The Future of Energy | 2023 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate

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American Museum of Natural History

American Museum of Natural History

Жыл бұрын

What will fuel the future of civilization? Major advances in energy production, and the urgency of the climate change crisis, are re-shaping the conversation about what we use to power our world: fossil fuels, wind turbines, hydroelectric, solar panels, nuclear fission and nuclear fusion.
With the recent breakthrough at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) National Ignition Facility, nuclear fusion has emerged as a leading candidate. Many see the ability to harness nuclear energy as a clear positive for reducing our impact on global climate, while some are skeptical of its practicality and safety for everyday use.
#Energy #ClimateChange #NeildeGrasseTyson #AsimovDebate #ScienceDebate #Technology
How will science, engineering, and geopolitics shape how the future of energy unfolds?
Join Neil deGrasse Tyson, the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium, and our panel of experts from various sectors on this issue for a compelling discussion about today’s energy landscape and what we can expect in the future. 
Watch all the past Asimov debates: • 2022 Isaac Asimov Memo...
For a full transcript of the debate, visit: www.amnh.org/explore/amnh.tv
2022 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Space Pollution
• 2022 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2020 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Alien Life
• 2020 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2018 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Artificial Intelligence
• 2018 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2017 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: De-Extinction
• 2017 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2016 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Is the Universe a Simulation? • 2016 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2015 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Water, Water
• 2015 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2014 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Selling Space
• 2014 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2013 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: The Existence of Nothing
• 2013 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2012 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: Faster Than the Speed of Light • 2012 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2011 Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate: The Theory of Everything
• 2011 Isaac Asimov Memo...
2023 Asimov Panelists:
Peter Keleman
Arthur D. Storke Memorial Professor, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Columbia University
Olivia Lazard
Fellow, Carnegie Europe
Tammy Ma
Lead, Internal Fusion Energy (IFE) Initiative, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Anna Shpitsberg
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy Transformation, U.S. Department of State
David Wallace-Wells
Columnist, New York Times
The late Dr. Isaac Asimov, one of the most prolific and influential authors of our time, was a dear friend and supporter of the American Museum of Natural History. In his memory, the Hayden Planetarium is honored to host the annual Isaac Asimov Memorial Debate-generously endowed by relatives, friends, and admirers of Isaac Asimov and his work-bringing the finest minds in the world to the Museum each year to debate pressing questions on the frontier of scientific discovery. Proceeds from ticket sales of the Isaac Asimov Memorial Debates benefit the scientific and educational programs of the Hayden Planetarium.
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© American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY

Пікірлер: 328
@CreamyBone
@CreamyBone Жыл бұрын
Can you believe people still sit around and watch commercial television? - With cool interesting stuff like this for free 😁👍
@nkemdirimarukwe
@nkemdirimarukwe 8 күн бұрын
Hey. I’m a recovering ignoramus. Please recommend cool platforms I can meet other recovering ignorami?
@ivonnezaragoza5010
@ivonnezaragoza5010 Жыл бұрын
Once a year is not nearly enough! Love these debates
@FictionBlue
@FictionBlue Жыл бұрын
I wish these would happen more frequently than once a year! Great stuff! Thanks a lot!
@josephdonais4778
@josephdonais4778 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see others today experiencing how we as little kids felt in the 60s and 70s of the Wizard of Oz appearing once a year.
@malikapollard3618
@malikapollard3618 11 ай бұрын
No. Or it wouldn't be special. It's a memorial, not a show.
@DarkenedSpell
@DarkenedSpell 4 ай бұрын
Love the annual debate ! But please give them comfy rotating chair ! :P
@biologyprodigy
@biologyprodigy Жыл бұрын
I've been waiting for this year's debate.
@rhondah1587
@rhondah1587 Ай бұрын
It's not a debate. It's a panel discussion.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:05 Surely we'll all rejoice if that happens. But as much of an optimist as I like to consider myself, I have to tell you, if by 2050 there is ANY fusion power plant generating net energy, I will be SHOCKED. Any size, just one plant, price no object (for the time being). ONE PLANT. I won't say it's impossible, but that's really out there.
@Orson2u
@Orson2u 20 күн бұрын
Wallace Manheimer at the National Fusion Energy Research Labs agrees. It is far off in the future, in the next half of the 21st century, at best. Late 21st century? Too optimistic?
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 20 күн бұрын
​@@Orson2u A lot will probably depend on progress in superconductors. Raising the critical temperature, critical current density, critical magnetic field. That could do a lot to reduce the minimum size of a reactor. And then, smaller reactors can be built faster, and more can be learned more quickly. I think it's safe to say that no working fusion reactor, of any kind, could ever be made without superconductors. That was a key development. But on the upper end, even with the best superconductors we can imagine, it may only be possible to make a magnetic field just so strong, because the constituent materials can only be strong, and at some point the magnet would have to break down. With better software and models, it may be possible to accelerate progress in designing and building better reactors. In particular, I wonder if stellarators will eventually win out over tokamaks. Stellarators are more complex to build, and software could help a lot with that; on the plus side, they should be more stable, and in fact, reliable operation of tokamaks, without disruptions, for long periods, may never really be possible. Stellarators apparently don't have the same problem with disruptions.
