The World's Biggest Desalination Plants Should Not Exist

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Asianometry

Asianometry

Күн бұрын

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@ilyadorokhov7827
@ilyadorokhov7827 3 ай бұрын
Chemical engineer here. I worked at an aluminium smelter beside the water desalination plant in UAE. First of all, efficiency of all desalination methods is approaching thermodynamic limits. The biggest problem with any separation method is that you have to work against entropy of mixing which is very high (imagine how much effort it takes sort out M&Ms by colour but we have to sort out molecules). So the choice between thermal/membrane method is largerly driven by required scale: large scale favours huge thermal separtors, small scale is better with membranes. The biggest problem with water in GCC countries - is it's exessive demand for maintaining golf courses, open swimming pools, artificial lakes and forests. While this is a lifestyle choice and we can't solve this issue with engineering methods, there are potential areas for improvement. For example, sewage systems and wastewater treatment systems are very primitive. The best potential solution for water issues might be improved collection and recycling of waste water.
@homuraakemi493
@homuraakemi493 3 ай бұрын
Ok nerd
@مقاطعمترجمة-ش8ث
@مقاطعمترجمة-ش8ث 3 ай бұрын
@@homuraakemi493 Ok Internet Virgin
@Nphen
@Nphen 3 ай бұрын
Since so much water is used for agriculture, switching to saltwater marsh farming could save quite a bit of water in all those nations. As for the golf courses & artificial lakes & forests; they would really benefit from using ancient permaculture techniques to infill more water and shade the ground without waste. You said sewage systems are primitive. They should be bulletproof. Every drop matters. You'd think they'd be obsessed with water conservation. Have they not read or seen Dune? I live among the largest freshwater supply on Earth (Great Lakes) and we try to value those water resources.
@shadowmistress999
@shadowmistress999 3 ай бұрын
ditch the swimming pools and go for man made sea side pools -- with sea water, save the desalination effort lol
@KenBarrChannel
@KenBarrChannel 3 ай бұрын
Just making sure my message went through. We are not dealing with a technological problem, it's a political one. 'Imagine No Corruption' - Great J. Lennon the first
@tHebUm18
@tHebUm18 3 ай бұрын
7:20 Confirming that is how you represent Steam scientifically.
@samuelling2998
@samuelling2998 3 ай бұрын
I came right to the comments to see if anyone else noticed. Was not disappointed!
@vishaldwdi
@vishaldwdi Ай бұрын
​@@samuelling2998exactly
@Balkroth
@Balkroth 3 ай бұрын
Just gotta say, I laughed at the steam Icon in the MSF diagram.
@mk500
@mk500 3 ай бұрын
I loved this also 🤣
@Mordecrox
@Mordecrox 3 ай бұрын
Also Spongeballs SquarePants
@kaplanfx
@kaplanfx 3 ай бұрын
I was cracking up too.
@logannasty3240
@logannasty3240 3 ай бұрын
google search first hit
@honor9lite1337
@honor9lite1337 3 ай бұрын
Jeje😅
@elitearbor
@elitearbor 3 ай бұрын
9:00 Sponge balls, square plants. Got it. I ain't laughing, but I got it.
@ChinchillaBONK
@ChinchillaBONK 3 ай бұрын
Liar! 😂
@ntabile
@ntabile 3 ай бұрын
@@elitearbor Bikini Button!
@honor9lite1337
@honor9lite1337 3 ай бұрын
Why😅
@quint3ssent1a
@quint3ssent1a 3 ай бұрын
I laughed like an idiot. Haha, he said the funny thing 😅😅😅
@stofjes4204
@stofjes4204 3 ай бұрын
@@quint3ssent1a Fkc my English is not that well. Could you explain pls
@TheNumberOfTheBeast666
@TheNumberOfTheBeast666 3 ай бұрын
I studied for a time under Doctor Tzahi Cath, who researched membrane processes for water and wastewater treatment application. When speaking about desalination, he always made it clear to indicate that we were near the physical limits of efficiency when it came to current technology, and that concepts like low energy desalination "is not something that nature likes." Desalination does have clear use cases outside of freshwater treatment; specifically, industrial wastewater treatment, where membrane desalination processes become cost effective when compared to other methods for removing specific hard to break down chemicals from waste process streams. It these more limited, specialist applications where desalination gets its legs. To be clear, at least from people researching at the edge of the field, no one is anticipating some breakthrough that transforms the economics around this treatment tool.
@kapilchhabria1727
@kapilchhabria1727 3 ай бұрын
Could you post some literature for curious minds to read?
@Broken_robot1986
@Broken_robot1986 3 ай бұрын
Damn
@TheNumberOfTheBeast666
@TheNumberOfTheBeast666 3 ай бұрын
@@kapilchhabria1727 To be frank, I have nothing good on the subject outside of my course materials. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGe9fqiCib2Vp7M This video demonstrates how reverse osmosis works on a microscale level, and you can get a sense for why this is a process that has physical limits.
@lucasrem
@lucasrem 3 ай бұрын
Tzahi Cath is a theoretical guy, he can show the kids in school what the goals are, the benefits and disadvantages. He does not have the solution himself, he hopes he students will bring the solution ! Any progress ?
@sino_diogenes
@sino_diogenes 3 ай бұрын
the real breakthrough will be a massive reduction in the cost of energy. If the cost of energy reduces 10x then desalination suddenly becomes economically viable for anywhere with access to salt water.
@alexhubble
@alexhubble 3 ай бұрын
If people want to live there, it costs what it costs. When the costs become unsustainable, people will have to leave or die, it's all very existential. There's absolutely no point waving environmental concerns, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia doesn't care. If the water stops there is no Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
@stuartgmk
@stuartgmk 3 ай бұрын
Yep pretty simple.
@Torchedini
@Torchedini 3 ай бұрын
And at the moment it is powered by our desire for oil. As long as that is what we need. We have this in the middle east.
@duran9664
@duran9664 3 ай бұрын
🚩Dude, Brine now is the true treasure 👊 It contain many valuable metals that their price has skyrocketed lately; like lithium, copper, magnesium & zinc. Plus, it contains rare earth metals like Vanadium, Gallium, & Molybdenum which r used in fusion experiments & high-tech industries.
@mrlithium69
@mrlithium69 3 ай бұрын
@@duran9664 yes we have to rethink our waste products, they are secondary source of minerals once the waste is refined. which it would be refined. because theres so much of it and somewhat toxic. i'm sure someone would love paid to dispose of scrap brine. Billions are being spent on every end of the supply chain. these things take time.
@makisekurisu4674
@makisekurisu4674 3 ай бұрын
Tbh, they are doing a lot to try and fix their problem. Its not line they're destroying someone else's shoreline.Its their own afterall.This shoreline can be used to attract more tourist and more money
@ps3301
@ps3301 3 ай бұрын
They burn oil to get fresh water.
@floycewhite6991
@floycewhite6991 3 ай бұрын
Thank Heaven they're switching to burning natural gas!
@lukasalej5710
@lukasalej5710 3 ай бұрын
bu hu, while the rest of developed world uses way to much water than they actualy need.
