Solar Power To Overtake Oil Production Investment For First Time (reuters.com) 136
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), investment in clean energy is set to surpass spending on fossil fuels in 2023, with solar projects expected to outpace oil production for the first time. Reuters reports: Annual investment in renewable energy is up by nearly a quarter since 2021 compared to a 15% rise for fossil fuels, the Paris-based energy watchdog said in its World Energy Investment report. Around 90% of that clean energy spending comes from advanced economies and China, however, highlighting the global divide between rich and poor countries as fossil fuel investment is still double the levels needed to reach net-zero emissions by mid-century.
Around $2.8 trillion is set to be invested in energy worldwide in 2023, of which more than $1.7 trillion is expected to go to renewables, nuclear power, electric vehicles, and efficiency improvements. The rest, or around $1 trillion, will go to oil, gas and coal, demand for the last of which will reach an all-time high or six times the level needed in 2030 to reach net zero by 2050.
Current fossil fuel spending is significantly higher than what it should be to reach the goal of net zero by mid-century, the agency said. In 2023, solar power spending is due to hit more than $1 billion a day or $382 billion for the year, while investment in oil production will stand at $371 billion. Investment in new fossil fuel supply will rise by 6% in 2023 to $950 billion, the IEA added.
Around $2.8 trillion is set to be invested in energy worldwide in 2023, of which more than $1.7 trillion is expected to go to renewables, nuclear power, electric vehicles, and efficiency improvements. The rest, or around $1 trillion, will go to oil, gas and coal, demand for the last of which will reach an all-time high or six times the level needed in 2030 to reach net zero by 2050.
Current fossil fuel spending is significantly higher than what it should be to reach the goal of net zero by mid-century, the agency said. In 2023, solar power spending is due to hit more than $1 billion a day or $382 billion for the year, while investment in oil production will stand at $371 billion. Investment in new fossil fuel supply will rise by 6% in 2023 to $950 billion, the IEA added.
On related news... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, another way of looking at it is that till now we were investing more into new oil sources than into solar. Shows the dedication to decarbonization.
Re: On related news... (Score:2)
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More money spent does not necessarily equate to more productivity.
Sure it does. Look at the trillion+ dollars the U.S. taxpayer has spent propping up oil companies for the past nine decades and how low the price of gas is because of it. More money spent = more oil production = lower prices.
Re: On related news... (Score:3)
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Re: On related news... (Score:2)
Panels on sale here have "85% after 15 years" warranty.
These even give a factory warranty for "92% after 25 years": https://www.recgroup.com/en/al... [recgroup.com]
Not sure where you got that crap.
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Re: On related news... (Score:4, Interesting)
Look at the trillion+ dollars the U.S. taxpayer has spent propping up oil companies for the past nine decades
We can't, because you provided no source for your numbers. This page [eesi.org] (from an anti-fossil-fuel group) claims US $20B/year in tax subsidies. However:
1) The "tax" qualifier is important. By the same definition, US taxpayers "bail out" homeowners for at least $160B/year [treasury.gov], and we bail out people with employer-provided health insurance for $336B/year.
2) The same source says the corresponding EU tax subsidy is 55B euros/year, essentially three times as much -- yet EU GDP is a third less than US GDP, meaning the EU subsidizes fossil fuels at four times the GDP rate as the US.
3) Inflation probably doesn't make that add up to $1T over 90 years, especially because...
4) Something like $10B/year is from a fossil-fuel exemption to the repatriation tax in 2017's TCJA. That tax did not exist before, so it only counts as a "tax subsidy" since then.
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1) The "tax" qualifier is important. By the same definition, US taxpayers "bail out" homeowners for at least $160B/year, and we bail out people with employer-provided health insurance for $336B/year.
Well, good? The oil companies don't need bailouts, but some people obviously do.
The same source says the corresponding EU tax subsidy is 55B euros/year, essentially three times as much -- yet EU GDP is a third less than US GDP, meaning the EU subsidizes fossil fuels at four times the GDP rate as the US.
Hmm, that sounds suspicious considering how much more they tend to pay for fuel?
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The tax studies I mentioned are not just for some people, but for most of them. Why do we need to bail out most of the public? That's not what bailouts are for!
I don't care what you think sounds suspicious. Bring data, not feelings.
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Why do we need to bail out most of the public? That's not what bailouts are for!
