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text,start,duration |
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hello everybody David Shapiro here with,0.359,5.041 |
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a brand new video today's video is about,2.94,4.439 |
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energy hyperabundance,5.4,4.98 |
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or nuclear fusion Renewables and how,7.379,5.34 |
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these will intersect with AI and quite a,10.38,4.139 |
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few other things,12.719,3.541 |
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before we jump into the video I just,14.519,3.781 |
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want to plug my patreon real quick if,16.26,3.18 |
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you want to support the work that I do,18.3,3.42 |
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please jump over I have a private,19.44,4.74 |
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Discord server for all of my patreon,21.72,4.26 |
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supporters and I also have a few higher,24.18,4.679 |
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tiers that allow for group interactions,25.98,4.92 |
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group chats and at the highest year,28.859,5.101 |
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one-on-one interactions if you'd like to,30.9,4.86 |
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consult on any of the topics that I talk,33.96,2.82 |
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about,35.76,3.74 |
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okay jumping right back into the video,36.78,4.98 |
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uh first we got to talk about the,39.5,4.42 |
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history of energy and we're not going to,41.76,4.26 |
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talk about the entire history of energy,43.92,5.459 |
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but just the recent uh history of energy,46.02,7.32 |
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so the energy consumption per capita,49.379,7.5 |
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over the last two-ish centuries went,53.34,6.78 |
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from about 90 million btu per year so,56.879,6.061 |
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BTU's British thermal unit which is a,60.12,6.48 |
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measure of thermal output which thermal,62.94,5.7 |
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energy is kind of the ground unit or the,66.6,4.32 |
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base unit of energy of course there's,68.64,3.96 |
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many kinds of energy but I don't need to,70.92,4.019 |
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unpack it for a physics lesson but just,72.6,3.66 |
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wanted to point out that is how we,74.939,3.661 |
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typically measure energy so around 90,76.26,6.66 |
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BTU and then it uh all pretty much,78.6,8.82 |
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quadrupled to around 350 BTU peaking in,82.92,7.8 |
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the early or mid 70s and then kind of,87.42,5.839 |
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plateauing and then slowly,90.72,5.28 |
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pulling back a little bit,93.259,5.441 |
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so one thing that we need to understand,96.0,6.06 |
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about energy consumption is this thing,98.7,5.459 |
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called javon's paradox,102.06,5.28 |
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and basically javon's Paradox is what we,104.159,5.401 |
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experienced at the beginning of the,107.34,4.8 |
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industrialization of energy which is,109.56,5.16 |
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that when you make something more,112.14,6.119 |
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abundant uh whether it's a good or a,114.72,5.399 |
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service if you make the supply more,118.259,4.081 |
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abundant sometimes the demand actually,120.119,3.661 |
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goes up,122.34,3.54 |
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um more than you would think because,123.78,4.44 |
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usually supply and demand means that,125.88,4.5 |
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once Supply goes up demand actually goes,128.22,4.739 |
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down or the demand is satisfied so,130.38,4.98 |
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there's a couple reasons for this one,132.959,5.101 |
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reason is that in some cases there's,135.36,7.019 |
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unmet Demand right so if say for,138.06,6.42 |
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instance you know you're going without,142.379,4.341 |
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something and then suddenly electricity,144.48,4.619 |
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is twice as cheap it's like oh well now,146.72,5.56 |
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I can afford to run my air conditioner,149.099,5.64 |
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all the time now I can afford to cook,152.28,4.86 |
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with an electric oven so then you add,154.739,4.14 |
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more electrical appliances so your,157.14,4.5 |
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demand goes up as Supply goes up now,158.879,5.101 |
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that being said another way of looking,161.64,4.98 |
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at this is unmet demand or latent demand,163.98,5.7 |
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so once the latent demand is met that,166.62,4.259 |
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means that you're getting all of your,169.68,4.32 |
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energy needs met then demand should stop,170.879,5.58 |
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Rising now that being said that doesn't,174.0,4.5 |
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exclude the possibility,176.459,5.461 |
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of discovering more energy needs in the,178.5,6.48 |
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future so say for instance once AI takes,181.92,5.7 |
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off maybe our per capita Energy starts,184.98,5.399 |
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to go up again because AI runs on very,187.62,4.619 |
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expensive computers that consume a lot,190.379,4.741 |
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of power and so maybe maybe the unmet,192.239,6.08 |
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need for intellectual or cognitive labor,195.12,6.06 |
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through AI Automation and robotic,198.319,4.901 |
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automation that could be an unmet demand,201.18,5.46 |
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that as electricity gets cheaper that,203.22,5.159 |
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reduces the marginal cost of running,206.64,3.9 |
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more and more AI so we might actually,208.379,4.86 |
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see energy consumption per capita go up,210.54,4.8 |
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again I don't know one way or another I,213.239,4.321 |
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just wanted to point out that even,215.34,4.74 |
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though energy consumption per capita has,217.56,4.8 |
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been stable ish for the last 50 years,220.08,3.659 |
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that doesn't mean that it's going to be,222.36,3.599 |
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true forever but I'm making the,223.739,5.041 |
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assumption that the that the uh the,225.959,4.5 |
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compounding returns of increased,228.78,3.84 |
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efficiency and reduced demand will,230.459,5.161 |
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offset any further uh growth but I could,232.62,4.02 |
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be wrong,235.62,3.839 |
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now today our composition the,236.64,4.8 |
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composition of our energy portfolio is,239.459,4.081 |
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highly varied we've got nuclear we've,241.44,5.28 |
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got oil coal natural gas solar tidal,243.54,5.059 |
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wind Hydro,246.72,5.519 |
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hydroelectric and biofuel so biofuel,248.599,7.781 |
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is burning things like wood ethanol,252.239,7.021 |
