“with wind the single-biggest contributor… Power production costs have declined “by almost half” … And the clean energy sector has created 50,000 new jobs… Ask me what was the impact on the electricity sector in Uruguay after this tragic war in Europe — zero.”

  • CriticalMiss@lemmy.world
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    I actually never thought of it like that, if you’re not partaking in the trade of fossil fuels, you are removing yourself from a lot of potential conflicts and “who support who” ordeals.

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      One of the main reasons the big players want (or even need) as many people globally to remain dependent on it as possible - control.

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          Germany has the most renewables per capita of any European nation and have been heavy investors for a long time now.

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            They are a bit better now, but especially during Merkel were some heavy stones laid on the way for wind. Ok, i admit, they are good in private solar now.

        • puppy@lemmy.world
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          Ironically it’s the US and German subsidies that kickstarted solar and brought costs down.

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      Yes, I think that one of the side effect of the war in Ukraine will be a big increase of renewables energy in Europe.

      European countries started to realize how fragile their energy supply is and how dangerous it is.

      • oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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        Sadly, in the meantime it also mean a surge of imports of fossil fuels from other countries and reopening extraction sites in EU. Reducing fossil fuel dependency really is the top priority of EU, not only for ecology but also for peace and for the economy.

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        Except once you have the turbines and panels, you don’t have to keep importing resources to run them. Sure, you might need parts for maintenance, but if things go south it’s a lot easier to reverse engineer parts than to find new oil suppliers.

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        Only because they produce them the cheapest and in the largest quantities (which goes hand in hand).

        Basically any country can produce solar panels and wind turbines. Both technology and resource wise.

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        They also have hydropower which provides a constant base load, and basically they have just heavily optimised their distribution of power to be very efficient. In emergencies they are also able to import power from neighbouring countries.

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          There are, but none is feasible today when it comes to mass storage. Or is there one?

          • remus989@sh.itjust.works
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            There is actually. Pumped Storage hydro uses the energy as it’s generated from renewables and uses it to pump water up into a reservoir. Once you have the water pumped, it’s just a matter of letting the water back out through turbines. Their efficiency is somewhere around 80% which is pretty good.

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              For that you need both suitable hills and water. Also it’s not that huge, it certainly depends on the reservoir capacity. If it was a feasible solution, then you’d see them everywhere, but you don’t. Ask Germans about it.

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        How often is there no wind anywhere?

        How cloudy does it have to be so you can’t generate power?

        Is it possible to store power?

  • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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    Looks like that’s just the grid? I’m sure there’s more to go for transportation and eliminating the need for generators and gas, but this is a great start!

    • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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      does anyone ever assume that it’s anything other than the grid when it comes to some article like this?

      • Lancoian@lemmy.world
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        electricity is’t the majority of the energy consumed in nearly any country.

        it’s a easy way to keep confusing less vigilant people by calling electricity as energy.

        Just call things the way they are.

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          You’re right; 2/3 of worldwide energy is actually waste heat.

          image

          https://www.businessinsider.com/most-energy-still-comes-from-oil-2015-10

          Here’s the chart from 2007: Waste heat / losses are in the top right, although it doesn’t show the transport sector losses which are higher than for coal generation.

          image

          What this means is that when we fully electrify all sectors, by using renewable energy such as wind and solar, our total energy generation capacity will only need to be about 1/3 to 1/4 of what we currently produce today to fulfill our current energy needs. That’s huge.

            • thesorehead@lemmy.world
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              The reference to waste heat could include the heat from burning fossil fuels that isn’t turned directly into work. Which is a lot.

              So you’re right, there will still be some waste heat and the reduction in production needs won’t be that drastic. But it’s still a significant chunk of the total!

              • cucumber_sandwich@lemmy.world
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                Yes of course, but a lot of energy is currently also used for heating things in cooking steel, chemical industry, concrete, etc. Those processes need energy as heat and directly produce waste heat. I agree it’s probably still significant. It’s just wrong to reduce energy consumption to “making things move”.

