SmokingtheMeats
Well-known member
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- #76
I'm sorry I started this mess. It was never my intention.
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Lol. The thing about the internet…we are all free to walk away at any time. Some tough realities being parsed out here though. I think I am correct that oil and gas still equals power, but I am open to being proven wrong. I actually would like to be proven wrong.I'm sorry I started this mess. It was never my intention.
" Fine, if you think that CA electric grid is managed well, I'm not even going to try convincing you"Lived in CA my whole life, 38 years. Never had a power outage not caused by weather taking down a poll and even then it was maybe just 2 hours.
My internet goes out more than my power by a factor of like 100.
Where I live the grid is managed very well" Fine, if you think that CA electric grid is managed well, I'm not even going to try convincing you"
again, I don’t understand the point.What exactly will heat their homes this winter? What will run their factories when the wind is not blowing and the sun is not shining? How would adding more renewable energy help answer the last two questions?
OK, I see what you are saying. What I’m saying is that more renewables will make the problem worse. Renewables are unreliable. At least we agree that more hydrocarbon energy sources makes people safer from evil dictators.again, I don’t understand the point.
the issue for Europe, is that they have been too dependent on requiring too many hydrocarbons from Moscow.
The facts that their homes will not be heated, etc., is not the fault of renewables/alternative feedstock sources. The fault is in Moscow.
The question then becomes, how could they have minimized that pain inflicted upon them by Moscow? And the answer is multifaceted (including sourcing hydrocarbons from elsewhere), but includes partly the obvious: (A) reducing energy demand, and (B) increasing availability of non-hydrocarbon feedstocks
To frame this as though the lack of energy alternatives in Europe is the fault of alternative feedstocks … very strange.
Short term issue, lesson learned, one year pain, problem solved, Putin spanked, Trump vindicated, all is good, world a better place except for the Ukrainian dead and injured (and Russian military pawns and relatives, other collateral damage, but hard to have sympathy for enablers). This winter, more parkas and blankets. Anyone who freezes is a fool or has a bad family.again, I don’t understand the point.
the issue for Europe, is that they have been too dependent on requiring too many hydrocarbons from Moscow.
The facts that their homes will not be heated, etc., is not the fault of renewables/alternative feedstock sources. The fault is in Moscow.
The question then becomes, how could they have minimized that pain inflicted upon them by Moscow? And the answer is multifaceted (including sourcing hydrocarbons from elsewhere), but includes partly the obvious: (A) reducing energy demand, and (B) increasing availability of non-hydrocarbon feedstocks
To frame this as though the lack of energy alternatives in Europe is the fault of alternative feedstocks … very strange.
Europe has very few natural resources, especially for oil. England was once a massive producer of coal, and it once was the source of virtually all their electric power and heat.What exactly will heat their homes this winter? What will run their factories when the wind is not blowing and the sun is not shining? How would adding more renewable energy help answer the last two questions?
Agree 100%. Gotta keep trying. Just not reliable yet. Storage is the key. In the meantime, the more renewable energy you rely on, the more vulnerable you are.Europe has very few natural resources, especially for oil. England was once a massive producer of coal, and it once was the source of virtually all their electric power and heat.
Those days are gone, but so are the days of 100% reliance on foreign petroleum as the only source of energy. Although renewable resources are far from ready for prime-time, they're at least something that can't be taken away by a foreign government. That's reason alone for just about every country to look for alternatives.
It will take a long time, but at the wheels are in motion.
Renewables do not have to be, by definition less reliable. That's FOX News-talk. As a conservative (full-right) EV and solar panel owner, been there done that. With proper planning (which is so far rare) renewables can be done just as reliably as fossil fuel solutions. All it takes is the right investment and planning before fully committing to the renewable cut-over. Lots of ways to store energy for down times, and not just batteries. Pump water uphill on windy days into large reservoirs to use for generation when wind dies, etc. My power wall batteries are WAY better than the old 8-cylinder GM-powered generator behind the barn, and far less costly to maintain. In fact zero maintenance instead of $2k/yr plus parts ($8k last year). They are still a nonstarter some places - for example solar panels are silly in high latitudes because winters are dark when power is needed most, and batteries simply can;t handle months of storage. But in some of those places, lake parts of New Zealand and all of Iceland, renewables can still handle 100% of needs because there is a huge amount of geothermal (available to tap into almost anywhere in Iceland) and/or hydroelectric.OK, I see what you are saying. What I’m saying is that more renewables will make the problem worse. Renewables are unreliable. At least we agree that more hydrocarbon energy sources makes people safer from evil dictators.
Already had this discussion with that person after pointing out the two examples they used of CA's "failed" grid were a result of external factors (first by Enron and then, ironically, by Arizona Public Service, which also happens to have been the largest outage CA has experienced in its history) that had little to nothing to do with CA specific.Where I live the grid is managed very well
SMUD > https://www.smud.org/
Community owned, and their headquarters are down the street from me and they have free EV charging powered by Solar I siphon off of sometimes
It's not part of CAISO, which manages most of the state.
It's under BANC > http://www.thebanc.org/
Little map for you:
The great thing about free markets is that the bigger the need to solve a problem, the bigger the opportunity for companies to compete to solve it.Agree 100%. Gotta keep trying. Just not reliable yet. Storage is the key. In the meantime, the more renewable energy you rely on, the more vulnerable you are.
Silly Europe! They could fix all this if only they’d pull “more hydrocarbon energy sources” out of thin air!OK, I see what you are saying. What I’m saying is that more renewables will make the problem worse. Renewables are unreliable. At least we agree that more hydrocarbon energy sources makes people safer from evil dictators.
Short term issue, lesson learned, one year pain, problem solved, Putin spanked, Trump vindicated, all is good, world a better place except for the Ukrainian dead and injured (and Russian military pawns and relatives, other collateral damage, but hard to have sympathy for enablers). This winter, more parkas and blankets. Anyone who freezes is a fool or has a bad family.
There were and are plenty. But they chose to do two really stupid things - over-focus on renewables without also planning for the collateral needs that come with them (grid leveling batteries, etc.,), and they increased reliance on Russian oil and gas despite wise advice to the contrary. THEY now see the folly and are scrambling - there are solutions, including more extraction in friendlier/safer places like North America. So no, it isn’t thin air. Contrary to the old 1980’s myth that hydrocarbons will run out in the near term, we now have more known reserves than at any time in history - in fact as far forward as we can see, with many more technologies and needed locations yet to explore. Fracking has been a godsend. A green warming alarmist’s nightmare - but a reality. The EU had choices, and made bad ones. Andrea Merkel was Exhibit A, but she had a lot of company. They now rue those decisions, and are quickly finding solutions, so yes, clearly there were and are sources, always were.Silly Europe! They could fix all this if only they’d pull “more hydrocarbon energy sources” out of thin air!