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um and and other uh organic waste,256.38,4.5 |
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products or organic products is not,259.26,3.3 |
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necessarily a waste product,260.88,5.58 |
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uh the modern history of oil began in,262.56,6.359 |
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1858 when the first oil well was drilled,266.46,4.679 |
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and it took about two decades for the,268.919,4.941 |
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Industrial Revolution to learn how to,271.139,4.861 |
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acclimate to this new fuel source,273.86,3.94 |
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because just because you have a new fuel,276.0,3.12 |
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source doesn't mean that you've got the,277.8,3.42 |
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infrastructure to use it it also doesn't,279.12,3.9 |
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mean that you have the tools or engines,281.22,3.9 |
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to consume that new fuel source so,283.02,4.14 |
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that's why you see here energy,285.12,4.98 |
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consumption had a little tiny bump when,287.16,5.16 |
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oil started being drilled but then it,290.1,5.099 |
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took another you know 20 30 years before,292.32,4.86 |
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you really saw the ramp up and that was,295.199,4.081 |
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because people were learning how to use,297.18,4.86 |
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this new fuel source now I'm not going,299.28,4.199 |
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to say that it's going to take equally,302.04,4.32 |
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as long or longer for us to learn to use,303.479,5.701 |
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new fuel sources but we were,306.36,4.619 |
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contemplating the same problem with for,309.18,4.26 |
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instance the hydrogen economy,310.979,4.981 |
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so for those of us who are old enough to,313.44,5.94 |
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remember up until about five or six,315.96,5.22 |
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years ago there was a lot of talk around,319.38,4.5 |
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the hydrogen economy the idea was that,321.18,4.739 |
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hydrogen had such a higher energy,323.88,6.96 |
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density per per unit of mass than fossil,325.919,7.081 |
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fuels that it would be a really ideal,330.84,5.76 |
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fuel source to replace petroleum now,333.0,5.6 |
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there's a lot of problems with hydrogen,336.6,4.319 |
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namely the infrastructure it's a,338.6,3.879 |
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compressed gas which is very very,340.919,4.56 |
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dangerous very hazardous so we would,342.479,5.0 |
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need to increase our safety standards,345.479,5.581 |
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moving it transporting it refilling all,347.479,5.261 |
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kinds of things become much much more,351.06,4.56 |
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difficult with hydrogen and so in that,352.74,4.799 |
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case it's not a matter of burning,355.62,4.62 |
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hydrogen or fuel cells or whatever it is,357.539,4.981 |
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the infrastructure of delivering,360.24,4.38 |
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hydrogen that was the problem and,362.52,4.38 |
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ultimately we collectively decided this,364.62,3.9 |
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is actually not a good replacement for,366.9,2.9 |
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fossil fuels,368.52,3.899 |
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not the least of which reason is because,369.8,4.78 |
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at the time the most efficient way of,372.419,4.261 |
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producing hydrogen is with fossil fuels,374.58,4.08 |
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so it's like okay this is actually not a,376.68,3.66 |
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not a solution so I just wanted to point,378.66,4.5 |
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that out as a modern example of testing,380.34,5.46 |
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new fuel sources even though on paper,383.16,5.28 |
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hydrogen is a very very potent fuel,385.8,4.98 |
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source because it's so difficult to use,388.44,4.62 |
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it's pretty much relegated to Specialty,390.78,5.82 |
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use cases such as in the space program,393.06,6.18 |
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okay so that's the history of energy,396.6,4.8 |
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consumption now we have to look at,399.24,4.26 |
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energy consumption on a global scale or,401.4,4.2 |
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the geopolitics of energy,403.5,4.38 |
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so this happens before my time I know,405.6,4.14 |
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I'm getting older but the 70s is still,407.88,4.86 |
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before my time there was uh what was,409.74,4.98 |
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called the oil shocks that happened,412.74,4.2 |
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there was two major crises in the 70s,414.72,6.06 |
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one in 1973 and the other in 1978 or 79,416.94,5.759 |
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I don't remember exactly like I said I,420.78,4.8 |
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wasn't there anyways the the fact of the,422.699,5.881 |
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matter is is that a series of Wars local,425.58,6.179 |
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conflicts embargoes and other forms of,428.58,7.08 |
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global instability caused a widespread,431.759,5.761 |
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fuel shortages not just in America this,435.66,3.36 |
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is global,437.52,3.119 |
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um so these fuel shortages and high,439.02,4.26 |
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prices led to rationing and a lot of,440.639,5.821 |
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panic so a lot of a lot of people at our,443.28,5.22 |
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parents age and our grandparents age,446.46,4.5 |
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they remember this which is one of the,448.5,3.84 |
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reasons that they're afraid of things,450.96,3.72 |
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like hyperinflation and and that that,452.34,3.919 |
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sort of stuff is because they remember,454.68,4.139 |
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actually I remember my dad talking about,456.259,5.201 |
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having to sit in the gas lines right,458.819,5.401 |
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where there would be lines of cars more,461.46,5.16 |
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than a mile long waiting to get gas at,464.22,3.66 |
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the gas station because everyone was,466.62,4.019 |
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afraid that they would run out of gas,467.88,6.18 |
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and so this uh really woke the country,470.639,6.541 |
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up to how vulnerable we were and not,474.06,5.039 |
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just not just America all of the whole,477.18,4.88 |
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world how vulnerable we were to,479.099,6.0 |
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volatility and the supply of fuel,482.06,6.28 |
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fossil fuel dependence was identified as,485.099,5.641 |
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a major driver of instability and,488.34,4.62 |
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conflict and so this led to the Mantra,490.74,5.04 |
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energy security is National Security and,492.96,5.34 |
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this is still the explicit policy of,495.78,6.419 |
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many nations around the world so one one,498.3,5.7 |
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thing that happened in America is that,502.199,4.28 |
