Germany Sticks To Nuclear Power Deadline But Leaves Loophole (reuters.com) 192
Beeftopia writes: Germany will keep two of its three reactors operational through the end of 2022, despite a pledge to shut them all down by December 31. A likely winter gas shortage prompted the change. "German Economy Minister Robert Habeck said in a statement on Monday the move did not mean Berlin was reneging on its long-standing promise to exit nuclear energy by the end of 2022," reports Reuters. Habeck went on to say, "It remains very improbable that we will have crisis situations and extreme scenarios" requiring further use of nuclear.
"Germany is part of a European system hit by a decline in Russian gas deliveries, the French nuclear power squeeze and a drought that has curbed hydroelectric production and cooling water supplies to thermal power stations as well as hampering barge deliveries of coal," Reuters says. A problem with the planned use case for the reactors is that nuclear plants are not designed to be variable backup energy generators, but rather continuous first-line generators.
"Germany is part of a European system hit by a decline in Russian gas deliveries, the French nuclear power squeeze and a drought that has curbed hydroelectric production and cooling water supplies to thermal power stations as well as hampering barge deliveries of coal," Reuters says. A problem with the planned use case for the reactors is that nuclear plants are not designed to be variable backup energy generators, but rather continuous first-line generators.
Trump called it, and they laughed. (Score:2, Insightful)
https://youtu.be/FfJv9QYrlwg [youtu.be]
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Ronald Reagan called it in 1982, and they laughed.
https://www.nytimes.com/1982/0... [nytimes.com]
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yes, they laughed [theintercept.com]
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The stopped clock was actually right? Guess when you spout enough bullshit, even a cheesy cartoon show can predict the future [insider.com].
Re:Trump called it, and they laughed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Weird talking point, Germany isn't completely dependent on Russian energy. So not sure what you lot think your big "tee hee gotcha!" moment is. They laughed because it was ridiculous, and it's still ridiculous today. He wasn't proved right, you are just pretending he was.
Can we not treat this as a partisan issue. Trump didn't invent this Obama also warned about reliance on gas [euractiv.com] and in this case both were right. The real problem is not that Germany will run out of gas and freeze. The problem is that Germany has been effectively paying for Russia's war in Ukraine. Without that money likely many people would not be either dead or kidnapped.
Re:Trump called it, and they laughed. (Score:5, Insightful)
I know it feels good to bash Germany, but while Germany made their fair share of mistakes, making them out to be the root cause or even a necessary precondition for the Russian war is not helpful.
In that sense, many other countries have been paying for the Russian war by buying very substantial quantities of oil, coal and indeed gas from them, plus many other commodities such as nickel, plus ore and nuclear fuel. Even after 2014. This includes the Netherlands, much of Eastern Europe and even the US, not to speak of China. Their trade with China alone would probably be enough to sustain this war.
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ATM half the world is buying rare ores from Russia.
Wasn't there even a /. story about it, or did I see it elsewhere?
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I know it feels good to bash Germany, but while Germany made their fair share of mistakes, making them out to be the root cause or even a necessary precondition for the Russian war is not helpful.
Agreed. We could go back to America's demands for extreme reform in Russia under Gorbachev which put him into problems and likely ultimately lead to Putin. However the US is providing more aid to Ukraine both absolutely and relative to GDP. So are plenty of other countries which are further than Germany from Russia. Germany's weapons are primarily there for defence against Russia and so successful defence of Ukraine reduces their needs directly. Germany should step up more.
Re:Trump called it, and they laughed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Trump didn't invent this Obama also warned about reliance on gas [euractiv.com] and in this case both were right.
Indeed it was Obama first. And if only America didn't have a reputation of never doing anything that isn't in the interest of America maybe people may have taken them seriously.
But alas the "warning" from the first president came right after the alleged ally of Germany was caught spying on it's friends in the highest level of government, so a big fuck you to America and anything they said.
And the second "warning" came from a president whose entire platform was "America First" so a second heartfelt fuck you to America's opinion on international politics.