@chrism3784
@chrism3784 3 ай бұрын
yep, which is causing the earth to warm so they need to burn more oil for a/c and more water
@Bell_plejdo568p
@Bell_plejdo568p 3 ай бұрын
@@lukasalej5710how does the rest of the world use way to much water
@mishmohd
@mishmohd 3 ай бұрын
@@Bell_plejdo568pfront lawns. Golf courses
@tracyrreed
@tracyrreed 3 ай бұрын
🎶 Who lives in a desalinator next to the sea? 🎶 🎶 Sponge Ball Square Plants! 🎶
@TheXuNiQue
@TheXuNiQue 3 ай бұрын
I'm from Saudi Arabia , and everything consume at leas 2X amount of water because of heat and sun its 48C here (118.4 Fahrenheit) I drink around 2 liter per day and if you are working outside you need to drink 4 liter per day . its normal to consume more water in a hot place
@ethandouro4334
@ethandouro4334 3 ай бұрын
You guys could use this to reforestation program, specially in the Hijaz region, since it's fertile, turning the desert to a tropic is way less stressful than letting this madness desalination
@celdur4635
@celdur4635 3 ай бұрын
You should always drink 3-5 liters per day even without the work.
@richardarriaga6271
@richardarriaga6271 3 ай бұрын
​@@ethandouro4334That takes agriculture-scale water. More since your goal is more acreage.
@ethandouro4334
@ethandouro4334 3 ай бұрын
@@richardarriaga6271 I meant more like to create parks, like Tunisia did
@benwouda
@benwouda 3 ай бұрын
Treated waste water from the cities are used to water plants in parks and agriculture
@CalgarGTX
@CalgarGTX 3 ай бұрын
Bruh they are in the middle of a desert but won't use solar panels to heat up the water smh EDIT: These comments also smh for the most part xD We need asianometry vids on the current state of solar & battery storage tech and also on solar thermal potential applications urgently ! Some people still seem to think its the 1970s (When those MSF plants were built coincidentally) it's appalling...
@deeznutz5825
@deeznutz5825 3 ай бұрын
Desalination is also a potent cure for the energy storage problems solar has, no need to store energy in batteries when the sun is brightest when you can just do all your desalination then and store the water indefinitely.
@liledw13
@liledw13 3 ай бұрын
Even better would be a large scale solar reflector. Focusing a large area of solar energy into a single point would heat up water faster.
@daddust
@daddust 3 ай бұрын
That would drive solar panel production and drive down costs and spur technology development. They’re not using renewables for anything ever, bandit kings that they are.
@adamk.7177
@adamk.7177 3 ай бұрын
​@@liledw13 Nice, direct energy transfer. No need to maintain solar panels, far simpler setup. Also, if the refractor gets dirty, you can just wash it in seawater.
@bennyklabarpan7002
@bennyklabarpan7002 3 ай бұрын
Why would they use solar when they have more oil than they can sell without lowering the global prices? Solar is much less efficient than nuclear, it's not really profitable anywhere without subsidies.
@Veritas419
@Veritas419 3 ай бұрын
Water > No water. Nuclear powered desalination > Fossil fueled desalination
@umaikakudo
@umaikakudo 3 ай бұрын
Who in their right mind is going to give or allow a Gulf State to possess fissile materials?
@nikolatasev4948
@nikolatasev4948 3 ай бұрын
@@umaikakudo South Korea. They built nuclear power plants in Abu Dhabi.
@nabilfreeman
@nabilfreeman 3 ай бұрын
Check your political views at the door?
@nomaster5647
@nomaster5647 3 ай бұрын
Now you only have to store the depleted uranium for the next 250 million years. Earth’s end is coming for humans
@Dongonzales123
@Dongonzales123 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear powered desalination < renewable powered desalination. It's in the desert. Wind and sun are abundant.
@MithunOnTheNet
@MithunOnTheNet 3 ай бұрын
As someone who grew up in Bahrain, the scaling on taps was still bad and the water was still slightly salty despite the distillation. Of course, I was last in Bahrain in 2002, so maybe things have improved since.
@artiumnihamkin9206
@artiumnihamkin9206 2 ай бұрын
05:23 Saudi Arabia produce 2.9 billion cubic meters of water not 2.9 million.
@aalhard
@aalhard 3 ай бұрын
8:08 the irony is that desalination is so focused on efficiency, but any time fresh water is found efficiency goes out the window😮 We all must be efficient when no one is looking!
@Spacedog79
@Spacedog79 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear is the ideal way to do desalination, zero carbon, 24/7, and you're processing large amounts of water for cooling anyway so you get it basically for free.
@Frostbytedigital
@Frostbytedigital 3 ай бұрын
Not to mention the reactive elements found in seawater that we could be using to fuel the facility after refinement. The obviousness of nuclear always seems to get upended by the politics however
@Spacedog79
@Spacedog79 3 ай бұрын
@@Frostbytedigital And while you're at it with a high temp reactor you can extract the CO2 and use it to create synthetic fuels for carbon neutral transportation. There are endless possibilities which somehow have yet to make it on to policy maker's radars.
@seankinney3797
@seankinney3797 3 ай бұрын
nuclear is expensive to build though, solar or wind is several times cheaper.
@markfowler2066
@markfowler2066 3 ай бұрын
You folks must work in the public sector, you never talk about cost...
@benmcreynolds8581
@benmcreynolds8581 3 ай бұрын
Seriously! I just commented basically the same thing as your comment did. I don't get why it's not happening yet? We are so far behind where we should be that it frustrates me beyond belief. IMO this should be clear: The fact that Desalination is so energy intensive but fresh water is so important.. What If we dedicated nuclear energy to be the main energy option to run these energy hungry desalination plants?? Idk why we aren't already doing this anywhere we could...? Seriously think about it.. Nuclear power produces no green house gas emissions. It's extremely energy efficient. The list goes on. So why are we not utilizing this... We are being extremely too slow, too reserved, too cautious, too inactive to even make the smallest dent into our climate issue and our energy issues. It's holding back progression across the board in many different area's.. It's honestly getting really frustrating. I thought we would be more motivated than this. More active than this....?
@Esty210
@Esty210 3 ай бұрын
9:03 Who lives in a pineapple under the steam?
@mfaizsyahmi
@mfaizsyahmi 3 ай бұрын
SpongeBalls SquarePlants!
@wedmunds
@wedmunds 2 ай бұрын
​@@mfaizsyahmioOWWW my sponge balls, woaoaoaoah
@swolefly4743
@swolefly4743 3 ай бұрын
I LOVE ASIANOMETRY
@wrxgeneration
@wrxgeneration Ай бұрын
Did you zip him up when you finished?
@CarolineAcheson
@CarolineAcheson 3 ай бұрын
He realized there had been several deaths on this road, but his concern rose when he saw the exact number.
@ggtgp
@ggtgp 3 ай бұрын
Dead Sea brine is processed for fertilizer, you can see it from space covering the south end of the sea.
@floycewhite6991
@floycewhite6991 3 ай бұрын
No kiss tonight honey, you're wearing a Dead Sea facial mask.
@BracaPhoto
@BracaPhoto 3 ай бұрын
Salt makes GREAT fertilizer 😂😂❤❤
@Wordbird69
@Wordbird69 3 ай бұрын
Did you know that you can use old motor oil to fertilize your lawn?
