Meliva wrote:Sorry for double posting, but this is a bit too much to add on with a quick edit like I prefer to usually do.
I checked. California is indeed more populated then all of australia. And far smaller in land area.
Australia
2020 estimate
25,671,400
• Total
7,692,024 km2 (2,969,907 sq mi) (6th)
California • Total 39,512,223
163,696 sq mi (423,970 km2)
Roughly 1.5 times more people on about one eighteenth the land. A big problem you have is trying to use Australia as a model. While Your country is nice, it's easily one of the worst countries in the world to use as a model for other countries. I don't mean that as in it's a bad place, it's just so insanely unique. Basically a giant island, no neighboring countries(by land) incredibly unique wild life, etc.
A lot of things that would work well for you guys is absolutely not possible for just about everyone else. Lots of unused land, most European countries don't even have a fraction what you guys got.
Edit-again really want to clarify, think you got a lovely country in wild life, pretty solid government all things considered, but you guys are just too wildly different to just about any other country to be a model to work off of. Probably the most unique country on earth in my opinion. At least that I can think of. Which has it's ups and downs.
Argo wrote:Meliva wrote:Or how about we put it in your head-since clearly there seems to be some vacant space in there based on those points you made and the fact that frankly if you thought about it more thoroughly you would see putting it there would be pretty sensible.
What?
First point. the people and science stations. Now, why you even bothered mentioning that, I don't know. even if we doubled the high end of 5K to a nice solid 10K that is an absolutely tiny amount of people to relocate. Now losing the science bases could be bad, though honestly I doubt we would actually need to even sacrifice them, which I'll explain in my third point.
>>>Do you know what studies and research are done in Antarctica and why Antarctica is the only place on earth from which these studies can be done?
https://discoveringantarctica.org.uk/ho ... tarctica/#
Second, your point on the very few animals and plants that do only live there. First off, it's a pretty big land mass, and most of that life, lives in the seas around it, or the coasts.
>>>Orcas are noted to be the only animal to breed in the Antarctic during winter. Do you know much about eco-systems?
https://discoveringantarctica.org.uk/ec ... cosystems/
Just put the damn waste facilities as deep inland as possible, with lead and other resistant metals to keep it safely contained. Maybe set up devices to scare away any animals.
>> So you not only want to put nuclear waste in the Antarctic but you think filling it with lead is a good idea too?
https://emerging-researchers.org/projec ... n%20adults.
Third point-it's a big damn landmass.
>>As far as I know the USA have the right to claim Antarctic Territory but to date haven't made a claim.
https://www.scar.org/
You could probably quite easily keep the science bases along the coasts, along with most of the animals, while safely storing the waste far inland. Now in the very unlikely event that some tragedy like say a meteor hits the waste dump and spreads the waste-the casualties would literally be at the worse case less then 10K, and only a very small amount of wild life would be harmed.
.. I don't have a response to this.
Nuclear energy, is quite honestly the best option to power humanity, that we currently have. If handled properly with a coordinated effort, I honestly think we could probably power all of humanity fairly easily, with far less pollution currently, far more power, and far less waste.