              • masterofn001
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                Converting energy to power will always produce at least one of heat or light (also radiant heat) in the process.

                There is no 100% efficient power.

                But, electric is the closest you could get. Especially compared to any petroleum products

            • Virulent@reddthat.com
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              No but electric motors and heat pumps are much more efficient so electfication helps reduce waste heat

            • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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              Changing your energy generation from burning something to turning a turbine with wind power, hydropower or geothermal power. Or just using solar, means that you have no waste heat for electrical generation.

              Waste heat is only created when you burn a fuel to boil the water.

              • cucumber_sandwich@lemmy.world
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                If you heat things electrically you still generate waste heat. Think electrical stove and its bigger industrial counterparts.

          • Lancoian@lemmy.world
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            that’s not quite right and mixes couple things

            you have production losses and transmission losses. then you have waste heat used for household and industrial heating.

            now you would also have to produce that portion electrically.

            For instance in winter heating requirements of a typical house are 2x that of the electricity used.

        • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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          I mean I doubt any reasonable person would think that literally every household in Uruguay has replaced their gas stove with an electric/induction stove and that they use only AC/heat pumps and everyone has switched to an electric car and every bus has been converted to a trolley and or Battery/Hydrogen Electric

          and a bunch of other stuff.

  • Ghostlight@lemmy.world
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    Meanwhile in South Africa, we’re having blackouts while being almost completely dependant on coal.

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      i think evs are still too expensive for the common uruguaian(?) wallet. so they still use oil for cars. but 4 months 100% renewables is great news.

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        Indeed, I have some friends who live in South America and they tell me that electric scooters and three wheelers are becoming very popular. Imported from China.

  • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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    I wonder how much of that is biomass, and how they’re planning to grow enough vegetation to renew iy

      • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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        Not too much biomass fortunately. But even with some googling I can’t seem to find how anyone plans to produce enough biomass to keep this going

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          53% of power currently being generated by wind, the rest hydro. So there you go. They seem to be doing it, so there’s your answer.

          • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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            Yes they have multiple forms of energy generation, that does not answer the question as to wether their biofuel is sustainable. Yes it’s carbon neutral (ish) but can they produce the biomass as fast as they consume it?

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        I don’t know how much I trust that website. It states that British Columbia has 100% of its power generation from an unknown source, which it labels as “500 grams per kwhr” equivalent to coal. But we know that 100% of British Columbia’s electricity comes from hydro…

          • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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            The website’s number of 500g / kilowatt hour is completely wrong.

            This is what BC hydro says:

            An efficient, low cost electricity system for B.C. More than 90% of BC Hydro’s generation is produced by hydroelectric generation, which is generally the most cost-effective, clean and reliable option. We also continue to investigate alternative sources of energy, such as wind and wave power.

            We generate over 43,000 gigawatt hours of electricity annually to supply more than 1.9 million residential, commercial and industrial customers.

            Over 80% of BC Hydro’s installed generating capacity is at hydroelectric installations in the Peace and Columbia river basins.


            About 87% of electricity in B.C. is produced from hydroelectric sources. B.C. is home to roughly 16 000 MW of hydroelectric capacity, most of which is located on the Columbia River in southeastern B.C. and the Peace River in the northeast. Site C, a new 1 100 MW hydroelectric facility, is currently under construction on the Peace River. The project is expected to be completed in 2025.

            The greenhouse gas intensity of B.C.’s electricity grid Footnote 2 measured as the GHGs emitted in the generation of the province’s electric power, was 7.6 grams of CO2e per kilowatt-hour (g of CO2e per kWh) electricity generated in 2020. This is a 70% reduction from the province’s 2005 level of 24 g of CO2e per kWh. The national average in 2020 was 110 g of CO2e per kWh (Figure 8).

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      This aspect is a big aspect of intermittent renewables energy that is often dismissed: you need piloted energy as a backup, the amount of piloted energy depend on how oversized is the intermittent energy installation.

      For renewable piloted energy there is two options that I know of: hydro and biomass. Uruguay is using both.

