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Top 10 Energy Sources of the Future - YouTube
Channel: TDC
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It鈥檚 a really exciting time to be alive.
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We have a front row seat to the only known
transformation of a world powered by dirty
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fossil fuels, to a planet that gets its energy
from renewable, clean sources.
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It鈥檚 going to happen just once, right now.
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These are the top 10 potential energy sources
of tomorrow.
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Every hour, more energy from the sun reaches
us than we earthlings use in an entire year.
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To try and save a lot more of it, one idea
is to build giant solar farms in space that
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will collect some of the higher intensity,
uninterrupted solar radiation.
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Giant mirrors would reflect huge amounts of
solar rays onto smaller solar collectors.
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This energy would then be wirelessly beamed
to Earth as either a microwave or laser beam.
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One of the main reasons this amazing idea
is still just an idea is because it鈥檚, big
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surprise, very expensive.
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But it could become a reality in the not so
distant future as our solar technology develops,
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and the cost of launching cargo into space
comes way down, thanks to the work of companies
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like Space X.
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We already have human-powered devices [I鈥檓
envisioning wind-up flashlights or the like],
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but scientists are working on harvesting power
generated from normal human movement.
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We鈥檙e talking about tiny electronics here,
but the potential when multiplied by billions
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of people is big.
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And with developers making electronics that
use less and less power, one day your phone
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may charge when it rustles around in your
bag, pocket or moves in your hand, or your
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fingers move on the screen.
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At Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
scientists have even demonstrated a device
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that uses viruses to translate pressure into
electricity.
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Yes, it鈥檚 amazing as it sounds and no, there鈥檚
no way I鈥檓 going to try and explain how
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it works--of course it鈥檚 linked below if
you want more info.
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There are even small body-worn systems that
passively produce electricity when you move.
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Human power isn鈥檛 going to solve global
warming, but every little bit helps.
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Harnessing all the energy in the motion of
the ocean could power the world several times
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over, which is why over 100 companies are
trying to figure out how.
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Because of the focus on wind and solar, the
tidal energy industry kind of got elbowed
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out of the early mix.
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But these systems are quickly becoming more
efficient.
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For one, meet Oyster, a 2.4 megawatt producing,
hinged flap that attaches to the ocean floor
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and - as it opens and closes - pumps high-pressure
water onshore, where it drives a conventional
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hydroelectric turbine.
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So, one of those could power a whole housing
development or a couple massive residential
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towers--roughly 2,500 homes.
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An engineer with the air force academy has
created the terminator wing-shaped turbine
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that employs lift instead of drag, allowing
it to theoretically harness 99% of a wave鈥檚
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energy instead of the 50% that current tidal
projects can get.
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And Perth, Australia just got the world鈥檚
first-ever wave-powered desalination plant
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that provides the city with enough drinking
water for 500,000 residents.
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The element hydrogen - by far the most abundant
in the universe - is very high in energy,
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but an engine that burns pure hydrogen produces
almost no pollution.
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This is why NASA 鈥榮 powered its space shuttles
and parts of the International Space Station
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with the stuff for years.
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The only reason we鈥檙e not powering the entire
world with hydrogen is because it only exists
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on our planet in combination with other elements
like oxygen.
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You know, good old H20.
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Russia even converted a passenger jet to run
on hydrogen in the late 80鈥檚 and Boeing
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recently tested small planes that fly on hydrogen.
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Once the hydrogen is separated it can be pumped
into mobile fuel cells in vehicles that are
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able to directly convert it into electricity.
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These cars are now being manufactured on a
fairly large scale.
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Honda鈥檚 planning on demonstrating the versatility
of its new hydrogen fuel cell car by plugging
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it into a model home in Japan to power the
house--instead of the car sucking electricity
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from the building like its electric-powered
competitors have to do.
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Honda says one of these fully-fuelled cars
could power an entire house for a whole week,
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or drive 300 miles without refuelling.