@marca9955
@marca9955 3 ай бұрын
@@BracaPhoto Yes, salting the enemies earth was a famous economic kickstarter. Like an ancient Marshal plan.
@danisraelmalta
@danisraelmalta 3 ай бұрын
Very different process from RED SEA distillation process brine...
@Flumphinator
@Flumphinator 3 ай бұрын
Given that you can’t do literally anything without water, $7B is actually a screaming deal for that capacity.
@xjdisuehd
@xjdisuehd 3 ай бұрын
Till now, water has been mostly free or very highly subsidized in Saudi Arabia, UAE, and other ME oil rich nations. The idea of a government provided service being non-subsidized and breaking even is unacceptable in the region, as citizens don't revolt as long as they are kept rich with plushy useless jobs in the public sector and services are provided at dirt cheap prices. Rather than invoke fury and revolt among citizens, Saudis, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE - all have chosen to privatize their water industry, with only government oversight to regulate profiteering. The problem is that these MSF plants are so damn expensive, that the water prices will shoot upto around $8/1000 gallons, assuming that the private players would have to buy energy at market prices. That is the landed price to customers. Another project silently undergoing is inviting renewable energy companies to partner with RO desalination private players (predominantly Israeli or using Israeli origin technology) but it faces two issues - lack of diplomatic ties with Israel and the surrounding waters in ME where the sites would be optimal have been polluted beyond repair in terms of increasing salinity and massive amounts of chemicals and heavy metals (which are present in cleaning chemicals). That can be repaired by changing the membranes somewhat and having additional pre-treatment, and this is one of the reasons that UAE has made diplomatic relations with Israel and Saudi is wanting too, all thrown off by the Hamas. Qatar is on the fence as the Qatari royal family is kind of a fundamental wahabi supporter and believer, but Qatar if it continues this will face massive backlash with Trump reportedly willing to remove the massive US base away from Qatar. The other factor in play is American oil and gas pumping. Europe wants more gas and ME had a market cornered but then US strikes back with massive LNG facilities and the ability to pump out enough gas to meet Europe's demand. At a cheaper price, as American natural gas is surprisingly cheaper, due to domestic cheap prices. Middle Eastern countries can no longer afford to continue subsidizing everything for its citizens as it as causing dents in their budgets. Another reason, ME governments want to get out of water desalination and privatize it. This isn't only about water, but - about water, geopolitics, and economics.
@smalltime0
@smalltime0 3 ай бұрын
It blows my mind that they had water for free. I only heard about it when talking to a Saudi in Germany and he mentioned his parents installing a pool (in SA). I was like "Yeah but even in SW Australia the evaporation means the upkeep is pricey" "we don't pay for water in SA" WTF, like WTF.
@sudeepmitra
@sudeepmitra 3 ай бұрын
@johnl.7754
@johnl.7754 3 ай бұрын
With the exorbitant luxury spending that the rulers (including extended families) and government officials spend I can understand why the people of those countries demand these essential free stuff.
@floycewhite6991
@floycewhite6991 3 ай бұрын
You forgot injecting sea water into oil fields to force the remaining oil out. Brine could be used instead.
@lucasrem
@lucasrem 3 ай бұрын
Saudi Arabia is not your friendly Nation. Only some people can benefit from the oil lords, change is needed badly. Religious freaks in power, Allah is evil.
@jestubbs69
@jestubbs69 3 ай бұрын
One of the largest desalination plants in north. America is where I live in Ensenada Baja CA, Mexico. Many many many other small R.O. purification plants in nearly every neighborhood working with high salinity well water. They make outstanding quality live water. + High alkaline water. City or trucked water is nasty filthy stuff. Only for washing. Use borax, soda & vinegar in your laundry as it’s insanely hard. There are also many thermal springs. Still water is scarce and in shortage in many areas.
@somedude-lc5dy
@somedude-lc5dy 3 ай бұрын
desalination seems like good use-case for dumping excess solar power. this allows you to over-build solar farms so that even cloudy days can meet 100% of electricity need. water is great at being stored in reservoirs, so it makes for easy "energy" storage. though, limiting population growth in resource limited areas is probably for the best, but that's not something easy for a government or group of outside countries to sell to a local population.
@captiannemo1587
@captiannemo1587 3 ай бұрын
That requires planning.
@oohhboy-funhouse
@oohhboy-funhouse 3 ай бұрын
@@captiannemo1587 "Planning" is optimistic given the kinds of projects being built in the Gulf states. Skiing in the desert checks out.
@cannesahs
@cannesahs 3 ай бұрын
i bet they burn fossils for this
@kapilchhabria1727
@kapilchhabria1727 3 ай бұрын
We have very good and cheap ways to store excess solar energy: pumped hydro storage.
@Nelo390
@Nelo390 3 ай бұрын
@@kapilchhabria1727 only in places with mountains.
@michaelimbesi2314
@michaelimbesi2314 3 ай бұрын
I’m not sure that fab is the correct term to refer to any industrial facility other than semiconductor plants
@marilynlucas5128
@marilynlucas5128 3 ай бұрын
LOL
@spyczech
@spyczech 3 ай бұрын
Fab analysis
@uss_04
@uss_04 3 ай бұрын
07:14 Would you say the Source of Steam is a Valve?
@ali_alami
@ali_alami 3 ай бұрын
and there is only 2 valves
@bonzita23
@bonzita23 3 ай бұрын
07:55 Steam logo lol
@Molkit007
@Molkit007 2 ай бұрын
you're du mb
@MrArnoudje
@MrArnoudje 3 ай бұрын
Ive worked in the commissioning at the Jebel Ali facility’s in the past. It is extremely big. These countries need power and water in that combination MSR really makes sense. Heat would be wasted anyway in steam turbine condensors.
@vi6ddarkking
@vi6ddarkking 3 ай бұрын
As the need for need for water increases I wonder if Solar Domes for Desalination are going to become more common due to their efficiency and low cost closer to the equator. After all Desalination is an energy intensive process, using the heat of the sun in the simplest form of Desalination, would definitely be an interesting possibility.
@rceldib
@rceldib 3 ай бұрын
I am amazed that no one is talking about out how much water is used to process oil into gasoline. From what I understand it is about two gallons of water for each gallon of gas. Our local RO plant in Los Angeles sends 60% of what they process into ultra pure water to the petroleum refineries. How much of that water in the Middle East is for the oil industry?
@filanfyretracker
@filanfyretracker 3 ай бұрын
probably should switch the refineries to grey water. That is the water that comes out of the wastewater plants, Industrial process is an idea first use for recycled water. A city is not the ISS and the residents are not yet ready for recycled water(that is looping the wastewater back into the drinking water plant's inlet pipe). But a factory wont care, the gasoline making machine or a data center just needs water in general, So send em the water that the wastewater plant would just dump into the ocean.
@Nphen
@Nphen 3 ай бұрын
Their mistake is fighting against the ocean and salt water. A project in Spain is using halophytes, or salt-tolerant crops, to form saltwater marshes. The tech is simple - canals & gates. The harvest of biomass is 3x what land crops produce. The plants are edible and also make amazing skincare & cosmetics. The marshes also produce animal protein in the form of crabs, shellfish, fish, and frogs, as well as being a habitat for flamingos. The Middle East has all the sun & ocean water they could ever want for. They need to start planting their coastlines with saltwater marshes. It's hard to believe this hasn't been tried.