Because you've been bailing out corporations to protect profits, and that's not what bailouts are for. They're for temporarily aiding corporations to protect jobs, but the layoffs are proceeding until morale^Wprofit improves anyway so clearly they didn't do that.
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For example how much of the cost (in both money and lives) of the 9/11 attacks and subsequent decade of global war on terror should we attribute to oil?
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I wonder if we would have been so interested in bringing "peace" to the Middle East if there wasn't any oil there. How much did that all cost?
Re: On related news... (Score:5, Funny)
"We could both buy a Cadillac Escalade, you spending $60k and myself spending close to $90k that doesnt specifically mean I have better features. It could mean I am bad at negotiating costs."
You're both bad.
You bought a Cadillac!
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To me if there's anything misleading about it, it's comparing oil to just solar. I would add investment in wind to the solar, at least.
I used to think the future would be more solar, but now it seems like probably more wind. As of the end of 2021, the world was producing almost twice as much wind as solar [ourworldindata.org].
Europe is a huge power market, and very serious about switching to renewables, and they just don't have that much solar, and offshore wind is still fairly
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Indeed. My first though was "Isn't that a bit late?".
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Even if we stopped using oil for transportation, you still need oil for countless other products we all use on a daily basis. So oil drilling is not going away.
I'm not sure ... (Score:3)
My real world consumer experience (Score:5, Interesting)
My home solar went online about 3 months ago.
I bought a huuuuuuge system, ridiculous numbers of batteries, filled the roof with ~100 high end panels, the works. I totally went for it.
My experience:
1) 170k up front cost
2) financially unviable without 30% tax credit (means you guys paid 30% of my cost with your taxes)
3) took 9 months to turn on from after contract signed and first payment made even though was only 5 total days labor
4) despite the 60+ kWh battery system I can't go entirely off grid without shutting off my ac and running the batteries to near zero on a sunny day. I'm still grid dependent.
5) the system is very fidgety. There aren't enough qualified people to do work so they've had to return several times to fix things the install crew botched. I had a guy here for 5+ hours 2 days ago to get the batteries back online and another guy is coming back tomorrow morning to redo core electrical panel work, so still not done
It's a huge pita but I'm happy to get free car charging and zero electric bills now (was previously 500-800/month depending) but you gotta be really dedicated and self educated to get the right system at a viable price and make it work.
On the industrial side, I have a few family members nepotismed into the local power company. The shit going on at the power company isn't much different than my solar consumer experience. We're lucky the industrial solar works at all in this area. I don't imagine its dramatically better in most other places as this was one of the first regions to take solar seriously at industrial scales.
Having solar is better than not but the entire industry needs serious quality improvements. I wouldn't have my economy dependent on it. Solar is at about the same level of dumb as how Texas runs their power grid. It's fine until, it's not.
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Or perhaps it means he should have also invested in insulation. Lots of folks report success with solar from Germany, and that's well north of Texas.
And do note that he was talking about using the system to charge his car, so you need to factor that in, also.
He should have either sized his system to not need the grid, or he should have used a lot fewer batteries. (The batteries and associated electronics were a large part of his system cost.)
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He spent 170k and said his energy bill was about $800 a month. That's about 12.5 years of electric bills, or 149 months. We don't know how much he was spending on fuel to move his car around, but me driving a hybrid and going ~200 miles a week, I only pay around $80 a month (at California gas prices). So if we say 880 a month or 119k (after 30% discount), is 135 months comes out to about ~11 years and change.
I guess it's worth it but he did mention that he still has a grid connection and his system doesn't
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I dunno, let's stop for a minute and ponder the energy requirements for air conditioning, in Texas, in a home large enough for 100 rooftop solar panels. Oh, and one or more electric cars. He's living large.
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Re:My real world consumer experience (Score:4, Interesting)
For someone called "iAmWaySmarterThanYou" you sure made some questionable decisions.
Presumably your daily usage includes a significant amount of vehicle charging. Otherwise you house must be incredibly inefficient, and you could massively reduce your energy consumption with some very low cost insulation.
For reference, the Passivhaus standard requires a maximum of 4.5kWh of heating or cooling per day to maintain a comfortable temperature.
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I think he mentioned something about AC.
I'm not sure where he lives, but if it is anything remotely like where I live (New Orleans area)...AC is a HUGE part of your electric bill for pretty much 8 months of the year.
