New Scottish Wave Energy Generator Unveiled 244
MikeChino writes "We've learned about Scotland's wave energy initiatives in the past, and just this morning the nation unveiled Aquamarine Power's next-generation Oyster 800 wave power plant. The new generator can produce 250% more power at one third the cost of the first full-scale 315kw Oyster that was installed in Orkney in 2009. The device's shape has been modified and made wider to enable it to capture more wave energy, and a double seabed pile system allows for easier installation."
Unfortunately... (Score:3, Funny)
...the energy cannot be used to power homes or industry; it can only be used to inflate bagpipes.
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...the energy cannot be used to power homes or industry; it can only be used to inflate bagpipes.
If only they could use it to power distilleries, they'd surround their entire coastline with these machines!
I keed, I keed! Scotland is a gorgeous, scenic country, (OK, well, at least the Highlands were gorgeous,) and despite their penchant for trying to trick you into eating haggis, most of the people I met there were very friendly.
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The highlands *are* magnificent - and so is the whisky, of course, think I brought 20-odd bottles home - but haggis is actually pretty edible. One chipshop actually offered deep fried haggis 'n chips, which was a surprising but definitely repeatable experience.
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Somehow I find it humorous that vegiVamp likes haggis. ;)
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Yeah, they're mostly friendly drunks.
Yeah... last time I went to Glasgow I was hugged/leant on by a friendly drunk. I think she was about 11... the other children said stuff, but I couldn't understand them.
(I'm English, and I'm pretty sure it's not much worse than England. But I like Scotland, it feels happier than England. I'd move, except for the weather.)
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it's called "draff" and is more commonly used as cattle feed. There is only about 1 tonne per mash process (usually 2 a day) for your average 2-still distillery so not quite enough to use for bio mass generation unless you are a pretty big distiller (glenlivit et al).
IAASALIS. (I am actually scots and live in scotland)
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:5, Informative)
As a Scotsman I'm offended at your derogatory and cliched view of my country. The energy is used to power deep-fat fryers, whisky distilleries and cigarette vending machings. Some energy is left over for TV sets in to watch our football team being crushed by all but the tiniest nations.
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I thought it was a middle eastern invention. You're possibly thinking of the modern kilt, which I believe was invented by an English businessman who wanted to make the clothes of his highland employees more convenient to wear and work in.
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Fitba, and we would have believed you.
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fuck you
What's the matter, bee up yer kilt porridge wog?
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nah, it's just those scotts are always angry and getting into fights.
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Because Scottish people, on the whole, are not an oppressed minority. They live in a first-world country (heck, even the last Prime Minister and his 2nd-in-command, who were in power for over 10 years, were Scottish). So yeah, it is different.
But that's a totally inexact criterium - are Argentinians first-worlders ? Is Barack Obama black ? Aren't 'oppressed minorities' entirely subject to location ?
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I just want to point out that anybody with any taste at all loves fried chicken and watermelon. I mean, that is good food. If you don't like at least one of the two, you're defective.
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Watermelon has an odd flavor. Musk melon is much superior.
And sure, anything fried is edible. I'd really rather have it grilled and basted with honey mustard, or covered in parmesan and baked.
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"And sure, anything fried is edible. I'd really rather have it grilled and basted with honey mustard, or covered in parmesan and baked."
While that would make a nice chicken dish, it isn't actually going to taste better than quality fried chicken.
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps the pendulum should swing in the other direction? I laugh at the stereotypes of my ancestors (Polish and Irish top the list). Perhaps everyone needs to lighten up and laugh at the things that make us different instead of flying off the handle and getting offended.
TL;DR: lighten up, life's too short.
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No it isn't; the racist one is the one which has little comment;
Yeah, they're mostly friendly drunks. [slashdot.org].
the differences include
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Scottish is not a race, it is a nationality, you have no choice of what genetic markers that people will group into an arbitrary "race". You do have a choice of what nation you claim. Some people move to say America and stop being scottish, some do the opposite, some move and continue claiming scotland. All of these people are making choices which open them to mockery.
Project scrapped .... (Score:2)
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Speaking of firsts (Score:2)
This is also the first power plant in the world to be painted tartan.
