lungben81
lungben81 t1_j08lca0 wrote
Reply to comment by SecurelyObscure in [OC] Cost of Carbon Zero - Historical Look At U.S. Funding of Fusion Energy by Metalytiq
We know that fusion power works in the sun and in thermo nuclear bombs. Therefore, I think it is unlikely that it is impossible to make a practical fusion reactor. But it may need to be very large and very precise, requiring large R&D costs.
lungben81 t1_j0747e7 wrote
Compare these numbers to the annual costs for drilling / purchasing fossile fuels. And for the environmental damage they cause.
Unfortunately, the fusion research funding world-wide are just peanuts. The technology could be much closer to breakthrough if funding would have been better.
lungben81 t1_iy2kef5 wrote
Reply to comment by dragonlax in [OC] 'Big 4' accounting firms are PwC, Deloitte, KPMG, and EY - breaking down how they make money by giteam
How is the separation done? Are these 2 different legal entities? Are they located in different buildings? Do they have different owners? Is there an overlap / exchange of employees?
The brand names are obviously not different.
lungben81 t1_iy04sm7 wrote
Reply to comment by HegemonNYC in [OC] 'Big 4' accounting firms are PwC, Deloitte, KPMG, and EY - breaking down how they make money by giteam
The Big4 are quite active in consulting business at large financial institutions (at least in Germany). At the same time, there are only these 4 audit firms and auditors must change every few years. Thus, the likelihood that the same company is consulting and auditing the same client at the same time, or in short succession, is quite high.
The official "solution" to this potential conflict of interest is that 2 different sections of the big4 company do consulting and auditing. But I do not know how solid this separation is in practice.
lungben81 t1_ixzefhc wrote
Reply to [OC] 'Big 4' accounting firms are PwC, Deloitte, KPMG, and EY - breaking down how they make money by giteam
And there is absolutely no conflict of interest when they do audit and consulting at the same time...
lungben81 t1_ir9v41e wrote
Reply to comment by Starskigoat in Many scientists see fusion as the future of energy – and they're betting big. by filosoful
Yes, and also not the environmental damage.
Both renewables and fusion power can be produced locally and with much smaller environmental footprint.
lungben81 t1_ir972t7 wrote
Reply to comment by ricktor67 in Many scientists see fusion as the future of energy – and they're betting big. by filosoful
This is not either-or but both renewables and fusion development must be funded sufficiently.
Both are much cheaper than what we currently pay for fossile fuels.
lungben81 t1_j1je13d wrote
Reply to comment by ExternalSeat in France and Italy share a lot of cultural features, but people often fail to grasp how centralised France is compared to how decentralised Italy is, at least regarding population. Different historical paths, different political and social dynamics today. by iUseArchRS
Germany is in this regard very similar to Italy, both for the population distribution and the late unification.