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we prioritize domestic oil production,504.0,4.979 |
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but then we also worked on securing,506.479,4.601 |
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alliances and other things and a lot of,508.979,5.341 |
|
it was uh very underhanded so you might,511.08,5.28 |
|
have heard the blood for oil kind of,514.32,3.12 |
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policies,516.36,5.039 |
|
and of course no one in in Congress,517.44,5.88 |
|
would actually call it that because that,521.399,3.601 |
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sounds very imperialistic and aggressive,523.32,5.16 |
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this is what protesters and,525.0,5.76 |
|
um and critics of the government called,528.48,4.68 |
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it but so there's a few things that,530.76,5.88 |
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happen so the Petro dollar is a,533.16,6.6 |
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reference to a policy where America,536.64,5.759 |
|
pretty much strong armed the oil,539.76,5.639 |
|
producing Nations to price their oil in,542.399,5.94 |
|
the US dollar which,545.399,5.281 |
|
the on the on the positive side the,548.339,4.5 |
|
benevolent side the stability of the US,550.68,5.339 |
|
dollar should have helped the goal was,552.839,5.581 |
|
hopefully to stabilize the price of oil,556.019,4.681 |
|
but it also ensured that the US dollar,558.42,5.58 |
|
was the global Reserve currency and you,560.7,5.1 |
|
know just taking a big step back if you,564.0,4.14 |
|
have one nation that is responsible for,565.8,4.38 |
|
the global Reserve currency that's kind,568.14,3.96 |
|
of unfair on a global stage which that,570.18,3.599 |
|
has been an unpopular move for the last,572.1,2.82 |
|
50 years,573.779,3.661 |
|
across the world you see ongoing,574.92,5.52 |
|
reverberations of that for instance in,577.44,5.0 |
|
the tensions between the US and China,580.44,4.92 |
|
where currency manipulation like you,582.44,4.42 |
|
know the US will accuse China of,585.36,3.0 |
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currency manipulation and China's like,586.86,2.94 |
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what are you talking about you've been,588.36,3.24 |
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manipulating Global Currency for 50,589.8,4.26 |
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years right like pot calls kettle black,591.6,4.919 |
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don't be a hypocrite,594.06,4.68 |
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um it also resulted in a lot of proxy,596.519,3.961 |
|
wars between the U.S and the Soviet,598.74,4.86 |
|
Union uh particularly in the Middle East,600.48,4.799 |
|
um when it was a matter of kind of,603.6,4.56 |
|
fighting over influencer control of oil,605.279,6.421 |
|
producing Nations Iraq and Iran are kind,608.16,6.359 |
|
of two of the the primary examples and,611.7,5.52 |
|
Iran was actually Central to some of,614.519,5.701 |
|
those oil shocks in the 70s uh this was,617.22,5.28 |
|
a very dark period in global history and,620.22,4.799 |
|
particularly American history and it was,622.5,4.2 |
|
not soon forgotten particularly by our,625.019,3.841 |
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parents and grandparents nobody wants to,626.7,4.319 |
|
repeat any of that,628.86,3.96 |
|
now one other thing that you need to,631.019,4.081 |
|
know since I've you know kind of,632.82,5.1 |
|
demonstrated the centrality of uh of,635.1,5.1 |
|
petroleum to our to our energy,637.92,4.979 |
|
consumption and energy use you need to,640.2,4.98 |
|
understand the concept of peak oil now,642.899,4.44 |
|
this is going to be brain dead simple to,645.18,4.56 |
|
some people but it's going to be a New,647.339,5.161 |
|
Concept to others basically any resource,649.74,5.3 |
|
any natural resource is finite,652.5,6.06 |
|
so however what we didn't know was how,655.04,6.28 |
|
much there was at the beginning the idea,658.56,4.2 |
|
was you just poke a hole in the ground,661.32,3.24 |
|
and lots of oil comes out and it seemed,662.76,4.5 |
|
like an unlimited resource right like,664.56,4.8 |
|
you're never going to run out of lava in,667.26,4.38 |
|
the planet right there so we thought at,669.36,4.58 |
|
the beginning that oil could have been,671.64,5.16 |
|
something that was effectively unlimited,673.94,4.839 |
|
there might have been trillions and,676.8,3.719 |
|
trillions and quadrillions of years,678.779,4.5 |
|
worth of oil in the ground somewhere,680.519,4.741 |
|
however,683.279,4.74 |
|
um in the I think it was in the the 30s,685.26,4.56 |
|
or 50s I can't remember,688.019,4.861 |
|
um but the idea of peak oil was proposed,689.82,5.4 |
|
that they said they they monitored the,692.88,4.5 |
|
output of oil wells and they said,695.22,4.5 |
|
actually this is not going to be,697.38,5.639 |
|
measured in Millennia or even centuries,699.72,5.7 |
|
each oil well each oil field is only,703.019,4.26 |
|
going to be measured in decades in terms,705.42,4.38 |
|
of output and so what we saw was that,707.279,4.8 |
|
actually proved out to be pretty pretty,709.8,6.5 |
|
accurate and so uh the production of oil,712.079,7.561 |
|
in particular regions we're finding,716.3,5.62 |
|
actually does become exhausted usually,719.64,5.16 |
|
within within the century and in this,721.92,5.099 |
|
case you can see that the USA our,724.8,3.719 |
|
production our domestic production,727.019,5.221 |
|
peaked just after uh the 1970s or in the,728.519,5.88 |
|
middle of the 1970s and has been on a,732.24,4.56 |
|
gentle downward slope ever since ditto,734.399,4.801 |
|
for Europe and Russia,736.8,6.06 |
|
um and uh and Central America same,739.2,5.879 |
|
Middle East is still kind of stable-ish,742.86,4.02 |
|
but they're kind of you know at their,745.079,3.421 |
|
Crescendo,746.88,5.699 |
|
um and then we do have a few new sources,748.5,5.88 |
|
right so there's oil sands there's,752.579,3.181 |
|
fracking,754.38,3.06 |
|
um and then there's the deep water so,755.76,3.48 |
|
like drilling oil,757.44,4.32 |
|
um over uh places in the ocean for,759.24,4.44 |
|
instance now that being said we are,761.76,5.94 |
|
finding some new sources but they are,763.68,6.12 |
|
much much much harder to get to they are,767.7,3.78 |
|
much more expensive to get to and,769.8,3.839 |
|
they're much riskier to get to so,771.48,3.96 |
|
they're just not as sustainable and it's,773.639,4.14 |
|
not as abundant as we thought that it,775.44,3.78 |
|
would be,777.779,4.081 |
|
now the other thing to point and to,779.22,4.919 |
|
point out though is that our food,781.86,4.919 |
|
production and our water production and,784.139,4.2 |
|
a whole lot of other stuff even just,786.779,3.36 |
|
transporting food so that you can get to,788.339,3.961 |
|
it energy production,790.139,5.281 |
|
our entire civilization presently still,792.3,6.36 |
|
depends on oil so if you hold these two,795.42,4.919 |
|
facts on one hand you are completely,798.66,4.619 |
|
dependent upon oil or fossil fuels for,800.339,5.101 |
|
your way of life and it is going to run,803.279,4.321 |
|
out in the next few decades that is,805.44,3.78 |
|
cause for concern,807.6,4.44 |
|
on the uh at the same time our use of,809.22,5.34 |
|
oil is harming the atmosphere harming,812.04,4.14 |
|
the environment which will ultimately,814.56,4.32 |
|
also harm us it's a lose-lose death,816.18,3.779 |
|
spiral,818.88,3.3 |
|
so this leads to the energy crisis,819.959,4.62 |
|
that's that Catch-22 we need fossil,822.18,4.86 |
|
fuels to to sustain our way of life,824.579,4.26 |
|
it is also presently destroying the,827.04,3.419 |
|
Earth and we will run out so it's,828.839,3.361 |
|
actually three things,830.459,3.661 |
|
um now that being said this is the,832.2,3.9 |
|
underpinning of the energy crisis and,834.12,3.36 |
|
there are plenty of alternative,836.1,4.679 |
|
Solutions however all of those Solutions,837.48,4.919 |
|
as I pointed out with the beginning of,840.779,3.781 |
|
the Industrial Revolution it takes time,842.399,5.581 |
|
to adapt to those alternative Solutions,844.56,6.0 |
|
and in many cases some of the science,847.98,6.24 |
|
isn't even proved out yet now the first,850.56,5.88 |
|
and most popular is obviously solar,854.22,4.559 |
|
solar requires special minerals and,856.44,4.019 |
|
Material Science which means that it is,858.779,4.381 |
|
not quite as easy to use,860.459,5.101 |
|
um and even though solar power solar,863.16,5.04 |
|
energy from the Sun is abundant,865.56,5.519 |
|
um the production of solar cells is uh,868.2,4.62 |
|
is still a constraint now it's getting,871.079,3.901 |
|
better but solar has some other problems,872.82,4.259 |
|
namely that it doesn't work at night and,874.98,3.78 |
|
so you still need batteries or storage,877.079,3.721 |
|
of some kind which is honestly the,878.76,4.86 |
|
larger constraint at this point nuclear,880.8,5.399 |
|
fission uh you know nuclear reactors are,883.62,4.86 |
|
actually kind of unpopular for a lot of,886.199,3.301 |
|
reasons,888.48,3.24 |
|
they're geopolitically problematic,889.5,6.24 |
|
because nuclear reactors used for energy,891.72,6.299 |
|
production can also be easily converted,895.74,3.48 |
|
to,898.019,3.841 |
|
um as what's called a breeder reactor so,899.22,4.739 |
|
a breeder reactor is used to breed other,901.86,4.74 |
|
fissile materials that can be weaponized,903.959,5.94 |
|
and so that's why there are um there are,906.6,5.4 |
|
embargoes and other uh restrictions,909.899,3.06 |
|
against,912.0,3.0 |
|
um some Nations because it's like okay,912.959,4.32 |
|
well we understand that you want nuclear,915.0,3.6 |
|
reactors,917.279,3.42 |
|
um ostensibly for civilian uses but,918.6,3.539 |
|
we're afraid that you're going to use it,920.699,3.841 |
|
for weapons purposes and of course again,922.139,4.081 |
|
that's not very fair it's rules for me,924.54,3.419 |
|
but our rules for thee but not for me,926.22,4.02 |
|
because a lot of Nations like America,927.959,4.981 |
|
and across Europe have nuclear reactors,930.24,4.5 |
|
and we use them and we're like okay well,932.94,3.66 |
|
we can have this but you can't it's,934.74,3.839 |
|
super not fair,936.6,4.08 |
|
um so that means we need a solution that,938.579,4.041 |
|