My AC pretty much *clicks* on late March or early April and pretty much
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Where I live it typically goes up to 45C in July & August inland (35C on the coast but more humid). Most homes do have ai
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If you have the money and means, you can and should be able to live how you want in the home you want.
First, not necessarily. If it's inherently unsustainable and affecting others' ability to live at all, no you shouldn't.
Second, what's being discussed in this thread is making it cheaper to do that, not to stop you from doing it.
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This is not a zero sum game.
If I can afford to pay the power to my home I can afford for the AC to cool it to the temperature "I" find to be comfortable....
That does nothing to impact if someone else can afford a home or air conditioning to the level I work out.
My work and earnings do not prevent anyone else from affording what they can afford.
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If I can afford to pay the power to my home I can afford for the AC to cool it to the temperature "I" find to be comfortable....
That does nothing to impact if someone else can afford a home or air conditioning to the level I work out.
That's flatly false, even if you use solar. If you use energy continually to get more cooling, then it takes more energy input to support that, which at best means more solar panels once. If you use energy once to put more insulation on the building, so it doesn't take so much energy to keep it cool, then what you're ultimately accomplishing is reducing the lifecycle pollution, and therefore your AGW contribution.
It's also just cheaper and smarter to improve insulation, although this is best done at constru
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I had to google what "45C" was in F....it gets up to 113F there commonly? Whew...that IS hot. My I ask what part of the world you are in?
I'm in Andalusia, Spain; the hottest part of Europe. Highest recorded & verified temp was at least 47C, & a 48C temp is disputed. We can have daily 41+C temps for weeks at a time (over 41C is where it gets uncomfortable to be outside for any length of time). To add to the efficiency, many Spaniards would rather head to their local bar/café to enjoy each others' company & the air-con than put their own air-con on at home. Many bars & cafés are family friendly here. Can you think of
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He did says something about AC, and he also said Texas. But insulation is STILL what you need to reduce heating/cooling costs. With enough insulation you can get by with nearly no heating and very little AC. You will start needing to worry more about air quality, as that will reduce the circulation if the climate is extreme, but that's relatively easy to handle. Simple heat exchangers on the input, a small electric fan, and a few monitors for CO, CO2, radon, etc (which are recommended anyway).
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Frankly, I do
Re: My real world consumer experience (Score:3)
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He mentioned charging his car from the system. That could mean lots of different things, but it could really drive up the electric usage.
I can’t believe it! (Score:3)
So you’re saying you went all out on an evolving technology that still requires subsidies and you’re disappointed in your returns?
Yeah I spent $4000 on a gaming PC and I’m disappointed that it’s not much better than my friend’s $2000 gaming PC compared to the improvements he sees over a $1000 PC. What a scam.
Re:My real world consumer experience (Score:5, Interesting)
60 kWh/day [1,800 kWh/month] for a household is more than 2x the U.S. average [google.com], which is itself more than 2x the rest of the industrialized world [shrinkthatfootprint.com].
The good news is that you can still make improvements to the efficiency of your household, which will make the solar a better match to your needs.
Re:My real world consumer experience (Score:4, Informative)
What he claimed is a work of fiction.
Re:My real world consumer experience (Score:4, Interesting)
I would think so. $170K for a solar and battery system is a lot of money to spend without considering overall household efficiency.
The average household uses about 1kW per hour (24kWh/day) - this is average use with A/C, heating, refrigeration and other loads taken into account (e.g., you might use 20kW for your stove, but it's for a short time).
A 60kWh battery system is huge - that's equal to a large chunk of most EVs today. That should last you a good 2 days if completely blacked out. If you cut down to essentials, say, fridge, cooking and internet and computer, you can easily extend that over a week (Vehicle to Load, or V2L, is a compelling feature of many EVs now too - here you're using the EV battery pack to power a few essential items).
100 high end panels is 30kW of power at peak generation - the top end LG panels are over 300 watts each, so 100 of them can go up to 30kW. At your standard household 240V, that's 150A.
Most new homes have 240V 200A service, which is 48kW. And most homes don't get anywhere near that continuously. So someone who's needing that much power is probably doing something wrong, or theyre one of the few who actually own a home large enough to get 300A or 600A service. (600A service is actually just 3-phase 200A service which the power company can deliver to you). But that's still considered pretty much for mansions and such.