      It’s something to keep in mind if we want to reach 100% renewables without nuclear, we need to increase the biomass electricity production.

      On another hand we are already using a lot of biomass to produce ethanol and biodiesel. A lot of land is also use for animal feed, so I’m a society with less ICE cars and less meat eated we might have enough land to grow biomass for electricity generation.

      • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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        Exactly, but I’m wondering how Uruguay is planning to go from a “might” to a “definitely” enough biomass production

      • Jojo@lemm.ee
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        Biomass as a source of energy has a lot of the same problems as fossil fuels, no? Why is nuclear not on the table while biomass is?

        • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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          Nuclear does not have the same function than biomass.

          A biomass power station is (relatively) cheap to build but the fuel is expensive. So it make sense to have it as a backup and only use it when necessary.

          On the other hand nuclear is expensive to build but the fuel is cheap. So building a nuclear power station as a backup does not make sense, it needs to run all the time.

          This is the basic ideas, but in practice nuclear is actually beneficial to renewables. The electricity network operator did several scenarios for the French electrical production in 2050. In their scenarios, having around 13% of nuclear in the mix divided by almost two the amount of solar, wind turbines and batteries needed.

          • Jojo@lemm.ee
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            But nuclear is scalable while running, allowing you to ramp up and down as needed to cover for the intermittent nature of renewables without relying on fossil fuels or similar. Isn’t that why adding nuclear into the mix is such an effective strategy?

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        Well then it’s a good thing that’s United States produces 20 to 25% of its electricity through nuclear power generation. It would be a good idea to maintain that.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      We really need to think of biomass as batteries. In both cases, it’s tough to scale up enough for full coverage but we know how to store biodiesel or ethanol, it’s very energy dense. Scattering a bunch of diesel generators with big biodiesel tanks might be a better answer than batteries for when the wind doesn’t blow

      It also ensures a market and distribution industry for farming and construction vehicles where batteries may not work

      • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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        It takes a decade and quite a bit of space to make a tree (for example), it’s technically renewable but the fuel production is very slow. I’m curious how they’re planning to keep that up

        • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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          Other things grow faster and take up less space than trees. For example most biofuel is made from maize and sugarcane.

          • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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            eyy thank you! That makes sense! You seem to be the only one to actually try to answer my question :/

            I know where to look further! thank you!

            • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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              No problem :) It was interesting to read a bit more about it. I reckon hemp would be the ultimate one though - super fast growing, will grow in most climates and really versatile for making fibers.

          • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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            Yea, that’s the issue. For something to be sustainable, you need to replenish the fuel source. Biomass can be, but you need a lot of it, but we also need it for food

        • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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          By that logic you could also not call the flat thing inside a phone a battery because it can’t feed back into the grid.

          • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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            Other way round, you can take biomass and turn it into electricity easily. But you cant easily turn electricity into biomass. (it is easy on a phone to go both ways tho, google “USB c OTG adapter”)

          • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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            technically yes, well an accu really. But that might be different in English. The question is whether that sunlight charging of that carbon store can keep up with our consumption

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          You burn it, and it generates electricity in a thermal plant. Or you can use it directly to heat a boiler to heat buildings.

    • taffingitout@lemmy.world
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      You can check it out in real time here: UTE Generation Biomass is not something so actively sought, it’s more of a consequence of other industries here. You are correct that we have other renewable sources that work when wind is not on its peak. There are two hidro plants that can work when demand is large and wind is not on its peak, and they’ve managed to keep this regime even on dry or draught conditions.

      • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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        I’ll have to check later. It seems like the page is down, I’ll get back to you. thank you!

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    how those middle east prince now can buy more hookers and supercars if u guys not using oil

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    Very cool. I hope they are looking at reducing demand for power as much as increasing production.

    • DanForever@lemmy.world
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      Actually, with clean sources of electricity like wind and solar, the amount consumption doesn’t matter. It only matters if there isn’t enough for everyone, or the power comes from non-green sources (coal etc)

      • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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        I don’t understand the objection to greater efficiency… Even renewables are not without their own environmental costs of mining, transportation, manufucaturing etc. If we use less power we can more easily transition to renewables, with less disruption to the environment.