The Doomsday Scenario (Score:3, Funny)
Well... every great plan has to have a doomsday scenario or two. This one is the worst yet.
As we know the tides are primarily caused by gravitational drag from the orbit of the moon. The moon has enough velocity that its orbit is actually widening, meaning the grip between the two bodies is getting ever so infinitesimally smaller. One generator stealing energy from this system is nothing, but once we start investing in it hardcore... the reduction in wave energy leads to extra gravitational drag on the moon, slowing its orbit... causing it to stop advancing, and be pulled in towards the earth.
By the time this is noticed, it is too early to convince politicians that something must be done now, and in fact, the push to convert more power over to wave energy.
How does it end? Well political infighting, and a new ad campaign by the deep ocean energy harvesters association begins extolling the virtues of the new larger moon, and begin funding both PR campaigns for surfing associations and contests.... and the new moon cult which has begun preaching that the moon is actually Jesus returning to earth. As part of their agreement with the energy harvesters, the cult members primary ritual consists of running Air conditioning all day long, with their windows open and bitcoin mining.
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That's all well and good, but you forgot to account for solar activity, malfunctioning gravitrons, and the politicization of godless scientists.
if only they'd gone with Clean Oil (Score:3)
Clean Oil - It's So Clean, You Can Drink It
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Clean Oil - It's So Clean, You Can Drink It
North Sea water. You drink it - it drinks you.
Re:The Doomsday Scenario (Score:4, Insightful)
This is not a tide-generator. It is a wave generator, i.e. basically wind-powered. Your scenario does not apply.
The way this works is that it has several joints and swims and thereby fits to waves. As the waves move past the device, the joints are bent in one or the other direction. This is converted to energy via a hydraulic system.
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Tides are a result of the moon's movement - I'm not aware of any feedback mechanism where stopping the tides would impact the moon.
Even if there is, though, how many tidal generators would we have to install to have the slightest impact on a system that contains it's inertia in such a volume of water? I just asked Wolfram Alpha "what is the total volume of water in all the seas", and it claims 1.332×10^21 liters. The mind boggles.
I really don't believe tidal generators would have the slightest impact.
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Re:The Doomsday Scenario (Score:5, Interesting)
I know it's bad form to link your your self but i did the work for this last them we talkd about it.
http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1643562&cid=32116814 [slashdot.org]
well based on what i have read - as the moon/tidal effeects work the earth is slowing down and the moon is gaining potential energy related to earths gravity well by moving farther away - assume this is a colosed energy system..
assume we pull energy out of it.. the moon will come closer to earth (or reduce it's movement away) - so the total energy supply would be the potential energy of the moon in relation to earths gravity well.
PE = m x g x h
m = 7.3477 × 10^22 kg
g = 9.8 m/s2
h = 363,104,000 m (using it's Periapsis)
PE = 2.61461968 × 10^32 Joules
474 × 10^18 = AEC = whole planet annual energy consumption
PE/AEC = 551,607,527,000 years....
so the answer is .. keep current rates.. and assume we could get it all from here.. 550 billion years..
according to this #19
http://helios.gsfc.nasa.gov/qa_sun.html [nasa.gov] [nasa.gov]
"In about 5 billion more years, the useable hydrogen (not all the hydrogen) will have been converted to helium, and the Sun will start burning helium, and become a red giant."
if i remember right.. if it goes red giant it will grow larger than 1 AU so it will engulf earth..
basically.. we could increase energy consumption by a factor of 100 and only then would we be toying with maybe crashing the moon into us before the sun burns us away.
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I hope it works. It looks like it will start rusting the second its submerged.
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Hopefully it is simple enough to avoid most of the common fouling and corrosion issues underwater:
1) The delicated parts are all fully sealed
2) The hydraulic cylinders can be made of high grade stainless steel.
2) Any moving parts are constantly in motion so wont get encrusted by barnacles.