@mukkaar
@mukkaar 3 ай бұрын
Ah yes, those salt tolerant crops produce tons of freshwater.
@Nphen
@Nphen 3 ай бұрын
@@mukkaar Those nations use 80% of their water supply for freshwater crops. If they stop using their freshwater for crops, and use salt water farming instead, they will use less water.
@aoeuable
@aoeuable 3 ай бұрын
Let me get this straight: The Arabs are having trouble getting at *heat*, of all things. Not even temperature differentials, but plain heat as long as it's above 100C. Or, differently put, is there an actually good reason why they're not using solar-thermal.
@obsidianjane4413
@obsidianjane4413 3 ай бұрын
Notice how in most of the facilities pictures every horizontal surface looks brown? That is dust. So keeping solar concentrators clean in a desert is a problem. Also they don't work at night, so you lose half of your production capacity.
@tee2567
@tee2567 3 ай бұрын
@@obsidianjane4413 Well, you could rinse them off occasionally. Wait...
@cyberninjazero5659
@cyberninjazero5659 3 ай бұрын
​@@tee2567Water is a flat circle
@ChangedNames
@ChangedNames 3 ай бұрын
@@tee2567Damn, you people are so stupid. Think before speaking & if youre ignorant of a topic then dont lash out with your "genius idea" and disregard the "current status" instead ask why the current idea is being used not yours. And dont stop at the first racist answer
@pretty7545
@pretty7545 3 ай бұрын
​@@tee2567you can also use dirt to clean dirt off of solar panels but why do that when you can boost the price of oil with every large addition to demand so that at least on paper you get a big rebate on your desal plant?
@lynndonharnell422
@lynndonharnell422 3 ай бұрын
A story i heard in KSA in early 90s. Corrosion expert called into the plant up near Ras Tanura over severe corrosion problem. Turns out they located the brine discharge rigjr next to the Gulf water intake. Duh.
@taiwanluthiers
@taiwanluthiers 3 ай бұрын
I suppose they can dig a hole and pump all their brine there, and evaporate them into some kind of a dead sea mineral pond... Surely there's lots of stuff in seawater that can now be extracted.
@creativecraving
@creativecraving Ай бұрын
7:40 😂 People older than 35 won't understand why you'very chosen that logo for steam! ❤ I love the humor. 😅
@ntabile
@ntabile 3 ай бұрын
Singapore also have a desalination plant.
@Wolf-yr1qy
@Wolf-yr1qy 3 ай бұрын
has*. Singapore is a singular subject, so you need a singular verb. For example, he has.
@ntabile
@ntabile 3 ай бұрын
@Wolf-yr1qy thank you, grammar teacher. I'm blaming the samsung spell and grammar check 😉
@Phil-D83
@Phil-D83 3 ай бұрын
Waste heat from a nuclear reactor makes more sense
@cole1
@cole1 3 ай бұрын
yeah but we still have the scaling problem. hmmmm
@gmu3134
@gmu3134 3 ай бұрын
Middle east… I don’t think US would approve
@Ben942K
@Ben942K 3 ай бұрын
@@gmu3134every country can actually have nuclear power… They have to promise not to use it for nefarious means among other things. It’s the cost associated with it that’s a deterrent.
@hermanwillem7057
@hermanwillem7057 3 ай бұрын
​@@gmu3134ain't the only one with nuke
@co2_os
@co2_os 3 ай бұрын
​@Ben942K yeah I don't think big daddy allows it still, otherwise they'd be working on it right now, but maybe soon.
@microcomputermaster
@microcomputermaster 3 ай бұрын
A US company called Capture6 is working on a method to use the waste brine from desalination for a carbon dioxide capture and mineralization process. They're getting government funding to build pilot plants in Australia, South Korea, and California, but it'll be several years before any of these plants can demonstrate if the technology is feasible.
@manyulgarprsch
@manyulgarprsch 3 ай бұрын
What products will they get after the mineralization?
@microcomputermaster
@microcomputermaster 3 ай бұрын
@@manyulgarprsch Some kind of calcium carbonate I think. I've heard of a few universities which demonstrated that it could be blended into concrete or plaster, but even if you just buried it, the carbon dioxide would be stable in that form.
@newtoncorp
@newtoncorp 3 ай бұрын
You can use brime for cement, that will absorb CO2 from atmosphere, trials in saudi at the moment In Dubai, the water is first sent to people, then treated and used in agriculture and landscaping
@MikeAlabbasi
@MikeAlabbasi Ай бұрын
Same thing here in 🇧🇭 Bahrain, desalinated water is mainly for domestic use, after using it gets treated and used in agriculture or landscaping. Moreover, in order to limit the consumption of water; the government of 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia has an export ban list for many crops, and if I'm not mistaken the 🇦🇪 UAE has a similar list as well.
@thesaltycabbage
@thesaltycabbage 3 ай бұрын
I remember seeing the plant in malta and thinking how did we do this in 1881 and africa still can't get water
@bartz0rt928
@bartz0rt928 3 ай бұрын
hm. I remember a video item years ago of an experimental low tech setup somewhere in northern Africa (I think it was Tunisia but I'm not sure). They built greenhouses with a brick wall facing the prevailing sea wind, and the bricks were made with little horizontal holes running through them all over. The moist air would flow in, containing enough water to sustain the plants in and even around the greenhouses. Salt would accumulate on the brick of course, but could apparently be removed easily enough and used as a cheap building material (I guess the benefit of a very arid environment is that you can build a house out of compacted salt "bricks"). The plan was to build these structures in large enough numbers to de-desertify a part of the northern Sahara, giving people access to locally and sustainably produced water and food. I have no idea what happened with that idea. It's obviously a much slower and more labor-intensive way to go about it, but it strikes me as much more robust long-term. Given the gulf states' high tech fetish though any plan like that might be DOA.
@someoneyouusedtoknow
@someoneyouusedtoknow 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for breaking that down into Olympic size swimming pools for us Americans 😂
@AB1Vampire
@AB1Vampire 3 ай бұрын
A privileged unit of measurement.
@OneRedKraken
@OneRedKraken 2 ай бұрын
Never read or cared about water desalination. But when someone explains something well I can't help myself but listen. Great video!
@CarneyBarney-qo7wq
@CarneyBarney-qo7wq 3 ай бұрын
Would be cool if you could look in to fish farming. Living in the isle of Skye in the western Highlands of Scotland, the industry is ubiquitous and not without controversy.
@buckstarchaser2376
@buckstarchaser2376 3 ай бұрын
Seawater evaporation ponds work for cleaning salt outdoors, in the dirt, because the growing salt crystals will naturally exclude nearly all things that don't fit right in the crystal lattice. When you harvest the wet crystals from the ponds, they may have a concentrated level of contaminants in the spent liquor that clings to the wet crystals, but this is why there is a plant for "washing" the salt. Normally, purification by crystallization is way overkill for food grade products. It just happens to be one of the easiest ways to get brilliant white salt crystals from muddy seawater.