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The main obstacle right now is the relatively
high cost of these vehicles and the lack of
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hydrogen stations to refuel them, although
California now has plans for 70 of these stations
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across the state, South Korea鈥檚 expected
to have a total of 43 soon and Germany鈥檚
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aiming for 100 by 2017.
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The method of converting the heat rising from
the depths of the molten core of the earth
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into energy - also known as geothermal - powers
millions of homes around the world, including
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the electricity usage for 27% of the Philippines
and 30% in Iceland.
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But an Icelandic deep drilling project may
have recently discovered the holy grail when
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it hit a pocket of magma, which had only happened
once before in Hawaii.
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The team pumped water down into the hole,
which the scorching magma instantly vaporized
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to a record-setting 842 degrees fahrenheit.
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This highly pressurized steam increased the
power output of the system tenfold, an amazing
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success that should lead to a giant leap in
the energy generating capabilities of geothermal
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projects around the world.
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Nuclear fission power plants are the traditional
reactors that have been in use around the
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world for decades and provide the US with
about 20% of our electricity.
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They use something called light-water technology
to surround the fuel rods with water, which
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slows the neutrons and allow for a sustained
nuclear reaction.
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Buuuut, the system is really inefficient--only
5 percent of the uranium atoms in the rod
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get used up by the time it has to be removed.
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All that unused, highly radioactive uranium
just gets added to our growing stockpile of
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nuclear waste.
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But now, finally, there appears to be another,
more efficient way, called a fast reactor,
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where the rods are submerged in liquid sodium
instead of water.
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This allows 95 percent of the uranium to be
used, instead of the unacceptably inefficient
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5 percent.
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Adopting this method would solve the huge
problem of getting rid of our 77,000 tons
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of radioactive waste because these new reactors
can reuse it.
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GE Hitachi has already designed a fast reactor
called PRISM and is shopping it to power companies,
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but the biggest obstacle is the high cost
of building new nuclear power plants.
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Plus, you have to overcome the political stigma
that nuclear is a dangerous energy source.
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Still, the benefits are huge---Its a proven
technology that emits pretty much no greenhouse
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gases.
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The big success story is France, which has
75% of its electricity needs met by its 59
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nuclear power reactors.
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With production and installation costs getting
cheaper by the day, solar power is taking
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off around the world.
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Europe is the best in photovoltaics and is
driven by its leader, Germany.
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On an average sunny day in 2012, Deutschland
got as much electricity from the sun as 20
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nuclear power stations, enough to power 50%
of the country.
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Spain is now generating more than 50% of its
power from renewable resources like solar.
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A California desert is home to the largest
solar power station in the entire world, and
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the United States increased its solar capacity
by nearly 500% from 2010 to 2014.
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And if you think that that鈥檚 as fast as
solar can possibly grow, listen to this.
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Researchers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory
in New Mexico just made a significant breakthrough
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in quantum dot solar cell technology that
will allow highly efficient solar panels to
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double as transparent windows.
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When this technology becomes cheap enough
to hit the mass market in the next couple
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of years, every sun-exposed window in the
world will have the potential to be converted
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into a mini power station.
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From 2002 to 2013, biofuels grew more than
500% in the U.S. as production of crop-derived
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ethanol and biodiesel became a mainstream
substitute or supplement to gasoline in our
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cars.
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In fact, back in the day when Henry Ford first
developed his Model T, he thought it would
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run on ethanol.
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The discovery of vast amounts of cheap oil
all over the world unfortunately made it the
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go-to energy source.
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But renewable biofuels are making a strong
comeback now.
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The only problem is that the currently dominant
first generation of biofuels use the same
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land and resources that have traditionally
been used to grow food, which is driving up
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the cost of food and causing big problems
in a lot of the developing world, so something
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has to change if biofuels are going to give
us a chance at replacing oil with something
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clean burning.
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That鈥檚 where a plant like switchgrass comes
in.
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It鈥檚 hearty, it grows like a weed just about
anywhere, and it isn鈥檛 food.