@SliderHarDCorE
@SliderHarDCorE 14 күн бұрын
@@ronaldgarrison8478 Most of the things you mentioned are nothing compared to the main problem that must be overcomed first, but you didn't even mentioned ! The efficiency of that achieved ignition was only around 1 % !!! We cannot even imagine what kind and how many new discoveries/inventions have to be made before engineers could bring up that efficiency by factor of 100+ !
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 14 күн бұрын
​@@SliderHarDCorE I assume you're talking about the efficiency of ICF (hey, it's been a month since I even watched the video). My comment is about fusion more generally, by ICF, MCF, or anything else. MCF is much closer to breakeven-indeed, it will surely go far past scientific breakeven, and probably past engineering breakeven also. But even then, we still won't have a working power plant. It's a bitch, for sure. Getting that extra push to Q>1 requires building machines of gargantuan proportions (although there are designs coming along that will surely be pushing the scale back down pretty soon). TBBH I don't care much about ICF. It proved scientific breakeven, but it's like, "Who cares?" It's embarrassingly far from engineering breakeven. And if it ever gets there, by then I don't think anyone will care. If I had to bet (though I wouldn't because this whole thing is so uncertain), I'd bet on stellarators. They're harder to build than tokamaks (well, ITER is super-hard, but just from its sheer scale), but in the end they may work a lot better in practice.
@SliderHarDCorE
@SliderHarDCorE 14 күн бұрын
​@@ronaldgarrison8478 It's hard to connect your posts to anywhere in the video because your timestamp is wrong. They talked about fusion no early than min 26 and only about that one first ignition event, but maybe you meant to put 1:04:20 where they talk about "infinite power"😄 for everyone. So i was talking about the fact that in order to power those lasers who produced 2 MJ and got out 3 MJ in that ignition event, they consumed close to 295 MJ of energy. Even she mentioned about that here 31:45. There is no point in thinking about size reduction, if there are not any clear prospects for net production viability on practice.
@sebeast1
@sebeast1 8 ай бұрын
Asimov was incredible, and this debate is the least we can do to remember him, his books will remain relevant for milennia to come.
@teebee4699
@teebee4699 Жыл бұрын
I hope more people start watching these!
@MikeAPRN
@MikeAPRN Жыл бұрын
Awesome job putting this together again! Loved the panel and guest appearance of Jamie ☢️⚡️🧪
@gsilcoful
@gsilcoful Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video.
@denislemenoir
@denislemenoir 4 ай бұрын
The only debate where the MC talks more than anyone else by an order of magnitude
@rhondah1587
@rhondah1587 Ай бұрын
It's not a debate, it's a panel of very smart people who know their stuff and some will agree, and some will disagree, but it isn't a debate. Neil will always have tons to say in whatever venue he is at. That's part of his personality. He is a very enthusiastic science promoter as well as an astrophysicist.
@denislemenoir
@denislemenoir Ай бұрын
Oh my mistake, I thought it was entitled the Isaac Asimov Debate.
@rhondah1587
@rhondah1587 Ай бұрын
@@denislemenoir It was indeed titled wrong. A debate is where there are two sides and they have timed periods within to make their arguments. This was a discussion between a number of people with varying opinions and assertions.
@OCTO8R
@OCTO8R Жыл бұрын
Have been waiting it all the year long! Yes, this would way better to have two conversations a year. But in any way, thank You! ❤
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
I never anticipated that this discussion would be too dumbed down to be useful, but I suppose I should have. It really is. To get anywhere with this subject, you have to get into a little basic math, and some charts and graphs. Sorry to have to bring that bad news, but surely it can't really be news. This is not rocket science…except that, at times, it kind of gets to that level.
@joeyhinds6216
@joeyhinds6216 Жыл бұрын
I like the systems mind of Anna but I just don't see that future being feasible with the state of our political/industrial complex. Olivia is spot on. We need sustainable mindset. We need to think long term but with focus on anythingnwe can do now, breaking through engineering political and corporate barriers. Also having energy systems won't be helpful if no one can afford it or won't be accessible in certain areas.. Thanks for the great talk!
@Rnankn
@Rnankn Жыл бұрын
Isn’t it that our political/industrial complex isn’t feasible with the future we need? And why would we allow dollars to be a functional barrier to something like energy? Energy cannot be created or destroyed, nature is a complex biochemical and geophysical system(s), but economic is a construct. We can always create money, or value it differently, or forgo it entirely. I really think it is important tot start with what is absolutely necessary, and cannot be controlled, everything else is superfluous.
@gunnarkaestle
@gunnarkaestle 5 күн бұрын
@@Rnankn Money is a proxy for energy; or more precise it is a proxy for exergy. There is a conservation law for energy but none for exergy. The exergy content of exergy will degrade according to the entropy law and in the end, all energy is low temperature heat (100 % anergy).
@richardwainwright507
@richardwainwright507 Ай бұрын
Awesome stuff, just wish it was much longer
@horsreseauquebec
@horsreseauquebec Жыл бұрын
I do live off grid using mostly solar panels where there is low light. The strategy is having enough solar panels to fill the batteries at 100% in a few hours only. So, whenever there is a bit of sun, you refill fast. The rest of the time, bi-facial panels will still generate a few kWh per day in the worst conditions. I made it through 9 days without sun this fall; +- 5kWh of production per day or less, still enough for internet and a computer!
