Especially since many of the plants die after 1 year anyway so it’s not even like we shorten their lives anyway.
Especially since many of the plants die after 1 year anyway so it’s not even like we shorten their lives anyway.
I never understood the hatred for crash. It’s a great story great acting and great ending. I really don’t see what the hate is about.
You mean like ores like copper, iron, rare earths that kinda thing. There are seems of minerals that are actually meteorites that have collected in certain spots on a glacier. Haven’t heard anything about other large deposits but usually you would need to do all kinds of geological surveys to find that stuff and since most places are covered in 1mile+ of ice it’s near impossible.
When you say resources what resources are you referring to specifically?
What are you going on about this is not a hard game to make and it’s been advertised forever now so the market research has been done.
I don’t know much about app design so what work does it take to keep an app up to date and is it possible just to not update it?
Yeah but I feel at least at weddings circle dancing is more common and that requires going in the middle and showing your moves not really partner dancing. I haven’t been to a wedding where there’s partner dancing with enough room to do a waltz.
Learn a dance or two nothing too complicated but being able to bust out a dance at a wedding really impressed everyone.
But heat radiates out to space it doesn’t accumulate in the atmosphere like CO2 does. Plus if we switch to a fully renewable grid you aren’t introducing any new heat to the system just moving it around.
I think you underestimate how much energy hits the earth from the sun. The total amount of energy humans use in a year hits the earth in an hour. How much heat we give off is pretty negligible.
The problem with the comparison is hydrocarbons are the energy source, hydrogen is no it’s just the energy carrier. It is very inefficient to convert energy to hydrogen then convert it back again. Something like 60% round trip efficiency. Not to mention the cost and loss in loading into containers and shipping it around the world. It’s also not a very dense fuel per volume especially compared to oil. It’s just way easier and cheaper to have cables that run from one place to another. They are already building one from Australia to Singapore and if it’s successful that will probably open the floodgates. There aren’t many places that are more than 2000 miles away from large sources of renewable energy even if your thinking places like Alaska which could do hydro if there ever was dense enough populations anywhere that would consume it.