Phew. I assumed this was gonna be another catastrophe. Like Osborne Reef, where some yahoos dumped TWO MILLION car tires into the ocean and just hoped for the best.
First try a little, see what happens, then maybe do more.
Someone should have dropped 5 subway cars in. Then checked back in a few years.
Worse than scream-and-leap policy making is the utter refusal to do any kind of follow up assessment. (Perhaps you've heard of the opioid crisis? Best intentions leading straight to Hell.)
--
Tangent, from the OC:
> ...artificial reefs were designed to boost recreational fishing, which in 2011 generated a whopping $15 billion in state and federal taxes.
We should ban commercial fisheries.
In my state, every salmon caught by a commercial fisherman costs the taxpayers $1.
Whereas anglers make the state money.
If this doesn't make sense to you, you simply don't understand Freedom Markets™.
In a happier example, New Orleans sinks old Christmas trees to fortify the receding wetlands. Not a totally happy example actually because overall there's still destruction of nature and increased risk of floods. At least it's a good policy though, even a nice tradition.
Could you clarify what it means by "commercial fisherman costs the taxpayers $1"?
The point of government is not to extract maximum rent from the tenant/citizens, so if your complaint is that fisherman are not paying the government enough to use common resources which the federal government is managing... you're thinking about the government wrong.
(That salmon, fwiw, produces more than $1 in utility to the downstream consumers, which is the whole point of farming or fishing, or any economic exchange at all.)
"Brightliners were made of stainless steel....but this worked against them underwater."
"the project failed for two reasons: first, because the trains’ envelopes were spot-welded, which formed a thin layer between the two metals that led to corrosion. Second, because the corrugated pattern made it easier for undercurrent waves to “grab on to” and further pull the stainless skin apart"
If those were meant to also serve as spots for scuba divers I guess that they are not safe?
A thousand cars seems like a large number so I just went to check how many subway cars does NYC has in operation. Here is what Wikipedia says "As of November 2016, the New York City Subway has 6418 cars on the roster."[1].
This is still not bad for the ocean or environment. Yes, they seemed to have decayed faster than thought but things on the bottom of the ocean even if they are a pile of rubble are good for fish havens. The whole area on the continental shelf south of Long Island is mostly featureless sand. Small fish need places to hide out and that brings bigger fish to the area. I fish in the area. So perhaps they might not be as good as hoped but it is still good.
Really obnoxious web design there; why would I want an auto playing video of unrelated celebrity dribble that you can't close and sticks in place as you scroll covering 1/3rd of the screen?
> Back then, artificial reefs were designed to boost recreational fishing, which in 2011 generated a whopping $15 billion in state and federal taxes.
Maybe I'm out of the loop, but in Europe I sometimes see people recreational fishing on the piers at the beach for example and I can't imagine how this activity could generate 15 billion in taxes.
If the 3 mentioned states together have 20.4 million people, then every inhabitant on average is paying $700 in taxes for recreational fishing. What's going on there, how many people have this hobby and how much are they paying for it?
The 15 Billion is a clickable link to the full breakdown. They give retail sales of recreational fishing gear as nearly 50 billion per year which all has sales tax as well as the fishing licenses themselves. They also make some assumptions about taxes from related jobs. They also have a "ripple effect" number which gets really deep into the "make it look good for what we want to say" territory and are an organization for fishing/conservation so take it all with a grain of salt.
I don't quite buy the full $15 billion/year amount but quite a few billion per year seems immediately reasonable.
Deep sea fishing is a very big and active sport. Maintaining and fueling deep sea recreational vessels required is also pretty expensive. Could add up quick, especially if you consider boat sales. There is also licenses and tags for the boat. I've been on one and the gas costs alone are hundreds of dollars a day for one boat.
It's certainly possible that the number is simply wrong, but it seems to be sourced from this publication: https://asafishing.org/uploads/2011_ASASportfishing_in_Ameri... (adding State and Federal totals at the bottom of Page 8). $15 Billion of taxes on $50 Billion of total expenditures does seem high, but not totally implausible. The right doubt might be whether there are really $50 Billion of annual expenditures on Recreational Fishing in the US. I suspect they are double counting a lot of things: if one goes fishing once on a vacation, they might be counting the entire travel cost of the vacation as a fishing expenditure.