That's the biggest problem here. It's one thing to say "you were warned", but one needs to look at the context in which those warnings were made, especially given the rise of gas was driven by climate initiatives that America didn't want any part of, and the policy of funneling money to Russia was an American economic principle that by raising wealth in unstable nations they will magically tend to a stable democracy (which obviously didn't happen, not just in Russia, but any other nation either).
Finger pointing at Germany in this case is stupid, though they do make a compelling scapegoat for anyone not paying close attention.
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Hmmm...USA shipping weapons, ammo, etc. to the USSR (or the UK for that matter)? Not like we were attacked by Germany, after all. We could have dealt with Japan without getting entangled in a European war, after all.
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Ah. Strawmanning.
Nobody ever said they were COMPLETELY dependent.
Not even Orange Man.
But it appears that they're willing to potentially KILL people due to an insane strategy in their energy policy.
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Orange man is very bad
We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is that in reality Germany is going to have to lean a lot harder on these nuclear reactors than they are saying... how can they say with a straight face they don't think there will be power emergencies when Russia has totally shut them off from gas even earlier than they thought?
My further guess is these reactors are going to be going a lot longer than the end of 2023...
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Re:We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Insightful)
Widespread public opposition to nuclear energy vs widespread public opposition to being really cold... decisions, decisions.
Barring some magical change, not only Germany, but broader northern (at least) Europe will really need the excess nuclear power this year due to the limited hydropower available beyond the natural gas situation. I would be very curious what pan-European grid planning is happening for winter.
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The situation is far more complex than that.
Firstly, most Germans use gas for heating, not electricity. They can't easily switch their central heating systems to electricity in time for winter. In fact retrofitting heat pumps is pretty expensive in buildings designed for gas.
They can obviously buy resistive electric heaters, but they cost a lot more to run than gas central heating even with the Russian supply cut off.
All keeping those nuclear plants online does is reduce the price of gas and electricity a b
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Firstly, most Germans use gas for heating, not electricity.
Gas is in a shortage. The Germans have 30GW of electric generational capacity from gas. That's a lot of gas that can be used for heating instead, if you find another way to keep the lights on.
I'm not sure why you persist with this talking point. You get corrected by multiple people on every story about this topic. Heating homes (or rather keeping the gas dependent energy economy going) is the exclusive reason for extending the life of the coal and nuke plants. The singular reason they are doing this is to a
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The Germans have 30GW of electric generational capacity from gas. That's a lot of gas that can be used for heating instead,
Yes, let's redirect the Russian gas from the power plants to the homes. Oh, wait...
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Imagine a chilly German walking down to the local OBI, picking up an electric heater and using it to keep themselves from freezing for the next few months
See, it is not all that hard, in fact anybody looking for some profits would probably note the local brands and buy some stock
The lengths that you go to create catch-22 scenarios is just ridiculous
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Well, it would be refreshing is you used you own UID
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and all I will do is report it.
LOLOL oh lordy, that didn't notice that button is a no-op?
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Water power in Germany is about 2% of the total ...
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Hydropower also comes from Scandinavia when the wind is not blowing.
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Just to give you an idea for 2022:
Germany exported 53 TWh of electricity and imported 35 TWh, so still has substantial net-exports. From this For France the situation is reversed: It exported 36 TWh but imported 47 TWh, so it is now dependent on imports to keep the lights on. Germany exported 14 TWh to France and imported 3 TWh from France. France depends on electricity for heating. So yes, it is interesting what will happen in the winter.
Re:We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:4, Insightful)
The French nukes will be back online by winter. This was an exceptionally bad summer with some postponed maintenance coming due and the heatwaves forcing throttling etc. Normally France exports a shitton of energy.
Re:We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:4, Informative)
The French nukes will be back online by winter.
No they wont. Except you speak about next - aka - the winter afterwards.
The french nukes are in prolonged downtime for safety upgrades.
Read some news.
YOU read some news. This article [france24.com] says "France’s minister for energy transition said Friday that French electricity giant EDF has committed to restart all its nuclear reactors by this winter". If you are going to patronizingly contradict someone's post, please at least provide a citation.