@thefunnyfritz4035
@thefunnyfritz4035 3 ай бұрын
Looks like smn out of Just Cause 0:16
@frankg7786
@frankg7786 2 ай бұрын
Hahaha yes it does
@diantonovich
@diantonovich Ай бұрын
No they sell it pretending it is from zamzam well in Mecca . It’s a kind of scam
@crunchworks22
@crunchworks22 3 ай бұрын
Asianometry continues to be one of the highest quality channels on YT!
@jsalsman
@jsalsman 3 ай бұрын
...also, when describing energy inputs, you can't ignore how many solar panels the mere interest on those petrodollar reserves will pay for. It's only a matter of time. Solar is renewable, gas and oil is not.
@umaikakudo
@umaikakudo 3 ай бұрын
The sun is renewable. Solar panels are not.
@TV-8-301
@TV-8-301 3 ай бұрын
I've probably said this before, but I appreciate how your videos are information-rich and easy to understand without unnecessary frills to make it more "engaging"
@_ingoknito
@_ingoknito 3 ай бұрын
no need to apologize for potatos
@wastedtimefr
@wastedtimefr 3 ай бұрын
Also to be noted, in saudi arabia, a substantial amount of this fresh water is used for oil resevoirs pressure maintenance, so not used by humans
@0MoTheG
@0MoTheG 3 ай бұрын
Turning sewages (poop) back to water would limit the need somewhat.
@floycewhite6991
@floycewhite6991 3 ай бұрын
King of Saudi Arabia sets a good example for his people by swigging only toilet-to-tap.
@allah.remembrance
@allah.remembrance 3 ай бұрын
Ras AL Khair, Saudi Arabia is the world's largest desalination plant with a capacity of 2,998,000 m3/day. It is also recorded in Guinesses World Records.
@uss_04
@uss_04 3 ай бұрын
Was recently rewatching up the nuclear desalination video . There’s discussion of Arizona having a desalination plant at the sea of Cortez and unlike the west coast it has no clear outflow, meaning salinity will build up there over time.
@floycewhite6991
@floycewhite6991 3 ай бұрын
Sea of Cortez? You mean the Gulf of California. What's the matter? You have a problem with Baja California?
@HamishBarker
@HamishBarker 3 ай бұрын
Your channel is excellent. Really enjoying the long form tech stuff. I did thermodynamoc design on large multi effect distillation and power generation plants built in Bahrain.multi effect is similar to multi stage flash, the main difference is where the evaporation ( and scale) occurs. From memory, typical desal output was about 10x the kg rate of input low grade steam. The ste was from back end of steam turbine process. Process control, very very large low pressure comtrol valves, safety systems ( burst discs rather than giant safety valves) and seawater corrosion were challenges.
@vidanimated6850
@vidanimated6850 3 ай бұрын
What you're missing out is that in Saudi Arabia, companies like Marafiq use a hybrid plant where steam is used to also generate electricity. Thus, the problem you're mentioning isn't really a problem if the heat isn't being wasted.
@caav56
@caav56 3 ай бұрын
It's mentioned right before membrane method
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 24 күн бұрын
​@@caav56 taking advantage of the waste heat physics requires a thermal power plant to regect, and building an open cycle steam engine so you can drink the condensate are 2 very different things. Personally an open cycle concentrated solar plant would be ideal. Use the sea water to cool the output steam and condensate with a counter flow heat exchanger then use the molten salt to boil the sea water to distil it into brine and high pressure steam. It only needs to run during the day since water is easier stored, but theoretically a large enough molten salt reservoir can carry generation into the night. As a producer of both water and electricity your only concern is what to do with the brine. (Personally i would use evaporation pools/lakes to reduce it to pure seasalt for sale)
@farhan00
@farhan00 3 ай бұрын
"They should not exixt" So what should the people do, just not drink water?
@nikolatasev4948
@nikolatasev4948 3 ай бұрын
Use less energy-intensive desalination methods. Use the fresh water more efficiently - fewer golf fields, open swimming pools, etc.
@co2_os
@co2_os 3 ай бұрын
​@@nikolatasev4948 yeah cause these are the major consumers of water in the entire country. What are you talking about. Plus I'm sure newer plants are built to the new standards and are more energy efficient, you can't simply nuke the biggest desalination plants in the planet.
@Vmac1394
@Vmac1394 2 ай бұрын
In the case of the Gulf States maybe don't import millions of slav-, I mean "migratory workers, " to the point where your population has increased by 5x in 50 years.
@wasimshaikh1665
@wasimshaikh1665 3 ай бұрын
7:26 Steam logo 🤣🤣
@SmartAndTidy
@SmartAndTidy 3 ай бұрын
Excellent expose. As they used to say, don't build on sand.
@doujinflip
@doujinflip 3 ай бұрын
14:34 I remember at COP28 that one of the UAE desal plants had an exhibit, and I asked them what they do with all that brine. Apparently there's a substantial market for hypersaline seawater. For what exactly the buyers don't reveal, but the plant reps say sometimes upwards of like 80% of their wastewater gets sold and trucked away.
@boozecruiser
@boozecruiser 3 ай бұрын
They seem like a trustworthy bunch.
@ChessAndRaspberryMojito
@ChessAndRaspberryMojito 3 ай бұрын
That amounts to some 20 trucks a day, not impossible, but rather weird if no one can make the numbers on where it’s worth using
@chris-hayes
@chris-hayes 3 ай бұрын
I love how you present these topics, very professional.
@transistor703
@transistor703 3 ай бұрын
Quick babe Asianometry just dropped a new vid 👀
@Mis73rRand0m
@Mis73rRand0m 3 ай бұрын
My dad worked at an RO Desalination plant on the All American Canal in his final years. It was a neat place, mix of old and modern tech because it was shuttered for decades after being built initially in the 80's. Kind of a folly as far as the investment goes, but still a cool facility.
@johnkeller2952
@johnkeller2952 3 ай бұрын
Okay soooo what just pumping brine out into the middle of the empty quarter? Can't contaminate the groundwater if there is none
@eclecticmemes
@eclecticmemes 3 ай бұрын
This is the most obvious solution.... Spray a million gallons a day of brine into the air in the middle of nowhere and you get instant salt flats as well as temperature reduction and humidity increase (for downwind agriculture) . Any brine that makes it to the ground will be filtered by the sand so that by the time it hits the water table, if it ever makes it, it will be as fresh as a mountain stream.
