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Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay

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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by SWM   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 3:45 pm

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bafoote wrote:HH history:

SL is comprised of Core SL worlds and Shell = Roughly 1700 systems with who knows how many planets. Here I am not counting protectorates who would have small populations anyways.

All of said worlds were colonized BEFORE Warshawki sails or the Hyper Generator. It was only with the advent of the Hyper generator at Beowulf about 600 years ago that let Beowulf come to the aid of Earth in their "Final War" and save the planet. SCRAGS anyone...

Its only been recently that, IE last 600 years, that protectorate worlds were settled and the verge trying to get AWAY from the SL Core/Shell worlds.

Not completely correct.

The Core was definitely settled before the advent easy hyper travel. The Core is those systems that initially joined with Earth to form the Solarian League. The Shell worlds joined later. There is no evidence whether they were settled before or after the League was founded. It is likely that many were settled before the League, and many were settled after the League.

Similarly, many worlds in the Protectorates, the Verge, and beyond were also settled before the League. Colonists reached Grayson in 998 P.D--shortly after the League was founded, and nearly three hundred years before the Warshawski Sail was invented. That is probably the limit on the range of pre-League settlement, since they were using one of the earliest cryo ships.

Numerous other colonies were undoubtedly established out that far and farther before the Warshawski Sail was invented in 1273 P.D., as other cryo ships completed their journeys. Manticore, for example, was certainly not established to get away from the League since the Jason left Old Earth 150 years before the League was founded. Other ships leaving at the same time as the Jason but heading only as far as the modern Verge would have arrived before the invention of the Warshawski Sail.

Starting in 1284 P.D. we see the new burst of expansion with hyper ships, sometimes beating the cryo ships en-route. Haven (667 light-years from Old Earth) was one of those early hyper drive colonies (only 25 years after the first Warshawski colony ship), and it spawned a mini-Diaspora in the surrounding sector.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Star Knight   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 4:02 pm

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I GOT IT :-)
Found something in More than Honor, The Universe of Honor Harrington:
It is thus possible to transport even such bulk items as raw ore or FOOD STUFFS PROFITABLY over interstellar distance.

Meaning after the invention of thw Warshawski Sail.
So no matter what you thing, there is no question that they haul food in the Honorverse.

Dont have time for more.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Duckk   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 4:26 pm

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No one said that you can't transport food profitably. The issue here is whether ALL food is imported for most Core and Shell systems.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Buckfan328   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 4:58 pm

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Duckk wrote:No one said that you can't transport food profitably. The issue here is whether ALL food is imported for most Core and Shell systems.

Which is really a non-issue. Obviously some food is transported. Obviously Lacoon will cause a massive disruption in the Solarian economy. Some of that disruption will be a product of the completely-non-quantifiable-with-available-data amount of foodstuffs being moved. Still I think one would be hard pressed to describe a scenario in which such highly developed systems as the core worlds would let it go beyond an economic disruption into actual starvation.

Still I couldn't help but be intrigued. Just for fun I did a little math if you say each person eats 2500 Kcals/day and you are shipping pure carbohydrates at 4 Kcals/gram it ends up you would need to supply about 625,000 metric tons of grain to supply a billion people for a day. And the capacity of Honorverse freighters is what? 2-6 million tons? So for what its worth that seems to me like it would take an awful lot of shipping tonnage to import ALL your food for that many highly populated worlds but its at least theoretically possible. Then again I am not sure I have a good grasp on the total tonnage of the merchant fleets we are talking about, if that information even exists?
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Alistair   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:32 pm

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I suspect that some core worlds could get a little short on food but I don't for see massive 3rd world like starvation what I see is WW2 like rationing being imposed by planetary governments until trade can be reestablished.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Dane Dryss   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:51 pm

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To assume that in the age of grav-plate tech that when cities go up and up and up that if the worlds can make their own staple food then they would do it. Now if they need other equipment like high tech plows, parts for those plows etc, then that might hurt their ability to make their own food.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by Thirdbase   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 7:03 pm

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Star Knight wrote:@Thirdbase
1) I think grain is cheaper to ship than many other things, You can haul it in big tanks, loading and unloading will be very easy.
But that’s a detail, the question is indeed if its profitable or not.
And I think it is.