@AlignmentCoaching
@AlignmentCoaching 9 ай бұрын
Well done! What sort of battery(s) are you using?
@horsreseauquebec
@horsreseauquebec 9 ай бұрын
@@AlignmentCoaching Silicon dioxyde / lead crystal. I hope to try LTO soon.
@czarlguitarl
@czarlguitarl Ай бұрын
much respect, thanks for the info!
@shawnnoyes4620
@shawnnoyes4620 29 күн бұрын
You are a small rounding error. There are not enough solar panels and batteries to go around. There is not enough land area and raw materials to do it with solar. You need nuclear energy for process heat and electrical generation.
@RCHeli1
@RCHeli1 28 күн бұрын
I don't live off grid, but have a 12kW PV rooftop array, and 10kW of battery storage. In summer, my reliance on grid power is around 10%. This will be my first winter with batteries so I don't have the numbers yet, but I expect my grid dependence to be less than 40%. With the exception of hot water, my home is all electric, and my car is electric.
@gabrieltreewolf4618
@gabrieltreewolf4618 Жыл бұрын
A great conversation ! Ended where a another hour should have started.
@karlstone6011
@karlstone6011 Жыл бұрын
Status of the Magma Energy Project Dunn, J. C. (Sandia National Labs., Albuquerque, NM.) Abstract The current magma energy project is assessing the engineering feasibility of extracting thermal energy directly from crustal magma bodies. The estimated size of the U.S. resource (50,000 to 500,000 quads) suggests a considerable potential impact on future power generation. In a previous seven-year study, we concluded that there are no insurmountable barriers that would invalidate the magma energy concept. Several concepts for drilling, energy extraction, and materials survivability were successfully demonstrated in Kilauea Iki lava lake, Hawaii. The present program is addressing the engineering design problems associated with accessing magma bodies and extracting thermal energy for power generation. The normal stages for development of a geothermal resource are being investigated: exploration, drilling and completions, production, and surface power plant design. Current status of the engineering program and future plans are described. Publication: Presented at the Symposium on Geothermal Energy, New Orleans, La., 10 Jan. 1988
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 Ай бұрын
My one major "complaint", if you wish to call it that, about Dr Tyson: he does not emphasize nearly enough that science is EXPENSIVE. That technology is EXPENSIVE. That one should NEVER EVER TAKE FOR GRANTED or ASSUME that some technology will continue to progress into the future. That technology happens ONLY because people CHOOSE to make it happen. They can CHOOSE to be STUPID, instead, and slow down progress.
@AORD72
@AORD72 Күн бұрын
You think engineers don't factor that in? Good engineers search for efficiencies and understand thing like the Carnot cycle. The main law of thermodynamics is conservation of energy. Right now wind solar and geothermal are the most cost effective form of energy generation because of technology advancements. Technology in the future is likely to solve fusion and create efficient solar panels and high energy densities life long batteries.
@apophisxo4480
@apophisxo4480 8 ай бұрын
Great discussion! Thank you!!!
@AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory
@AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory 8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@snuffeldjuret
@snuffeldjuret Жыл бұрын
Nice to see people in location.
@dancooper8551
@dancooper8551 Ай бұрын
This panel and discussion was excellent!
@abrahamsatinger265
@abrahamsatinger265 2 ай бұрын
Not a professional: What about the MIT roll to roll graphene production on a copper substrate. Dissolve some of that copper and expose the graphene to make a copper graphene copper pattern to make a Brownian battery? and using plasma sounds like an awesome idea, but go full circle. Chuck down trash and toxic waste ( past the water bed) and have usable products out of what effectively is a caldron of elements and compounds which you can collect by using heat and pressures. The plasma can be fueled by geothermal energy anyways even by solar and wind.
@domdela5217
@domdela5217 Ай бұрын
I just started watching this channel, beginning with the 2024. Thank you for setting up this discussion. 80% goes over my head. But nonetheless, it is entertaining and educational.
@johnumair
@johnumair 6 күн бұрын
Beautiful sense making and points beyond the realm of conversational norms.
@TheMighty_T
@TheMighty_T 2 ай бұрын
Closed loop systems don't have to use fracking for underground water system flow. Eavor (a Canadian company) use such a system and it becomes a very versatile system when you are not tethered to fracking for geo thermal.
@gunnarkaestle
@gunnarkaestle 5 күн бұрын
I doubt that the drilling of paralle heat exchange holes and the lining is much cheaper than todays drilling technology, so that we can afford not to pump oil (which has a value of dozen of dollars per gallon) but lukewarm water which is only worth a few pennies. And even if we have a heat reservoir of 300 °C (and not somthing between 140 °C - 180 °C which many geothermal sources provid) this is much less than today's thermal power plant technology (coal + gas fired), meaning the efficiency is much lower: you need to process more water and steam to extract the same electricity. An existing turbine and condensor from a 40 year old power plant won't work.
@AlphaKingofGlory
@AlphaKingofGlory 8 күн бұрын
Peace is the magic technology we can produce instantly
@AndrewNiccol
@AndrewNiccol 10 ай бұрын
Tammy Ma's answer make me believe we won't have fusion in 2050, she is a fusion scientist, if she believe we can make it, she will just simply answer "Yes." But she is very coy about the question.
