• 60 Posts
  • 1.41K Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 25th, 2024

help-circle


  • Significant changes are currently taking place around the world. Here are ten that should be noted. Source

    1. Around the globe, nothing is being expanded as massively in terms of electricity as renewable energies, i.e., power from the sun and wind, as well as battery storage. Approximately twice as much investment is flowing into so-called electrotechnology as into fossil fuels. 92.5 percent of the newly built capacity for power generation worldwide in 2024 was renewable. In 2023, it was 86 percent, and in 2022, it was already 83 percent.

    2. In the first half of 2025, China has expanded its renewable energy supply by twice as much as the rest of the world combined.

    3. Since at least 2024, China has earned dozens of billions of dollars more from the export of electrotechnology than the USA, the world’s largest fossil fuel exporter, earns from the export of oil and gas. The gap is growing. 70 percent (wind) to 90 percent (solar, batteries) of the global production capacity for electrotechnology is located in China.

    4. In the USA, the Trump administration is actively and aggressively combating renewable energies in line with the “Project 2025,” which is largely funded and shaped by the oil industry. As a result, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has reduced its growth forecast for renewable energies in the USA by almost 50 percent.

    5. For the world as a whole, however, the IEA predicts a doubling of renewable capacity by 2030, which would be roughly equivalent to the combined current installed total capacity for power generation (across all energy sources) in China, the EU, and Japan. It should be noted that the IEA is notorious for repeatedly and significantly underestimating the growth of renewable energies. This global development is a direct, causal consequence of German regulation, as crazy as it sounds: We initiated this trend with the Renewable Energy Act. If we act wisely, Germany will change the world for the better. If not, it will still change the world, but in a different way.

    6. In China and India, CO₂ emissions from power generation are now decreasing, which is sensational good news. This is due to renewable energies.

    7. Global electricity consumption continues to grow rapidly, partly due to artificial intelligence and data centers, but also due to the rapid growth of electrification in general.

    8. Fortunately, the rapid growth in consumption is fully offset, and even surpassed, by the even faster growth of renewable energies: Worldwide, in the first half of 2025, approximately 369 terawatt-hours more were consumed than in the previous year’s period, but also 403 terawatt-hours additionally generated from the sun and wind. In the first half of 2025, renewable energies have surpassed coal as the most important energy source for electricity worldwide.

    9. The market for internal combustion engines has been shrinking since 2017. Just as only renewables and storage are growing in power generation, only the electric motor is growing in mobility, and that continues to accelerate. This is called disruption: A superior, easier-to-produce, and ultimately cheaper product displaces the old, expensive competition. That’s how market economy works.

    10. Among the top 20 best-selling electric cars worldwide from January to August 2025, there are two Tesla models (in first and third place), 17 Chinese cars, including nine from BYD alone—and a single German electric car (the ID.4 from VW in 18th place).


  • Ich will einen chinesischen Kleinwagen für unter 17.000€, lackiert mit den Tränen der deutschen Automobilindustrie.
    So ärgerlich, dass man die Stefans, Peters und Martins in den Chefetagen kaum persönlich dran bekommt. Die nehmen jetzt noch ein paar Jahre Boni mit, für all die getragene Verantwortung und verpissen sich dann.




  • Not sure if this is good advice. By joining the gamble, you’re (micro-)fueling the global suicide machine that’s causing all this stress. Someone has to earn the money you make from it, and it’s usually either by destruction, exploitation or scamming.
    I try to break free from all the stuff by downsizing. Second hand clothes, Repair Café, holidays at youth hostels like 40 km from my home, meeting/making local friends and very important: Raising your kids to not be spoiled, entitled, materialistic cunts.
    I call it the power of No, thank you. It’s so calming to lower you expectations, switch to a lower gear and find happiness in baking a cake with apples from the neighborhood, than another, big-ass TV and a crowded flight to Asia once a year.
    Having young kids is brutal though. It gets better and you’ll look back at it with mixed feelings of relieve and melancholia.




  • This is great advice! It took me a couple of decades and I’m still struggling sometimes, but this is the way. It is a burden and a privilege to recognize a deep-seated social or environmental problem because you can now spend the rest of your life telling people about it and get hit with ignorance, apathy or some sort of bullshit bingo. It will crush you if you don’t find strategies to deal with that. The post I’m replying to lists exactly the strategies I would recommend as well. It’s not easy because it’s (too) slow and not as sexy as calling for a revolution. But I’d say it’s the only way. Lead by example.

    Well … and sabotage. You should definitely blow up some pipelines.










  • Puh, atme mal durch! Da liegt ein bisschen Hoffnung auf linke Politik in der Luft, die Umfragewerte steigen. Wenn wir uns jetzt sofort wieder gegenseitig bekämpfen lacht sich die bürgerlichen Mitte und alles rechts davon tot.
    Jetzt mach doch nicht mit beim aggressiven grabenziehen und andere-scheiße-finden. Damit löst du kein einziges Problem und springst nebenbei auch noch über das Stöckchen dieser Zeitung. Dann haben sie alles was sie wollen.
    Schön locker bleiben, dickes Fell und weiter. Wir können uns ja gerne wieder zersplittern NACHDEM wir Bundeskanzli sind.