You think, you have no proof. And why would it be cheaper to ship 10 tons of grain, than to ship 10 tons of molycircs? or 10 tons of aircars? Take a look at a modern shipyard, all those neat containers, they haul just about everything.

2) Grayson survived, yes. By investing a high percentage of their annual GDP.
It would have been much, much better for them if they could have imported the stuff..
Speaking of Grayson, thanks so much. You made me remember something from Honor of the Queen:

“Masada is badly over-populated in terms of its productive capacity,” Houseman went on, “and Grayson requires additional infusions of capital for industrial expansion. If you opened markets in the Endicott System, you could secure a nearby planetary source for foodstuffs and sufficient capital to meet your own needs by supplying Masada with the goods and services it requires for its population. The boon to your economy is obvious, even in the short term. In the long term, a commercial relationship which serves both your needs could only lessen—perhaps even eliminate—the hostility which has divided you for so long. It might even create a situation in which naval expansion becomes as unnecessary as it is economically wasteful.”

So there is trade going on with food.


That was Houseman proposing trade going with food, if you remember correctly Masada and Grayson went to war. So there was no food trade happening there.

3) You can terraform Mars, sure. If you have money to throw away you can do such prestige things. Or can build a fleet of merchant ships that will be able supply you for all eternity for that kind of money.


Why is terraforming Mars a "prestige" thing? You build good ships if they are going to last for eternity.

4) What happens when food haulers don’t show up in the real world? Price for goods will increase, demand will go down. You pay more, ships will keep coming.
That’s how capitalism works.


Well I suppose that when half your population has died from starvation that demand will be down.

Furthermore, why should you pay 5 times more when you haul it through space??


That's true, it may be 10 times as much.

Those merchant ships haul an incredible quantities and do so for decades if not centuries.


Do you have any evidence of this?

The cost of shipping will be minimal, crew salaries and wormhole fees will be the main expenses.


Again do you have any evidence of this? You are also forgetting maintenance costs, excise taxes, duties, bribes, and all the other fun things in modern and future commercial shipping.


5) Why not? Cause they don’t have to? There is no need for Beowulf to waste perfectly good real estate or beautiful landscape on farming.


Have you ever seen a tall grass prairie? I wouldn't call them beautiful. But that doesn't really answer my question.


6) This is not about just feeding people. Of course that is possible. We are able to feed 15 billion if we have to. But this is not about feeding people. This is about meeting demands of a fully developed society.
I can order and buy norwegian salmon in the States if I want to or canadian bison in Europe if I feel like it and pay for it. No try to do that on a planet of 7 billion people. And the same for a couple of trillion.


Norwegian Salmon, and Canadian Bison are luxury foods, which I have repeatedly stated would still be imported.


Any iam quite sure that the current world population is anything but 6,877,734,572.


Correct, the estimate now is World 6,877,810,361 see what a difference a few hours makes. That is the US Census Bureau estimate of the current population.

http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html



7) Problems where solved by importing food.
I don’t know why you call Grayson pop limited.


Because it was mentioned in several places in the book, that Grayson Steadholders limited their populations to what they could support.

From IEH:

It had been rather refreshing for both Honor and Nimitz to meet an entire planet of people who were willing to accept the 'cat on his own terms, but it did mean the Graysons were also more likely to grasp that Nimitz and Samantha's new friends were, in effect, the opening wedge of an invasion. A friendly one, perhaps, but still an invasion. One of Honor's traditional authorities as Steadholder Harrington was to decide how many and which emigrants would be allowed into her steading. In Grayson's grim, early days, it had also been the steadholder's harsh duty to determine which of his steaders had to die if that was what was required to balance population against the maximum strain his steading could bear, and Honor was unspeakably grateful that decisions like that were no longer necessary. Yet Grayson remained a planet with a commitment to the tradition of balancing people against resources which would have delighted the most rabid of Old Earth's pre-space Greens, and that was the environment into which Honor proposed to introduce treecats.