Edit: I said "seemed to be" because I was proud to have found that page on my own. But as another poster pointed out, that page is directly linked from the article so there is no doubt it is the source.
Forgot to cover your last part, the 15 billion is for all states and federal government not just taxes in those 3 states. It's more like $45 per person or ~$100 per taxpayer per year. The distribution will be bimodal with those paying income tax will be paying significantly more than median and those just partaking will normally be paying significantly less than median. Of course most aren't involved at all.
'The MTA had good reason to believe the program would succeed. Just a few years prior, it had dropped more than 1,000 Redbird trains in the ocean. They remain on the ocean floor to this day, in part because they were made of carbon steel, which helps prevent corrosion.
By comparison, Brightliners were made of stainless steel. When the subway cars debuted in 1964, they were a mechanical and aesthetic innovation. The stainless steel made the train cars lighter on the tracks, but this worked against them underwater.'
Few questions here. First, isn't carbon steel ... steel? Steel is primarily iron and carbon, so my understanding is that carbon steel is mostly just a marketing term to have at least an adjective of some sort, just like 'aircraft grade aluminium', which is in fact one of the cheapest, bulk types of aluminium (hence use in bulk in aircraft)
Second, how does regular steel fare better than stainless steel in a corrosive environment? The article says the stainless steel started to corrode from the welds, which is fair enough, but wouldn't regular steel just corrode wholesale?
Carbon Steel is the name of "regular", non-alloy steel.
And w.r.t. the SS thing, i think the carbon steel got to be thicker because of expected corrosion while the SS (that still can oxidize, albeit at a much slower rate) is significantly thinner, therefore getting disintegrated more easily.
It really isn't worded very well in TFA tho, i may be misunderstanding.
I think the basis could be that the newer trains were too light to stay sunk, being made of a material that is lighter yet stronger. Also it so happens that construction details matter. The article cites corrugation, which allows panels to be lighter yet just as strong. The article also cites spot welding. You can weld together steel panels in many ways, and the article doesn't say how the Redbird cars were constructed, except there's an implication that there's no spot welding. The Titanic was made of "iron" as the dramatized architect said in the movie, but he seems to speak poetically [1][2]. The ship hasn't quite dissolved like an aspirin.
"Artificial reefs" are typically an excuse by the tire industry to dump their toxic junk in the ocean, sometimes with public money. It's not surprising at all that other actors with large pieces of junk have caught on. What a scam.
Various industrial metals are recycled all the time at scrapyards across the world. For example, school buses in USA are commonly reprocessed at end of life.
The problem is that it's a low-margin business in most places and it quickly can become economically unfeasible. 1,000 subway cars is a tall order for any scrap yard with a lot of 'overhead' involving specialized disassembly that would eat that margin real quick, I presume.
This is literally the most stupid thing I've read this week. Not even believable a modern society allows something like this, and the even in recent history.
I hope every single person involved is deeply ashamed
> It is important that we learn from these mistakes and improve the process
[+] [-] specialist|4 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osborne_Reef
First try a little, see what happens, then maybe do more.
Someone should have dropped 5 subway cars in. Then checked back in a few years.
Worse than scream-and-leap policy making is the utter refusal to do any kind of follow up assessment. (Perhaps you've heard of the opioid crisis? Best intentions leading straight to Hell.)
--
Tangent, from the OC:
> ...artificial reefs were designed to boost recreational fishing, which in 2011 generated a whopping $15 billion in state and federal taxes.
We should ban commercial fisheries.
In my state, every salmon caught by a commercial fisherman costs the taxpayers $1.
Whereas anglers make the state money.
If this doesn't make sense to you, you simply don't understand Freedom Markets™.
[+] [-] dematz|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] michaelt|4 years ago|reply
I imagine they didn't have anywhere to store the remaining nine hundred and ninety five subway cars.
[+] [-] bpodgursky|4 years ago|reply
The point of government is not to extract maximum rent from the tenant/citizens, so if your complaint is that fisherman are not paying the government enough to use common resources which the federal government is managing... you're thinking about the government wrong.