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Germany mostly uses gas for heating. So these two plants do not help against being cold in Germany.
Germany generates almost as much power from natural gas these days as they do from coal. It's not just these two nukes. They have also extended all the coal fired plants as well in an effort to potentially save up to 80TWh of gas this year, precisely so people can use it for heating instead. I see your comment below about Germany exporting power. A large reason for that is that they spare large generational capacity precisely because they have built gas plants as part of their plan to shut down the coal pla
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The BDEW (German Association of Energy and Water Industries) says a bit over 40% of German households use gas for heat.
So unless you expect almost half the country to invest heavily in ceramic space heaters, they are in fact VERY dependent on gas for heating the country and cannot just turn up the electricity.
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Last year Germany generated 165 TWh from coal and lignite and 234 TWh from renewables, both much more than gas. Germany did not extend "all the coal plants". As far as I know it so far just two: Heyden and Mehrum. Germany has spare capacity because the build renewables but kept older plants partially in reserve. Gas generating capacity was not significantly expanded in the last decade (although I think they added a bit in now). Electricity generation from gas in 2010 was 89 TWh, was then a bit lower with
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Too bad it probably takes a long time to build an electrically powered methane production plant. Nuclear power for electrolysis of water and then turning that hydrogen to methane. Of course if they started building it back in 2014 it would be ready by now.
Re: We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Informative)
CO2 is sequestered by the living plant matter, and released when the plant decomposes. The amount that is released by burning the wood is exactly the same as the amount released by composting the wood. And it was all captured by the growth of the plant.
So all you have to do is look at the increase or decrease in plant mass, and you know the effect on CO2. So chopping down and burning a forest that would otherwise have remained a forest increases CO2 release but planting forests to use for firewood decreases CO2 levels. In a tree farm setting, you're replacing whatever is cut with new plantings.
Hopefully the general public will be more mentally flexible
You don't need flexibility, you need relevant education.
Re: We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:2)
Burning hundreds of years old trees is not compatible of the idea of firewood forests.
There is a reason every forest is not called a firewood forest.
Re:We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Insightful)
widespread public opposition to nuclear power.
The opposition is not so widespread.
German politics, like American politics, is dysfunctional, but in the opposite way.
In America's first-past-the-post plurality system, small parties are mostly ignored by the two-party duopoly.
Germany's proportional system leads to coalition governments where small parties are kingmakers with disproportionate power. The Greens were able to impose denuclearization despite getting only 15% of the vote.
Re:We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Interesting)
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https://www.engineeringnews.co... [engineeringnews.co.za]
67% of people support keeping nuclear power plants running for another 5 years. 27% oppose. But then in most any poll there's about 20% that oppose anything because they are stupid, want to mess with the poll, don't understand the question, and so on. This is still a significant opposition but give it a bit of time and it will be more like 80% support and the 20% will be the people that read the question wrong and thought no means yes.
Further in the poll is 41% support bu
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Re:We are talking now not past choices (Score:4, Informative)
The energy transition and nuclear exit is widely supported by the population in Germany. In fact, it was not the Greens that did the decision to exit nuclear after Fukushima, but the Merkel government. The greens never had a majority in Germany. The energy transition was planned by a green and left-wing government before and despite being challenging, is credited for bringing down prices for renewables.
Also, I am a physicist and engineer and can look at actual data. (I noticed your posts never include a piece of data to back up your argument. Only unsubstantiated hate against "greens") I am also not scared of nuclear or radiation. I still fully support energy transition in Germany and think it is overall a huge success as it brought prices for renewables down so that a full transition to renewables is now considered economically and practically feasible as shown now by countless simulation studies for all major economies.
Cost not greens killed nuclear everywhere.
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In fact, it was not the Greens that did the decision to exit nuclear after Fukushima, but the Merkel government.
That is wrong. It was a Green/Read coalation long before Merkel that made the laws to exit nuklear power. And when Merkel came to power: that asshole reverted the decision. And then - after Fukushima - she back backpedal-ed or hat lost the next election and/or had risked riots and civil war.