8) Sure, why shouldn’t there be billions of Humans on an icy planet? Cold nights means lots of pregnancies ;)
There is no reason for not having a big population. Since you can import food.


Because in general humans don't like the cold.

9) Yes, Honor wasn’t accustomed to the scale of Grayson farming domes cause the rest of the universe imports food if they can grow it themselves effectively.


Provide evidence that your statement is true.

10) Ships are a one time investment. It will amortize itself in no time. Then there is only maintance, crew salaries and wormhole fees. Not much cost for an incredible cargo space.


That desalination plant and irrigation system is the same way, plus you aren't going to have all the fees, taxes, duties and other little incidentals of traveling between independent nations.

11) Sure, grow your grain. On a planet that isn’t suited for it. I have farmplanet in the next starsystem and a fleet of cheap multimegaton merchants. I flood your markets and ruin you in no time. Than I have a monopoly and dictate the price.


Please provide evidence that you can do that? You keep saying it is cheap, but you never provide proof. Oh, and while you are elsewhere procuring your grain, I am lobbying my government to raise import duties on grain and other staple foods. Getting inspections done to keep foreign disease out, possible toxins, etc. Increases in the Health and Safety Inspections of ships carrying foodstuffs etc.

12) They wont import only exotic things. They will import the basic food supply also. There is no reason not to do so if its profitable.


But is it profitable? You haven't shown any evidence that it is.

13) Just like in the real world. Or not?


Sort of, except that in the real world, places like the US suddenly start shipping in emergency supplies of food. But if your communications are slow, like in a universe where it takes days if not weeks to get messages from one place to another, then it will take weeks if not months for food to be brought in. On earth that message goes out in seconds, and aid can be shipped in days if not sooner.

14) I bet you can buy real cow for the right price …


Revivified, ie. thawed from suspended animation, but then again as was mentioned before good beef should be aged.
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by bafoote   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 9:10 pm

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Math Check: =) Just cuz I feel like doing it...

For 1 Billion PPL.
2500 cal/day = 1 person.
Grain is 1500 cal/lb.
60lb = 1 Bushel
1 Bushel = 90,000 cal crudely
1 Bushel feeds 38 people a day

Average wheat bushels per acre non irrigated 1 harvest/year = 30-50 and in perfect conditions as high as 120: Call it 40 for now. Irrigated wheat farming obtains 3 crops a year. Winter, Early summer, Late summer generally speaking. At least this is what I remember from talking to my farming friends. Irrigated wheat also generally obtains about 60-100 bushels/acre IIRC per crop. Or 80x 3 = 240 Bushels a year per acre.

1 Acre Dry farmed feeds 40x38 people a day = 1520
1 Acre Irrigated farmed feeds roughly 9000 people a day
1 Billion people require 1,000,000,000/1500 = Roughly 660,000 acres a day 365 days a year or 240million acres a year.

Earth has 36,794,240,000 acres.

Earth has roughly 25% able to be farmed due to either Dessert, mountains, extreme weather(cold aka Antartica/Greenland etc) or swamps = 9 Billion acres. Of course with a desalination plant or two and energy to pump said water the amount of arable land increases Dramatically along with the yield by a gigantic margin.

Roughly able to feed if all used as DRY farming land and cut down the number of cow patties, would feed approx 36 Billion people. This on a planet with 70% of its area as water.

And yes, people would have to live somewhere too.

+)


Buckfan328 wrote:
Duckk wrote:No one said that you can't transport food profitably. The issue here is whether ALL food is imported for most Core and Shell systems.

Which is really a non-issue. Obviously some food is transported. Obviously Lacoon will cause a massive disruption in the Solarian economy. Some of that disruption will be a product of the completely-non-quantifiable-with-available-data amount of foodstuffs being moved. Still I think one would be hard pressed to describe a scenario in which such highly developed systems as the core worlds would let it go beyond an economic disruption into actual starvation.

