Been doing my usual volunteering at a local windmill again today. There's quite a few historic windmills and watermills round here.
Wind, water, why tap natural energy from just two of the four elements, where are the fire mills and earth mills? Surely they could install some sort of generators on active volcanoes, the output would be enormous. Maybe in areas subject to earthquakes too. Admittedly, you would not get power from them very often but when you did it would be enormous. You could store it in a gigantic battery and keep a big city going for months.
Japan is one of the countries most prone to earthquakes and we all know what happened 5 years ago at Fukushima. They could have had huge buoys floating in the water attached by wires to generators. When the Tsunami struck they would have generated lots of power and also mitigated the effects. Lots of relatively poor countries like Nepal and India suffer major earthquakes. If they covered the land with large versions of this shake generator the resulting power would compensate to some degree for the devastation.
Wind, water, why tap natural energy from just two of the four elements, where are the fire mills and earth mills? Surely they could install some sort of generators on active volcanoes, the output would be enormous. Maybe in areas subject to earthquakes too. Admittedly, you would not get power from them very often but when you did it would be enormous. You could store it in a gigantic battery and keep a big city going for months.
Japan is one of the countries most prone to earthquakes and we all know what happened 5 years ago at Fukushima. They could have had huge buoys floating in the water attached by wires to generators. When the Tsunami struck they would have generated lots of power and also mitigated the effects. Lots of relatively poor countries like Nepal and India suffer major earthquakes. If they covered the land with large versions of this shake generator the resulting power would compensate to some degree for the devastation.
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