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
Too many unknowns at present. First step was coming up with expensive experiments. Second step was finding one that seems to work and verify it. Next step is to scale up to create a demonstration reactor. After that would be something commercially viable.
@user-rq7hv6lf8c
@user-rq7hv6lf8c 5 ай бұрын
It's always problematic to ask what people BELIEVE. So many things are speculative that the experts believe may be as valuable as the believe of a pastor in his made up story. Not to be taken literally.
@user-rq7hv6lf8c
@user-rq7hv6lf8c 5 ай бұрын
It's always problematic to ask what people BELIEVE. So many things are speculative that even the experts believe may be as valuable as the believe of a pastor in his made up story. Not to be taken literally.
@JohnRider
@JohnRider 28 күн бұрын
It is a really tough question. And, scientists and engineers are wired to not answer in absolutes.
@evanreakes
@evanreakes 5 ай бұрын
I hope the next one is about Technological Acceleration. Seems like a suitable debate that is currently taking place. Something that opened my eyes to e/acc were books by Alan Toffler titled, Future Shock, Third Wave, and Powershift. Not to mention Doctor Tyson's explanations of NASA spinoffs. The benefits of pushing our boundaries in how we got cordless drills and the like.
@MrJoker42369
@MrJoker42369 2 күн бұрын
Really cool! Would have been amazing to get simon michaux on, a mining expert with grave concerns about the mining/energy requirements for oil, solar, wind, nuclear and other energy 'storage'.
@jwonderfulsuccess
@jwonderfulsuccess Жыл бұрын
Was waiting for this 🙏✨🕊❤ 2024 T O E
@ViktorBorgGrelsson
@ViktorBorgGrelsson 10 ай бұрын
maybe kick the headline quoting journalist next time
@bosselostal4252
@bosselostal4252 6 күн бұрын
Really love this kind of discussions ❤ but still believing we can change climate is not sane.
@factnotfiction5915
@factnotfiction5915 Жыл бұрын
26:44 - major thumbs up!
@bosselostal4252
@bosselostal4252 6 күн бұрын
Talking about decreasing co² from cars and not discussing exhaust from ships?
@ObsoleteTutorials
@ObsoleteTutorials Жыл бұрын
GOD DAMMIT. I emailed AMNH multiple times asking when will this year's Isaac Asimov debate be. Never got an answer, and now I missed attending it live. Seems a bit rushed though, this year's debate, and no Q&A at the end.
@imamiddleagedgoofygoober
@imamiddleagedgoofygoober 4 ай бұрын
Hope you get to go to the next one buddy!
@iRossco
@iRossco Жыл бұрын
NEED A PART-2 way too brief...or better still a whole continuous monthly/6monthly series all the way to 2050 til we get it done! There were things raised in that that many are not aware of such as guest Jamie's venture. Wind, waves, etc. etc. It will spark ideas in others to pursue or support, perhaps even fund. New & suppressed energy technologies explored & researched.
@MelliaBoomBot
@MelliaBoomBot Жыл бұрын
oh wow. Ive been waiting all through covid!!
@nikolasantonas4647
@nikolasantonas4647 Жыл бұрын
Incredible conversation to witness. More please!
@EduardoMartinez-km9tz
@EduardoMartinez-km9tz 7 ай бұрын
Asimov debates are my favorite class.
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
I'm glad we had some European representation who made clear we need a LOT of change to get this right.
@phil20_20
@phil20_20 3 күн бұрын
Debate? " Frankly, I find the idea of a bug who thinks, offensive!" 🤣 Fusion and Liquid Hydrogen, my next vehicle will probably be a Toyota Hydro-Hybrid.
@phil20_20
@phil20_20 3 күн бұрын
Smoky Bear has your Carbon Sequestration right here: 🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲☢️🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲
@phil20_20
@phil20_20 3 күн бұрын
Random House was, THE BOOK! in our house. We had a huge table next to the back wall in the living room, The Random House Unabridged Dictionary right the laying flat with some doilies under it. 🤠
@gunnarkaestle
@gunnarkaestle 5 күн бұрын
Fusion energy has a brilliant future and always will.
@alexciocca4451
@alexciocca4451 9 күн бұрын
This is an example of “ people trying to get away with being smart”
@newmexicoartist2468
@newmexicoartist2468 2 ай бұрын
I have found that, in these talks, the moderator doesn't disperse the conversation between ALL of the 'debaters' well enough. A very few of the debaters vastly dominate the conversation. Also, the constant interruption by the moderator is annoying and only sometimes as funny as might be assumed. I would like to hear from all of the guests in a more equal way. The interruptions by the moderator also, at times, cause confusion in the communication from the guests.
@BindasBadshah
@BindasBadshah Күн бұрын
What you call as interruptions are well needed for monotonous nature of these conversations. With N Tyson at the helm, he brings right amount of steering to keep the conversation. N Tyson is a phenomenal moderator..
@gunnarkaestle
@gunnarkaestle 4 күн бұрын
44:11 A very simple mode for technological diffusion is the Fisher-Pry model, which is basically a logistic growth curve.
@dan2304
@dan2304 22 күн бұрын
Geology is the limit of supply of both commodities including energy. The geological mechanisms for the formation of most commodities has been well understood for 70 years. Few new reserves to be found.
@bosselostal4252
@bosselostal4252 6 күн бұрын
CO²: Is it really sane to believe that changing the amount of co² in atmosphere will change the climate?