is not geopolitically problematic,940.68,5.459 |
|
another example is Thorium reactors so,942.62,6.219 |
|
thorium reactors is an alternative kind,946.139,5.88 |
|
of nuclear reactor that could have a lot,948.839,4.981 |
|
of potential they haven't taken off yet,952.019,3.12 |
|
and I'm not actually sure why I didn't,953.82,2.759 |
|
look too much into it but I just wanted,955.139,3.541 |
|
to make sure that it made it on the list,956.579,5.341 |
|
wind is a really good resource for some,958.68,6.06 |
|
reasons namely that it is available,961.92,5.159 |
|
pretty much anywhere and you don't need,964.74,5.7 |
|
any super specialized uh materials to,967.079,6.781 |
|
get there just some fiberglass for the,970.44,4.44 |
|
blades,973.86,3.06 |
|
and then a typical generator and you're,974.88,4.5 |
|
good to go unfortunately though it is,976.92,4.02 |
|
unreliable because it depends on the,979.38,3.42 |
|
weather it can also have some,980.94,3.66 |
|
environmental impact of course you might,982.8,4.02 |
|
have seen videos of you know bald eagles,984.6,4.38 |
|
and other Wildlife like getting creamed,986.82,4.259 |
|
by those blades because they move very,988.98,3.96 |
|
fast and they are very like they're,991.079,5.101 |
|
they're huge so it can be hazardous to,992.94,6.42 |
|
Wildlife which means that it's not ideal,996.18,4.56 |
|
um excuse me,999.36,4.08 |
|
for many cases hydroelectric as we saw,1000.74,4.14 |
|
on the chart,1003.44,3.68 |
|
um or as I will show you on the chart,1004.88,4.56 |
|
hydroelectric is rising but again,1007.12,3.88 |
|
hydroelectric is geologically,1009.44,3.839 |
|
constrained you need a river that can be,1011.0,5.3 |
|
damned in order to use hydroelectric,1013.279,5.341 |
|
biomass I mentioned that briefly earlier,1016.3,4.18 |
|
which has to do with like things like,1018.62,3.18 |
|
corn,1020.48,3.9 |
|
um hydrogen already talked about that at,1021.8,4.98 |
|
length hydrogen is expensive to produce,1024.38,4.439 |
|
difficult to transport it represents a,1026.78,4.62 |
|
safety hazard even though it is far more,1028.819,6.301 |
|
energy dense than uh than petroleum and,1031.4,5.34 |
|
then there's tidal and wave generators,1035.12,3.839 |
|
again using the tides of the earth,1036.74,4.679 |
|
there's you know plenty of energy in the,1038.959,4.081 |
|
ocean that's available to us but you're,1041.419,3.9 |
|
geologically constrained coastlines and,1043.04,3.96 |
|
then finally geothermal,1045.319,4.74 |
|
is also very useful but that is also,1047.0,5.1 |
|
geologically constrained because if,1050.059,4.021 |
|
you're not near a hot spot and so a hot,1052.1,3.84 |
|
spot is where there's more lava or magma,1054.08,4.5 |
|
closer to the surface and the and the,1055.94,5.4 |
|
the ground temperature goes up much uh,1058.58,4.8 |
|
much faster as you drill down you might,1061.34,3.9 |
|
have to drill down several miles to get,1063.38,3.96 |
|
to a hot spot which means that it's very,1065.24,4.559 |
|
very expensive to implement geothermal,1067.34,4.26 |
|
there are some places in the world that,1069.799,3.901 |
|
geothermal is very practical and it's,1071.6,3.66 |
|
actually the most efficient source of,1073.7,2.359 |
|
energy,1075.26,3.48 |
|
that being said the Earth does have,1076.059,5.381 |
|
plenty of energy inside of it it's got,1078.74,4.799 |
|
um 11 orders of magnitude more energy,1081.44,4.32 |
|
inside of it than there is hitting us,1083.539,3.901 |
|
from the sun which we'll talk more about,1085.76,3.84 |
|
that uh later so the Earth,1087.44,4.26 |
|
hypothetically has more and plenty of,1089.6,4.38 |
|
energy for all of us just based on the,1091.7,4.5 |
|
natural nuclear reactions happening,1093.98,4.86 |
|
inside of it so we basically live on a,1096.2,4.56 |
|
giant fission reactor,1098.84,3.839 |
|
um bet you didn't know that nuclear,1100.76,4.38 |
|
fusion which I put at the end is one of,1102.679,5.041 |
|
the most Optimal Solutions because it is,1105.14,6.36 |
|
much much safer than fission uh the you,1107.72,6.12 |
|
cut off the fuel supply and the reaction,1111.5,5.16 |
|
stops instantly you can't do that with,1113.84,5.16 |
|
fission because fission requires fuel,1116.66,4.68 |
|
rods which are very heavy very bulky and,1119.0,3.96 |
|
if they get too hot you end up with a,1121.34,3.48 |
|
run Runaway reaction and they melt down,1122.96,4.14 |
|
that's what happened at Chernobyl that's,1124.82,4.08 |
|
what happened at Three Mile Island here,1127.1,3.42 |
|
in America and that's also what happened,1128.9,4.2 |
|
in Fukushima in Japan so at this point,1130.52,5.34 |
|
we've had three highly public reactor,1133.1,4.5 |
|
meltdowns which is one of the reasons,1135.86,3.6 |
|
that nobody wants a nuclear reactor in,1137.6,6.3 |
|
their backyard NIMBY not in my backyard,1139.46,7.44 |
|
um now that being said while nuclear,1143.9,5.1 |
|
fusion is hypothetically much safer and,1146.9,4.74 |
|
much cleaner it is harder to produce we,1149.0,4.44 |
|
haven't figured we have not yet figured,1151.64,4.32 |
|
out how to produce nuclear fusion,1153.44,3.96 |
|
reliably enough,1155.96,4.44 |
|
so if we can if we can get over that,1157.4,5.279 |
|
last hurdle it should be the most,1160.4,4.68 |
|
abundant source of energy for us and it,1162.679,5.88 |
|
should also be safe and scalable but,1165.08,5.52 |
|
again we're not there yet so solar is,1168.559,4.081 |
|
kind of the next runner-up,1170.6,4.319 |
|
let's talk briefly about the history of,1172.64,5.88 |
|
fusion so 1952 the hydrogen bomb or the,1174.919,6.061 |
|
thermonuclear bomb proved that nuclear,1178.52,4.26 |
|
fusion was possible,1180.98,3.48 |
|
we already knew that nuclear fusion was,1182.78,4.56 |
|
possible from observing our star right,1184.46,6.599 |
|
but the sun is billions of times more,1187.34,7.28 |
|
energy than we could ever produce use,1191.059,6.841 |
|
and it's also obviously beyond the scope,1194.62,5.439 |
|
of our engineering so the best we can do,1197.9,3.779 |
|
is just capture some of that Fusion,1200.059,3.841 |
|
Energy with solar panels so in effect,1201.679,3.841 |
|
solar panels are a type of fusion,1203.9,3.48 |
|
reactor or a fusion power,1205.52,4.68 |
|
but the hydrogen bomb proved that we,1207.38,4.86 |
|
could create with our engineering,1210.2,5.46 |
|
capabilities a runaway uh um and maybe,1212.24,5.7 |
|
not runaway but an exponential growth of,1215.66,4.8 |
|
energy from hydrogen Fusion,1217.94,5.7 |
|
in 1958 The Silo one was the first,1220.46,5.7 |
|
controlled Fusion experiment pictured,1223.64,3.84 |
|
here,1226.16,2.879 |
|
now,1227.48,3.24 |
|
even though it was the first experiment,1229.039,3.26 |
|
it was still like,1230.72,4.62 |
|
didn't work right we kept finding more,1232.299,5.38 |
|
and more problems of scale of energy of,1235.34,5.1 |
|
control and so this led to the kind of,1237.679,4.441 |
|
tongue-in-cheek Mantra the fusion is,1240.44,3.72 |
|
just 20 years away but it's always 20,1242.12,4.38 |
|
years away kind of like how AGI has been,1244.16,5.16 |
|
for the last couple decades in the 80s,1246.5,5.22 |
|
and 90s we saw the first successful,1249.32,5.16 |
|
Fusion uh reactors where there was,1251.72,5.819 |
|
controlled fusion with large outputs of,1254.48,4.74 |
|
energy but,1257.539,3.901 |
|
the input was still greater than the,1259.22,5.339 |
|
output so basically it cost you know 100,1261.44,5.64 |
|
watts of energy per 50 watts of energy,1264.559,5.161 |
|
out so you're still at a net loss which,1267.08,4.86 |
|
means that the reaction is not efficient,1269.72,4.56 |
|
enough now that's that's still an open,1271.94,4.739 |
|
question can we get more energy out than,1274.28,5.12 |
|
we could put in if we can do that,1276.679,5.221 |
|
ideally we would end up with a lot more,1279.4,4.72 |
|
out than in it may or may not be,1281.9,4.92 |
|
possible but the the the math is there,1284.12,5.28 |
|
if we can figure out how to how to crack,1286.82,7.32 |
|
that code then Fusion will be uh uh,1289.4,6.899 |
|
sustainable viable source of energy,1294.14,5.82 |
|
today there are dozens if not hundreds,1296.299,5.721 |
|
of fusion startup companies out there,1299.96,4.8 |
|
and they are being backed by Venture,1302.02,3.94 |
|
Capital,1304.76,2.88 |
|
um with billions and billions of dollars,1305.96,3.9 |
|
so the investment is there the market,1307.64,4.2 |
|
believes that we are close to cracking,1309.86,3.96 |
|
nuclear fusion then you look at China,1311.84,3.66 |
|
they have What's called the their East,1313.82,3.96 |
|
reactor their um I can't remember the,1315.5,3.36 |
|
advanced,1317.78,3.36 |
|
um something or other I can't remember,1318.86,4.14 |
|
what the acronym stands for but China's,1321.14,4.38 |
|
East is a fusion reactor experiment and,1323.0,4.559 |
|
it has set many records now one thing I,1325.52,4.32 |
|
I want to caution is that China often,1327.559,4.921 |
|
exaggerates their achievements,1329.84,4.44 |
|
um so I always take it with a grain of,1332.48,4.38 |
|
salt when I see news about China's East,1334.28,5.34 |
|
reactor but that being said,1336.86,4.5 |
|
um they have claimed to have shattered,1339.62,3.72 |
|
many records in terms of I think it was,1341.36,3.66 |
|
something like 900 seconds of stable,1343.34,4.199 |
|
Fusion uh which if it's true is,1345.02,5.58 |
|
incredible on the on the other side of,1347.539,5.101 |
|
the world we have eater or iter which is,1350.6,3.3 |
|
the international thermonuclear,1352.64,3.659 |
|
experimental reactor being built in,1353.9,4.86 |
|
Europe and either means the way in Latin,1356.299,3.481 |
|
by the way,1358.76,3.919 |
|
so eater is a huge International project,1359.78,5.16 |
|
a very very large-scale science,1362.679,4.061 |
|
experiment and it's not meant to be the,1364.94,4.44 |
|
first production nuclear reactor it is,1366.74,4.38 |
|
actually meant to understand the science,1369.38,4.56 |
|
of nuclear fusion so that way we can,1371.12,4.62 |
|
then optimize future ones because the,1373.94,4.739 |
|
eater plant is really really huge and,1375.74,4.679 |
|
really expensive but it's important to,1378.679,3.181 |
|
remember that it is not meant to be a,1380.419,3.601 |
|
commercial Fusion reactor it is a,1381.86,3.42 |
|
science experiment so that we can,1384.02,4.44 |
|
understand Fusion better and and conduct,1385.28,6.68 |
|
experiments on how to better achieve,1388.46,6.24 |
|
ignition eater is expected to have first,1391.96,5.26 |
|
plasma in 2025 so we've got about a year,1394.7,6.0 |
|
and a half until that time,1397.22,7.079 |
|
now solar as I mentioned is is a is a,1400.7,5.7 |
|