Not stainless steel I hope (Score:5, Informative)
However, it's a myth that stainless steel is the best thing for salt water. It is fine for above-deck use because it gets washed clean by freshwater in rain. But the interesting ingredients of seawater can cause pinholing and stress corrosion in stainless steels, though A4/316 is better than most. Bronze (tin/copper alloy) is good and is traditionally used for throughhulls and seacocks. The usual solution (pun intended) is of course not to let seawater near any working fluid circuits but to use either hydraulic oils or a mixture of propylene glycol and water (anti-freeze) - use propylene rather than ethylene because it doesn't kill fish if it leaks out.
Corrosion engineering is a really fascinating discipline with many unexpecteds and gotchas.
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What! Why is this -1? Genius, my anonymous friend, genius!
simplified (Score:5, Insightful)
or... 1 device can power 750 homes.
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"A farm of just 20 Oyster 800 devices would generate sufficient power for up to 15,000 homes"
or... 1 device can power 750 homes.
Translated to American.
"1 device can power 750 "Scottish" homes" or one average American home.
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You can smooth the output with flywheels or capacitors on land.
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That's nice... (Score:2)
Also, I still want to know what happens when the wind stops blowing, the sun stops shining, or waves stop coming.
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The same thing that happens when the coal is burnt up completely, we run out of oil, the natural gas burns up...we stop using that source.
Re:That's nice... (Score:4, Informative)
That's when we turn on the link to Shetland, where the wind never stops blowing!
The what?
We move to option number four, tidal, which is being trialled [scottishpo...wables.com] in the Sound of Islay. Tides are predictable - you know exactly when the energy will peak and trough, and can plan for it. In an ideal world we'd have tidal as our base generation, with the troughs supplemented by other forms of renewable energy buffered by pumped storage.
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Also, I still want to know what happens when the wind stops blowing, the sun stops shining, or waves stop coming.
Waves are created by the movement of the moon around the earth pulling on them via gravity. If they ever stopped we would have bigger problems to worry about.
Wind is actually quite predictable and reliable in some places. There isn't a 1:1 ration of wind speed to power generated either, and we can store power to cover gaps or just ramp up some of our other sources.
The sun always shines, it is just that on occasion it is obscured by cloud. Some places get less of that than others, e.g. northern Africa or sou
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You mean tides. Waves are generated by the wind and to a low extend by ocean currents.
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When the waves stop coming, I'm sure we'll have other things to worry about than just those things not working.
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There are often waves when there is no wind
So, there's also often not.
Re:That's nice... (Score:4, Interesting)
$0.16 vs $0.15: Early generation tech always costs (Score:3)
Looks like from your figures it's going to cost more at point of purchase ten times as much to produce electricity as a coal fired alternative. But you can read the figures differently. A couple of thoughts here:
- first of all, early tech always costs more than mature technologies. Coal fired power generation of electricity is maybe 100 years old? so maybe we need to wait for a few years to see how the costs level up compared to this new tech
- second, total lifespan costs need to be considered. You've noted
NIH (Score:2)
WOW. Of the 1st 12 comments concerning this improved technology 10 are put downs or one sort or another.
Somehow I don't see that happening if it had been invented in the US. Oh yeah, maybe a joke or two but not 10 out of 12. Pretty damn sad.
Re:NIH (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is actually pretty impressive technology. Save, will be reliable once the kinks have been ironed out, environment-friendly. All the put-downs can be explained by advanced cretinism in a majority of /. posters at this time of the night in Europe.
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Somehow I don't see that happening if it had been invented in the US. Oh yeah, maybe a joke or two but not 10 out of 12. Pretty damn sad.
Well, yeah... Can't blame them, more than not being a US company, Acquamarine Power are going to steal some US waves [aquamarinepower.com]. Even more, the US govt is an accomplice, granting them money for a feasibility study!
Somehow I don't see that happening if... (Score:2)
Speaking of which, I do hope my surviving relatives in Britain understand that we in the U.S. tend to bomb the crap out of anybody who doesn't cooperate with - let alone threatens - the energy monopolies.
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You misunderstand motive; it isn't about where it was invented, it is about Big Energy not wanting competition. So slam it, put it down...discourage investment...discourage deployment. Speaking of which, I do hope my surviving relatives in Britain understand that we in the U.S. tend to bomb the crap out of anybody who doesn't cooperate with - let alone threatens - the energy monopolies.