@joeyhinds6216
@joeyhinds6216 Жыл бұрын
Tammy it's easy to sell the search for the holy grail but in the meantime please stop bad mouthing fission while speaking of diversity. Can we please have a thorough discussion of options like small modular reactors and coal to nuclear transition?
@Grobocopatel
@Grobocopatel Ай бұрын
The moment near the end when she says "we really prefer you just call it fusion" (instead of "nukes") is quite revealing. Fusion is just a make-work program for plasma physicists financed by public money in captured government institutions and FOMO-driven private VCs investing in startups. The fact they don't really have a superior product to fission nor to any of fission's alternatives in wind, solar, etc., means incumbents need to care a lot about keeping up the hype on the media, propagating false memes of infinite abundance, and of course: branding itself as something different than nuclear power.
@hapah4894
@hapah4894 Ай бұрын
Iceland is sitting on a magma conveyor belt. It can sell and supply Europe's energy needs probably cheaper than the current cost. Of course, the set up cost initially will be high.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
50:30 The increase rate of renewables (wind+solar) is, right now, just about covering the rate of increase of energy use, globally. You find that discouraging? Really? That's far ahead of where things were ten years ago, AND it's far, far behind where things will be in another ten years. To me, that's a lot more than just "barely moving the needle," to use a popular phrase.
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
It also means fossil fuel consumption is still increasing. That said: energy storage solutions are coming online more and more which makes replacing fossil fuel sources much easier/reliable.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 Ай бұрын
​@@autohmae No, it's not clear that it is still increasing. (Note that I was comparing increases in renewables tototal energy use, not to fossil fuel use.) I have stats for combined fossil fuel use, for 2021 and 2022, and there is an increase, but very small-a little less than 0.5%. The picture is a little confounded by lingering fx from Covid. The 2023 figures should be out in a few months, and the trends should be clearer then.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:19:30 The last five years David is talking about are the recent tail of a process that has been ramping up for MUCH longer. It's just that he only noticed the changes in the last few years.
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
Yeah, I was thinking the same. All these technologies, etc. take up a lot of time to develop. That said: to deploy them at scale and thus reducing the price through mass production, you need money. Lots of money, which is where the government comes into play. And if their is political will to pay for it, it usually moves much faster in the implementation phase. Also the biggest source of payment the R in R&D is the government.
@derekl6475
@derekl6475 11 ай бұрын
Too bad Prof. David Ruzic wasn't involved here, this is exactly what he works on in Illinois.
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
I just watched an interview with Isaac Asimov where he envisions satellites collecting solar energy and converting it to microwaves to beam to Earth where it's collected and converted to electrical power. No mention of that here. Is it not a possible solution?
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
Well, commercial space flight didn't even exist until fairly recently. And the production of energy is usually seen as a commercial endeavour. That said, people are working on these things, but mostly as designs, nothing much else.
@JoeHacobian
@JoeHacobian Ай бұрын
1:24:57 Neil explains the common sense and most evolutionary outcome, a common energy distribution network (electricity) where all generation sources compete for the title of most efficient and cost effective per application. He goes on to praise all the competing technologies and says they should compete on their merits and the best in class for electric generation in each category will emerge. Common sense, he also adds “after that I’m not a fan” which is a reference to the no-growth, de-growth green spectrum of Malthusian thinkers. The panel goes silent, because the green de-growth cat was let out of the bag and instantly guillotined, that was what the silence symbolized. To hide that one of the panelists said “You don’t mention wind” which was a misdirection out of the cul de sac. Good job Neil!
@wendellwilke721
@wendellwilke721 Ай бұрын
Neil could you see a future without vehicles. Build a system of tubes throughout cities and between cities. Diferent sizes for diferent comodities and put people or goods in capsules and send them. To take it further build cities underground and grow a lot of our food underground. Our planet would be a lot safer for the rest of the species.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
One thing of substance in this show, at least: To sequester the excess CO2 already in the Atmosphere involves quantities, and costs, that are NOT prohibitive. Don't believe that. It's bunk. We have already extracted quantities of carbon out of the ground that are comparable. And unlike the original fossil fuel extraction, undoing that is NOT a mining operation. Complete the transition to carbon-free energy, and this is totally feasible. And for the most part, if we do it right, it only needs to happen once.
@solexxx8588
@solexxx8588 26 күн бұрын
Carbon capture would cost more than the GNP of the planet. It's not feasible.
@Orson2u
@Orson2u 20 күн бұрын
All irrelevant and wasteful. CO2 rise is greening the earth, while we are near or over the saturation point where CO2 ceases to be thermogenic in the atmosphere.
@JustNow42
@JustNow42 29 күн бұрын
One thing nobody mention is people. We are too many people and we really need to do more to stop this growth. 3 billions would be enough, and yes we will be there or less with our failure to curb the CO2 emissions. Also nobody mention Australia, the biggest coal exporter in the world. Australia is ruled by big companies that are not very kind to the people that live there.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:08:24 Suddenly this is getting way more interesting! I wonder if what Dr Keleman says is true. It might be. Never really worked it out. But when you consider how wastefully energy was used in 1776 (whale oil lamps, wood stoves, tallow candles, and so on), it might be. If so, that's truly remarkable-although I'm sure there have been substantial ups and downs along the way. But here's the thing: The good Doctor NOW seems to be saying that the next few decades will bring a STEEP RISE in that global, per capita energy use. I have to question that. There are energy EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS going on apace. LED lights and electric cars are just two examples. There are others. There is a constant tug between countervailing trends in this area. I'm not so sure about that big energy surge that so many are predicting.