They have he Majourity in Baaden Wuertemberg, one of the biggest states in Germany. And they got roughly
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That there was a previous plan at some point which got overturned later does not change that the decision which now stands is from the Merkel government. And the greens were the junior party in the red/green government which made the original plan. So in any case, it was a collective decision supported by many sides.
Cost also kills existing nuclear in some locations, although you are right this is not the reason in Germany.
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You confuse insults with arguments and do not bother to back up your argument with data.
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You make unverifiable claims and then expect people to believe them
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And there's about 20% that will assent to anything because that's what "their tribe" apparently thinks it wants, and they are too insecure to say a word against, especially when they don't understand the question.
Unfortunately, the 20% stupid on both sides of the issue apparently hold a lot of sway over what does or doesn't actually happen, reaso
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In the BREXIT poll 25% were stupid and wanted to mess with the poll and voted: pro BREXIT
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In the BREXIT poll 25% were stupid
Release the Russia Report!
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You get your news about Germany from South African editorials that cite World Nuclear News as a source for information about... an online poll?
ha! That's so stupid, I can only spare one "ha" laughing at you.
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Yeah that's the most generous interpretation possible.
Because otherwise, keeping two plants operational but not generating energy is the dumbest fucking option possible because it costs shitloads of money and produces no electricity, while they keep burning coal in parallel.
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You know: to sell the electricity, you need a market to buy it. ...
Dumbass
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When they get hit with rolling blackouts just like California
And if they don't?
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My guess is that in reality Germany is going to have to lean a lot harder on these nuclear reactors than they are saying... how can they say with a straight face they don't think there will be power emergencies when Russia has totally shut them off from gas even earlier than they thought?
Probably going to need much more resistive heat to make up for (no) gas, so yeah I agree. Happy to be watching from afar.
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I heat my house with gas. If there was no gas, electric would be the much more expensive contingency plan. I suspect that is true for anyone who does not have a wood stove. Pretty sure my grid could handle that though, Germany not so much.
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NThe number one being that local grids can't deliver enough electricity to actually heat homes that way
What a stupid thing to say.
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The course of energy politics has been criticized from within Germany for a long time, and possibilities like these have been predicted ever since, calling for some kind of contingency plan. But criticism was usually (fallaciously) dismissed as some kind of racism against Russians and pointing fingers at the USA like only being critical because you want to shill for US fossil fuels instead, which doesn't even make sense if you're critical of imported fuels in general.
And
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'Scientist: My findings are useless, if taken out of context.
"Journalist": Scientists say their findings are useless"'.
Possibly the best SIG... ever.
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how can they say with a straight face they don't think there will be power emergencies when Russia has totally shut them off from gas even earlier than they thought?
Because they already put plans in place with the assumption that the gas would get shut-off completely. Germany won't freeze this coming winter. Their economy won't do well, but they aren't going to freeze.
That said I do agree with you, I highly suspect the reactors will be extended to 2024. Infrastructure takes a while to change.
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My guess is that in reality Germany is going to have to lean a lot harder on these nuclear reactors than they are saying... how can they say with a straight face they don't think there will be power emergencies when Russia has totally shut them off from gas even earlier than they thought?
Because nuclear power plants produce electricity
And Gas is (amoung other things) used for household heating
Both have nothing to do with each other.
And your "straight face" pun? What is that about?
Either Germany will need th
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I guess the thought is that every household is going to retrofit with electric heating or space heaters during an ongoing international supply chain shortage. Turning electricity to gas would make a lot more sense, using more nuclear power.
My further guess is these reactors are going to be going a lot longer than the end of 2023...
And for what reason would/could that be the case?
It's what most countries do, especially when not willing to build new plants. Is there a single nuclear plant in the US that isn't past its design lifespan? Ah, found a source with some detail. 1/5 of US power is generated from Nuclear - only one plant has been built
Re: We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think anyone thought Russia would invade (Score:2)
This is why you don't install dictators. When you put one guy in charge of everything even if you think that guy is smart sooner or later he's going to fuck up and nobody is going to call him on it. So we're left with Putin's and of life crisis cau
Re: We'll see how reality treats the plan (Score:2)
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Against popular believe outside of Europe/Germany:
The grid(s) in Europe/Germany are run by corporations - not by the government(s).
