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Wilya | 2 years ago
* a minority of plants were involved, it was only an issue because it happened on top of other issues (planned maintenances delayed due to covid, corrosion issues)
* the problem isn't actually the drought, it was the heat. The plants could keep operating, but they would have rejected water too hot, in breach of environmental regulations.
Besides, new plants can be built close to the sea instead of rivers to account for that.
martin_a|2 years ago
I think that's a no-go due to the salt in the water that will corrode pipes etc. Not an expert on that, though, obviously.
All the other points don't sound too good either: Corrosion issues, let's fuck up nature with hot water, not very good at all.
mrpopo|2 years ago