Each panel is also around 1.7 square meters (LG says 1.7mx1m in size), so 100 panels is 170 square meters, or 1800 square feet. Roof space wise, that's at least a 2000 square feet roof , and if you're spending that kind of cash, you aren't going to line your whole roof with it - either it's a flat roof and you have the panels angled or you have standard pitched roofs and thus putting them on the side getting the most sun, meaning the roof area is even larger still.
I think that pretty much dictates that the OP either owns a mansion or is basically way above what ordinary people live in right now.
Re: My real world consumer experience (Score:2)
I don't know, if we're assuming Texas that means space is cheap and commutes are long typically. If you don't live in California or New York a 2000-3000 sq ft Ranch house isn't that uncommon, I wouldn't even put it in the McMansion category. If you were routinely commuting 30 to 60 miles with an EV, and had to cool 3000 sq ft in an environment like Texas, those numbers he gave don't sound that crazy. On the high end for sure, but it's not exactly a bitcoin operation or something.
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Or they are just lying. That account and the various others that are probably the same person will post all sorts of nonsense to pan renewables, and then mod themselves up. They must have a system in place to notify them when any energy related story goes live, so they can post some copy/paste BS.
How would someone so dumb as to spend 170k on a solar system for their mansion get 170k and a mansion in the first place? Lottery win perhaps? Inherited wealth?
Based on their username they clearly think pretty high
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I helped a friend install solar panels on his roof a few weeks ago.
His upgraded hist current system to reach 20 kW power generation. He would be selling most of it back to the power grid.
The design and planning were done by himself, most manual work by friends.
His estimates that he will completely cover the initial costs (panels, inverters, cabling, etc) in 4 year. After that it will be pure profit.
Now we live at 60 degrees latitude and in a super cloudy, rainy area (Estonia). Our winter months from October
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I cannot imagine a solar project in Texas to be "financially unviable".
I can imagine that happening. If too many people try selling their excess electricity from solar power then the value of that electricity could drop to a point it's not paying off the interest on the loans for the install, the insurance, and whatever other costs to cover install and maintenance. We've seen spot prices for electricity go negative because of too much wind and solar on the grid.
What does it mean for electricity rates to go negative? It means the electricity producers are paying people to ta
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Why don’t I believe you?
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Wowza.
1. If #4 is true... something is seriously amiss at this price point :-)
2. you're welcome.
3. your point #5 suggests this is inaccurate. I suspect there was labor not seen onsite (designing, ordering, prepping, etc.) and you didn't mention the reason(s) for the delay so I'm presuming it was permitting and politicking... vote in different people.
4. something's amiss here: insulation on the home? oversized and/or ancient HVAC? so much square footage you're cooling a McMansion? #5 might present a clue...
5
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There's a lot of expensive electronics involved if you want to be able to switch your system from being on grid to being off grid ... or at least there was a couple of decades ago (plus a bit). His system cost and utility still doesn't make any sense to me except possibly....he talked about charging his electric vehicle from the system, and mentioned other family members, who I'm guessing may do the same.
I can imagine lots of scenarios where that might be a reasonable cost and return. E.g. perhaps he cons
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Yes his numbers look a bit off, which is why I wanted to give a counterpoint. However, they are not inconceivable. As you said, a big issue is off-grid and the batteries. He's looking at about 70K in batteries. Also he claims he has high efficiency panels which probably doesn't make economic sense. My panels are fairly basic which I actually prefer since they have known reliability. Also with so many panels, the average placement is going to suffer, and maybe he lives further north which will also hu
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Presumably you will be buying one of those Small Modular Reactors for your backyard as soon as they become available, in around 10-15 years time.
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I'd buy one if I could. There's already a nuclear power plant in my backyard so another one isn't going to hurt.
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LOL how is this post in any way a troll? I realize Mac is our most prominent nuclear pusher (I agree with him) but nothing in that post was inflammatory or trolling. Having a battery backup and a generator really is a sound solution. He can charge the backup battery during super-offpeak hours and then drain it during peak hours, which helps the grid and his bill.
I'm gonna guess the down-modders just don't like him because that post was just fine.
Also, industrial scale solar is definitely the future over roo
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Not every 7 years. Perhaps every 10, I didn't keep the house that long. There was a small drop in power delivered, but no cliff.
