One of the ironies of all of this is that Italy was a pioneer in
geothermal energy, and the first geothermal power plant was built at Lardello in 1904.
http://www.earthwormtunneling.com/geo_history.htmlPeople like to act as if this were a
new idea, but it's not. The situation there should tell us something about whether geothermal is really as magical as some would like to represent.
I happen to think that geothermal energy is not as ridiculous or as toxic as the other major forms of so called "renewable" energy, and I can't think of a single geothermal plant I oppose, although I used to say the same thing about wind plants, and now I pretty much oppose
all wind plants.
Geothermal does release a certain amount of carbon dioxide, but one could argue and perhaps have a point, that the carbon dioxide would have vented anyway. The figures I have seen in the literature for geothermal carbon dioxide loading is somewhere between 100 - 200 grams/kwh, not as clean as nuclear, but nowhere near gas, running at about 500 grams/kwh.
I do think that Italy can use more geothermal power, but I also think that the nuclear phase out was a very dumb idea, incredibly stupid, like all anti-nuke posturing.
The fact is that Italy, like all "nuclear phaseout nations" is totally beholden to the gas industry and to imported electricity.
The near collapse of the Po River a few years back, the decline of Alpine glaciers and similar events raise the stakes.
Italy is the home country of Enrico Fermi, the man who built the first nuclear reactor, and it is a disgrace that nuclear science infrastructure was destroyed there by ignorance, just as it is a disgrace that the ignorant continue to attempt to destroy and vandalize it elsewhere by appeals to mysticism and fear.
I hope that Italy will follow through on rebuilding the destroyed infrastructure, intellectual and physical, just as it was the only nation to follow through in a practical sense on the destruction in the first place.