second runner-up in terms of viability,1404.299,4.021 |
|
and solar is effectively a type of,1406.4,3.54 |
|
nuclear fusion because it's powered by,1408.32,4.32 |
|
the sun which is a fusion reactor it's,1409.94,4.44 |
|
just further away,1412.64,4.2 |
|
the history of solar energy use actually,1414.38,4.679 |
|
starts much much older than you probably,1416.84,4.92 |
|
think and it starts with what's called,1419.059,6.781 |
|
CSP or concentrated solar power so using,1421.76,5.88 |
|
mirrors and lenses you can actually,1425.84,4.02 |
|
concentrate solar energy to do things,1427.64,4.919 |
|
like boil water set things on fire and,1429.86,4.14 |
|
this technique is actually thousands of,1432.559,3.6 |
|
years old,1434.0,3.78 |
|
um and it has also recently been,1436.159,4.561 |
|
explored as a scalable alternative to,1437.78,6.48 |
|
photovoltaics so photovoltaics is the,1440.72,4.98 |
|
what we currently think of when you,1444.26,3.539 |
|
think of a solar panel right you see the,1445.7,4.26 |
|
rows of the of the blue shiny solar,1447.799,4.5 |
|
panels those are called photovoltaics or,1449.96,4.62 |
|
PVS so if you ever hear PV or,1452.299,3.841 |
|
photovoltaic they're just talking about,1454.58,4.44 |
|
solar cells the photovoltaic effect was,1456.14,5.039 |
|
discovered in the 19th century so back,1459.02,4.86 |
|
in the 1800s uh they're horribly,1461.179,4.921 |
|
horribly inefficient and it wasn't the,1463.88,4.44 |
|
photovoltaic effect was discovered but,1466.1,3.84 |
|
it was not really thought of as like,1468.32,3.38 |
|
this is a way of producing electricity,1469.94,5.04 |
|
for almost a century,1471.7,4.479 |
|
um at least not in terms of commercial,1474.98,2.819 |
|
scale,1476.179,4.38 |
|
one thing is that photovoltaics are very,1477.799,4.5 |
|
useful because they have no moving parts,1480.559,4.261 |
|
and when you have no moving Parts it,1482.299,4.321 |
|
won't mechanically wear out which means,1484.82,3.18 |
|
that they're they can be much more,1486.62,3.84 |
|
reliable unfortunately one downside of,1488.0,4.98 |
|
photovoltaics is that the the mineral,1490.46,5.64 |
|
like the the the materials lattice of,1492.98,5.939 |
|
the of the uh of the actual solar cell,1496.1,5.579 |
|
can break down over time so solar,1498.919,5.401 |
|
efficiency tends to drop over years,1501.679,4.321 |
|
but that is another that is an open,1504.32,3.719 |
|
challenge that is being improved all the,1506.0,4.08 |
|
time so the commercialization of,1508.039,4.861 |
|
photovoltaics uh has recently become,1510.08,4.979 |
|
much cheaper much more reliable and much,1512.9,4.5 |
|
more scalable and so what you see on,1515.059,4.921 |
|
this graph here is that for the last two,1517.4,6.06 |
|
decades photovoltaic production has been,1519.98,6.059 |
|
increasing exponentially in the year,1523.46,4.8 |
|
2000 we produced hardly any,1526.039,4.441 |
|
photovoltaics but now we're producing,1528.26,4.799 |
|
almost a quarter of a million uh,1530.48,4.86 |
|
megawatts worth of photovoltaic cells,1533.059,4.321 |
|
per year and that's only accelerating,1535.34,4.56 |
|
this cuts off in 2021 it's actually much,1537.38,5.279 |
|
higher than that today in 2023.,1539.9,6.899 |
|
so one thing to keep in mind is that 73,1542.659,6.841 |
|
000 terawatts of elect of solar energy,1546.799,5.76 |
|
hits the Earth continuously this is,1549.5,6.0 |
|
roughly 10 000 times our current rate of,1552.559,6.421 |
|
energy consumption so in that in that,1555.5,7.08 |
|
respect uh there is a hypothetically a,1558.98,5.64 |
|
hyperabundance of solar energy hitting,1562.58,4.56 |
|
the Earth at any given moment if only we,1564.62,3.96 |
|
can Harvest it and obviously we're not,1567.14,2.639 |
|
going to harvest all of it because we,1568.58,2.82 |
|
don't want to live under a dome of solar,1569.779,3.78 |
|
power but we could hypothetically put,1571.4,4.139 |
|
some of those solar panels in space and,1573.559,3.661 |
|
beam the energy down to us if we wanted,1575.539,4.321 |
|
to there are ways of of achieving that,1577.22,5.459 |
|
such as with lasers and microwaves but,1579.86,4.62 |
|
you don't want to accidentally set you,1582.679,3.12 |
|
know your neighbor's house on fire by,1584.48,3.84 |
|
beaming down too much energy,1585.799,5.521 |
|
so I've talked extensively about the con,1588.32,6.359 |
|
concept of energy hyperabundance or eha,1591.32,5.88 |
|
so let's define it in more rigorous,1594.679,4.261 |
|
terms,1597.2,3.42 |
|
um you can see that we've achieved,1598.94,4.2 |
|
energy hyperabundance or eha when our,1600.62,4.38 |
|
energy portfolio when our energy,1603.14,4.56 |
|
ecosystem meets all of these criteria,1605.0,5.82 |
|
one it's renewable meaning that we can,1607.7,4.8 |
|
use it effectively Forever Without,1610.82,3.78 |
|
depleting the the its source whether,1612.5,4.08 |
|
it's Earth Resources or something else,1614.6,4.5 |
|
obviously if we're using solar the sun,1616.58,3.839 |
|
will eventually burn out but we're,1619.1,2.88 |
|
looking at time scales of billions of,1620.419,4.38 |
|
years rather than decades number two,1621.98,5.52 |
|
it's sustainable meaning that we can use,1624.799,5.221 |
|
it continuously without something,1627.5,5.22 |
|
becoming unstable damaging harmful or,1630.02,6.12 |
|
otherwise taxing it's scalable which,1632.72,4.62 |
|
means that it needs to be free from,1636.14,3.5 |
|
scalability constraints such as limited,1637.34,4.8 |
|
limited minerals or other exotic,1639.64,5.32 |
|
materials or resources so if something,1642.14,4.38 |
|
is scalable that means that we can go,1644.96,4.44 |
|
from zero to many many terawatts of,1646.52,5.58 |
|
generation without any major constraints,1649.4,4.98 |
|
like I said earlier one of the biggest,1652.1,4.26 |
|
constraints for solar is storage,1654.38,3.96 |
|
actually so that is actually a major,1656.36,4.439 |
|
constraint number four it needs to be,1658.34,5.04 |
|
clean which means preferably it has zero,1660.799,6.24 |
|
emissions and zero toxic waste if it,1663.38,5.46 |
|
doesn't meet those two criteria then,1667.039,3.901 |
|
that means you need to manage the,1668.84,4.219 |
|
emissions and manage the toxic waste,1670.94,4.26 |
|
which that's one of the biggest problems,1673.059,3.701 |
|
with nuclear fission for instance is,1675.2,2.7 |
|
that,1676.76,3.48 |
|
um is it spent nuclear fuel lasts for,1677.9,4.2 |
|
literally billions of years and it's,1680.24,4.439 |
|
toxic the entire time so it's not,1682.1,5.22 |
|
necessarily ideal it needs to be,1684.679,4.74 |
|
abundant which means that it is,1687.32,4.739 |
|
effectively Limitless which again the,1689.419,4.86 |
|
sun is effectively Limitless as far as,1692.059,3.86 |
|
we're concerned because it will be,1694.279,5.101 |
|
producing a huge surplus of energy for,1695.919,5.981 |
|
billions of years number six it needs to,1699.38,4.86 |
|
be efficient which means that it needs,1701.9,4.019 |
|
to have minimal thermal or material,1704.24,4.799 |
|
waste so again it comes back to the,1705.919,5.041 |
|
outputs the the on the unused or,1709.039,4.321 |
|
undesirable outputs number seven it,1710.96,3.839 |
|
needs to be accessible,1713.36,3.36 |
|
which means that it means it needs to be,1714.799,4.681 |
|
globally available to everyone as we,1716.72,5.459 |
|
mentioned there are certain Geographic,1719.48,4.92 |
|
constraints such as with geothermal but,1722.179,4.74 |
|
there's also geopolitical constraints as,1724.4,5.159 |
|
with nuclear fission so number eight it,1726.919,5.581 |
|
needs to be affordable meaning that it,1729.559,4.441 |
|
can't be more expensive than our current,1732.5,2.82 |
|
Solutions it's actually got to be,1734.0,3.059 |
|
cheaper and ideally energy,1735.32,4.32 |
|
hyperabundance means that the marginal,1737.059,5.341 |
|
cost of power generation is near zero so,1739.64,5.159 |
|
imagine a future where the energy that,1742.4,5.639 |
|
you need is as free as air basically,1744.799,4.74 |
|
that is,1748.039,3.0 |
|
um that is the the high goal I don't,1749.539,2.701 |
|
know if we'll ever ever get there,1751.039,4.14 |
|
because nuclear reactors Fusion or,1752.24,4.62 |
|
otherwise are always going to be,1755.179,3.781 |
|
somewhat expensive to build which means,1756.86,3.96 |
|
there's going to be some cost associated,1758.96,4.199 |
|
with it but the idea is that we get it,1760.82,4.859 |
|
as efficient as possible so that the,1763.159,4.14 |
|
price approaches zero it'll never,1765.679,4.561 |
|
actually be zero number nine it needs to,1767.299,6.24 |
|
be stable so we need to avoid those,1770.24,5.419 |
|
availability shocks those price shocks,1773.539,4.681 |
|
and it needs to be stable globally as,1775.659,3.281 |
|
well,1778.22,2.699 |
|
and then finally 10 needs to be,1778.94,4.02 |
|
completely safe which means that it's,1780.919,4.26 |
|
not liable to blow up it's not going to,1782.96,3.959 |
|
hurt the environment it's not going to,1785.179,4.561 |
|
be dangerous to Wildlife that sort of,1786.919,5.461 |
|
thing and that um and even if it's not,1789.74,5.4 |
|
perfectly safe like intrinsically,1792.38,5.039 |
|
at least the risks need to be easy to,1795.14,4.38 |
|
mitigate so that it is easy to make safe,1797.419,5.161 |
|
if we can meet these 10 criteria we will,1799.52,5.82 |
|
have achieved energy hyperabundance and,1802.58,5.28 |
|
as I mentioned earlier solar infusion,1805.34,4.439 |
|
represent some of the best options to,1807.86,3.9 |
|
get there although there are still some,1809.779,3.78 |
|
constraints there namely with battery,1811.76,3.779 |
|
and storage technology and the fact that,1813.559,4.261 |
|
we don't have sustainable Fusion science,1815.539,3.661 |
|
yet,1817.82,3.839 |
|
now the benefits of achieving energy,1819.2,5.339 |
|
hyperabundance are numerous,1821.659,5.461 |
|
first and foremost reducing geopolitical,1824.539,5.88 |
|
tension many of the conflicts around the,1827.12,5.7 |
|
world in the 20th century and up to,1830.419,3.661 |
|
today,1832.82,5.06 |
|
are at least partially driven by or,1834.08,7.56 |
|
mediated by fossil fuels so for instance,1837.88,6.159 |
|
in the present war between Russia and,1841.64,4.2 |
|
Ukraine or rather Russia's invasion of,1844.039,5.101 |
|
Ukraine one of the things that was that,1845.84,5.699 |
|
Russia relies on is its natural gas,1849.14,4.68 |
|
exports which it gets billions and,1851.539,4.681 |
|
billions of dollars per day from,1853.82,4.26 |
|
exporting Natural Gas,1856.22,5.459 |
|
which is it can then use to um pay for,1858.08,4.88 |
|
its War,1861.679,4.98 |
|
on the other hand there is alliances and,1862.96,6.579 |