@magical_blue
@magical_blue 3 ай бұрын
there are huge aquafers ander there+ oil and gas
@phlogistanjones2722
@phlogistanjones2722 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video. 7:18 Steam symbol 9:04 Sponge Balls, Square Plants Your comedic acumen is ALWAYS a joy to behold sir. I truly understand the hesitancy of a reasonable person to endorse a process that consumes massive amounts of free energy. I though STRONGLY subscribe to the notion of the Kardashev Scale. Cheap, ubiquitous, useful energy is KEY to the advancement of civilizations. All of them. Always. The ability to generate and manipulate increasing energy densities and quantities IS civilization. That is what brings a "better life" for everyone, everywhere, every time. Always. Using dirty energy is foolish but often is a short term necessity as a bridge. It is no longer necessary and THAT is my objection. Burning chemical feedstocks to make heat is a waste. An inefficiency nightmare on an industrial scale. So we agree on that but Nuclear for baseline energy is a solved problem. All other forms of useful energy can and should be explored but to not replace baseline needs with clean, efficient nuclear is both foolish and short sighted. Putting too many eggs in too few baskets is an absolute nightmare on a national scale and for that reason alone your concerns are certainly warranted as well. My only real concern with RO is that it is by its very nature 'high-tech" and the membranes are still relatively expensive and relatively difficult to manufacture. Industrial scale can be stupid simple as you noted with the Saudi designs. I have an RO unit in my own home so obviously that concern is probably overblown on my part but I would prefer a simple solar still for simplicities sake. I also think that throwing the concentrated brine away is foolish. You just spent a lot of time, effort and energy making it and there are a LOT of valuable materials RIGHT THERE. Since most of those places that have so much excess brine have HUGE tracts of...Land. I can certainly see them dedicating some of it to big ol' settling/evap ponds. That is just my opinion. I could be wrong. Peaceful Skies.
@87solarsky
@87solarsky 3 ай бұрын
No Oil = No Water ?!
@frankstrawnation
@frankstrawnation 3 ай бұрын
Crazy, no?
@lucasrem
@lucasrem 3 ай бұрын
Allah is Oil, that's how these warlords keep their power ! With water, they show the same friedyness ! Dessert people are weirdo people, why there freaks ?
@MrFateTube
@MrFateTube 3 ай бұрын
israel has(had?) no oil, but is exporting desalinated water to neighbors(meaning it is overproduced compared to their own needs).
@87solarsky
@87solarsky 3 ай бұрын
@@MrFateTube In the case of Israel this isn't overproduction, but rather a way of economically maintaining strategic production reserves, in case the water levels in the Sea of Galilee aren't sufficient for drinking water extraction.
@NeovanGoth
@NeovanGoth 3 ай бұрын
No. Reverse osmosis is far more energy efficient and there's more than enough sun in the desert.
@shruk4
@shruk4 2 ай бұрын
Glad that you mentioned the national security question at the end. John Dolan, aka "the war nerd" is always talking about the impossibility of war between the Saudis and Iranians because just after some quick ballistic missiles the Saudis would be struggling for water.
@TheGreatAtario
@TheGreatAtario 3 ай бұрын
There are so many mispronunciations today I despair of calling them out
@doujinflip
@doujinflip 3 ай бұрын
Well Arabic does involve a lot of sounds that don't exist in English.
@TheGreatAtario
@TheGreatAtario 3 ай бұрын
@@doujinflip I wouldn't even know of the Arabic mispronunciations…
@MikeAlabbasi
@MikeAlabbasi Ай бұрын
*YES!!!* For starters, 🇧🇭 Bahrain, it's only two syllables, just simply go Ba-Rain, that's it. I actually live there, and never in my life have I heard someone mispronouncing it.
@emilepierre1663
@emilepierre1663 3 ай бұрын
That’s actually insane and awesome at the same time 😂
@jamesrobinson9176
@jamesrobinson9176 3 ай бұрын
Why would ag runoff have heavy metals?
@ThatSlowTypingGuy
@ThatSlowTypingGuy 3 ай бұрын
Seriously WTF?
@bernardfinucane2061
@bernardfinucane2061 26 күн бұрын
Rainwater catching is also an option. Red Sea towns like Jeddah suffers flash flooding because the Saudis make no attempt to prevent the seasonal rains from flowing out of the hills and into the Red Sea. Another problem is the careless waste of water in agriculture. There have been improvements in wastewater treatment for reuse, but there is still a long way to go.
@MoritzvonSchweinitz
@MoritzvonSchweinitz 3 ай бұрын
It's a pity we don't use some simple nuclear option for this. At the very least to pre-heat the water or something. Should be rather trivial to build, could use low-grade nuclear fuel and feels like it could be deployed in something like a sealed container.
@yren3386
@yren3386 3 ай бұрын
Boiling water reactor? Guess what else are boiling water reactors? Chernobyl and Fukushima Also, that's basically putting more nuclear materials into the vicinity of several most politically unstable regions.
@hyric8927
@hyric8927 3 ай бұрын
I deeply appreciate you pronouncing the name Curaçao correctly!
@magnvss
@magnvss 3 ай бұрын
Imagine when they finally run dry of their oil production (which allows them to run such huge and energy-intensive desalination plants): with such a huge population (relative to their water supply), you would witness one of the biggest humanitarian crises the world will ever see.
@docwatson1134
@docwatson1134 3 ай бұрын
No way it will drag on that long. Within three to five years, it will become apparent, that CO2 reduction is possible, and largely solved. Then the remaining heavy users of fossil fuels will face planetary scrutiny. And demands to transition to solar immediately!
@daviddavidson1417
@daviddavidson1417 3 ай бұрын
A mass migration into the better managed parts of the world while blaming them, most likely.
@DRakeTRofKBam
@DRakeTRofKBam 3 ай бұрын
Theres not necessarily an event where the oil will just stop running. I imagine the humanitarian disasters will come even before they stop deciding to siphen the reservoirs empty due to earthquakes and sinkholes.
@benr7294
@benr7294 3 ай бұрын
Or they just build nuclear plants
@IvanTre
@IvanTre 3 ай бұрын
They have solar.
@GarC170
@GarC170 24 күн бұрын
Saudi owned farms in Arizona recently had their ground water leases revoked by the state. Those farms grew most of SAs cattle feed. They’re hurting even harder for ground water now
@UtahBlender
@UtahBlender 3 ай бұрын
The problem will fix itself. Saudi Arabia, for example, is throwing money at any big touristy project which will make their economy less reliant on oil. However, once the oil dries up, nobody will want to go to a desert for vacation. The GCC countries will revert back to escorting camels around the desert and water demand will plummet.
@jihadalsweed
@jihadalsweed 3 ай бұрын
Has nothing to do with the video, just a pure hatred
@موسى_7
@موسى_7 3 ай бұрын
I agree
@LackofFaithify
@LackofFaithify 3 ай бұрын
Other than leaving out what will no doubt be an unpleasant body count, yeah, I can't see how it goes anyway but this. They've spent so much on this that and the other to diversify/change/etc...,but they just can't stop being what they've been.
@Glory005
@Glory005 3 ай бұрын
I have an idea for affordable solar agricultural-scale desalination and water transport. This is a high volume continuous process, based on driving turbines with concentrated solar energy. Consider a jet engine: there are compressor stages that pull air in, then a combustor in which the compressed air is mixed with jet fuel and burned, increasing its pressure, then expansion stages that extract some of the kinetic energy from the heated air to drive the compressor and do mechanical work. A steam turbine has similar compression and expansion stages, but instead of a combustor the steam is heated by some external fuel source, e.g. coal. The heat from the burning coal is transferred to the steam in a heat exchanger. I suggest A) using a large field of solar mirrors as the heat source, and B) configuring the expansion stages to leave as much kinetic energy in the compressed steam as possible. Instead of driving a locomotive or generator, the turbine's work goes into moving the steam itself. In this way, large volumes of fresh water can be pumped from one location to another (after initially boiling the water, again with concentrated sunlight). For desalination, imagine that the hot, high pressure steam coming from one of these turbines is travelling along a pipe. If seawater is injected into the steam, the water flashes to steam and we have a flow of cooler, lower pressure steam carrying suspended salt crystals. Removing the crystals is a mechanical process that can be achieved with, e.g., a vortical extractor. Some of the purified steam can be re-heated and routed back to before the brine injector for continuous operation. The major selling point of this process is that it can be scaled up to large capacities. Near the equator, a gigawatt worth of sunlight arrives per square kilometre. Given a desalination plant near a coastline, one might build a solar turbine-based pumping station every few kilometres along a pipeline carrying steam into the interior of a continent. At the destination the steam can be condensed back to water, perhaps doing useful work in the process.