Only if those who are refusing to co-operate aren't also nuclear powers.
For comparison (Score:4, Informative)
Onshore wind farms have a 20%-25% capacity factor. Offshore wind seems to have a 30%-40% capacity factor, with turbines in the 1 - 4 MW range. So this wave power unit will on average generate slightly less energy than one of the smaller offshore wind turbines. In the KE = 0.5mv^2 equation, water has about 800x more mass than air, but the average wind speed is a lot higher than the average speed of the waveheight up and down. Enough so that it seems wind ends up having the advantage. (This is just a comparison, not a trade-off. You could for example install these wave power machines in between your offshore wind turbines.)
Comparing to conventional energy sources, the typical coal plant in the U.S. is about 340 MW with a 65% capacity factor, for about 220 MW average generation. So that's about 800 of these wave energy generators. The typical nuclear plant is about 1.55 GW with a 90% capacity factor, for about 1.4 GW average generation, or about 5000 of these wave energy generators. So we've still got a long way to go before these can truly replace conventional energy sources.
Unfortunately I can't find the price for one of these units, probably since they're still very much in the R&D phase. So I can't do a cost comparison. Also note that the Wikipedia entry for this project says it has three flaps each of which is capable of 800 kW. So depending on if the summary or wikipedia is right, the average power generated may be a factor of 3 higher.
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>>Unfortunately I can't find the price for one of these units, probably since they're still very much in the R&D phase
Didn't you read the article? The price was listed right there: they are 25% cheaper than the previous version.
There ya go. They're totally cost-efficient.
Comparing tiny single units to entire power plants (Score:4, Insightful)
No it isn't. That's a small single generator of probably 1970s or earlier vintage, and you have several of them in a single power plant because you need a lot of cooling, water treatmentt, coal handling etc gear whether you have one unit or several. Many of the concrete cooling towers you see are designed to cool two seperate units for example.
If a power plant has for example four 650MW units that adds up to more than your number for nuclear, which is also wrong because there are some much bigger plants there along with the tiny research reactors and the many very small miltary run "power" plants in developing countries that bring the average down. Don't confuse "average" with typical and compare apples and orchards.
Re:For comparison (Score:4, Insightful)
You forgot the most important points: Wave power does not need any fuel, does not pollute and needs very little maintenance. Yeah, it needs more development to get efficiency up and we need a lot of them, but on the other hand they are clean and cheap to run. We have plenty of space for them.
Numbers, motherfucker (Score:3)
This is not a put-down of the technology; this is a put-down of shitty publish-the-press-release technology reporting. Give us fucking numbers.
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We you ranting instead of gogleing or wikipeding?
You are not interested in teh answrs yoiu claim to seek Otherwise you would read TFA etc.
Regardign yuor enxt post: who cares what a home is in power? It is a completely common reference unit in power generation. Nearly every "new technology" power plant is measured in terms of "homes powered".
Asuming you are from teh USA ... it does not matter anyway how much power one home uses, as YOU and YOUR home will need 3 to 4 times of it anyway.
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Re:Numbers, motherfucker (Score:4, Funny)
Roughly equivalent to a library of congress or a fotball field.
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You're thinking of tidal generators. These are wave generators, and operate most of the time except when there are calm seas.
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Research costs don't really tell me anything about production costs. £4 - £5.1 million buys me what? Aquamarine Power signed a £4 million contract for how much expected output?
And tell me, do you think I didn't search, read wikipedia, or otherwise do due diligence? For all your bluster, you didn't tell me anything here that wasn't in TFA -
Scottish Wave Energy? (Score:2)
Big and expensive (Score:2)
The pictures show a big expensive jointed float.
Wind turbines are also big and expensive stiff machines.
When I as a physicist and engineer ponder on this, I get cheap light efficient constructions of film, like paragliders and balloons.
Why is this so?
Perhaps generators are expensive to subsidize industry.
Perhaps I am a genius.
Which is more likely?