Not even in France where the Government owns 90% of the grid and the power production.
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Yes but at least in the U.S. the green pork (ham?) also came with a big side of nuclear power subsidies as well.
Mmmmm, green pork. Does for your body what the Washington marketplace does for your country.
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Carbon footprint. (Score:2, Insightful)
I saw a nice little graph the other day of german energy production, and it's basically summarized as 500B+ spent on renewables, and they have effectively the same proportion of carbon emitting energy sources as they did 20 years ago.
Wind+Solar have been a failure, and despite the cries of "batteries" will continue to be that way for at least the next decade or two. Then after overbuilding wind+solar 5x+ and batteries plus a few days of storage the result will likely be the most expensive energy on the plan
Re:Carbon footprint. (Score:5, Informative)
I saw a nice little graph the other day of german energy production, and it's basically summarized as 500B+ spent on renewables, and they have effectively the same proportion of carbon emitting energy sources as they did 20 years ago.
Just for curiosity I checked and that doesn't look correct [wikipedia.org].
Despite total energy capacity increasing they're actually generating less total power from carbon emitting sources.
Wind+Solar have been a failure, and despite the cries of "batteries" will continue to be that way for at least the next decade or two. Then after overbuilding wind+solar 5x+ and batteries plus a few days of storage the result will likely be the most expensive energy on the planet and the least reliable.
Repeat after me, no one has proven that wind+solar are grid scale technologies.
I was skeptical too, but as of 2018 Germany was getting 23% of it's power from wind+solar.
I don't know the limits where you start hitting issues with reliability... but that sounds like grid scale tech to me.
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I was skeptical too, but as of 2018 Germany was getting 23% of it's power from wind+solar.
I don't know the limits where you start hitting issues with reliability... but that sounds like grid scale tech to me.
That is easy to achieve when they can offload the generation to fossil fuels when wind is not blowing and sun is not shining. Moreover the price of offloading is not being paid by the renewable generation sources. Therefore LCOE of renewables looks great. But System LCOE is pitiful at high renewables penetration (above 40% for wind or above 20% for solar). That is the territory where it starts to be worse than nuclear. See System LCOE by Falko Ueckerdt, Lion Hirth, Gunnar Luderer, Ottmar Edenhofer.
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You can't comprehend that 23% of the total means it is much more than that "sometimes?"
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I am in favor of nuclear power. You can even build it near me as long as it's a modern safe design. So I agree with you on that.
But I think you are underestimating the potential of batteries to smooth out the grid in the face of renewables. There are several technologies that have the potential to work at large scale:
* liquid metal batteries [ambri.com]
* flow batteries [wikipedia.org]
* lithium iron phosphate batteries [wikipedia.org] (e.g. Tesla Megapack [tesla.com])
* distributed "virtual power plant" [electrek.co] systems (home-scale batteries linked through software and
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Sorry, this is far from the truth. Germany now produces 50% of its electricity from renewables and substantially reduced coal use. In 2000 in produced 38 TWh from renewables, in 2021 it was 234 TWh. In 2000 it produced 148 TWh + 143 TWh + 72 TWh (= 354TWh) from lignite and coal gas and in 2021 110 TWh and 55 TWh and 90 TWh (=255TWh), respectively. So this is a substantial reduction in fossil fuels with a corresponding reduction in CO2 emissions (gas use is fluctuating a bit depending on price, in 2010 it w
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Co2 emissions electricity sector in Germany: 2010: 313 Mio T. 2019: 219 Mio t.
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True, but this is not a failure of wind and solar, but the result of political decision.
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and they have effectively the same proportion of carbon emitting energy sources as they did 20 years ago.
That is wrong.
Germany reduced CO2 output in the electricity sector by far over 50%.
And atm we produce > 50% of our electricity with renewables.
Are you sure you are not living in an alternative universe?
