those contracts now?

      he amount of homeless is scary.

      Citations needed.

      Why do you always want citations for "common knowledge"?

      How did you plan on getting heat from all those windmills if there was no electric heat? H2, as already explained. Heat from electricity is at the moment not planned. In the long run heat will be produced from biomass, not from electricity, that would not make any sense. However it is thinkable for colder countries than Germany to "store electricity as heat" in big water tanks and use it later to heat houses. That can be done large scale, or local in each house. Or you use solar collectors to create hot water.

      The most rational use of electricity to heat would be heat pumps. But those you basically only use to heat a house not to heat water for showers etc. Heating water for showering on the other hand can also be nicely done with electricity as you do usually not need much water. But for a bath it already gets expensive/irrational.
      You can combine it, heating up water with heat pumps to about 25C and then pipe it through a el

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    24. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      I did not say that Germany can not build nuclear powered ships.
      I said the contracts imposed on us after the lost wars prohibit us to build big ships.

      I said that unless you can point to something to back that claim up then I think you are mistaken or lying. You keep telling me to look it up myself and I did, I found nothing. Therefore I conclude you are deliberately lying to me because I would assume you did your own research before posting such a claim.

      Small difference. And it makes not much sense to power a destroyer with nuclear power. Unless it gets equipped with a rail gun or several lasers perhaps.

      Of course it makes sense, the USA had a fleet of nuclear powered cruisers up until 1998, and none of them were equipped with lasers or rail guns. They were deemed redundant with the large fleet of nuclear powered submarines and aircraft carriers. A decision made with more politics than actual military readiness in mind.

      If you want to argue the distinctions among "cruiser", "frigate", or "destroyer" (or even "battleship") then don't bother. The terms are often arbitrary, change definition over time, and our "cruisers" built in the 1960s are of similar size and capability of the "destroyers" we have today as well as similar to the "frigates" the German navy owns now. A WW1 battleship would be no match for a modern frigate, and both would have similar displacement.

      Germany has reduced it naval forces drastically

      We noticed.

      None of your submarines are operational. Half of your surface fleet is in port for repairs or limping along at sea with inoperable equipment. Your helicopter fleet is in such bad repair that the pilots can't maintain even the minimum flight time required to keep their flight certification. Half of your jet fighters are grounded because of poor repair, and the half that are operational are mostly obsolete air frames from the USA. German Army tanks are being sold off for scrap because they can't afford to even change the oil.

      Russia doesn't need an army to invade Germany, a boy scout with a BB gun on horseback could stride in and take over.

      And how would Russia do that? Perhaps you want to read one of your own recent posts again: nuclear power in Germany is about 10%, coal is about 40%, perhaps 45%. So: they only could shut down 50%, not 75% if we would get all our Uranium and Coal from Russia. Which we don't.

      They don't have to do anything, Germany is shutting them down all their own. Russia can wage an economic war by playing with the energy markets. OPEC did similar things to the USA in decades past but with the USA being energy independent now, or sufficiently so to put the nation in a position to negotiate, they can't play these games any more.

      Why do you always want citations for "common knowledge"?

      Because "common knowledge" is not always correct.

      With the issue of homelessness it's "common knowledge" that it is used as a political club against Republican Presidents. Homelessness today is the same as it was in 2009, but in 2009 we had a Democrat in the White House. Now that it crept up the tiniest amount it's now a "crisis". The homelessness problem in the USA is no better or worse than it is in Germany or the rest of Europe, you are in no position to call homelessness in the USA "scary".

      (No idea on what base you define them 200% efficient, though ;D )

      It's called "coefficient of performance" when used to describe a heat pump even though the term "efficiency" would be used for any other device that performed the same function. I was also mistaken on my claiming a heat pump being "200% efficient" because a modern heat pump can bring 350% more energy into the home than resistance heat for the same energy used. I suspect you know that but you just want to be an ass.

      It

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    25. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      There are 50 windmill fires per year, killing about a dozen people per year, and wind produces only 2% of total energy consumed. What happens when/if that's 20% of the energy produced? We'll be seeing multiple such fires everyday and hundreds of workers and bystanders killed as a result. We get 20% of our power from nuclear, no fires, no people dead.