        • DanForever@lemmy.world
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          You’re right! There’s nothing wrong with efficiency and teaching people to be less wasteful, however I believe including it in your argument for renewables means muddying the message.

          Talking about getting production to 100% renewable puts the onus on governments and power companies to change.

          Talking about efficiency is about getting consumers to use less, and allows energy producers and politicians to point the finger at people leaving their lights on unnecessarily rather than getting on with the job of making more renewable energy.

          This is of course speculation on my part

          • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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            Efficiency doesn’t have to be consumer led, though. It could be stuff like higher building standards and subsidies for insulation, subsidies for heat pumps for AC and hot water, even seemingly trivial things like free/subsidised LED bulbs can add up (there is still a significant amount of non-LED bulbs in the wild in many countries).

    • kurcatovium@lemm.ee
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      Well, not every country has wind farms or water turbines as viable option. You know, geography and stuff…

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          For example Czech republic, Slovakia, baltic states, maybe Finland. It’s not like there’s none of these available. It’s they’re not really viable/meaningful options, yet. Sure you can build solar, but with nearly no sunlight in winter it’s almost useless for half the year…

        • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          My country of Belgium. Unless by “100 % renewable” you include fossile gas generation “offset” by summer’s overproduction (which would be disingenuous).

          Middle of January: 100% overcast for weeks on end with only 8 hours of daylight, some days with little to no wind. Geography does not support more hydro or any geothermal generation. Country is way too densely populated for meaningful biomass fuel production (not that it is a climate-friendly practice anyway).

          Maaaybe there is a stretch argument to be made about offshore wind/water, but we have relatively little coastline and very busy waterways due to having some of the busiest shipping ports of Europe, so I doubt even in the most optimistic scenarios this can fill the gap during the winter season.

          For any meaningful definition of the concept, we can’t be 100 % dependent on nationally-sourced renewables until we figure out much much denser and cheaper long term storage solutions. Which is alright - maintaining existing nuclear reactors is an option (barely due to legaislative sabotage pushed by the “greens” but a couple gigawatts is nothing to scoff at) and more importantly we are part of the EU which will hopefully allow us to buy southern European solar/wind via HVDC lines in the future, and we’re already very dependent on French nuclear. (Also we don’t have to be 100 % independent to push for renewables, perfect mustn’t be the enemy of good and all that)

          • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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            allow us to buy southern European solar/wind

            Yeah, I think this is the future for small, densely populated countries without clear sources of renewable energy

          • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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            Doesn’t Belgium just import electricity from the European energy grid? You guys have access to Norwegian hydro, German coal, and French nuclear.

            • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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              Yes, in rather large amounts since we aren’t always self-sufficient (even with fossil gas).

              Almost all of continental Europe is part of one, synchronous grid. Right now I’m using electricity simultaneously being produced in Belgium, Portugal, Ukraine, Turkey, and even Morocco; although for accounting purposes we calculate the difference at the border, electrons don’t care.

            • argarath@lemmy.world
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              You intentionally ignored the part about being overcast for weeks during the winter, the time of the year where they need the most energy. Tell me how solar can heat up the entire country when it’s overcast and there are only 8 hours of day light, which reminder, is covered by the overcast weather that stays for weeks

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              Middle of January: 100% overcast for weeks on end with only 8 hours of daylight, some days with little to no wind.

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              I think you are forgetting on part of the message.

              Sure on average over the year you can produce enough electricity, but how do you heat houses in december, January and February when there is almost no sun ?

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          Vatican City /s

          I think that there are constraints for certain countries, but the majority probably could. And when they can’t, it should be solved by cooperation and trade, IMHO.

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      I don’t understand the nuclear energy hate. Of the nonrenewables it is the cleanest, and it is not always possible to run 100% renewable, (they depend on natural factors such as sun or wind), while nuclear is constant and always producing. Look at Germany and how it is polluting using gas and fossiles, it would be a million times better it they used nuclear energy.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        Nuclear is just not practical. Even if you discount the risk of severe impact if anything ever goes wrong, and the long term impact on the environment if the fuel and waste chain. we’ve countless case studies that it’s just too expensive, too complex to build, too much putting all your eggs in one basket.