Since everyone will be confused over nationality (Score:2)
Since everyone will be confused about whether Scotland is a country or not, whether it's part of England or not or something called Great Britain or the United Kingdom, here is a video that explains Britain, the United Kingdom, Scotland etc.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNu8XDBSn10
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The video is wrong in one respect - it refers to Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland as "four co-equal and sovereign nations" when in fact none of them is sovereign - only the United Kingdom is. Scotland, Wales and NI have less sovereignty than a US state, in that the British parliament can in theory still legislate in any matter across the whole of the UK. In practice it doesn't do so (or does so only at the request [wikipedia.org] of the devolved legislatures) because it would be political suicide.
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You're wrong. The Consent Motion is a practicality that allows Westminster to legislate on Scottish issues where it is agreed that this should happen, so that it doesn't become a constitutional controversy. It isn't strictly required, though. Parliamentary sovereignty still resides at Westminster.
A practical example is the disbanding of the Parliament of Northern Ireland in 1972, which would have been impossible had Westminster not had ultimate power over Northern Ireland.
This is the reason the political
but can they make a gun with it? (Score:2)
134 comments and not one references making a gun using wave motion. Slashdot, I am disappoint.
Star Force! (Score:2)
Thank you. I was about to make the same joke about Wave Motion Energy, and could it power a spaceship made from the remnants of the Yamato, but, you beat me to it.
I think back to my childhood, hearing that trumpet sound and hearing Orion say "Wave Motion Energy at 100%"
That's still my favorite tv show.... ever.
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Some kilts are longer than others, friend.
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Scotland was a nation, even had its own King. Robert (The Bruce) defeated the English at Bannockburn.
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By the accepted usage, Scotland (England, Wales, etc) is not a nation. The nation is the United Kingdom.
WRONG.. very very wrong.. i suggest you read up on the4 articles of the union bud.. this is why Scotland has it's own legal system and is recognised as a nation in it's own right on that very document
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the only thing that counts is that scottland, wales and ingland have their own socker teams in the world champion ships ;D (no idea about northern ireland ... do they play socker there?)
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The European Union does not change national status. Each of the members of the EU is a soverign nation, complete with passports, Internet country codes etc. and all the trappings of sovereignty. Being an EU member doesn't mean you stop being a nation. There is no United States of Europe, there is no European Union passport. Only passports of the sovereign nations that make up the EU.
Scotland is not a sovereign nation, it makes up part of a nation, and the sovereign nation of which it makes a part is called
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Deliberately writing a comment which tries to confuse the term "soverign nation" with "nation" does not make your comment on topic. As a hint, if there wasn't a difference between the terms "soveriegn nation" and "nation" then people wouldn't tend to write it out in full.
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it's not british IT'S SCOTTISH!
and after the referendum in 2014 Scotland will be independent
Saor Alba agus Alba Gu Brath!
Poser - any Scotsman should know the whole island is Britain and it's hard to be independent of your own island. Perhaps you are confused as to the southeastern part of Britain? They're called the "English".
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Poser - any Scotsman should know the whole island is Britain and it's hard to be independent of your own island. Perhaps you are confused as to the southeastern part of Britain? They're called the "English".
They have experimented these things in the Outer Hebridian Isles where I am from and apparently also out in Orkney (neither of those places are actually Britain, if you want to be pedantic : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Britain [wikipedia.org]). The newer versions of these basically use wave energy to pump water onto the land and use it to turn turbines in a hydro electric fashion. The older ones turned turbines under water which, any fool will tell you generating electricity underwater is not the brightest idea.
T
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it's hard to be independent of your own island.
Not that hard. Take a look at Haiti and The Dominican Republic. One is a total basket case, the other isn't. A strong wall and customs service on the DR side keeps them separate.
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The island is called Hispaniola. Neither Haiti nor the Dominican Republic can be "independent" of Hispaniola. It's not a cromulent phrase. Similarly, Scotland cannot be independent of Britain. It could become independent of the United Kingdom.
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Poser - any Scotsman should know the whole island is Britain and it's hard to be independent of your own island. Perhaps you are confused as to the southeastern part of Britain? They're called the "English".