(That salmon, fwiw, produces more than $1 in utility to the downstream consumers, which is the whole point of farming or fishing, or any economic exchange at all.)
[+] [-] Overtonwindow|4 years ago|reply
"the project failed for two reasons: first, because the trains’ envelopes were spot-welded, which formed a thin layer between the two metals that led to corrosion. Second, because the corrugated pattern made it easier for undercurrent waves to “grab on to” and further pull the stainless skin apart"
[+] [-] taubek|4 years ago|reply
A thousand cars seems like a large number so I just went to check how many subway cars does NYC has in operation. Here is what Wikipedia says "As of November 2016, the New York City Subway has 6418 cars on the roster."[1].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_Subway
[+] [-] specialp|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] blamazon|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dgrin91|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mbg721|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Stevvo|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] savoytruffle|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Aardwolf|4 years ago|reply
Maybe I'm out of the loop, but in Europe I sometimes see people recreational fishing on the piers at the beach for example and I can't imagine how this activity could generate 15 billion in taxes.
If the 3 mentioned states together have 20.4 million people, then every inhabitant on average is paying $700 in taxes for recreational fishing. What's going on there, how many people have this hobby and how much are they paying for it?
[+] [-] zamadatix|4 years ago|reply
I don't quite buy the full $15 billion/year amount but quite a few billion per year seems immediately reasonable.
[+] [-] chucksta|4 years ago|reply
Apparently the rule of thumb is %10 of the boats value for the cost per year on maintenance, https://www.unitedyacht.com/Yacht-News/how-much-does-it-cost....
[+] [-] nkurz|4 years ago|reply
Edit: I said "seemed to be" because I was proud to have found that page on my own. But as another poster pointed out, that page is directly linked from the article so there is no doubt it is the source.
[+] [-] zamadatix|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ryan_lane|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|4 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] rolleiflex|4 years ago|reply
'The MTA had good reason to believe the program would succeed. Just a few years prior, it had dropped more than 1,000 Redbird trains in the ocean. They remain on the ocean floor to this day, in part because they were made of carbon steel, which helps prevent corrosion.
By comparison, Brightliners were made of stainless steel. When the subway cars debuted in 1964, they were a mechanical and aesthetic innovation. The stainless steel made the train cars lighter on the tracks, but this worked against them underwater.'
Few questions here. First, isn't carbon steel ... steel? Steel is primarily iron and carbon, so my understanding is that carbon steel is mostly just a marketing term to have at least an adjective of some sort, just like 'aircraft grade aluminium', which is in fact one of the cheapest, bulk types of aluminium (hence use in bulk in aircraft)
Second, how does regular steel fare better than stainless steel in a corrosive environment? The article says the stainless steel started to corrode from the welds, which is fair enough, but wouldn't regular steel just corrode wholesale?
[+] [-] skateboardCat|4 years ago|reply
And w.r.t. the SS thing, i think the carbon steel got to be thicker because of expected corrosion while the SS (that still can oxidize, albeit at a much slower rate) is significantly thinner, therefore getting disintegrated more easily.
It really isn't worded very well in TFA tho, i may be misunderstanding.
[+] [-] cardiffspaceman|4 years ago|reply
[1] https://www.moviequotedb.com/movies/titanic/quote_23821.html [2] "The 2,000 hull plates were single pieces of rolled steel plate" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic#Building_and_preparing...
[+] [-] tartoran|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] aluminum96|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] flipbrad|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] blamazon|4 years ago|reply
https://www.lowtechmagazine.com/what-is-the-embodied-energy-...
Various industrial metals are recycled all the time at scrapyards across the world. For example, school buses in USA are commonly reprocessed at end of life.
The problem is that it's a low-margin business in most places and it quickly can become economically unfeasible. 1,000 subway cars is a tall order for any scrap yard with a lot of 'overhead' involving specialized disassembly that would eat that margin real quick, I presume.
[+] [-] rr808|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|4 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] lillecarl|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] herbst|4 years ago|reply
I hope every single person involved is deeply ashamed
> It is important that we learn from these mistakes and improve the process
What process? For dumping trash in the ocean?
[+] [-] oxfeed65261|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lnyng|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] NikolaeVarius|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] burneracc|4 years ago|reply
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