      Do you really want to go down that path of calling wind power "safe"?

      If you doubt my claims then look it up, and post a link proving me wrong. It's quite possible I'm wrong but unless someone posts proof then I can pull numbers out of my ass like anyone else.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    26. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Well,
      the fact that Germany is not allowed to build big ships is common knowledge.
      And the fact that the US, especially the rust belt and the west coast, is littered with homeless is common knowledge, too. I have friends traveling there every few yeas and they see easy 1000 every trip they make.

      But you picked your nick good enough, to blind to see :D

      Germany is dependent on hostile nations for it's energy supply. In the case of an economic war on Europe by Russia and/or it's puppets in the Middle East would leave Germany in the cold and dark in less than 18 months.
      No it would not, we have enough friendly nations to sell us oil and gas, e.g. all north sea neighbouring nations.

      Why should I google stuff and prove you wrong with links when you not provide a link, is beyond me :D

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    27. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      There was one single wind mill fire during the last 40 years. As no one is working at a wind mill I doubt there ever was one "killed by a wind mill".

      You can hardly proof something wrong. You can only proof something right :D I doubt anyone has made a post somewhere that says "blindseer is wrong, the only reported wind mill fire was 1997" which I can link to :D

      If you have so many wind mill fires in the US, then there is obviously something wrong with the mills. And if you have so many dead due to bystanders and/or fire fighters, then there is even more wrong.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    28. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Three dead in German off shore windmill accident
      https://www.thelocal.de/201204...

      Two dead in windmill fire, multiple windmill fires reported worldwide
      https://gineersnow.com/industr...

      You can hardly proof something wrong.

      You can prove me wrong by finding data counter to my own. If you bothered to actually look for data instead of making unsubstantiated claims then you'd find articles like what I linked to above and articles with data showing nuclear power to be very safe. Like this one:
      https://www.nextbigfuture.com/...

      If you have so many wind mill fires in the US, then there is obviously something wrong with the mills.

      We do have a lot of windmill fires, as they do in Germany. If you want to claim that German windmills are safer than those made in the USA then I'm not going to believe you without data.

      If you want to split hairs on me not finding a specific combination of fire, death, Germany, and wind turbine, then go look for yourself. I got sickened from trying to sort through all the dead from wind power accidents I found.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    29. Re:Risk vs. certainty by blindseer · · Score: 1

      German Army trains with broomsticks instead of rifles and vans instead of tanks.
      http://thefederalist.com/2018/...

      German Air Force grounded.
      https://foreignpolicy.com/2018...

      Few NATO members carrying their share of mutual defense obligations, Germany is leading in this trend.

      And when Berlin decides it will not pony up the promised 2 percent of GDP for its NATO contribution, other laggard countries follow its example. Only six of the 29 NATO members (other than the U.S.) so far have met their promised assessments.

      https://www.realclearpolitics....

      I was going to post more but it was depressing to see the land of my ancestors in such a sorry condition. If you want me to believe that Europe has enough mineral oil and erdgas for Germany on top of what they produce for themselves then I need to see that. I'm not finding it, they are buying erdgas from Russia too. Russia doesn't just provide 40% of erdgas that Germany burns, they supply 40% of erdgas that all of Europe burns.

      You think the USA will provide you erdgas? Our Democrat Party blocked the Keystone XL pipeline that was supposed to expand our ability to export oil and gas. Like the democrats in Germany they think we should stop drilling for erdgas and use windmills to power heat pumps for warming our homes and heating our water.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    30. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no restrictions on Germany building a proper navy after 1990 unification and 2011 restructure of military. I looked, and found nothing. All I found is a bunch of German dead weight thinking that France and U.K. Would come to save your asses.

      You keep saying "common knowledge" but I don't think it means what you think it means.

      I've heard of German homeless. They like to panhandle tourists when not picking their pockets. Berlin has been paying homeless to leave. Is that where you live? That only keeps homeless out of sight. Easy to ignore when swept under a rug.

    31. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you picked your nick good enough, to blind to see :D

      You are German, no? Then why pick "anglosphere" as your nick?