        Making up some numbers but I think the scale is right …. Which would you choose:

        — $12B and 10-20 years to build a nuclear plant, requiring highly specialized fuel and employees.all or nothing: you get no benefit the whole time it’s under construction so payback is multiple decades. Given the specialty fuel, employees, security, it’s the most expensive choice to operate

        — $1B and 10-12 years to build a wind farm, but you start getting income as soon as sections come online. Fuel cost is zero and one being out for maintenance has negligible impact in production/profit. You get payback practically as soon as the project is built and it’s all gravy from there

        • sitzathlet@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          Adding to this, while the wind doesn’t always blow, and the sun doesn’t always shine, nuclear needs water to evaporate. In a world where droughts during summer get ever more common, nuclear/coal is not the 24/365 solution it once was. The future has to rely on a diverse mix of different energy sources, if it wants to be resilient.

          • mihies@kbin.social
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            Coal is not affected by droughts, though. Nuclear for better or worse is the most reliable and clean source we know today. Biggest hurdle with renewables is storage. Let’s see if hydrogen is the way. But then again, storing large quantities of hydrogen might result in a big boom of something goes wrong.

            • sitzathlet@feddit.de
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              AFAIK coal power plants often(always? Idk) use steam to drive their turbines in order to generate electricity. I’m not arguing against nuclear, but for a very diverse mix. Warm dry summer -> solar. Rainy dark winter -> hydro & wind. If we keep burning fossils, including nuclear, until we can switch to 100% renewals, I’m okay with that. The big advantage of renewals is the comparatively low cost of phases where no electricity is produced. A solar farm doesn’t generate cost at night. Coal and nuclear plants can’t just be “switched on and off” at will, and if they don’t produce, still need a lot more attention. But for the meantime, they are necessary, until we either overbuilt so much renewables to cover for “no wind/sun/rain” situations, or get some storage solutions (batteries, hydrogen, biofuels,…) Implement on a large enough scale.

              • mihies@kbin.social
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                That steam is closed circuit though. But yes, they need cooling water and perhaps pollution cleaning water. So I guess they are affected by droughts as well.

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        1 year ago

        Because it’s an obvious psyop that took over almost every social media platform. No one was talking about nuclear then BOOM everyone was talking about nuclear all of a sudden with exactly zero mainstream public input from politicians or even marketing from nuclear power companies. People hate nuclear, because some of us have been alive long enough to remember Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima (the worst nuclear disaster in human history, 2011).

        Here’s a list of every single nuclear meltdown/disaster/catastrophe https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_and_radiation_accidents_and_incidents

        The fission reaction to boil the water to spin the turbines is clean, but literally every single other facet of nuclear production, from mining, to enriching, to transport, to post-reaction storage (where nuclear waste inevitably always leaks) is disastrous for the environment.

        • Bgugi@lemmy.world
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          I’m pretty sure you’re glossing over Germany replacing nuclear with coal, which has been probably been the largest story in nuclear since Fukushima.

          Even including major disasters, nuclear is one of the safest and cleanest sources of power, and the only one poised to seriously displace fossil fuels in many places.

          If anything, “Sunshine and rainbows” renewables are a psyop to help entrench fossil fuels long-term.

      • Turun@feddit.de
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        It’s a good energy source in principle and Germany definitely should have let their reactors run longer, but it’s just too damn expensive to build new ones. I’m not aware of any serious private installations of nuclear that are being built right now. One small modular reactor company in the US recently announced they will need twice as much money as previous estimated to build one.

        Meanwhile, a ton of people and companies are building solar and wind everywhere.

      • Alto@kbin.social
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        Decades and decades of fossil fuel company FUD about nuclear that they managed to get the greens to buy into a long time ago.

        • Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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          No, not FUD. it’s the radioactive waste issue. And enormous expense.