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But, if we wanted to run all the world鈥檚
cars on it, we鈥檇 need to plant it on an
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amount of land equivalent to the entire countries
of Russia and the U.S., combined.
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So that鈥檚 not gonna work.
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This brings us to the 3rd generation of biofuels,
algae, which has all the right ingredients
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to replace oil once and for all.
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Algae鈥檚 natural oil content is greater than
50%, which means it can be easily extracted
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and processed.
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We can convert the remaining part of the plant
into electricity, natural gas and even fertilizer
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to grow even more algae without chemicals.
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Algae grows quickly and doesn鈥檛 need farmland
or freshwater.
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Just last month, Alabama became the world鈥檚
first algae biofuel system that can also effectively
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treat human wastewater, this actually resulted
in a carbon-negative outcome.
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The 40,000 a day demonstration plant basically
floated giant bags on a bay, pumped wastewater
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water into them, added a little algae, and
then let the sunlight do its thing.
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Before long, algae had grown everywhere and
cleaned the wastewater so well it could either
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be released back into the bay or reused by
people as drinking water.
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We鈥檙e already getting a lot of energy from
the wind, but with the Buoyant Air Turbine
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- or BAT - that floats 1-2,000 feet above
the ground where winds are stronger and more
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consistent, we could soon be getting that
energy much more efficiently.
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The system is simple: a ringed blimp with
a wind turbine in the middle is tethered securely
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to the ground.
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It鈥檒l produce twice as much power as similar
sized tower-mounted turbines.
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It can even handle winds of more than 100
mph and can be fitted with additional devices
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like a wifi unit, which would help bring the
Internet to parts of the world that don鈥檛
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have it yet.
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The buoyant air turbine was designed for bringing
renewable wind energy to rural parts of the
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world where building a traditional wind turbine
was impossible and will first be deployed
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in Alaska.
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It can even automatically detect and adjust
its floating height to where the best wind
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speed is.
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When the wind speed is dangerously high, the
thing will dock itself, eliminating the need
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for manual labor.
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Flying wind turbines like this should soon
replace all the less efficient tower-based
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systems and could allow for the construction
of offshore wind farms that have until now
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been really expensive to build.
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Unlike fission, nuclear fusion doesn鈥檛 create
any deadly nuclear waste because it fuses
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atoms together instead of splitting them apart,
so there鈥檚 no threat of a runaway reaction
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that could lead to a meltdown event.
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But, this is easier said than done.
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One Nobel Prize-winning physicist described
fusion as trying to put 鈥渢he sun into a
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box.
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The idea is pretty.
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The problem is, we don't know how to make
the box."
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The technical issue is that fusion reactions
will produce material that鈥檚 so volatile
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and hot, it will damage the reactor that created
it.
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This isn鈥檛 stopping private companies and
governments from spending billions to research
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the technology and solve these problems.
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And if the immense challenges can be overcome,
fusion will provide virtually limitless energy
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and power the world.
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That鈥檚 why the world鈥檚 wealthiest governments
are collaborating on the controversial International
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Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor in France,
known as ITER.
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When was the last time Russia, China, Europe
and the United States collaborated on anything?
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That鈥檚 how important for humanity this project
is.
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And because of its revolutionary potential
several powerful companies like Lockheed Martin
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are quietly working on their own fusion reactors.
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Lockheed has a very optimistic timeline for
their system, projecting that they will meet
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global energy demand by 2050.
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Their optimism may be fairly justified.
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In October, 2013, in separate research, scientists
at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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in the United States achieved a huge milestone
in fusion when, for the first time, a fuel
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capsule gave off more energy than was applied
to it.
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Thank for watching.
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Let us know if we missed anything or if you
disagreed with our rankings.
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spread by sharing it.
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You can see a collection of our favorite videos
from across the Internet back on our website,
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TDCvideo.com.
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For The Daily Conversation, I鈥檓 Bryce Plank.
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