Still I couldn't help but be intrigued. Just for fun I did a little math if you say each person eats 2500 Kcals/day and you are shipping pure carbohydrates at 4 Kcals/gram it ends up you would need to supply about 625,000 metric tons of grain to supply a billion people for a day. And the capacity of Honorverse freighters is what? 2-6 million tons? So for what its worth that seems to me like it would take an awful lot of shipping tonnage to import ALL your food for that many highly populated worlds but its at least theoretically possible. Then again I am not sure I have a good grasp on the total tonnage of the merchant fleets we are talking about, if that information even exists?
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by namelessfly   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 9:37 pm

namelessfly

An interesting calculation. Only problem is that you don't get multiple grain crops each year in most locations. Among the few exceptions is Israel because it is close to the equator. Nile valley also. However; most land close to the equator is tropical with intense rainy seasons that making farming utter hell. Dryland wheat farming in the Columbia basin you get only one crop of may be 40 bushels per acre every other year because of the rotation to accumulate water.

I'm a very hard core technology optimists but even I don't believe that population can icnrease indefinatelyw ithout some severe problems.. We are feeding our current population of six plus billion people. We will be able to feed the probable peak population of 8 billion people and even the improbable peak population of 10 billion people. However; SLN core worlds were settled almost 2,000 years ago. Assuming that they've maintained modest, positive population growth (if they are europeans they are extinct) doubling only once per century, then their populations would increase by a factor of one million during that time. A world with only 10 million people ends up with a population 10 trillion after 2,000 years! This obviously hasn't happenned. However worlds with tens of billions of people are likely to exist in the core. These are worlds that had to be terraformed so their environments are probably marginal.

bafoote wrote:Math Check: =) Just cuz I feel like doing it...

For 1 Billion PPL.
2500 cal/day = 1 person.
Grain is 1500 cal/lb.
60lb = 1 Bushel
1 Bushel = 90,000 cal crudely
1 Bushel feeds 38 people a day

Average wheat bushels per acre non irrigated 1 harvest/year = 30-50 and in perfect conditions as high as 120: Call it 40 for now. Irrigated wheat farming obtains 3 crops a year. Winter, Early summer, Late summer generally speaking. At least this is what I remember from talking to my farming friends. Irrigated wheat also generally obtains about 60-100 bushels/acre IIRC per crop. Or 80x 3 = 240 Bushels a year per acre.

1 Acre Dry farmed feeds 40x38 people a day = 1520
1 Acre Irrigated farmed feeds roughly 9000 people a day
1 Billion people require 1,000,000,000/1500 = Roughly 660,000 acres a day 365 days a year or 240million acres a year.

Earth has 36,794,240,000 acres.

Earth has roughly 25% able to be farmed due to either Dessert, mountains, extreme weather(cold aka Antartica/Greenland etc) or swamps = 9 Billion acres. Of course with a desalination plant or two and energy to pump said water the amount of arable land increases Dramatically along with the yield by a gigantic margin.

Roughly able to feed if all used as DRY farming land and cut down the number of cow patties, would feed approx 36 Billion people. This on a planet with 70% of its area as water.

And yes, people would have to live somewhere too.

+)


Buckfan328 wrote:
Duckk wrote:No one said that you can't transport food profitably. The issue here is whether ALL food is imported for most Core and Shell systems.

Which is really a non-issue. Obviously some food is transported. Obviously Lacoon will cause a massive disruption in the Solarian economy. Some of that disruption will be a product of the completely-non-quantifiable-with-available-data amount of foodstuffs being moved. Still I think one would be hard pressed to describe a scenario in which such highly developed systems as the core worlds would let it go beyond an economic disruption into actual starvation.

Still I couldn't help but be intrigued. Just for fun I did a little math if you say each person eats 2500 Kcals/day and you are shipping pure carbohydrates at 4 Kcals/gram it ends up you would need to supply about 625,000 metric tons of grain to supply a billion people for a day. And the capacity of Honorverse freighters is what? 2-6 million tons? So for what its worth that seems to me like it would take an awful lot of shipping tonnage to import ALL your food for that many highly populated worlds but its at least theoretically possible. Then again I am not sure I have a good grasp on the total tonnage of the merchant fleets we are talking about, if that information even exists?
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Re: Implenting Case Lacoon I & II after Oyster Bay
Post by bafoote   » Wed Oct 27, 2010 9:57 pm

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Tropics you plant soybeans and get 4 harvests a year. Hmm someone see the PBS show I saw when they rolled that stat out? Has to do with shipping said soy to Europe to feed their cows...