      Seems odd for a German named "anglosphere" to mock Americans, and doing so in English.

      You Germans think poorly of Americans. Do you know what Americans think of Germans? I don't know, because Americans don't think of Germany at all.

    32. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The windmill fire you linked in your other answer was in Netherlands, not Germany.
      Make sure you don't mix up Austria, Switzerland or Netherlands with Germany :D for unknown reasons they don't really like that.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    33. Re:Risk vs. certainty by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      1st link: two workers drown during construction of a wind mill, what is your point?
      2nd link: two workers died due to a fire introduced through a short (in Netherlands): what is your point?

      We all know that the German forces have some trouble, but they are greatly exaggerated. I personally don't like how much they shrunk the German navy. And I don't like that no one has the guts to have a public discussion if/whether we actually still need/want our own defense forces. I would agree if we completely abandon it. But I would prefer if we had a decent strike force, which can be smaller than it is right now, but fully operational all the time. The bad shape we are in at the moment is basically because we upgraded/switched to to many new systems in short succession. New destroyers, new submarines, new planes, new helicopters, and because of BREXIT we are in talks with France to start developing a new fighter again.

      And when Berlin decides it will not pony up the promised 2 percent of GDP for its NATO contribution, other laggard countries follow its example. Only six of the 29 NATO members (other than the U.S.) so far have met their promised assessments.

      If Germany would follow what Trump actually demands: 4% GDP contribution to defense, then Germanys defense budget would be twice as high as that from Russia. No one wants that. We will probably increase it to something like 45B EUR over the next few years, and that is it.

      USA would not sell gas to Europe/Germany via pipeline but via liquified natural gas in tanker ships. OTOH: we all agree that fracking at the moment is a bit questionable. No idea what they do wrong in America with fracking, we frack in Germany since 70 years and have no problem with water pollution etc.

      Like the democrats in Germany they think we should stop drilling for erdgas
      In the long run that is the only solution, as nat gas still produces CO2. However it might not be feasible e.g. in Alaska.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    34. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1st link: two workers drown during construction of a wind mill, what is your point?

      That wind power is not safe. More people die in wind power accidents per energy produced than nuclear power. Look at the chart here:
      https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2016/06/update-of-death-per-terawatt-hour-by.html

      Same number dead per year, wind produces 1/3 the energy than nuclear. Therefore nuclear three times safer than wind.

      2nd link: two workers died due to a fire introduced through a short (in Netherlands): what is your point?

      Point is that wind power is not safe. That windmill fire was on a windmill from a Danish company, the same company the Dutch, Germans, and Americans buy their windmills.

      We all know that the German forces have some trouble, but they are greatly exaggerated.

      That's nice. So if the "exaggerated" claims are that none of your submarines are seaworthy, and only 1/3 of your jet fighters can fly, then what's the real numbers? That half of your air force and navy have working equipment?

      I personally don't like how much they shrunk the German navy. And I don't like that no one has the guts to have a public discussion if/whether we actually still need/want our own defense forces.

      If you believe you can do without a defense force then you are insane. Germany has a obligation to NATO for minimum expenditures for military. If Germany wishes to do away with it's military spending then it must first leave NATO.

      I would agree if we completely abandon it.

      Then don't be surprised if NATO abandons you.

      But I would prefer if we had a decent strike force, which can be smaller than it is right now, but fully operational all the time. The bad shape we are in at the moment is basically because we upgraded/switched to to many new systems in short succession. New destroyers, new submarines, new planes, new helicopters, and because of BREXIT we are in talks with France to start developing a new fighter again.

      I don't see how that's relevant. In fact the discussion of military might is not relevant. The goal is to fight sea level rise, and doing so by reducing CO2 output. Germany could do that with investment in nuclear powered ships, and research into synthesized fuel, like the US Navy has done. Maybe the German navy could use the US Navy as an example. Oh, there we are, back on topic of the sorry shape of the German navy. Nothing stops the Germany navy from building nuclear powered ships. Germany had a nuclear powered ship in the past, so no treaty prevents it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Hahn_(ship)

      And when Berlin decides it will not pony up the promised 2 percent of GDP for its NATO contribution, other laggard countries follow its example. Only six of the 29 NATO members (other than the U.S.) so far have met their promised assessments.