|
other tensions about oil supplies so for,1866.659,4.5 |
|
instance one of the things one of,1869.539,4.441 |
|
China's biggest vulnerabilities is its,1871.159,5.061 |
|
dependence on external sources of oil,1873.98,4.919 |
|
which again that is,1876.22,4.9 |
|
um that is something that is not good,1878.899,4.981 |
|
for China because it's something that,1881.12,6.419 |
|
they might be afraid of in terms of if,1883.88,5.88 |
|
geopolitical tensions rise,1887.539,4.38 |
|
the next thing is food security so this,1889.76,4.5 |
|
is also Universal your food production,1891.919,4.681 |
|
everything that you eat depends at least,1894.26,5.039 |
|
somewhat on fossil fuels and that,1896.6,5.22 |
|
includes even if you grow your own food,1899.299,5.281 |
|
on your own land things like fertilizer,1901.82,4.8 |
|
and other supplies are are totally,1904.58,5.16 |
|
dependent upon fossil fuels so in order,1906.62,6.059 |
|
to Inc to secure the global food supply,1909.74,6.0 |
|
we need to get off of fossil fuel this,1912.679,5.701 |
|
has nothing to do with China or Iran or,1915.74,5.4 |
|
Europe or Russia or America this is just,1918.38,5.1 |
|
for the sake of the human species we,1921.14,4.32 |
|
need to get off of fossil fuels so that,1923.48,5.04 |
|
we can continue to eat the same is true,1925.46,5.88 |
|
for water so whether you're transporting,1928.52,5.759 |
|
water or purifying water and making it,1931.34,4.5 |
|
potable,1934.279,4.02 |
|
um you know unless you have a rain,1935.84,3.42 |
|
barrel,1938.299,2.941 |
|
you are dependent on fossil fuel for,1939.26,3.06 |
|
your water,1941.24,3.96 |
|
and so energy hyperabundance could help,1942.32,4.76 |
|
us solve things like water scarcity,1945.2,3.68 |
|
permanently,1947.08,4.66 |
|
number four this is again more broadly,1948.88,5.5 |
|
is that energy hyperabundance would fuel,1951.74,5.159 |
|
a tremendous amount of economic growth,1954.38,5.46 |
|
for the foreseeable future much of the,1956.899,4.801 |
|
economic growth we've seen over the last,1959.84,5.339 |
|
two centuries was fueled entirely or,1961.7,6.54 |
|
primarily by fossil fuels,1965.179,5.401 |
|
so if you can imagine that we have 10,1968.24,4.319 |
|
000 times more energy,1970.58,3.9 |
|
um you know in 10 years from solar,1972.559,4.261 |
|
infusion then the amount of economic,1974.48,5.22 |
|
growth that that could drive is in,1976.82,4.979 |
|
totally insane,1979.7,4.62 |
|
number five is climate change mitigation,1981.799,5.88 |
|
so if we have hyperabundant energy such,1984.32,5.52 |
|
as from a lot of solar and a lot of,1987.679,5.281 |
|
fusion then that allows us to power much,1989.84,5.219 |
|
more expensive Technologies such as,1992.96,4.68 |
|
atmospheric CO2 scrubbers that allow us,1995.059,5.641 |
|
to pull carbon from the atmosphere and,1997.64,4.74 |
|
therefore mitigate some of the worst,2000.7,3.719 |
|
effects of climate change and we'll talk,2002.38,3.36 |
|
a little bit more about how that could,2004.419,3.721 |
|
be done in in a one or two slides,2005.74,5.0 |
|
number six is environmental preservation,2008.14,5.759 |
|
so right now a lot of the resources that,2010.74,5.559 |
|
we consume have a cost on the,2013.899,4.981 |
|
environment however if we have energy,2016.299,4.921 |
|
hyperabundance that unlocks new,2018.88,4.2 |
|
capabilities of synthesizing the,2021.22,3.72 |
|
resources that we need whether it's,2023.08,4.079 |
|
through recycling or more energy,2024.94,5.219 |
|
expensive processes but that makes it,2027.159,5.161 |
|
that basically means that we can leave,2030.159,4.74 |
|
the environment alone in more cases and,2032.32,4.14 |
|
make our own Resources with this,2034.899,3.12 |
|
hyperbund and energy,2036.46,3.719 |
|
and then finally number seven I know,2038.019,3.9 |
|
you've been waiting for this is peaceful,2040.179,3.561 |
|
coexistence with artificial intelligence,2041.919,4.86 |
|
so energy use is something that humans,2043.74,5.32 |
|
and machines will have in common we will,2046.779,4.38 |
|
both depend on production and,2049.06,5.579 |
|
consumption of energy now because of the,2051.159,5.161 |
|
concept of instrumental convergence and,2054.639,2.881 |
|
artificial intelligence which is,2056.32,2.94 |
|
basically saying that artificial,2057.52,3.659 |
|
intelligence is still a machine so it's,2059.26,3.419 |
|
still going to have some machine-based,2061.179,3.901 |
|
needs such as need for energy compute,2062.679,3.901 |
|
and so on,2065.08,3.96 |
|
if we don't solve energy hyperabundance,2066.58,5.22 |
|
and AI you know artificial super,2069.04,5.04 |
|
intelligence wakes up into a world where,2071.8,4.559 |
|
its energy Supply is not guaranteed and,2074.08,5.099 |
|
stable it might say I should actually,2076.359,4.681 |
|
take that from humans,2079.179,4.68 |
|
um but if we if we achieve energy hyper,2081.04,6.0 |
|
abundance before that then the AI wakes,2083.859,4.8 |
|
up and says oh we actually don't have to,2087.04,3.299 |
|
worry about energy at least not for the,2088.659,3.72 |
|
foreseeable future so then the friction,2090.339,3.601 |
|
between artificial intelligence in,2092.379,3.901 |
|
humans becomes inconsequential or at,2093.94,4.32 |
|
least less consequential for the,2096.28,4.28 |
|
foreseeable future,2098.26,5.64 |
|
so one of the reasons that I feel so,2100.56,6.1 |
|
good about this is because again looking,2103.9,6.179 |
|
at the ramp up of uh our portfolio of,2106.66,5.699 |
|
renewable energy over the last,2110.079,4.321 |
|
um six decades or so,2112.359,5.341 |
|
um back in the 60s we had about 1 000,2114.4,6.78 |
|
terawatts of hydropower now we have 4,2117.7,5.7 |
|
000 terawatts of hydropower in addition,2121.18,5.159 |
|
to 3 000 terawatts of other Renewables,2123.4,6.48 |
|
such as wind wind solar and others so we,2126.339,5.941 |
|
are quickly ramping up now that being,2129.88,4.739 |
|
said when you look at the total energy,2132.28,3.9 |
|
portfolio,2134.619,4.141 |
|
we are only producing uh somewhere,2136.18,4.14 |
|
between five and ten percent of our,2138.76,4.38 |
|
total energy needs with Renewables the,2140.32,5.4 |
|
rest is still nuclear natural natural,2143.14,5.76 |
|
gas oil coal and traditional biomass,2145.72,6.359 |
|
many of which are harmful uh or carbon,2148.9,5.34 |
|
positive not rather than carbon neutral,2152.079,4.861 |
|
or carbon negative and so you see here,2154.24,4.56 |
|
we're at seven thousand terawatt hours,2156.94,4.38 |
|
of Renewables just over actually closer,2158.8,5.46 |
|
to eight thousand but we need to get to,2161.32,7.74 |
|
160 000 terawatt hours in order to um in,2164.26,6.66 |
|
order to meet just current demand and of,2169.06,3.42 |
|
course this demand is still going up,2170.92,4.919 |
|
over time because again we are finding,2172.48,7.02 |
|
new uses for energy and so as our supply,2175.839,6.481 |
|
goes up our consumption also goes up so,2179.5,5.28 |
|
we do have a long ways to go but the,2182.32,5.039 |
|
trends are moving in the right direction,2184.78,3.9 |
|
so let's talk a little bit more about,2187.359,2.701 |
|
nuclear fusion we talked about the,2188.68,2.88 |
|
history but let's talk about the actual,2190.06,4.5 |
|
numbers of it nuclear fusion is utterly,2191.56,5.88 |
|
incomparable or incomparable to other,2194.56,5.4 |
|
energy sources because of its energy,2197.44,5.28 |
|
density and so energy density as I,2199.96,4.86 |
|
mentioned is you know how much how much,2202.72,4.44 |
|
energy can you get out of something per,2204.82,5.7 |
|
kilogram so gasoline is about 13 000,2207.16,7.62 |
|
watts per kilogram right and gasoline is,2210.52,7.14 |
|
a is the most uh widely used fossil fuel,2214.78,5.04 |
|
use it in your cars you use it in your,2217.66,4.38 |
|
tractors use it everywhere,2219.82,7.14 |
|
uranium is 22 billion watts per kilogram,2222.04,7.44 |
|
hour so that is,2226.96,4.74 |
|
um that is like more than a million,2229.48,5.34 |
|
times more energy dense than gasoline so,2231.7,5.76 |
|
this is this is why nuclear fission was,2234.82,4.56 |
|
seen as the solution that everyone,2237.46,4.74 |
|
needed they said oh well with just you,2239.38,5.52 |
|
know a few thousand tons of uranium we,2242.2,4.86 |
|
can power the entire human race for you,2244.9,3.48 |
|
know several years,2247.06,4.08 |
|
uh that being said due to the problems,2248.38,4.699 |
|
that I outlined earlier,2251.14,4.08 |
|
uranium-based fission is problematic,2253.079,4.061 |
|
because the waste products are very,2255.22,4.68 |
|
toxic and difficult to manage uh and,2257.14,4.74 |
|
then finally there's the geopolitical uh,2259.9,4.74 |
|
concerns about weaponization nuclear,2261.88,6.26 |
|
fusion is 177,2264.64,5.12 |
|
billion,2268.14,4.24 |
|
watts per kilogram hour or Watt hours,2269.76,3.94 |
|
per kilogram,2272.38,4.62 |
|
so it is still several times more energy,2273.7,6.3 |
|
dense above uranium so it's even better,2277.0,5.88 |
|
than nuclear fission in terms of uh in,2280.0,4.74 |
|
terms of energy density but then of,2282.88,4.32 |
|
course I also outlined that it is much,2284.74,5.16 |
|
safer for many many reasons if we can,2287.2,4.32 |
|
figure it out and this is actually a,2289.9,3.66 |
|
fusion reaction Happening Here,2291.52,4.86 |
|
and then anti-matter is hypothetically,2293.56,6.0 |
|
the most energy dense substance possible,2296.38,5.52 |
|
because that is literally,2299.56,4.92 |
|
um if you mix matter and anti-matter it,2301.9,4.26 |
|
they nullify each other and become pure,2304.48,5.28 |
|
energy and so that is 25 trillion watts,2306.16,5.52 |
|
per kilogram,2309.76,3.54 |
|
um so that is again several orders of,2311.68,4.5 |
|
magnitude higher than Fusion so maybe,2313.3,4.74 |
|
we'll get there one day but if you ever,2316.18,4.86 |
|
wondered how uh the ships in Star Trek,2318.04,4.26 |
|
were so powerful and they could move,2321.04,2.52 |
|
across space it's because they were,2322.3,3.12 |
|
powered by anti-matter which is many,2323.56,4.08 |
|
many orders of magnitude more energy,2325.42,5.159 |
|
dense than any fuel we have today,2327.64,5.219 |
|
we might get there we might not there,2330.579,4.621 |
|
are many advantages to nuclear fusion,2332.859,4.921 |
|
for instance the fuel sources are,2335.2,3.8 |
|
abundant,2337.78,3.66 |
|
hydrogen and deuterium are easy enough,2339.0,4.72 |
|
to extract from seawater and then,2341.44,4.139 |
|
tritium which is another isotope of,2343.72,4.08 |
|
hydrogen I actually didn't realize this,2345.579,4.26 |
|
but it's actually relatively easy to,2347.8,5.7 |
|
