E
EddieM
and it would be better in rural areas? Anyway no matter I am not contesting the fact that a significant loss of electricity for a protracted peripd of time would be disastrous to life as we know it rural or urban.
If we're talking about a fairly long-term situation (which is what the title of this thread seems to imply), then I think it probably would.and it would be better in rural areas?
Indeed - and, as per my recent comment, that would probably be at least a slightly lesser problem in (some) rural areas, since natural sources of drinkable water are more likely to be found in such places than in the centre of London.Water supplies need electric. With total loss of power, the loss of water will be the first thing that drives humans back to cave men - more so in a city like London where rivers are visibly polluted and underground.
and it would be better in rural areas? Anyway no matter I am not contesting the fact that a significant loss of electricity for a protracted peripd of time would be disastrous to life as we know it rural or urban.
It's undoubtedly true that they would hope/like to 'try' more in urban areas, but the magnitude of task (and the potential amount of time required to address it) could also be much greater in such areas.if you live in a town or city, with a lot of other people, then the electricity industry will try to reconnect you more quickly than they will remote rural areas. the distances are shorter, the customers are more numerous, and the financial loss is greater, in towns.
Hours in a large city.More realistically, I wonder how long (hours, days or what)
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