      If Germany would follow what Trump actually demands: 4% GDP contribution to defense, then Germanys defense budget would be twice as high as that from Russia.

      You say that like it's a bad thing. Much of the civilian pilots in America are former military. Much of the nuclear engineers and technicians in America are from the Navy. America treats its military as a jobs training program as much as a defense force. The guy that hooked up my cable internet was in the USMC as a communications technician. You need trained technicians in Germany, no? Teach them in the military.

      No one wants that.

      Germans don't want people trained from government funds? I don't believe you.

      We will probably increase it to something like 45B EUR over the next few years, and that is it.

      Maybe if you didn't export so much funds in energy then you'd have money to spend on a military. It appears your defense st

    35. Re:Risk vs. certainty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The windmill fire you linked in your other answer was in Netherlands, not Germany.

      If you'd read the article instead of just the headline you'd have seen this:

      In 2011, the company had a wind turbine fire but was blamed on a brake problem. The next year, a Vestas V-112 wind turbine in Germany caught fire, and pointed to the fire on a loose connection that caused an arc flash. This is other than the arc fire that happened in Vestas V-90 turbine in Spain upon maintenance.

      https://gineersnow.com/industries/renewables/two-mechanics-died-wind-turbine-fire-helped-wind-industry

      The point is that windmill fires are a problem worldwide (which includes Germany), can and do result in deaths and property damage, and because wind produces less energy compared to the deaths produced compared to nuclear therefore we should have a preference for nuclear over wind.

      Make sure you don't mix up Austria, Switzerland or Netherlands with Germany :D for unknown reasons they don't really like that.

      Citation needed.

  44. Too bad we don't have 15 years of prep time by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

    Oh, wait.

  45. Re:Fake news by bobbied · · Score: 0
    https://wattsupwiththat.com/20...

    How Al was wrong...Read it and weep. Oh I know what's coming next... But you cannot believe everything you read on the internet.... Careful, because I can say that too.. ;)

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  46. A suggestion, huh? by Jerry · · Score: 1

    Unless the "study" was just another "sky is falling" AGW horror story the authors should republish when they have definite proof that has undergone peer review with folks other than those at RealClimate, or who make a living off of Federally funded grants.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

    1. Re:A suggestion, huh? by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      This was peer reviewed. Did you even bother to read the article?

      The peer-reviewed study combined data from the Internet Atlas, a comprehensive global map of the internet's physical structure, and projections of sea level incursion from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

      or who make a living off of Federally funded grants.

      You mean scientists at universities? Sure, anyone who does science for a living obviously can't be trusted. We shouldn't believe anything they say. Unless all their funding comes from a private company, like Exxon or Chevron. Then we should believe whatever they say, because they obviously have no bias.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
  47. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Jerry · · Score: 2

    Specifically, averaging 3.2mm, according to Wikipedia. In 15 years, that's only 48mm (less than 2 inches).

    How's that going to flood a bunch of stuff that's not on some coral atoll in the South Pacific?

    How Indeed!
    Lunar and solar tides produce variations orders of magnitude larger than that daily. Three millimeters is below the grass of measurement noise from satellite data or floating buoys.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  48. Yeah no by N_Piper · · Score: 1

    I can do basic math, 2033 is 15 years. Why does that matter? Anyone who has read "Scientific" news for any length of time knows when you need to pick a bullshit arbitrary time frame people pick 10 to 15 years, it's that wonderful convergence near enough to get immediate funding but far enough that it's actually impossible to prove it won't happen.

    1. Re:Yeah no by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      I can do math too, 3mm times 15 years equals 45mm, or 4.5 cm. Oh my we'll drown unless we pass out snorkels!!!

      Pffft, get a grip you alarmist idiots.

    2. Re:Yeah no by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      Stop making things up. They didn't say we'd all drown, so why do you pretend they did? They actually said, "more than 4,000 miles of buried fiber optic conduit will be underwater." That's not a made up number. They looked at where conduit is buried, how deeply it's buried, and which segments will be underwater in 15 years. And yes, it doesn't take a lot of rise to do that. They were surprised at how much is just a few inches above the current water level. But I guess if you don't like facts, it's easier to just deny them and use sarcasm as a substitute for logic.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    3. Re:Yeah no by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      45mm is not not "a few inches".