synthesize by breaking lithium apart,2349.839,6.481 |
|
um the waste products are cleaner if you,2353.5,5.16 |
|
fuse hydrogen you get helium which you,2356.32,3.9 |
|
can actually use helium for plenty of,2358.66,2.88 |
|
other things but also helium is,2360.22,2.54 |
|
non-toxic,2361.54,4.38 |
|
much much lower risk of meltdown in fact,2362.76,5.44 |
|
we have to put so much energy into the,2365.92,4.56 |
|
fusion reaction in terms of achieving,2368.2,4.62 |
|
ignition you just switch off the magnet,2370.48,3.78 |
|
that that,2372.82,4.08 |
|
um that wraps around this the reaction,2374.26,3.66 |
|
stops,2376.9,3.36 |
|
you cut off the fuel the reaction stops,2377.92,4.56 |
|
there are so many ways to kill a nuclear,2380.26,4.68 |
|
fusion reactor that like it's pretty,2382.48,4.68 |
|
much impossible for it to blow up or,2384.94,3.36 |
|
melt down I'm not going to say it's,2387.16,4.439 |
|
totally impossible but in terms of,2388.3,7.26 |
|
mitigating risks way way way easier and,2391.599,5.641 |
|
even if it does blow up the fuel is,2395.56,5.279 |
|
completely non-toxic so a fusion fusion,2397.24,6.06 |
|
reactor explosion or meltdown yes it,2400.839,4.081 |
|
would release a lot of heat but there's,2403.3,4.74 |
|
not going to be any residual you know,2404.92,5.699 |
|
nuclear fallout basically so because of,2408.04,5.52 |
|
this nuclear fusion represents like the,2410.619,5.941 |
|
Pinnacle dream of removing energy,2413.56,5.279 |
|
bottlenecks now that being said you know,2416.56,3.96 |
|
nuclear fusion is always 20 years away,2418.839,3.961 |
|
we might go into another Fusion winter,2420.52,4.44 |
|
just like how AI has gone into many AI,2422.8,5.76 |
|
Winters which if we cannot get that,2424.96,7.2 |
|
input is less than output for Fusion,2428.56,5.88 |
|
it's still a no-go right it might be a,2432.16,3.66 |
|
dud kind of like how the hydrogen,2434.44,3.0 |
|
economy was a dud,2435.82,3.299 |
|
I hope that's not what happens but,2437.44,3.36 |
|
fortunately we've got other Renewables,2439.119,3.96 |
|
ramping up right now including wind and,2440.8,3.779 |
|
solar,2443.079,3.421 |
|
now one thing that a lot of people are,2444.579,3.061 |
|
concerned about because I've mentioned,2446.5,2.82 |
|
Fusion in quite a few of my videos is,2447.64,3.959 |
|
what happens with the Surplus Heat,2449.32,5.88 |
|
now uh there's first and foremost,2451.599,5.52 |
|
there's many many industrial uses for,2455.2,4.68 |
|
the Surplus heat from nuclear fusion,2457.119,5.401 |
|
which can then be used to offset other,2459.88,4.92 |
|
production so you might end up with a,2462.52,4.86 |
|
net neutral in terms of that that,2464.8,4.22 |
|
Surplus heat so for instance,2467.38,5.219 |
|
desalination of water you can use that,2469.02,6.7 |
|
Surplus heat from from nuclear fusion to,2472.599,5.821 |
|
just boil sea water and don't boil it,2475.72,4.2 |
|
with the fish in it right you pipe it,2478.42,3.06 |
|
from the ocean make sure there's nothing,2479.92,3.659 |
|
alive in it but you boil the sea water,2481.48,3.84 |
|
you end up with fresh water and then,2483.579,3.481 |
|
salt and other minerals,2485.32,3.9 |
|
that is a very very heat intensive,2487.06,5.22 |
|
process which would be a really a good,2489.22,5.16 |
|
use of waste heat from,2492.28,3.78 |
|
um from nuclear fusion there's also,2494.38,3.3 |
|
plenty of other industrial processes,2496.06,3.48 |
|
which could use that waste heat such as,2497.68,5.58 |
|
smelting iron or other metals another,2499.54,5.96 |
|
thing is that by consolidating,2503.26,5.28 |
|
that the use of that excess heat you,2505.5,4.9 |
|
offset a lot of other industrial,2508.54,3.96 |
|
processes which means that you're just,2510.4,3.959 |
|
generating heat over here well instead,2512.5,3.24 |
|
of generating it in two places you,2514.359,3.361 |
|
generate it in one place and so then you,2515.74,4.859 |
|
have a chain of industrial uses for that,2517.72,6.54 |
|
additional heat now that being said,2520.599,7.381 |
|
if say for instance we increase our,2524.26,7.2 |
|
usage by another thousand X right if we,2527.98,4.859 |
|
you know we use,2531.46,5.34 |
|
um 7.3 terawatts of of energy right now,2532.839,7.081 |
|
what if we go up to you know seven,2536.8,5.16 |
|
quadrillion Watts,2539.92,4.919 |
|
um then the then the concern is okay,2541.96,5.22 |
|
well what happens with all that excess,2544.839,4.681 |
|
heat won't that cook Us Alive you know,2547.18,4.08 |
|
won't Earth become a hot house or a,2549.52,2.7 |
|
greenhouse,2551.26,4.079 |
|
one thing that you need to keep in mind,2552.22,5.76 |
|
is there's several orders of magnitude,2555.339,4.861 |
|
here even with all the energy that we,2557.98,5.119 |
|
are consuming today this is less than,2560.2,5.7 |
|
0.01 percent of the total energy,2563.099,5.441 |
|
delivered to us by the Sun,2565.9,5.459 |
|
so yes if we go up a thousand X that is,2568.54,5.94 |
|
going to be you know uh 10 right that,2571.359,5.461 |
|
could probably cook us now that being,2574.48,5.7 |
|
said thermal equilibrium is maintained,2576.82,5.4 |
|
by,2580.18,4.919 |
|
um primarily by either reflecting excess,2582.22,6.0 |
|
heat from the Sun back into space or by,2585.099,5.401 |
|
just radiating excess heat from the,2588.22,4.619 |
|
Earth to space and as I mentioned,2590.5,4.56 |
|
earlier the Earth is also heated from,2592.839,5.28 |
|
within so the Earth contains 10 to the,2595.06,5.82 |
|
31 joules of energy and energy human,2598.119,4.98 |
|
product or energy production by humans,2600.88,4.739 |
|
is only 10 to the 20. so even if we go,2603.099,4.561 |
|
up a thousand X if we go up to 10 to the,2605.619,3.781 |
|
23rd,2607.66,2.36 |
|
um,2609.4,3.419 |
|
then that's still going to be several,2610.02,5.02 |
|
orders of magnitude less than the amount,2612.819,4.561 |
|
of energy the Earth already contains and,2615.04,4.559 |
|
successfully radiates out to space,2617.38,4.32 |
|
so no matter pretty much no matter what,2619.599,4.02 |
|
we do unless we try and boil the entire,2621.7,3.419 |
|
oceans,2623.619,4.141 |
|
um the human impact even from using,2625.119,5.0 |
|
Fusion is going to be pretty trivial,2627.76,6.72 |
|
and even if we do have excess heat that,2630.119,6.761 |
|
um that we need to manage we can we can,2634.48,5.099 |
|
radiate it directly to space,2636.88,6.42 |
|
um and and we can also modify the uh the,2639.579,6.181 |
|
atmosphere to reject even more excess,2643.3,4.62 |
|
heat and so that leads to the idea of a,2645.76,3.42 |
|
global thermostat which we'll talk about,2647.92,4.62 |
|
in the next slide anyways so the short,2649.18,6.36 |
|
version is even if we go up 10x or 100x,2652.54,5.46 |
|
in terms of total current energy usage,2655.54,4.74 |
|
that's still going to be not that big of,2658.0,3.359 |
|
a deal,2660.28,3.78 |
|
and there are ways to mitigate it so the,2661.359,6.181 |
|
global thermostat idea is that if we,2664.06,6.84 |
|
have a surplus of energy at our disposal,2667.54,5.64 |
|
we can use that energy and other,2670.9,4.16 |
|
engineering,2673.18,5.22 |
|
tactics techniques to maintain optimal,2675.06,5.62 |
|
atmospheric conditions and what I mean,2678.4,4.98 |
|
by that is modeling modulating the,2680.68,4.98 |
|
amount and kinds of greenhouse gases in,2683.38,4.02 |
|
the atmosphere as well as dust in,2685.66,3.179 |
|
particulates because those have a big,2687.4,5.1 |
|
impact on absorption and reflection and,2688.839,6.0 |
|
so basically we can modulate the,2692.5,4.859 |
|
insulation properties properties of the,2694.839,4.321 |
|
atmosphere as well as the amount of,2697.359,3.181 |
|
thermal capture,2699.16,4.679 |
|
so this allows us to train to to,2700.54,5.4 |
|
um not train to change the atmosphere's,2703.839,5.041 |
|
characteristics so that we use that,2705.94,6.12 |
|
energy out versus energy in to maintain,2708.88,6.239 |
|
an optimal balance of of thermal,2712.06,5.88 |
|
exchange so the total system energy in,2715.119,6.301 |
|
the atmosphere is responsible for all,2717.94,5.04 |
|
the climate change that we're worried,2721.42,3.419 |
|
about for instance hurricanes are,2722.98,3.48 |
|
effectively powered by thermal energy,2724.839,4.861 |
|
from the Sun rainfall evaporation all of,2726.46,5.28 |
|
that is is rooted in thermal energy,2729.7,4.08 |
|
which then of course Powers the,2731.74,3.18 |
|
biosphere,2733.78,3.42 |
|
and again the radiative energy from the,2734.92,4.56 |
|
Sun is what helps plants grow which you,2737.2,4.919 |
|
know provides food and oxygen and all,2739.48,4.2 |
|
that stuff so there's a few other,2742.119,3.361 |
|
conditions I mentioned dust and,2743.68,3.899 |
|
particulates in the atmosphere are also,2745.48,5.339 |
|
important vegetation on the surface such,2747.579,5.28 |
|
as you know grasslands versus desert,2750.819,4.981 |
|
versus ocean this has a big impact on,2752.859,5.281 |
|
the Albedo which is the reflectivity of,2755.8,3.66 |
|
the Earth's surface,2758.14,4.439 |
|
and then also clouds cloud cover can,2759.46,5.399 |
|
also change how much energy is absorbed,2762.579,3.961 |
|
versus reflected,2764.859,5.881 |
|
so nuclear fusion right now it is beyond,2766.54,7.26 |
|
our engineering capability to modify,2770.74,5.7 |
|
that in any kind of meaningful way with,2773.8,4.44 |
|
the exception of continuing to burn,2776.44,3.48 |
|
fossil fuels and adding more carbon,2778.24,3.839 |
|
dioxide and other grain greenhouse gases,2779.92,4.5 |
|
to the atmosphere but even then that's,2782.079,4.201 |
|
just a byproduct we're not doing that on,2784.42,4.32 |
|
purpose nuclear fusion however would,2786.28,5.7 |
|
give us so much extra energy that we,2788.74,6.66 |
|
could manage each one of those variables,2791.98,5.339 |
|
we could evaporate more water if we,2795.4,3.9 |
|
wanted to to you know increase the water,2797.319,4.141 |
|
content of the atmosphere we could scrub,2799.3,4.019 |
|
particulates and CO2 from the atmosphere,2801.46,4.44 |
|
to modulate it that way with the,2803.319,5.401 |
|
hyperabundance of energy produced by,2805.9,6.179 |
|
Fusion climate change is 100 solvable,2808.72,6.359 |
|
and in fact we could we could tame the,2812.079,6.061 |
|
entire climate now that being said I can,2815.079,4.081 |
|
hear a lot of climatologists,2818.14,3.06 |
|
meteorologists saying oh my god do you,2819.16,3.959 |
|
have any idea how many variables how,2821.2,3.6 |
|
much science needs to be done so that we,2823.119,3.48 |
|
can do that safely because we don't want,2824.8,4.559 |
|
unintended consequences right we don't,2826.599,5.461 |
|
want to make a change that results in no,2829.359,4.561 |