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I'd be leery about planting to many trees near the home. The roots could eventually destroy the water pipes coming into the home and sewage pipes leaving the home.
Key Words (Score:2)
The Key Word here is "Investment"
The truth is of course many nations are still opening up new oil and coal fields and our emissions are still increasing year on year.
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Well, you can't turn the "spigot off" till the alternatives are actually ready, you know?
Until the infrastructure, power grid and a number of other issues are ironed out and ready, we're not going to be cutting over any time soon.
Not unless you are prepared to end the economy and level of comfort in life we currently have in a very drastic fashion.
Re: Unserious solutions by unserious people. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Plug and play?
Bill Gates has entered the chat.
Re: Unserious solutions by unserious people. (Score:2)
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Apple (and Amiga, Sun, SGI etc) had the advantage of bundling the hardware and software together.
When they build a new model, they make whatever adjustments are needed to the OS and done. The OS just needs to recognise a handful of fixed models.
It's much harder for MS or Linux, when instead of a handful of known models you're expected to run on a frankenstein combination of any number of different parts connected via a variety of different connections.
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Unfortunately modular reactors don't work like that. The reactor design is standard, but also quite small. The only ones anywhere near production are NuScale, and their certified for production reactor generates 50MWe. It also needs all the usual support infrastructure in place, including a large, disaster-proof cooling pool. Refuelling cycles are every 2 years.
They hope to have it producing energy for the grid by 2030. Given the small size, they would need 20 to 30 of them to replace one full size reactor,
Re: Unserious solutions by unserious people. (Score:2)
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Anything military related doesn't have to worry about being commercially viable, i.e. problems can be solved simply by throwing money at them.
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Add more modules? Plug-n-play? Sounds a lot like solar. And batteries.
Re: Unserious solutions by unserious people. (Score:2)
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Bullshit. Most nuclear power plants use standard modules. How about some examples:
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I expect someone will ask about that study on deaths from the German nuclear power phase-out, here's an article that mentions it: https://www.forbes.com/sites/s... [forbes.com]
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Also mentions that renewables are now at around 40% the cost of nuclear and continue to drop. And contains the false claim that nuclear is "emission free". Sure, the plant is. Except for building it and tearing it down. Making the fuel is not and storing the waste is not either.
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Environmental devastation due to mining fuel is also a massive problem...one the nuclear industry blowboys never want to discuss.
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How much mining has to be done for wind and solar power? The environmental devastation from that isn't mentioned by the "green" energy advocates. They can't mention the mining required because it would show nuclear power as a better option.
The nuclear fuel required for meeting our energy needs would be met many times over by just processing the tails from rare earth element mining. There's plenty of uranium in the ash from coal power plants too.
Feel free to try showing wind and solar power as doing less
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Solar and wind comes with a full calculations. Nuclear comes with a buch of really big lies and useful idiots like you eating them up.
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Solar and wind comes with a full calculations. Nuclear comes with a buch of really big lies and useful idiots like you eating them up.
So, the solar and wind industries can tell no lies and the nuclear fission industry can tell no truths?
So, then, what do the solar and wind industries tell us about nuclear fission? Last I checked they said nothing. Saying nothing actually says a lot. If they say anything then that is an admission nuclear fission is an option. If they lie then that opens them up to having someone correct the record, perhaps with fines attached for false advertisement.
How do you know what is true about nuclear power if t
Mining [Re:Unserious solutions by unserious pe...] (Score:3)
How much mining has to be done for wind and solar power?
The point is that the mining to produce wind and solar power systems is done once and then the systems produce power without further fuel. The mining for coal plants is done every day... and is much more devastating.
The environmental devastation from that isn't mentioned by the "green" energy advocates.
It's really not terribly bad, sorry. The oil-company-funded "think tanks" are pushing this agenda, but it's mostly propaganda
A lot of the materials are things like copper (wires to transmit the power!) which are used for any type of power production, not just "green" power sources.
They can't mention the mining required because it would show nuclear power as a better option.
Right now, n
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Citations needed.
There is no "once and done" with solar power because whatever is collecting the sunlight is exposed to the weather and will have to be replaced. They wear out in 20 to 30 years because of this. Nuclear power plants wear out too but they produce much more power, do so day and night, and for as long as 60 or so years
The US DOE did a study on raw material needs. A nice chart comparing those needs can be seen here: https://cmo-ripu.blogspot.com/... [blogspot.com]
If you believe that chart is bullshit then f
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Citations needed. There is no "once and done" with solar power because whatever is collecting the sunlight is exposed to the weather and will have to be replaced. They wear out in 20 to 30 years because of this.