      You are being manipulated and believe nonsense.

      no additional conduit will be submerged if the average ocean depth increases 45mm more.

      waves are higher than 45mm! tides are more than 45mm

    4. Re:Yeah no by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      In 2013, the IPCC estimated the current rate of sea level rise as 3.2 mm/year. If we assume that rate, we get 48 mm in the next 15 years, or about 1.9 inches. But that's an underestimate, because sea level rise is accelerating. It has increased substantially in the last 20 years, and that 2013 number is already out of date. The current rate is estimated at 3.4 mm/year. That gives 51 mm or 2 inches. But of course it's still accelerating, so the actual rise over the next 15 years will be a bit more than that.

      That's the global average rate, but it isn't the same everywhere. It's faster in some places and slower in others. On most of the US east coast sea level is rising faster than the global average, and on the gulf coast it's rising even faster. So a lot of the coastal US will get bigger increases than that.

      no additional conduit will be submerged if the average ocean depth increases 45mm more.

      You just made that up. Maybe you should talk to the people who've actually looked at the data.

      waves are higher than 45mm! tides are more than 45mm

      Totally irrelevant. We're talking about buried cables. The water table doesn't go up and down with every wave that hits the beach.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    5. Re:Yeah no by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      storm surges last for days and go many inches. look at all the major fiber that fails when that happens.....nope.

  49. 4,000 miles of buried fiber optic, 1,100 hubs by Layzej · · Score: 1
    Here's global sea level in which even a Slashdot editor could eyeball acceleration.

    Engineers in New York City and Seattle probably...

    We have more than your hunch to go on. The study referenced in the article suggests that "by the year 2033 more than 4,000 miles of buried fiber optic conduit will be underwater and more than 1,100 traffic hubs will be surrounded by water. "

  50. Re:Fake news by blindseer · · Score: 1

    Is that to appease the gods or plug the hole in the bottom?

    --
    I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  51. Small problem by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    Relocating Internet infrastructure is a small problem compared to relocating billion of people that live near the sea.

    Even in the US, where there is a lot of inhabited land inside the country, that would cost a lot. Who will pay?

  52. Pardon? by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

    "Most of the damage that's going to be done in the next 100 years will be done sooner than later"

    Based on my very rudimentary knowledge of global warming, exponential curves, runaway effects and what have you. That statement is entirely false?

    Also a bit of a scare article. I assume it's implying the 'data sheds' where massive undersea lines terminate are close to the sea (they likely are!) but moving these are probably very very small scale problems in comparison to other issues if the sea rises the distance required to submerge them.

    Global warming is bad, how can we tie it to the internet!!!?

    1. Re:Pardon? by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 1

      Global warming is bad, how can we tie it to the internet!!!?

      You are missing an EXTREMELY important point here.

      Almost NOBODY gives a shit about "BILLIONS of OTHER PEOPLE" having issues, but HOLY FUCK WHAT DO YOU MEAN FACEBOOK WILL BE OFFLINE?????? will always get BILLIONS OF VOTERS attention.

      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
  53. Re:Fake news by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

    I worked as an Journeyman Instrument Man at Texaco refinery, Port Arthur, Texas.

    One of our tasks was to repair and maintain oxygen analyzers.

    We'd test them by exposing them to open air (as opposed to smokestacks, under water, in control houses, and tanks where people were working) and the goddam things always reported "21%."

    I mean, like all the mother fucking goddam time and stuff.

    It was never 15% our (like nitrogen) 78%.

    NO!

    Goddam son of a bitching yellow belly blue balled bastard suck ass 21%!

    Open air oxygen reporting at 21% is so one-sided as to be fake news.

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  54. Clearly caused by Russians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After all, itâ(TM)s PROVEN they are to blame for Trump, Clinton, Obama, Bush Jr and Australia!!!