The rest of your post makes no sense anyway. What is wrong if in a democracy people decide against somethings, vote a government into power to make the change, and the change is done?
Seems you do not be
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Renewables like wind solar and hydro are great. However they do have a problem of local variability - within one particular area you can have calm weather or lack of sun from clouds or night time. There are several solutions to that. You can have storage, but it's mostly reasonable to build storage that lasts at most a few days otherwise it's too expensive. You can backup with variable thermal plants, like gas, using them occasionally without too much CO2 impact as long as the renewables work well, which is
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What they need is serious power connectivity to the North and South of Europe.
Why would we need that, when we actually have that since 50 years?
Are you living under a rock, or are you just another Germany - aka renewables - hater?
The sooner nuclear plants open the less gas burned (Score:5, Insightful)
It sounds like Germany is still planning on burning natural gas for electricity until some "emergency" comes, and then they will start the nuclear power plants so they can have enough natural gas for heating through the winter. What a stupid move.
It would seem to me that the "greens" decided that they need to actually see the natural gas get burned at a rate that will not last the winter before they allow the nuclear power plants to start. But they have to have nuclear engineers and technicians at the sites to be able to start these plants up regardless because those plants will be in a "warm shutdown" in this period. This is going to cost them as much money as if the plant was running full power but they get no power out of the plant.
Maybe I'm missing something important but that appears to be the case.
Then there's France that is still operating their nuclear power plant at low capacity factors because of a series of poor engineering decisions. One is that they use cooling water from a river rather than a more common cooling pool and tower. They dump the water back in the river which can raise the water temperature to where it could kill fish. If they had a cooling tower and just used the river to make up for water lost to evaporation then they would not need to reduce power when the weather was warm, and possibly even not during droughts. I don't know how much water is boiled off but if they just dug out some artificial lakes to store up some excess water for dry periods then they might not need to reduce power then either.
One big issue that lowers their capacity factor is France using nuclear power to load follow. They bring down the power output of nuclear power reactors at night, rotating which is reducing power to minimize issues of xenon buildup and fuel burning too quickly any any given plant. They could run more wires to their neighbors so they are getting better capacity factor out of their nuclear power plants, which will lower their costs, and replace oil and coal fired power in neighboring nations, lowering CO2 emissions.
I have to wonder if part of what France is doing has to do with nuclear power not considered "green" and so could not count towards a nations lower CO2 emissions goals. I believe that changed. It could simply be that it was cheaper to reduce power than sell the electricity at a discount. Maybe there was not enough wires to ship that amount of power. Maybe France could have got a Tesla Gigabattery to manage this better.
There's a lot of bad choices here, and they've had a long time to fix them. It's only starting to happen now that there's an energy shortage that could threaten lives, as opposed to be a bit expensive or a bit inconvenient.
From the looks of it the problem is the "greens", ignoramuses and morons that fear nuclear power than global warming or energy shortages. They want to see an actual energy shortage first and then they will allow the nuclear power plants to restart. I expect these morons will lose power in the next election.
At least France is ramping up reactors (Score:2)
Then there's France that is still operating their nuclear power plant at low capacity factors because of a series of poor engineering decisions.
Thankfully though even though they have that Death-Star sized reactor design flaw, France can and will run all its reactors through the winter, so they are not in the same dire straights other countries are... and France is also planning on new nuclear reactors ASAP.
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It sounds like Germany is still planning on burning natural gas for electricity until some "emergency" comes, and then they will start the nuclear power plants so they can have enough natural gas for heating through the winter. What a stupid move.
Implying you can decide today to flip a switch rather than needing to do planning?
What you see as a "stupid move" the people who you are calling stupid only seeing an uninformed idiot rambling. You can't just magically go to a decommissioned nuclear plant and pull on the rip cord to start it up. Heck until a month ago there was a question if they could even get fuel to keep the ones running going for another 12 months. There's a reason they have also extended the running licenses of several coal power stat
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What I see as a stupid move is making all the preparations to run a nuclear power plant but not actually producing power with it until some predetermined shortage of natural gas is reached. They already know that there is a natural gas shortage. The are taking on the expense of getting the nuclear power plant prepared to produce power on short notice but then not immediately producing power. They are putting in all the expense of getting the nuclear power plant ready to produce power but won't go through
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Re: The sooner nuclear plants open the less gas bu (Score:2)
OK...
