...the surface is far from uninhabitable - the Palukoos are still living there.
But those are probably reserved for the other 200,000 people already...
Logically, the Cardassian occupiers would have had all sorts of energy production schemes for their own purposes. And since they were the bad guys, these schemes probably were maximally polluting, unsustainable and so forth. When the orders came to withdraw, they'd scuttle as many of these powerplants as they could, as this would be an easy way to do maximum harm to Bajor; others would simply be left behind.
The moon-burning scheme could well be among the abandoned Cardassian projects easiest to restart; if it wasn't finished, there would have been little point in sabotaging it at departure!
Timo Saloniemi
But those are probably reserved for the other 200,000 people already...
I don't really think so - it's a long way around the planet, while a moon might be just a thousand kilometers away.Anything that would bring the power from the moon to the planet would be cheaper and easier to achieve by transporting energy from one side of the planet to the other, no?
Or perhaps these homes were part of a Cardassian industrial project that folded when the occupiers left, and were totally dependent on power bled off from the industrial process - which no longer is running, and cannot be run with the existing resources. Such homes would be rather fundamentally different from self-sustaining farms or even from pre-occupation urban housing, but might be commonly found all over Bajor.Perhaps when the Cardassians left they simply did a very thorough job of destroying whatever mechanisms had been used to power these homes previously.
Such a moon might be so close to the planet that it would lose all its atmosphere, making the question of future habitability moot.I don't really think so - it's a long way around the planet, while a moon might be just a thousand kilometers away.Anything that would bring the power from the moon to the planet would be cheaper and easier to achieve by transporting energy from one side of the planet to the other, no?
"Station log. Stardate 46844.3. With the help of the Federation, Bajor is about to commence its first large-scale energy transfer, the tapping of the molten core of its fifth moon, Jeraddo. "
I don't quite get the "short term gain" talk here, either. What is "short term" about this moon-tapping project? As far as the episode dialogue goes, it could keep going for all eternity. It doesn't pollute, it doesn't fluctuate, it doesn't run out.
As for whether it's going to keep 200,000 households warm over the winter or five million households supplied in holographic entertainment and food replicators, the episode does not tell. Making those households survive the season is among the benefits, but nothing about the dialogue suggests that this would be the limit of the benefits.
Timo Saloniemi
It's rather consistent that the Federation has limited resources when it comes to the outer colonies, would-be members and whatnot. Bajor does get industrial replicators, but only four of them, after years of waiting... So there's probably a long list of hopeful recipients, and only so many of these miracle machines to go around.
However, the tapping of the moon is Federation aid, at least after a fashion:
I don't quite get the "short term gain" talk here, either. What is "short term" about this moon-tapping project? As far as the episode dialogue goes, it could keep going for all eternity. It doesn't pollute, it doesn't fluctuate, it doesn't run out."Station log. Stardate 46844.3. With the help of the Federation, Bajor is about to commence its first large-scale energy transfer, the tapping of the molten core of its fifth moon, Jeraddo. "
As for whether it's going to keep 200,000 households warm over the winter or five million households supplied in holographic entertainment and food replicators, the episode does not tell. Making those households survive the season is among the benefits, but nothing about the dialogue suggests that this would be the limit of the benefits.
Timo Saloniemi
Note the words "so many", not all. So while we don't know for sure, the text implies that this energy source has its limitations.
However, there are many far better ways to get that energy
and I would think a habitable planet using the slower energy gathering method would have many more benefits in the long-term assuming someone could get their act straight so the immediate drilling is unneeded.
Why did Bajor get so few industrial replicators? Is such technology difficult to manufacture?
Surely the UFP has portable heaters (we have something like that NOW) for each home in this area of Bajor to help them. Standard food replicators.
Dramatically speaking, it would have to be. Otherwise, our heroes would never have any adventures: they could just press a button and replicate a dozen thingamabobs that would solve all the problems and have all the fun.Why did Bajor get so few industrial replicators? Is such technology difficult to manufacture?
If industrial replicators were trivially easy to manufacture (industrially replicate!), the Federation should rightfully have thirty quadrillion starships rather than just a few thousand. Or if it didn't have those yet, it should have the means to create them overnight when something like the Borg or the Dominion comes a-knocking.
The Federation simply isn't like that. It is limited in its manufacturing abilities; its homeworlds have well-working infrastructures, but its outer holdings still struggle (often by choice, but nevertheless).
Yup. And the ecologically safe, steady long term power source for those technologies is the Jerrado power tap. Coming to them this fall, courtesy of your friendly Provisional Government (with backing from the Federation).Surely the UFP has portable heaters (we have something like that NOW) for each home in this area of Bajor to help them. Standard food replicators.
Why waste time and money with silly temporary measures when you can have a proper solution right away?
Timo Saloniemi
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