Nope. Existing panels have 30-year warranties. How long before they "wear out" is not yet determined, but it's longer than 30 years.
... I'll believe the US DOE over some rando on the internet.
Uh, your citation was a link to some rando on the internet.
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Uh, your citation was a link to some rando on the internet.
Look at the second chart in the article. The chart is using data from the US DOE, and the cite for the source is in the graphic. I realize that's like three degrees of separation but the cite appears legit. If you still believe the data is bullshit then give some data from someone you believe is reliable. I'd link to the primary source but it's been difficult to find. I'll get plenty of claims that the chart is bullshit but not yet anyone giving a cite to some study showing different.
Nope. Existing panels have 30-year warranties. How long before they "wear out" is not yet determined, but it's longer than 30 years.
The output of a so
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Sure, the plant is. Except for building it and tearing it down.
There is no power that is actually emission free.
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Sure, the plant is. Except for building it and tearing it down.
There is no power that is actually emission free.
True. And that is why the nuclear apologists are liars. For renewables you always get the total emission cost. The Nuclear fanatics just claim "emission free" or if they feel that is too obviously wrong "virtually emission free" or such crap.
Re: Unserious solutions by unserious people. (Score:2)
Renewables being 40% of the cost of nuclear is a flat out lie. The reality is the cost of renewables depends heavily on the composition of the system around it. From a reliability planning perspective a nuclear plant is a very know quantity, with the little downtime it has coming from planned outages for refueling and maintenance (and when you can plan an outage around system conditions that downtime barely matters). Compare that with something like a wind turbine, which is prone to unpreventable generation
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The modern models which don't have an axe to grind make solar/wind work in theory. The EU will just need Peta-Wh of total hydrogen generation and most of that in storage.
They do have a plan if you can ignore the cost for a moment.
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They do have a plan if you can ignore the cost for a moment.
But we can't ignore the costs.
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But we can't ignore the costs.
You ignore the actual lifecycle costs of nuclear, so clearly you can when you want to.
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Nuclear: part right, part wrong [Re:Unserious...] (Score:2)
Currently expensive, true. The nuclear advocates do say it can be made cheaper.
Not unreliable, untrue. I'm not sure where you got that. Nuclear plants turn out to be more reliable, on the average, than fossil fuel plants, running at an average capacity factor of 92.5%, well above pretty much all other power sources.
Slow to build, true. 7.5 years, on the average, from building to full-power operation. But the problem is a long-term one. We need a hundred-year solution. In the long term, even if we can't b
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Currently expensive, true. The nuclear advocates do say it can be made cheaper.
They have been pushing that obvious lie for half a century. "Energy too cheap to meter" when Windscale probably _took_ energy from the grid more than it produced. There is no sane reason to believe they stopped lying now.
Not unreliable, untrue. I'm not sure where you got that. Nuclear plants turn out to be more reliable, on the average, than fossil fuel plants, running at an average capacity factor of 92.5%, well above pretty much all other power sources
Just another lie. I guess you have ignored what has been happening in France. And you are ignoring that nuclear has an absolute disastrous failure mode. If a nuke SCRAMs, things get dicey because there typically is no warning, unlike with other forms of energy generation. You better have a
Citations [Re:Nuclear: part right, part wrong] (Score:2)
Currently expensive, true. The nuclear advocates do say it can be made cheaper.
They have been pushing that obvious lie for half a century.
I will remain agnostic about whether it can be made cheaper or not. Clearly in principle nuclear power plants could be much cheaper, but I will believe it when I see it. As the cliché goes, "in theory there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice there is."
For what its worth, an interesting discussion of cost can be found at the MIT site: https://energy.mit.edu/news/bu... [mit.edu]
Not unreliable, untrue. I'm not sure where you got that. Nuclear plants turn out to be more reliable, on the average, than fossil fuel plants, running at an average capacity factor of 92.5%, well above pretty much all other power sources
Just another lie.
Capacity factors are well known. Nuclear turns out to be very reliable compared to other power plant types, m
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Aside from the fact that oil will never go away in any of the next few lifetimes, due to things like plastics, fertilizers, and the plethora of other products western life depends upon from oil products.....we can't get off fossil fuels any times soon till the alternatives are truly ready.