Re: The sooner nuclear plants open the less gas bu (Score:4, Insightful)
There is an argument to be made that Putin merely moved up the timeline. Putin didn't cause this because at some point the natural gas flow could not keep up with demand. Germany and the rest of Europe was going to over extend themselves by closing the nuclear power plants anyway. At that point we'd still see a panic to find more natural gas, mine more coal, and restart shuttered nuclear power plants. Putin saw this happening and used it to his advantage.
Putin plays a part. High probability the part he plays will be minor.
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In case I missed it, would you care to explain to us again:
What have German nukes (or for that matter French nukes, or for that matter, the non existing Italian nukes) to do with gas from Russia?
Somehow I fail to comprehend what gas from Russia - or for that matter any gas from anywhere - has to do with nuclear power. Please enlighten us. Perhaps I once go for German Chancellor, I do not want to look dumb in the news when I get asked such a question.
So, to simplify it: "What has nat. gas to do with (German)
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Gas is being used to produce electricity. The EU market rules for electricity means that the price for electricity is defined by the highest production cost. Gas is because of it being so expensive causing that the highest production cost for electricity is very high. And therefor is the price for electricity very high.
Nuclear power could reduce the need for gas to produce electricity. Lowering the price for electricity.
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It was Gerhard Schröder in the early 2000's where the Social Democrats and the Green party formed the German government that started to lead Germany down the path of nuclear phase out and increased natural gas dependency for heating purposes with Nord Stream 2.
Gerhard Schröder has been personally involved with Nord Stream, Gazprom, and Rosneft.
So yeah, abs
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(* facepalm *)
Northstream 1 - or 2 - never had anythign to do with the nuclear exit.
No idea why outsiders think such bullshit.
Hint: what is a nuke supposed to do? Figure it ... easy to read up.
What is gas used for? Oh: nothing in common.
Wow - how hard can that be to grasp. Germany is not USA were they managed to switch most of the coal plants to gas plants. Never happened here.
So: Gas has no real usage in the area where Nukes are used.
Everyone knows that: but stupid outsiders think otherwise - lol, facepalm
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[disagrees with you and explains what you got wrong]
You again? Fuck off troll!
Go away, troll, you're not even a nerd.
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Nuclear phase out and Nord Stream 2 coincided. The former was initiated by the Greens and the latter by crooked Schröder, who then also signed off the nuclear phase out and then subsequently capitalized on both.
Furthermore both gas and nuclear were used for power generation. About 10% of Germany's po
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Not a fan of Putin, which you can see if you look through my comments ... [Putler propaganda]
No, actually, I'm looking at one of your comments right now and you're a disgusting Putler bootlicker.
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There isn't enough oil, fuel or LNG to survive the winter.
W T F is wrong with you? Did you fall on your head, and now the sky is always falling? Or do you just have daydreams of being Putler?
It turns out, they have reserves for winter, and will "survive" just fine.
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These reactors will go down and stay down. The operators have just pointed out that bringing up a nuke takes several weeks and that they have no procedure and cannot now create one to do it within a week. Hence they will not do it as they cannot assure reactor safety. No surprise, really, just some no-clue politico shooting off his mouth before asking the actual experts.
Protip: If you bring up a nuke (or change power output significantly) you have to be very careful and slow and stay within pre-determined s
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Where I'm from if you do something through a point in time, it means you keep continue doing it past that point in time.
Yes. Which is exactly why his question is valid. The statement is a nonsense statement used by political creatures to manipulate perception rather than just tell a straightforward fact.
We promised to shut them down on or before December 31. But now, they will still be running at the end of December 31.
They had to issue a statement to tell us they were keeping the reactors running for... a few additional hours past the deadline in their original promise? What actual ADDITIONAL information is contained in suc