@tringomun1697
@tringomun1697 Ай бұрын
Will these deep holes to access heat eventually cool the earth's core if there are thousands of them around the planet? Will it dissipate heat away from the core? I'm not a scientist, but it made me think about it. If the earth's core cools over time, will that affect it's rotation speed or orbit? Possibly over hundreds of years? Great debate, I'm glad I watched!
@aaronaardvark1361
@aaronaardvark1361 Ай бұрын
I’m not credentially qualified to answer; but no, not even close. I don’t believe test we could even, well, scratch the surface.
@wdvest8333
@wdvest8333 5 ай бұрын
Idea: don't like it? Use the power switch to turn it off?
@shawnnoyes4620
@shawnnoyes4620 29 күн бұрын
Nuclear energy is the answer. Also deploying fission-suppressed fusion hybrid reactors. That is a nuclear reactor that uses high-energy neutrons from a fusion reactor to trigger fission in non-fissile fuels. The reactor has a neutron-producing fusion core surrounded by a fission blanket. The neutrons from the fusion core trigger fission in the blanket, which multiplies the energy released by each fusion reaction. This design can make fusion reactors more economical and allow them to burn fuels that aren't suitable for conventional fission plants, including nuclear waste.
@VeritasPraevalebit
@VeritasPraevalebit Ай бұрын
The big problem for nuclear fusion to become the power source of the future is rarely mentioned. This is the fact that the tritium needed for the operation of a fusion reactor has to be produced by the reactor itself. It is possible to breed tritium in a fusion reactor but producing enough of it will probably turn out to be impossible. The reason for this is that each fusion reactor produces one neutron that could in principle be used to create one tritium atom. But inevitable neutron losses and losses in extracting the tritium will cause the yield to be far less than hundred procent. The only hope to make the losses up is to utilize nuclear reactions that produce more neutrons than they consume. Nobody knows if this will be a solution to the problem.
@jakemaddox3861
@jakemaddox3861 9 күн бұрын
You can get many more than one tritium per neutron. Breeding ratios >1 are easy to show.
@VeritasPraevalebit
@VeritasPraevalebit 9 күн бұрын
@@jakemaddox3861 Enlighten me, please.
@user-mb1zv8dl8l
@user-mb1zv8dl8l 26 күн бұрын
Why do you clap? Glory be to you man.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
~57:00 If you succeed in producing large amounts of clean geothermal energy, that would do a lot to actually undermine the biggest use case for hydrogen, which is stationary energy storage, especially at high latitudes.
@anatoliypankevych4853
@anatoliypankevych4853 7 ай бұрын
What scares me the most is giving the technology to such an aggressive society as russian…
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
You probably should not, the energy/fossil fuel they produce right now gives them power in the world. If the world does not depend on them, their influence is reduced.
@johngault-9597
@johngault-9597 Ай бұрын
Put someone on a pedestal and they will look down on us so why is Tyson's behavior so surprising...
@canadiannuclearman
@canadiannuclearman 23 күн бұрын
For carbon sequestration I'm very much in favor of planting bamboo because it's very fast growing it's easier rather than building exotic plants in Iceland
@generyan2332
@generyan2332 Ай бұрын
fusion power powering itself too.
@wdvest8333
@wdvest8333 5 ай бұрын
He's not dissing on you at your job
@ignacioduran5993
@ignacioduran5993 3 күн бұрын
A huge part of the problem is the arrogance of the industrialized countries in their premise that this or that technological alternative is unviable as it (or even they, which they do not consider as a combined or coordinated system) could never replace our current (fossil) energy system to guarantee our (extremely wasteful) standard of living, as if this "American way of life" were a sacred cow to be protected at any price and, even worse, spread around the world to be adopted and replicated by developing countries. Almost no thought is given to reductions in consumption, to curbing waste and increasing efficiency.
@majorhowell1453
@majorhowell1453 4 ай бұрын
What about spinning a magnetic top in space with sunlight? We could beam it to earth. Clean full energy.
@ignacioduran5993
@ignacioduran5993 3 күн бұрын
CO² production... USA 10%, China 30%... proportional to the population of each country, but what Neil forgot to point out is that much (a whole lot!) of the "Chinese" production is actually indirectly OURS, that is, outsourced manufacturing by European and USAmerican companies (ultimately the consumers) who are creating that pollution in another part of the world. The real carbon footprint per inhabitant in China and India is a fraction of what the extremely wasteful USA is responsible for.
@canadiannuclearman
@canadiannuclearman 23 күн бұрын
According to James Hansen of Columbia University 1.8 million people have been saved by nuclear energy by displaying ultra fine particulate pollution
@edwardbishop1176
@edwardbishop1176 Ай бұрын
Earth heat to generate power is the way to go.
@gaborpokoradi969
@gaborpokoradi969 4 күн бұрын
My bet is deep geothermal and thorium. Maybe space solar.