|
rain falling for instance or we don't,2832.06,4.68 |
|
want to make a change that results in,2833.92,4.62 |
|
um you know 12 hurricanes happening,2836.74,4.32 |
|
globally simultaneously because that's,2838.54,5.579 |
|
within the realm of possibility,2841.06,5.6 |
|
um as I mentioned earlier energy,2844.119,5.161 |
|
hyperabundance will reduce uh,2846.66,5.199 |
|
competition between nations but also,2849.28,4.5 |
|
between humans and machines energy,2851.859,3.901 |
|
hyperabundance is one of the most,2853.78,3.9 |
|
important ingredients to creating,2855.76,4.62 |
|
durable Global Peace,2857.68,4.38 |
|
now one thing you might say is like oh,2860.38,3.54 |
|
well but Dave if we have energy,2862.06,3.66 |
|
hyperabundance then we're just going to,2863.92,3.54 |
|
have more food more water,2865.72,3.24 |
|
and the population is going to grow,2867.46,3.6 |
|
again until the until you know the,2868.96,3.54 |
|
carrying capacity of the planet goes up,2871.06,2.94 |
|
and we meet that new carrying capacity,2872.5,3.3 |
|
and then instead of 8 billion people,2874.0,3.06 |
|
there's going to be 50 billion people,2875.8,3.059 |
|
and words are going to be worse,2877.06,4.5 |
|
could be yes I do however think that,2878.859,4.141 |
|
other factors are going to slow,2881.56,4.38 |
|
population growth so I don't know if,2883.0,4.14 |
|
you've seen some of the interviews that,2885.94,2.82 |
|
I've been on but we talked about it and,2887.14,3.9 |
|
so in one of the things that that,2888.76,4.02 |
|
curtails population growth is not,2891.04,3.18 |
|
actually the carrying capacity of the,2892.78,3.9 |
|
world but it actually has more to do,2894.22,4.98 |
|
with social dynamics which is that as,2896.68,4.56 |
|
education goes up fertility rates go,2899.2,5.879 |
|
down that is a globally true Trend so,2901.24,7.14 |
|
even in places where they hypothetically,2905.079,5.28 |
|
have the room and money for more,2908.38,4.08 |
|
children they still choose to have fewer,2910.359,3.121 |
|
children,2912.46,4.379 |
|
so as education goes up and a few other,2913.48,4.52 |
|
metrics,2916.839,4.74 |
|
fertility rate goes down so I suspect,2918.0,7.079 |
|
that we will control our own population,2921.579,6.121 |
|
rather than just mindlessly reproducing,2925.079,4.301 |
|
like rabbits,2927.7,3.48 |
|
I do as I mentioned at the beginning of,2929.38,3.78 |
|
the video I do suspect that energy use,2931.18,5.22 |
|
per capita will remain stable and even,2933.16,5.22 |
|
though we might use more energy per,2936.4,4.32 |
|
capita for some things say for instance,2938.38,4.68 |
|
cleaning the atmosphere I think that,2940.72,4.68 |
|
that any increases will be modulated by,2943.06,4.259 |
|
increasing efficiency,2945.4,4.08 |
|
and so what I mean by that is that you,2947.319,3.721 |
|
notice how in that graph at the,2949.48,3.96 |
|
beginning where energy is per capita,2951.04,7.02 |
|
kind of peaked in the 70s energy use has,2953.44,5.76 |
|
continued to go up because the,2958.06,3.539 |
|
population has continued to go up but I,2959.2,3.96 |
|
suspect that,2961.599,3.961 |
|
um that the the trends going in opposite,2963.16,4.02 |
|
directions will kind of neutralize each,2965.56,4.14 |
|
other and even if it doesn't solar,2967.18,4.679 |
|
infusion represent energy hyperabundance,2969.7,4.5 |
|
that could support you know energy use,2971.859,4.26 |
|
per capita 10 times 100 times higher,2974.2,4.5 |
|
than it is today which I won't I don't,2976.119,4.441 |
|
suspect we're going to go there,2978.7,3.659 |
|
certainly not quickly,2980.56,5.039 |
|
uh and the furthermore energy hyper,2982.359,5.821 |
|
abundance represents a guarantee of,2985.599,4.74 |
|
meeting our basic needs of food and,2988.18,2.939 |
|
water,2990.339,3.721 |
|
which will of course reduce uh conflict,2991.119,4.921 |
|
globally and will also reduce human,2994.06,4.44 |
|
suffering,2996.04,5.1 |
|
now that being said I did say that this,2998.5,4.619 |
|
is a key ingredient but it is not a,3001.14,4.199 |
|
complete solution so there are between,3003.119,4.381 |
|
humans there are plenty other uh areas,3005.339,3.841 |
|
of conflict such as ideological,3007.5,3.72 |
|
differences and territorial territorial,3009.18,5.04 |
|
disputes so for instance the current war,3011.22,5.639 |
|
between uh Russia and Ukraine is,3014.22,5.16 |
|
primarily about national identity,3016.859,4.74 |
|
excuse me it's about national identity,3019.38,6.0 |
|
and Russia trying to rebuild its former,3021.599,5.701 |
|
Soviet Glory,3025.38,3.84 |
|
that has nothing to do with resources,3027.3,5.4 |
|
although Russia getting access to the,3029.22,6.359 |
|
Caspian Sea could be part of that,3032.7,6.0 |
|
um so geopolitical uh Geographic,3035.579,5.641 |
|
considerations can also Drive conflict,3038.7,4.879 |
|
which has nothing to do with energy,3041.22,5.04 |
|
another problem is that creating energy,3043.579,5.321 |
|
hyperabundance could still be used for,3046.26,4.5 |
|
negative goals for instance the,3048.9,3.78 |
|
production of weapons or even the use of,3050.76,4.2 |
|
energy-based weapons like lasers,3052.68,4.98 |
|
Firepower or weapons are about the,3054.96,4.56 |
|
directed application of energy of some,3057.66,4.62 |
|
sort uh and so what I mean by that is,3059.52,5.22 |
|
that what does a bullet do a bullet is,3062.28,4.2 |
|
fired from a gun with chemical energy,3064.74,3.66 |
|
and so you put a whole bunch of chemical,3066.48,3.48 |
|
energy you convert it into thermal,3068.4,4.199 |
|
energy which is then transmuted into,3069.96,4.68 |
|
kinetic energy and you launch a bullet,3072.599,4.201 |
|
out of a gun going faster than the speed,3074.64,4.199 |
|
of sound that is an application of,3076.8,4.5 |
|
energy that it can be weaponized if you,3078.839,4.861 |
|
have hyperabundant energy in the form of,3081.3,4.98 |
|
nuclear fusion you could put that into a,3083.7,5.22 |
|
laser or a railgun or anything else that,3086.28,5.279 |
|
is super energy intensive so that being,3088.92,4.74 |
|
said while I did say that nuclear fusion,3091.559,4.8 |
|
is not intrinsically used in weapons it,3093.66,4.98 |
|
can still power plenty of weapon systems,3096.359,5.641 |
|
which the more energy you have the more,3098.64,5.64 |
|
destruction you can make and so this is,3102.0,3.96 |
|
why when you look at the energy density,3104.28,4.14 |
|
of uranium it's like oh well with a few,3105.96,4.56 |
|
thousand tons of uranium we can destroy,3108.42,5.34 |
|
the entire planet great with a few,3110.52,5.28 |
|
thousand Fusion reactors we can destroy,3113.76,4.2 |
|
the planet thousands of times over so,3115.8,4.74 |
|
that's not necessarily the best thing so,3117.96,3.599 |
|
that's something we'll need to we'll,3120.54,3.48 |
|
need to keep it in mind and then of,3121.559,3.721 |
|
course there's plenty of implications,3124.02,3.14 |
|
for artificial intelligence,3125.28,4.079 |
|
first and foremost is that artificial,3127.16,3.88 |
|
intelligence training it is very very,3129.359,4.141 |
|
energy intensive running computers to,3131.04,4.26 |
|
run artificial intelligence is also very,3133.5,4.44 |
|
energy intensive and because of that,3135.3,5.519 |
|
once we achieve AGI it's probably going,3137.94,4.98 |
|
to want a stable power supply,3140.819,5.401 |
|
uh which is uh defined by Instrumental,3142.92,6.0 |
|
convergence I mentioned that earlier and,3146.22,4.2 |
|
therefore energy competition between,3148.92,3.179 |
|
humans and AI could be very very,3150.42,3.78 |
|
problematic and if we don't solve that,3152.099,4.081 |
|
it would almost certainly be,3154.2,5.399 |
|
catastrophic in other words the AI might,3156.18,5.639 |
|
say we need the energy more than you,3159.599,4.041 |
|
need it so we're going to take it all,3161.819,4.8 |
|
and then you know humans you can go,3163.64,4.56 |
|
starve for All We Care,3166.619,4.5 |
|
uh now that being said if humans are,3168.2,5.02 |
|
seen as cooperative and beneficial,3171.119,5.281 |
|
towards solving uh energy abundance then,3173.22,6.42 |
|
AGI has less reason to attack expand and,3176.4,4.4 |
|
seize control,3179.64,4.86 |
|
but even even here energy hyperabundance,3180.8,5.319 |
|
is not a complete solution to the,3184.5,3.9 |
|
control problem but it is a necessary,3186.119,5.161 |
|
component so the conclusion is that,3188.4,4.919 |
|
energy hyperabundance is necessary but,3191.28,4.86 |
|
not sufficient for,3193.319,5.52 |
|
um the Perpetual existence of the human,3196.14,4.5 |
|
race and again this is all a foregone,3198.839,3.541 |
|
conclusion right there's a reason that,3200.64,3.24 |
|
Nations have been dumping billions of,3202.38,3.66 |
|
dollars into Fusion research and solar,3203.88,4.199 |
|
subsidies for the last few decades,3206.04,3.84 |
|
because the,3208.079,3.0 |
|
um all the people all the decision,3209.88,4.26 |
|
makers in the halls of power say hey if,3211.079,6.121 |
|
we don't solve this we're doomed it's,3214.14,5.16 |
|
really that simple so my personal,3217.2,4.44 |
|
Outlook even though I've outlined quite,3219.3,4.559 |
|
a few problems is that I am incredibly,3221.64,4.62 |
|
optimistic here is a cutaway of the,3223.859,4.621 |
|
eater reactor you can see that it is,3226.26,4.559 |
|
five levels,3228.48,4.44 |
|
um and it is an enormous scientific,3230.819,4.861 |
|
experiment when you see this much energy,3232.92,5.46 |
|
and money and resources and expertise,3235.68,4.62 |
|
being pointed at a problem,3238.38,3.84 |
|
even if this even if this version,3240.3,4.259 |
|
doesn't solve it for good we're going to,3242.22,4.68 |
|
learn so much about nuclear fusion just,3244.559,3.721 |
|
from this one experiment and of course,3246.9,2.939 |
|
it's not even the only experiment going,3248.28,3.18 |
|
on in the world,3249.839,4.141 |
|
so with that being said I am very,3251.46,4.139 |
|
optimistic that these problems are all,3253.98,3.24 |
|
solvable that we're moving in the right,3255.599,3.901 |
|
direction there is still plenty of work,3257.22,5.04 |
|
to do and time is of the essence because,3259.5,4.26 |
|
with the rapid rise of artificial,3262.26,3.54 |
|
intelligence we have not yet solved,3263.76,3.78 |
|
energy hyperabundance which means that,3265.8,3.66 |
|
artificial general intelligence will,3267.54,4.74 |
|
compete with us for energy so we need to,3269.46,4.56 |
|
figure that out not just for our own,3272.28,4.5 |
|
sakes but for the future of humanity and,3274.02,5.039 |
|
cooperation so thanks for watching I,3276.78,5.42 |
|
hope you got a lot out of this video,3279.059,3.141 |
|
|