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And what lubricates them??
Sea Gull guts?And what lubricates them??
There are a couple of wind projects in the waters off of Long Island, NY. Two are active, with the state having created a a bunch of lease areas.I’ve wondered about the maintenance for wind turbines that are at sea. You can watch the videos (I believe someone posted on here) of them catching fire, on land. You would think salt spray would cause significant damage to these things, which include keeping them adequately lubricated…..not including ships
We haven't buried raw garbage in our landfill in years. It get hauled to a waste to energy incinerator, then the ash is hauled back and landfilled. I wonder if that ash could be safely dumped at sea? Its going to have to go somewhere.Many landfills in the North east are out of room. They cant haul it offshore to dump
Like NY/NJ used to so needed alternative. CSX is making a fortune hauling the crap south to Alabama area. Converted all those useless coal cars to waste cars. Keeps my pension funded.
That should be in the funny shit thread….. looks like the fan won
Ash is used extensively in cement mixes. Pretty much all of the fly ash from power plants is used in concrete - possibly the ash from landfill incineration also....From what i read, unless you were in the Navy, they get special dispensation, it is very difficult to get a permit to dispose of human ashes at sea.
So a landfill worth of ash probably isn’t going to happen.
But I very well could be wrong, don’t know for sure.
Only difficult if you tell the authorities. Many years ago we did a burial at sea on the Columbia River for a long term friend of mine who I frequently boated with.From what i read, unless you were in the Navy, they get special dispensation, it is very difficult to get a permit to dispose of human ashes at sea.
You're likely right. US ACE got huge pushback for a plan to dump Connecticut River dredge spoils in designated dredge spoil locations. And that's stuff that was already in the water.From what i read, unless you were in the Navy, they get special dispensation, it is very difficult to get a permit to dispose of human ashes at sea.
So a landfill worth of ash probably isn’t going to happen.
But I very well could be wrong, don’t know for sure.
In NC they just dumped that shit into the rivers.Ash is used extensively in cement mixes. Pretty much all of the fly ash from power plants is used in concrete - possibly the ash from landfill incineration also....
Skydivers create a missing man formation and open the urn in the empty position..