And we ain't even close to there yet.
For EVs alone, there's not enough charging infrastructure to come close to supporting the population of the US if they were complet
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Aside from the fact that oil will never go away in any of the next few lifetimes, due to things like plastics, fertilizers, and the plethora of other products western life depends upon from oil products.....
Utterly irrelevant. The amount of oil used in those applications is so trivial compared to the billions of tons of oil we burn that it really isn't a problem.
If we did stop burning oil... we would have so much overproduction capability for oil that we could make all the plastic we could possibly want.
we can't get off fossil fuels any times soon till the alternatives are truly ready.
It's a long-term problem, it needs a long-term solution. Fossil fuels will be gradually replaced. We're not going to say "ok, tomorrow no more oil use."
And we ain't even close to there yet. For EVs alone, there's not enough charging infrastructure to come close to supporting the population of the US if they were completely converted......
Not at all clear. EVs can be charged at night, which is
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Well, I'm all for alternative fuels....BUT, I don't think we should be risking our lifestyles and, well, national security...by the govt trying to mandate we WILL be off things by 2030 or so.
We're already seeing "bans" on new ICE vehicle sales in this short time period in places. That would be all well and good if we were truly ready for that and EVs were 100% viable to own and use for all the current use cases
Long term problem, long term solutions [Re:About.] (Score:2)
Well, I'm all for alternative fuels....BUT, I don't think we should be risking our lifestyles and, well, national security...by the govt trying to mandate we WILL be off things by 2030 or so.
We're not "risking our lifestyles", nor national security. This is a slow and incremental process. Memorize that fact.
As for national security, there's a very good argument that reducing our dependance on fossil fuels will help our national security, not hurt it. Do you have any idea how much defense spending goes toward the middle East? Or, for that matter, think about the leverage Russia has in supplying fossil fuels to Europe.
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Sure they can be...if you are the owner of a single family home and can afford to install the charging equipment there...oh and you need to have your own off street parking.
Did you miss the part where I pointed out this is a slow and gradual process?
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Setting deadlines in about 7 years to ban sales of ICE vehicles...IMHO, is not slow and gradual.
It is manipulations from the govt...pressure from the govt. rather than having things make it attractive so where the populace naturally wants it.
Our govt is not there to influence our society....society is supposed to be in charge of and influence govt.
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EVs can be charged at night, which is a low time for the power grid. There is plenty of capacity there.
We keep losing that night time capacity as more solar power is added to the grid.
If we are adding batteries to the grid then that competes with batteries for BEVs, introduces more losses to the system, and just generally adds costs. Storing energy as pumped hydro, pressurizing air in mines, pushing rocks up hills, or many other similar options then there's matters of the climate and geography being suited for it. Bringing in energy from someplace else means being as reliant on a foreign nation for energy
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EVs can be charged at night, which is a low time for the power grid. There is plenty of capacity there.
We keep losing that night time capacity as more solar power is added to the grid.
You missed the future tense in that sentence. We will be losing that night time capacity as more solar power is added to the grid.
Grid is still under capacity during the dead of night now.
Yes, in the future we will have to adapt. Most of your points are reasonable, except:
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Solar power is expensive,
OK, I disagree with this one, too. Solar power has become absurdly cheap in the places where it's a reasonable solution. (It may be expensive in Seattle.)
and given that we are hitting very real physical limits on efficiency there's not much room for lowering costs.
Efficiency really isn't the limit on cost.
Any kind of automation or improvements in mining for materials to lower costs will benefit other energy sources too.
Improved silicon sheet production met
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It's not a fossil fuel if you're using it to make plastic or fertilizer.
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Your objections to getting off fossil fuels are circular nonsense. You're saying we can't build cars because there are no roads, and can't build roads because there are no cars to justify them, but that bullshit was already obsolete a decade ago. Growth in these sectors is exponential, and as is growth in the supply chains to support them.
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Q-Cells is building a 6GW/year supply chain in the US state of Georgia. Everything from raw silicon to finished panels. A few other panel factories are getting built, and First Solar has had them in the US for a number of years. The US will be mostly self-sufficient in panel production in 2-3 years.
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Pity the tiny oil companies, entirely bending to the will of an overbearing, overpowerful corporate state.
Please get serious.