          And a security issue. Think of the mess if war/terrorism comes home and adversaries starts blowing them up.

      • mihies@kbin.social
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        Even worse, they prematurely closed their nuclear power plants, even recently. 🤦‍♂️

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          You seem to be the type of person that doesn’t understand that you just can’t easily decide from one day to another to keep nuclear power plants online, that where decided to go offline soon over 10 years ago. Supply chains already adapted, technically necessary inspections weren’t performed because it would soon shut down etc. You just cant easily revert a plan to turn off all nuclear power plans by a certain date from 10 years ago just days or weeks before that date.

          • mihies@kbin.social
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            Did I ever say that, though? Global warming didn’t happen yesterday, it’s well known for decades. The decision to close npps in first place wasn’t very clever, not revoking the decision later was even worse (I don’t know what was the last possible date to revoke it, I admit - but it’s not easy is a bad excuse). This brilliant plan is resulting in huge pollution while having plenty of renewable sources and spending a ton of money on those.
            Edit: grammar

            • Vrtrx@lemmy.world
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              Yeah in a perfect world, Germany would have kept their npp and phased out coal first instead but it’s not a perfect world sadly and considering the npp operators were heavily campaigning against renewables Germany probably wouldn’t have invested that much in renewables if npp weren’t phased out. The only problem now is that Germany didn’t keep their momentum for investing in and expending renewables

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          But the issue is you still need something for when the sun isn’t shining like what happens every night, and when the wind isn’t blowing, which can also happen at night. What will power everything during that time? Nuclear can be the backbone that keeps things running when renewables aren’t keeping up with demand. Sadly we can’t fully rely on renewables, and between having gas and coal as the backup or nuclear as the backup, I’d prefer a billion times nuclear over the other option

          • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Batteries my guy. Batteries. You charge up your batteries by producing more electricity than you would need during the day, that keeps the lights on (so to speak) during the night.

            • mihies@kbin.social
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              Did you ever calculate the amount of battery capacity you’d need for, let’s say a week in winter?

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      I’d be willing to bet most people you’d categorize as “nuclear fanbois” would be perfectly happy if hydroelectric was providing 65% of the grid power.

      The problem is that that renewables are pushed as a “one size fits all” solution that they really aren’t.

  • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    Was the wind blowing all night every night? Or do they have enough hydro (or another power source) to power then while the sun is down?

    • jesta@lemmy.world
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      “Hydropower provides a large percentage of installed production capacity in Uruguay, almost all of it produced by four hydroelectric facilities, three on the Rio Negro and one, the Salto Grande dam shared with Argentina, on the Uruguay River. The production from these hydropower sources is dependent on seasonal rainfall patterns, but under normal hydrological conditions, can supply off-peak domestic demand.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_in_Uruguay

      • mihies@kbin.social
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        And they burn fossil fuels if necessary or import from Brazil it seems. They would have problems if a season is dry though.

        • killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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          They haven’t for four months though, which is what the actual article is about. You’re all over the thread throwing around negativity about the least optimal conditions.

          Are you not keen to see how long they can do this for? If they achieve this for 11 out of 12 months of the year for the next decade, is that not a huge win for them and for our ambitions around the globe?

          • mihies@kbin.social
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            The problem is usually not 4 good months but the time when you don’t have renewables since the demand is still there, or even higher (during winter). And then you have problems (see Germany, which is currently the biggest polluter around because of their renewables policy). They are lucky that they have majority of energy coming from hydro, since that is quite reliable, but still, what happens if drought strikes? Not an impossible scenario in these times of global warming. How much fossil fuels are they burning yearly instead of running a nuclear power plant?
            I’d be more than happy if renewables did solve all problems, but I don’t see how can that work today.

            • killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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              I see what you’re saying but the only tangible reply is: perfection is the enemy of good.

              If we get to a point where half the world is doing this while falling back to fossil in emergencies, while the other half has a 100% success rate with nuclear, then the case is clear.

              But that’s not where we are and this, on its own terms, is a step away from fossil fuels as a primary solution, which is progress.