@gunnarkaestle
@gunnarkaestle 5 күн бұрын
There is no such thing as "energy consumption" as there is a conservation law for energy. What you consume and maybe are able to waste is the exergy content of the energy. Please don't forget: energy = exergy (useful) + anergy (not useful), the amount of energy is always constant, but it degrades as exergy is converted into anergy.
@kevinim300
@kevinim300 2 ай бұрын
So happy I am exposed to this video series
@mylastday1037
@mylastday1037 10 күн бұрын
The Consumption monsters
@PabloMayrgundter
@PabloMayrgundter Жыл бұрын
Not much room for debate when you draw from institutions who advocate the same policies. I also share the sentiment that NDT's image seems to have outgrown his role
@justinklenk
@justinklenk 9 ай бұрын
Here, here. Neil has gone from the popularizer of science I most admired, years ago, to a 'scientific' figurehead who goes as far as to actually _disgust_ me, now. In this appearance ALONE - in this moderator role alone (read: immoderator) - he managed to once again botch or be unaware of basic facts; visibly annoy (for good reason) every SINGLE participant onstage with his stupidity and arrogant ego; nearly constantly distract from the momentary point of conversation (see: every goddamn exchange across the entire video); and dumb down not only the points and flow of dialogue, but the entire essence of the conversation (he always turns any 'conversation' he takes part in into a self-aggrandizing 'uni-sation,' full of his own lazily-fostered erroneous logic, which he vociferously offers up as _obvious_ reality - as if everyone listening at that moment is actually _more,_ or even _as,_ misguidedly foolish as himself). This panel, traveling to and engaging in this conversation, could have, should have - and _would_ have - gotten sooo much further - and sooo enjoyably more, had he been kept away. He's become a disgrace - and that is a disgrace to us, the scientific community which he still unabashedly purports to represent. 😢😢😢👎👎👎
@apophisxo4480
@apophisxo4480 8 ай бұрын
Relax! It's his personality, it makes the "debate more interesting." Which "institutions" would you have drawn from for a different perspective? I would have liked to hear about more advancements in fission energy, not because I don't have high hopes for fusion, but just because it seems more realistic at the moment. Also instead of burying the carbon, maybe we could use it to build???
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
@@apophisxo4480 He's talking about inviting coal, oil and natural gas industries so they will keep telling lies to dissuade the public from carbon taxes and the like. The big Exxon scandal from a few years ago was they had two sets of climate books: one secret where global warming is real and they have to build their facilities according to sea level rising and the like; and the other where they fraudulently say it's not happening to convince the public not to take it seriously.
@helfrich24
@helfrich24 Ай бұрын
Im glad Neil Degrasse Tyson is the host.
@sunflowerz54
@sunflowerz54 25 күн бұрын
Helium 3. Nuff said
@iRossco
@iRossco Жыл бұрын
No mention of methane which has a much greater greenhouse gas effect than carbon.
@HebaruSan
@HebaruSan Жыл бұрын
Methane is CH₄, the C is a carbon atom. Talking about "carbon" generally includes methane and the products of burning it.
@user-rq7hv6lf8c
@user-rq7hv6lf8c 5 ай бұрын
No mention of methane in the same dull way, methan is mentioned allways in these discussions. Let the facts be allowed to be presented to the recipient in a different way to check if he's actually following the strain of thought. Here: As @HebaruSan explains it, for example.
@user-dc2ot2tj2b
@user-dc2ot2tj2b 28 күн бұрын
my dear you do not need a laser for that that is only your focus on it can be done mechanical, electrical and only electrical that is the fuel for the laser.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:19:00 No. HELL no. That's not that everybody thought five years ago. Probably not even a majority. Those scenarios you're talking about are just preposterous. And I, just for one, was saying so at that time. I have the records of it. Of course, whether anyone was listening to little old me is another matter. But this is not just 20/20 hindsight I'm claiming.
@davidhenry5128
@davidhenry5128 9 ай бұрын
It is actually extremely stupid to have a discussion about power production that does not include nuclear fission, more so when climate change is considered to be the main point of contention. Honestly,,,,,, be honest....
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
America can no longer build big projects, possibly partly due to corruption. Georgia's new nuclear power plant came online July 2023, seven years late and $17 billion over budget. South Carolina's new nuclear power plant was cancelled due to corruption after spending $9 billion that rate-payers will pay for in their utility bills.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:25:00 And Neil, do you not think that infrastructure is being created right now?
@Rnankn
@Rnankn Жыл бұрын
It is shocking that social scientists are always excluded from climate discussions. Social change is the only viable solution to overuse of energy. That is because the problem is economics. How and what you measure determines what you value, and how you value it. Economists make models that value capital by devaluing everything else, and they ‘externalize’ factors that do not produce their predetermined results. Neo-classical economics is a political ideology that is unable to provide a wholistic understanding. Since ecology and energy are ignored in the models that structure the economy, the economy constantly tries to make the world fit into the models. It has never worked, but this is the first time we are up against a natural limit that cannot be forced, a clash is inevitable.
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
I see economics as a belief system for the wealthy on top to justify their position. One aspect is the primacy of growth in a finite world. Growth of production, GNP, profit, etc. As more countries head to 0% population growth (partly due to the Pandemic) there's fear and cries that we're going to have a depopulation crisis! They can't deal with heading toward a sustainability.