Columbia Basin gets 60-80 bushels an acre in the Palouse at least.

I did the calc using only 1 harvest a year as well. Obviously if I did calcs with multiple crops the number goes up. Same with using irrigated farming instead of dry.

Irrigated wheat farming in Oregon/Washington you get 3 grain harvests a year according to the guys I was talking to a few years back. Now my memory could be false and its 2 crops. Don't know about rest of world. Would think 3 in the SW USA as they get sun 24/7/365 and even their winters are warm for the most part over most of the desert down there and at least 2 in Kansas Southwards. All I do know is that with wet farming they were living like kings compared to the best wheat farmers in the Palouse who have to let their fields lay fallow occasionally on their acereage. If you go over there you will see triple" wide rows of wheat growing and a triple wide laying fallow. Though I think most farm 3 years on and 1 off or more. They are still pulling in 60-120 Bushels/acre in the Palouse(Columbia River Basin).

Don't quote me on this, but I seem to recall that soybeans produce more bushels IE calories per acre than anything else. I am sure someone will point out the obvious web search making me look stupid that I was too lazy to do myself. =)

namelessfly wrote:An interesting calculation. Only problem is that you don't get multiple grain crops each year in most locations. Among the few exceptions is Israel because it is close to the equator. Nile valley also. However; most land close to the equator is tropical with intense rainy seasons that making farming utter hell. Dryland wheat farming in the Columbia basin you get only one crop of may be 40 bushels per acre every other year because of the rotation to accumulate water.

I'm a very hard core technology optimists but even I don't believe that population can icnrease indefinatelyw ithout some severe problems.. We are feeding our current population of six plus billion people. We will be able to feed the probable peak population of 8 billion people and even the improbable peak population of 10 billion people. However; SLN core worlds were settled almost 2,000 years ago. Assuming that they've maintained modest, positive population growth (if they are europeans they are extinct) doubling only once per century, then their populations would increase by a factor of one million during that time. A world with only 10 million people ends up with a population 10 trillion after 2,000 years! This obviously hasn't happenned. However worlds with tens of billions of people are likely to exist in the core. These are worlds that had to be terraformed so their environments are probably marginal.

bafoote wrote:Math Check: =) Just cuz I feel like doing it...

For 1 Billion PPL.
2500 cal/day = 1 person.
Grain is 1500 cal/lb.
60lb = 1 Bushel
1 Bushel = 90,000 cal crudely
1 Bushel feeds 38 people a day

Average wheat bushels per acre non irrigated 1 harvest/year = 30-50 and in perfect conditions as high as 120: Call it 40 for now. Irrigated wheat farming obtains 3 crops a year. Winter, Early summer, Late summer generally speaking. At least this is what I remember from talking to my farming friends. Irrigated wheat also generally obtains about 60-100 bushels/acre IIRC per crop. Or 80x 3 = 240 Bushels a year per acre.

1 Acre Dry farmed feeds 40x38 people a day = 1520
1 Acre Irrigated farmed feeds roughly 9000 people a day
1 Billion people require 1,000,000,000/1500 = Roughly 660,000 acres a day 365 days a year or 240million acres a year.

Earth has 36,794,240,000 acres.

Earth has roughly 25% able to be farmed due to either Dessert, mountains, extreme weather(cold aka Antartica/Greenland etc) or swamps = 9 Billion acres. Of course with a desalination plant or two and energy to pump said water the amount of arable land increases Dramatically along with the yield by a gigantic margin.

Roughly able to feed if all used as DRY farming land and cut down the number of cow patties, would feed approx 36 Billion people. This on a planet with 70% of its area as water.

And yes, people would have to live somewhere too.

+)


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