  55. Re:unlike the marine cables, they are not waterpro by MoaDweeb · · Score: 1

    It's Ok. There is no AGW so this will not happen. :-)

    Florida will not be submerged either.

    --
    New Zealanders are well balanced with a chip on each shoulder. One represents Australia, the other the rest of the world
  56. 15 years by mcswell · · Score: 1

    How long have these supposedly vulnerable cables been in place? The Internet didn't exist before the 1990s. (I know, youngsters, the ARPANet existed earlier, in fact I was using it in the late 1980s. But I'm referring to the modern network that's grown by leaps and bounds.)

    I'd bet these vulnerable cables were put in place in the last couple decades at most, probably 15 years ago. And if they can be placed that quickly, then they can be replaced with newer ones over the next 15 years, a few inches (at least) higher, and we won't have to worry for a few more decades.

    There, that was easy!

  57. Re:Fake news by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 2

    If you plug the hole in the bottom are they still considered virgins?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  58. Re: Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this was a troll, it is brilliantly funny.

    If you actually believe what you said, which is unfortunately possible on slashdot, then please do not breed or vote.

  59. Re: Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hottest summer as determined by whom and by what methodology using what data inputs?

    When you can come up with something that is not the same twisted manipulated crap you can talk about hottest whatever.

    While we are here, please tell us what the correct temperature of the earth is.

  60. long term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why did they not plan for this?

  61. Typical end of civilization argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Halt the presses - some cables may need to be replaced

  62. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Namarrgon · · Score: 1

    Nobody's concerned about normal waves hitting coasts 2 inches higher up. What does concern them is how the rise affects the more extreme events; coastal floods from king tides and storm surges are getting worse, and more frequent - unusually high floods that only happened once a century (1% chance) are now happening once a decade (10% chance).

    These floods don't just inundate streets and underground cables, they can contaminate coastal wetlands, aquifers, and farmland with salt. In flat coastal deltas, a small rise in flood levels can extend a much longer way inland, salting the ground and the water table for miles and affecting the livelihoods of many - particularly in poorer countries with large populations depending on once-fertile river deltas. This is a very real problem for many countries without the funds to relocate farms and farmers, especially those like Bangladesh.

    --
    Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
  63. Re:Fake news by another_twilight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    “unless drastic measures to reduce greenhouse gases are taken within the next 10 years, the world will reach a point of no return.”

    Apart from some hand waving, nothing in the article contradicts this statement.

    The rest is cherry picking, out of context and exaggeration.

    Al Gore was a politician doing his share of exaggeration and simplification, but if this is the standard of your counter arguments, then you are looking for confirmation of a position you already hold. It's an editorial piece, poorly organised, poorly researched and absent even the pretence of balance or impartiality.

    *shrug*
    I've seen similar patterns of argument in other fields with believers vs science. Cherry pick exceptions and outliers, find some people who have made exaggerated claims that aren't generally held and argue that taints the whole field. Whether a creationist or a climate change denier, the form's the same. 'Skepticism' is fine when it's even handed. When it's a mask for refusing to accept evidence that contradicts a belief it's just denial.

    No one should believe what they read on the internet without some due diligence and a critical examination of the material, the presentation and possibly the source and this is unconvincing.

    There will always be some people trying to profit from an existing disaster or by convincing you that disaster is coming. You prove nothing by finding such people. How about, instead,

    I'd love to find out that anthropocentric climate change is either not changing or is not anthropocentric. It would make life easier and a little more pleasant. I stand to gain nothing by believing and it would make life easier and a little more pleasant to be shown I'm wrong. Being accused, indirectly, of having fallen for a pitch by someone motivated by greed fails to account for both the reluctance to believe and the weight of evidence that has overcome that reluctance. I first saw arguments and evidence for climate change back in the 80s (Dr David Suzuki was the first I can recall). Then it was mostly a topic for academic discussion - there certainly wasn't any money in it.

  64. Re: Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I shall correct this for you:

    There has always been climate change. Only socialists and their useful idiots think there is a single perfect static temperature for the planet.

    Ending right there. The rest of your screed is shit.

  65. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Nutria · · Score: 1

    "Study Suggests Buried Internet Infrastructure ar Risk From More Frequent High Floods" would be a much more interesting and uncontroversial paper...

