“It’s the dams …”

  1. not the abnormally warm water, in some cases giving spawning salmon heart attacks
  2. not the nasty shit falling from the skies
  3. not the lack of predictable or consistent snow pack

nope …

it’s the DAMS …

(which is partially true)

(but that’s WHY this is a limited hangout)

Link: https://www.king5.com/article/news/investigations/investigators/seattle-fish-passage-investment-skagit-river-investigation/281-6a700eb6-a546-4733-b74d-a96be5692498

What’s the silent part SOVIETOLOGISTS?

If we’re entering a new climate regime, “Hot House Earth”? – then traditional heat exchange methods for nuclear reactors will fail. Try keeping a boiling water reactor under control when the EXTERNAL SOURCE water temperature >100F or there are changes in sea level and water flow (for river sources).

*** WHAT IS HEAT EXCHANGE?

Link: https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3333982/nuclear-tech-milestone-chinas-supercritical-steam-free-generator-connects-grid

SMR’S will not save us: https://blog.ucs.org/edwin-lyman/five-things-the-nuclear-bros-dont-want-you-to-know-about-small-modular-reactors/

“To date, 1.5 percent of all nuclear power plants ever built have melted down to some degree. Meltdowns have been either catastrophic (Chernobyl, Ukraine in 1986; three reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi, Japan in 2011) or damaging (Three-Mile Island in 1979; Saint-Laurent France in 1980).”

“So far, most production cuts are due to warming waters—not just in the Rhône and Garonne, but in places like the Tennessee River in the US, and in the coastal seas where many more plants are sited. In recent years, nuclear plants across Northern Europe have been forced to shut down or reduce output because seawater became too warm to safely cool the reactor cores. Over the past decade, the Millstone power plant in Connecticut saw a series of shutdowns on hot summer days until regulators raised the temperature limit of its cooling waters by 5 degrees Fahrenheit.”