@wmchan44
@wmchan44 3 ай бұрын
In the Middle East, fresh clean potable water to WHO standards are more precious than oil. It should not be given free to the public but charged at a cost plus price for them to appreciate it's value.
@jihadalsweed
@jihadalsweed 3 ай бұрын
It is not free
@thamiordragonheart8682
@thamiordragonheart8682 3 ай бұрын
I think a good move might be from multi-stage flash to multi-stage vacuum membrane distillation. The ratio of fresh water to brine isn't as high, but it has much less scale buildup and somewhat lower energy consumption while retaining almost all the other advantages of multi-stage flash, including reliability. For reverse osmosis, there are still some gains to be had by switching to a batch process because then you can increase the pressure as the brine concentrates instead of running it all through the filter at constant pressure. I'm pretty sure it saves about 30% of the energy. There's probably a way to set that up as a multi-stage continuous process, but the research work I saw was all on batch processing.
@Shinzon23
@Shinzon23 3 ай бұрын
This is actually a really good reason why we should be investing in nuclear power plants because get a couple of those running and you'd have all the fresh water you need for a while
@randomchannel-px6ho
@randomchannel-px6ho 3 ай бұрын
The issue is per kilowatt hour nuclear is far more expensive Of course the calculus looks different when you consider emissions and other cost not reflected in the price tag but thats not how the world works sadly I'm bullish on nuclewr fusion eventually working out in part because we're kinda screwed if we can't find an overabudant source of clean energy
@mbican
@mbican 3 ай бұрын
​@@randomchannel-px6honuclear lasts 80 years, it's more expensive the first 10-20 years of operation but then old nuclear turns into a money printer. Where is the whole mindset that father seeds a tree so his grandson can benefit from the grown tree?
@rogerk6180
@rogerk6180 3 ай бұрын
Price is just far to high. It just isn't competitive.
@hawoaliahmed6996
@hawoaliahmed6996 3 ай бұрын
if you price in the grid stability batteries and ecological damages, nuclear is not that more expansive, arguably one of the cheapest. and even whitout pricing that in is still a magnitude cheaper than fossil fuels.
@mysticalmikeday
@mysticalmikeday 3 ай бұрын
​@@mbicanlol they're hungry and they ate the seed already.
@creativecraving
@creativecraving Ай бұрын
So you do great describing non-silicon technolgoes as well! ❤ Your videos are great, and they only stand to improve with time. I'm grateful, even for the occasional potato.
@agxryt
@agxryt 3 ай бұрын
Panacea: Pan - uh - say - uh ❤
@simonedaniel
@simonedaniel 3 ай бұрын
Incorrect, it is Pan - uh - *see* - uh
@agxryt
@agxryt 3 ай бұрын
@@simonedaniel I read that, and thought "yeah, that's what I said, and had to re-read my original comment, and realized I've heard it said both ways." Gonna look it up. It's definitely NOT "pan ass ey uh" tho hahaha e: you were right! Shut down the internet!
@sassa82
@sassa82 3 ай бұрын
Persian Gulf❤
@rialtho_the_magnificent
@rialtho_the_magnificent 3 ай бұрын
6:17 I recognised this building when I was in Malta in 2014. The tree on the right is now much bigger
@Ansset0
@Ansset0 3 ай бұрын
1:15 average household, 2+2 model, uses 113 M3 per annum. What the heck is the problem here? If country has 30+ per capita, on average, WTF are you or them complaining about? Gulf area should not be allowed to govern itself. 🤮 Let them dry.
@nearly_epic
@nearly_epic 3 ай бұрын
The water must flow statement is rad ngl
@Jupa
@Jupa 3 ай бұрын
The UAE is basically Elon Musk if he were a state. Tasteless, trashy, wasteful and simple minded… but at least they’re rich. For better or worse.
@TheSonic10160
@TheSonic10160 3 ай бұрын
I think desalination is one of those industrial processes that pairs well with nuclear energy. A nuclear power plant produces enormous waste heat for essentially free, waste heat from the turbines can be used in cogeneration or as preheat for intake water, while process heat could be directly derived from the nuclear reactor.
@evryhndlestakn
@evryhndlestakn Ай бұрын
@@TheSonic10160 nuclear energy doesn't pair well with anything. People seem to regard nuclear energy as free power which simply isn't the case. No matter how well the process is improved, there will always be waste product as a result of the process & it comes with ramifications as well as a cost. The waste isn't taken care & put aside a year after it is depleted. Of course it stays toxic & lethal for thousands of years. A nuclear power station costs more to run & decommission than the value of the energy it can produce in its lifetime. It's not even anything to do with any risks. Just on an economic level, the question of nuclear power stations isn't as clear as it first appears.
@TheSonic10160
@TheSonic10160 Ай бұрын
@@evryhndlestakn Sure nuclear pairs well with thermal desalination, you can run a desal. plant on the waste steam after it's been through the turbines, or you could replace the gas burning boilers with a nuclear reactor, as nuclear tech is way better at making raw heat than electricity, which is the unique advantage nuclear has amidst the portfolio of clean energy sources, only it and concentrated solar are any good at making industrially useful amounts of heat for chemical processes. Yes there is nuclear waste, but compared to the waste streams of everything else, only hydro and geothermal power outperform it in terms of 'waste'. Wind and solar produce tides of toxic sludge in their manufacture as part of the refining of rare-earths needed for efficient solar panels and powerful permanent magnets. In Europe and the US this sludge is managed somewhat, while in China, where over 90% of the world's panels are made that shit is just dumped out onto the ground to make a toxic kill zone bigger than Manhattan Island, free to dry up and blow around. Not including any talk of batteries, of course. Which yes, are getting better, but are still a massive externality and a ruinous cost to wind and solar infrastructure that's similarly short-lived and has only really started being talked about this decade. Fully processed nuclear waste is dangerous for about 300 years, afterwards the only way it can hurt you is if you grind it up and eat it. 90% of CO2 in the atmosphere emitted today will still be there in a thousand years. Meanwhile the heavy metals in coal fly ash, and rare-earth refinery slap ponds will still be as deadly as the way it was dumped out forever. How I really know you're a total joker who doesn't have a fucking clue what they're talking about is when you said nuclear isn't profitable. If that were the case, how come every nuclear power plant operator in the US is trying to reopen closed plants, and extend the lives of the ones they have? It couldn't be because once they've paid off their construction loans, nuclear power is actually the single most profitable form of power generation on the planet? kzbin.info/www/bejne/i3TCc3awZdWtg9k kzbin.info/www/bejne/q6K9haavaKmUrJoL&t=475 The ONLY economic problem facing nuclear power is the short-term focus on immediate profits over all else from the private investment sector, and that construction takes longer than a political term in the public services sector. Otherwise, the nuclear renaissance is already happening, The biggest banks in the world are ignoring your dogma and pledging support for nuclear power projects, since it offers guaranteed long-term returns. www.ft.com/content/96aa8d1a-bbf1-4b35-8680-d1fef36ef067 Governments all across the world are turning back to nuclear now that Russian gas is out of the question. Belgium recently stumped up five billion Euro for an expansion of its Borssele NPP and to get some Rolls-Royce SMRs built too. So I'm gonna need you to come up with some fresh content in your criticisms of nuclear power, and quit regurgitating falsehoods and anti-nuclear talking points that have been dead for more than a decade at this point.