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  66. So 2 inches will flood out the Internet? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Except recently it's been rising and is accelerating.

    That graph looks scary until you look at the scales, and translate milimeters to inches.

    It shows the sea level rising by 2 inches in the last century. It also looks very slightly bent up near the end.

    Now how you get a error bands of less than +- 1/6 inch when measuring sea level beats me. But let's assume their methodology works. And lets be generous and assume that bend is an exponential. It's a pretty small bend, so let's be REALLY generous and say that the extrapolated next two inches happen in 50 years rather than 100.

    So a 2 inch sea level rise in 50 years will flood out the Internet in 10? It only takes (substantially less than) 2/5 of an inch of sea level rise to do it?

    I think we need a MUCH scarier graph to support this panic.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:So 2 inches will flood out the Internet? by Layzej · · Score: 2

      let's be REALLY generous and say that the extrapolated next two inches happen in 50 years rather than 100.

      It's currently rising at 3.2 mm/year, so even at the current rate we'll see another 2 inches in less than 15 years. Not 100. Not even 50. 15.

      But it's the second order derivative that you need to worry about. Sea level rose about 0.5 feet over the last century. Half of that occurred in the last quarter century. Sea level rise will be measured in feet over the next century.

      Many of the conduits at risk are already close to sea level and only a slight rise in ocean levels due to melting polar ice and thermal expansion as climate warms will be needed to expose buried fiber optic cables to sea water.

  67. High speed wireless will replace all cables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 15 years all those slow hard to maintain cables will be replaced with a mesh of super high speed wireless mounted on roof tops.

    They will not even be worth digging up.

    As usual the socialist AGW scare monger crowd has come up with another silly sky is falling faux-science study to frighten us into giving them power.

    Go away, Marxists. You are stupid and boring. Your 19th century eco-political theories have been proven utterly wrong.

  68. 6 feet by 2033? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EurekAlert article linked from the post shows a map of inundated areas in New York City, specifically labelled as showing sea level rise by 2033. https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-07/uow-ssb071218.php

    Comparing that to the NOAA interactive Sea Level Rise map referenced as the source of THAT map in the article, it appears the "mean higher high water" sea level would need to be 6 feet higher to show the same flooded area. https://coast.noaa.gov/slr/#/layer/slr/6/-8235939.482246331/4977994.75073332/12/satellite/none/0.8/2050/interHigh/midAccretion

    Now I suppose something drastic could happen by 2033 - every bit of Antarctic and greenland ice sliding into the sea? But it seems a bit too unlikely a projection to be raising a fuss about the internet being destroyed (yet again) by then.

  69. Re:But the sea level is only rising a few mm per y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Study Suggests Buried Internet Infrastructure ar Risk From More Frequent High Floods" would be a much more interesting and uncontroversial paper...

    So changing the headline suddenly makes the paper more interesting? How does that work. If a higher sea level leads to more flooding which leads to higher water table then the original headline is still accurate. Just because you originaly didn't understand how it works doesn't make the headline wrong.

  70. Re: Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reason no one reports on it is because it isn't true. Volcanic activity is a small fraction of CO2 emissions by human activity, and solar output has marginally reduced since the 1950s.

  71. hogwash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder what these researchers are going to say in 15 years when none of this happens?... Of course all of Al Gore's predictions have failed to materialize but people still believe that idiot.

  72. At risk... by Doctrinsograce · · Score: 1

    Which thing is not the fault in the environment, but at fault with the characteristics of submarine fiber optics when they were selected for this application. Of course, if you have optical fiber that can tolerate the environment miles under the ocean, even an increase of hundreds of feet is not going to be a factor. Having experience in fiber optics manufacturing, I would call this "fake news."

  73. Re:Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Throwing volcanoes with promise rings into volcanoes has not demonstrably improved the survivability of the communities near the volcano.

  74. Re: Fake news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    here there is something

    "Climate Change Is as Made-up and Phony as the Steele Dossier," and pretty much that's true. It's been manufactured and created by a bunch of corrupt so-called scientists. " -- Rush Limbaugh

    "There is no such thing as global warming" -- Rick Santorum