Poster - any American should know the whole majority of the continent is USA and it's hard to be independent of your own majority of a continent. Perhaps you are confused as to the existence of this mythical independent Republic of Texas? And the Confederacy, that never happened either, because it is completely un-possible to have two separate, independent, sovereign countries in the same land mass. In fact that bullshit about the sovereign nation called the Vatican being right there in the same landmass as that other sovereign nation called Italy, well you DO know that's just a lie right?
A more appropriate analogy would be for Canada to become independent of North America, which would be a major civil engineering project.
Great Britain is an island that includes most of England, Wales and Scotland
The British Isles is a group of islands that includes Great Britain and Ireland (northern and southern)
The United Kingdom is a sovereign state that includes England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
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gaun yersel!..lol i voted SNP and have done all my voting life and it was amazing to see the results role in that night.. i stayed up all night it was just amazing!
Saor Alba
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fuck you it's not british IT'S SCOTTISH! and after the referendum in 2014 Scotland will be independent
Lets hope so, you porridge wogs cost us a fortune. At least £11 billion of English money heads for Edinburgh each year [telegraph.co.uk]
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this is just not true. The barnet formula and the financial restrictions on the scottish government mean that scotland HAS to balance its budget every year - whereas england can continue to borrow at the expense of the UK (which ironically includes Scotland). Luckily (for us Scots), the Scots government didn't go PFI crazy and now runs at a lower cost per capita then the UK/england government allowing Scots to have better medical care and many benefits that the English do not get.
I, like an increasing num
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I, like an increasing number of Scots, hope that Scotland leaves the union. I pretty sure the UK government will do all it can using dirty tricks in the divorce process.
One benefit for us English is that we will be able to send our kids to Scottish Universities and pay the same fees as anyone in the rest of Europe .
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Scotland when taken as separate from the UK is actually in surplus you muppet
Scotland contributes more than DOUBLE what it gets back from the union.. some fucking union dividend eh?
i think you'll fidn tat per capita london gets most spent on it, followed by northern Ireland followed by Scotland.
mind you westminster takes ALL OUR OIL AND GAS REVENUE and we get a pittance back.
the money that whisky sales generate is also quite astonishing and contrary to p
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Last I checked, independence had support of about 20% of the Scottish population. Seems quite unlikely that the majority will vote for independence. Given that Scotland gets a lot of money from the rest of Britain, only balanced out by North Sea oil, which is running out, I wouldn't be surprised if it had a lot more support in England than Scotland.
Personally, I'd like to see independence for Greater London. The rest of us would be a lot better off without it.
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Last I checked, independence had support of about 20% of the Scottish population. Seems quite unlikely that the majority will vote for independence. Given that Scotland gets a lot of money from the rest of Britain, only balanced out by North Sea oil, which is running out, I wouldn't be surprised if it had a lot more support in England than Scotland.
Personally, I'd like to see independence for Greater London. The rest of us would be a lot better off without it.
well 69 seats and a whopping historic landslide victory at the last elections kinda takes a huge dump on your 20% number.
we'll see when 2014 comes along And as for north Sea oil running out... sorry but that's crap.. take a look at http://www.oilofscotland.org/ [oilofscotland.org] for some simple truths on that.. also have have massive reserves off the west coast and have a large stake on the Rockall claim.. so erm.. kinda blows yer paltry arguments out the water.
oh and as for your poll... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/u [telegraph.co.uk]
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Isn't there a rock that needs to be returned from Enguhland?
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... Of course, you can't put them exactly side-by-side ...
Side by side in series all around the coast, or perhaps several rows in parallel around the most suitable parts of the coast? After a wave has been over one of these things there's still a lot of 'wave' left, and certainly enough to make it worthwhile placing a 2nd row of these things.
As per a previous poster, it does seem like an interesting idea to build a wind farm with these things at the base of each wind turbine and share much of the infrastructure ...
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In Iowa, they've already gotten wind energy's contribution to up over 15% (up from next to nothing a decade ago)
does this solve everything? Does it eliminate the need for bulk-baseload power? Again No...
But 15% adds up to a lot of coal and natural gas not being burned, and that number is going higher.