@sarmanhutajulu4319
@sarmanhutajulu4319 2 ай бұрын
This is the truth, thank you, we just can watch the decreasing the value of social wealth, and have Haven Ling time, but still have a Hope, how the transitionbpolicyvgrowth togeher with the social wealth in every level
@Orson2u
@Orson2u 20 күн бұрын
@@sandal_thong8631 Aristotle would tell you about home economics - which affects the poor and middle class much more than the rich.
@antoniomalynowskyj183
@antoniomalynowskyj183 7 ай бұрын
Como não mencionaram o Brasil, acredito com toda certeza que nós habitantes de Cucamonga estamos fazendo a coisa certa..... excessão para as queimadas criminosas da floresta amazônica.
@richardcourtenay8114
@richardcourtenay8114 5 ай бұрын
Sorry previous comment half written. I meant to say "Up till now we have used fossil fuel to make renewable energy systems so there is that backlog to pay for.
@ourlovehowerica
@ourlovehowerica Жыл бұрын
💖
@lorenzoblum868
@lorenzoblum868 Жыл бұрын
After watching the first minute of Neil's introduction and watching any further I would just like to ask a few questions : Why do we always focus on the energy and not how is this energy spent? Is it spent for megalomaniac projects only a very few privileged crooks will benefit from, will the energy be spent on manufacturing weapons and useless merchandising or will it be spent with ethics?
@gabrieltreewolf4618
@gabrieltreewolf4618 Жыл бұрын
This is just to get an idea of where we are at. a Conversation beginning. A very large topic.
@twonumber22
@twonumber22 Жыл бұрын
we need 7 billion more golf courses
@lorenzoblum868
@lorenzoblum868 Жыл бұрын
@@twonumber22 we need more tanks, more guns, more nukes, more superheroes figurines, more plastic guns for kids, more private jets for billionaires crooks, more junk food, more lousy TV programs, more GPS so that people can meet their nearest hooker, more drugs, more artificial flavouring.... More disasters...
@thebrutaltooth1506
@thebrutaltooth1506 Жыл бұрын
We have this issues with pricing energy and materials in general. For example, (freshwater)water is the most important non-renewable material on the planet, yet is one if not the cheapest material kg per kk compared with other stuff. I see a similar issue with energy. You get a price per kwh of electricity for example no matter what what is the purpose of its consumption but based of how much you buy and with some penalties if you make the signal dirty in the grid. Maybe a different price per activity of kwh use could be an instrument which could be helpful in the climate change/ biodiversity loss / pollution increase triple threat?
@lorenzoblum868
@lorenzoblum868 Жыл бұрын
@@thebrutaltooth1506 or taxing most polluting industries, regulating pollution. Old mines, refineries, factories must be put to new standards. The biggest corporations should finance due to the huge brake they get from the offshore... Any corporation being financially responsable for any pollutions, damages to the environment. Small business too. financing research, promoting ecofriendly business which Reuse, Recycle, Reduce, Repair, Redistribute
@NicksonSilva-bg9nk
@NicksonSilva-bg9nk 4 ай бұрын
Replace him as u want.
@TheCD45
@TheCD45 3 ай бұрын
Am really glad there are more women than men in this year's debate. For over a decade, it's always men>women in these debates, sometimes even 0.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 2 ай бұрын
1:14:00 But if you see the system as a whole, and that's the ONLY perspective you use, then you have only a hair-shirt solution. We have to stop our wasteful ways, be content with less. And you know the retort to that: Fine for you, not so great for the great bulk of Humanity. The solution is to go beyond that, and see many other factors that allow ways forward, some of which you've been discussing just now.
@jestermoon
@jestermoon Жыл бұрын
Take A Moment My fellow apes For me, wants and needs are the issue. Some people want more than they most. A reset is required Stay Safe Keep looking up Stay Free ❤🎉
@Orson2u
@Orson2u 20 күн бұрын
No. It simply isn’t “required”. That’s false.
@user-dc2ot2tj2b
@user-dc2ot2tj2b 23 күн бұрын
if energy mesuments is a calculation thing than the energy solution are numbers and that is the truth
@duduoverburn1777
@duduoverburn1777 9 ай бұрын
This is SO BIAS.... we CAN NOT replace combustions engines... for electric ones ... IS JUST NOT POSIBLE within out plannet... Hidrogen is other thing.. but the energy density of a batery is just ridiculus, also polute way more than building a normal "car" with a combustion engine.
@sandal_thong8631
@sandal_thong8631 7 ай бұрын
Shut down the highways then and make people take the bus, until they're willing to build electric trains.
@duduoverburn1777
@duduoverburn1777 7 ай бұрын
@@sandal_thong8631 seriosly? and the electric train where does it get the electricity to run?....
@BartholomewCounty
@BartholomewCounty Ай бұрын
We gotta get to mining H3 from the Moon.
@csbrudy
@csbrudy Ай бұрын
Liquid Fluoride Thorium Salt Reactors are the answer. Proven, and Safe.
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
And... I think only 0 thorium reactors are in use and 1 thorium reactor is being build right now.
@csbrudy
@csbrudy Ай бұрын
@@autohmae 9 years running at Oak Ridge. It would not produce weapons grade material, so they shut it down.
@autohmae
@autohmae Ай бұрын
@@csbrudy yeah I know, I meant currently in the world.
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