@AnirudhTammireddy
@AnirudhTammireddy 3 ай бұрын
9:03 sponge balls in these square plants
@atcengineering
@atcengineering 3 ай бұрын
I had quite a chuckle at that one!!!
@manoocgegr1364
@manoocgegr1364 3 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your channel for scientific and factful contents. The body of water you are mentioning in this video is called Persian Gulf. Thank you so much
@AlbatrossCommando
@AlbatrossCommando 3 ай бұрын
Israel (who also uses a lot of desalination) has a big advantage on the brine disposal front as they just dump it into the dead sea (refelling it in the process).
@shh13100
@shh13100 3 ай бұрын
They don't do that. It's been proposed but never done
@DioTheGreatOne
@DioTheGreatOne 3 ай бұрын
Oh no, you said the I word. Prepare for attacks.
@ulrichraymond8372
@ulrichraymond8372 3 ай бұрын
For scaling salt metal discs can be used and driven by either the use of electromagnetism or by pressure difference along the length of the pipe. It is also possible to shock waves through controlled explosions in the pipes but not sure if this crazy or practical. There is also a possibility of heating the hard to reach places by locally heating bends in pipes by the used of magnetic flux.
@ligius3
@ligius3 3 ай бұрын
I visited the Red Sea a few years ago. The levels are rapidly dropping and the sea will probably cease to exist in 80 years. Not to mantion the rising salt levels. It's funny because there are two contrasting things at play: the desalination plants dumping brine and the salt processing plants that just evaporate water into the air. The countries there are all fighting each other for water and shorting the other guys, while cooperation would clearly benefit everyone instead, like the prisoner's dilema.
@MaxPower-11
@MaxPower-11 3 ай бұрын
The Red Sea is not an inland sea. It’s connected to the Indian Ocean in the South and the Mediterranean Sea (via the Suez Canal) in the North. As such, there’s no chance of it disappearing.
@MyraPaul-l3e
@MyraPaul-l3e 3 ай бұрын
He decided water-skiing on a frozen lake wasn’t a good idea.
@ShumaBot
@ShumaBot 3 ай бұрын
Or just don't overpopulate an arid desert.
@michaelmoorrees3585
@michaelmoorrees3585 3 ай бұрын
Those oil rich countries need the labor to build their skyscrapers, and then keep them clean. When the oil money dries up, I don't wan to be anywhere near that "political fallout" !
@kapilchhabria1727
@kapilchhabria1727 3 ай бұрын
Stop talking logic to fools who built on reclaimed land when they have endless desert land to build on.
@DioTheGreatOne
@DioTheGreatOne 3 ай бұрын
​@@kapilchhabria1727Desert sand is terrible for foundations.
@LolTollhurst
@LolTollhurst 3 ай бұрын
This sounds like what europeans say about america
@joez.2794
@joez.2794 3 ай бұрын
Why would they do that when we pay them so handsomely so we can all drive to work, alone? All they're doing is turning something they have too much of, into something they don't have enough of.
@thebatmon
@thebatmon 29 күн бұрын
It's awesome that Asianometry didn't go the usual route of simply blaming the middle eastern countries for their unsustainable usage. He gives reasons as to why they do it and how they're slowly trying to transition, while also mentioning why these countries need to switch to more decentralised plants for national security requirements
@Ansset0
@Ansset0 3 ай бұрын
Some nations should not exist.
@poisedforduty
@poisedforduty 3 ай бұрын
So BOMB BOMB AWAY???
@Ansset0
@Ansset0 3 ай бұрын
@@poisedforduty have I said anything about violence? Your over interpretation is disgusting 🤮
@poisedforduty
@poisedforduty 3 ай бұрын
@Ansset0 who are you to judge what nations should exist or not? And of course your kind of attitude leads to war
@موسى_7
@موسى_7 3 ай бұрын
As an Iraqi, I agree. Saudi is nothing but trouble. Let's restore the Ottoman Empire.
@موسى_7
@موسى_7 3 ай бұрын
All Saudis should migrate to a country which can sustain their population. A country with farmland and water which can turn into bread and vegetables for them to eat. The desert is overpopulated, and the only jobs which exist there are related to the unsustainable oil industry.
@jercos
@jercos 3 ай бұрын
Vapor compression ("MVC") systems massively improve on MEF, using mechanical energy to attach a single "effect" stage to itself, taking vaporization heat from the compression action.
@universeisundernoobligatio3283
@universeisundernoobligatio3283 3 ай бұрын
Why are populations allowed to grow in places with no water? Such a delicate water source to support so many people.
@موسى_7
@موسى_7 3 ай бұрын
That's what I'm thinking. As an Iraqi, I'm thinking the Saudi population is going to cause a strain on resources. Unlike Iraq, Saudi doesn't have enough farmland to sustain its population, because it doesn't have rivers.
@edwinhuang9244
@edwinhuang9244 3 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure it's because historically those places did get enough water from the groundwater to sustain their population and population growth. And if they didn't, the places just disappear.
@jatpack3
@jatpack3 3 ай бұрын
Allowed? Are you going to control free people and tell them where they are permitted to live? While you are on a tyrannical power trip you should go to china and order them to stop using coal, immediately.
@universeisundernoobligatio3283
@universeisundernoobligatio3283 3 ай бұрын
@@jatpack3 Nature has always taken care of infestations, Disease, famine and drought have always worked in the past to reduce the size of an infestation.
@MikeAlabbasi
@MikeAlabbasi Ай бұрын
As a local from 🇧🇭 Bahrain, I confirm Edwin's comment, it's literally what happened. Through history, people in the area used to get water from natural springs and water wells, back then the water consumption wasn't as high as it is nowadays, an issue which was caused not only due to the rapid growth in population; but it's also because the fact that people's lifestyle and habits have changed through the years.
@timwildauer5063
@timwildauer5063 3 ай бұрын
There are more than a few companies trying to extract magnesium from sea water. I’d love to see them pair up with desalination plants to extract salts from the brine where it would be more efficient. It’s like putting carbon capture plants next to major carbon emitters. It just makes sense to try and capture a resource where we artificially boost its concentration.
@gianpaulgraziosi6171
@gianpaulgraziosi6171 3 ай бұрын
17:07 I’m American. 😂
@krassav43g
@krassav43g 3 ай бұрын
should mentioned Aktau plant or maybe make whole episode, would be very interesting
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