by theluckycountry » Sun 18 Aug 2024, 17:50:04
Why Renewables Cannot Replace Fossil Fuels
It’s all in the math and physics.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')olar panels adorn the roof of my Colorado home. I helped build two large solar farms. I felt sure I was helping mitigate global warming, and it felt good! And as a happy additional benefit, Colorado’s net-metering meant my electric bill for the sunny summer months was $0. A win for the climate and a win for me. Or so I thought.
My journey began when, as a concerned scientist, I decided to understand what it would take to clean up America’s fossil-fueled electric power systems. Wind and sunshine are free and plentiful. It seemed to make perfect sense to put them to work cleaning up dirty and polluting power plants... But the problem is that word “replace.” A coal plant generates electricity 24 hours a day, seven days a week, rain or shine, all year long. Solar panels, on the other hand, suffer through nights, clouds, dust, snow, and weak winter sun, all of which impact a solar panel’s ability to generate electricity. In fact, and on an annual basis, the average North American solar farm generates meaningful power less than 20 percent of the time.
I’d never really thought about that. Obviously, power for 20 percent of the time can’t replace 24-hour dispatchable (whenever needed) baseload power. To cover those huge night and dark-day gaps, and to keep the lights always on, something else is needed—a lot of something else. In Colorado and elsewhere, most of that something else, most of those gaps, are filled with power from coal or gas plants. And that is the problem. Although solar farms have allowed fossil-fueled plants to cut back and save emissions on sunny days, they haven’t been able to replace them 24/7 and obviously cannot do so by themselves.
The result is that to fill the power gap, utilities employing solar and wind farms still need to keep their fossil-fueled generators running to provide power when the sun isn’t shining or the wind not blowing.
Many of us have hoped that batteries could someday fill the gaps by storing and saving energy that could be distributed when needed to fill the gaps. Unfortunately, there is no known technology that can efficiently and economically store the incredible amount of energy required for the length of time required. In winter, for example, clouds can cover most of the continent for a week or more, shutting down solar production (the output from solar farms drops by 75 to 90 percent when clouds cover the sun). Batteries can store enough power for a few hours, but storing enough electricity in batteries to power the nation for a cloudy week is simply not feasible. And as we electrify everything, the demand and the gap will grow exponentially.
https://democracyjournal.org/arguments/ ... sil-fuels/Like most well meaning people our young scientist in the article simply believed what he was told in the mass media, without question, then went ahead with "the program" not thinking too deeply. It's only after years and tears that the fallacies in these modern dreams come to light for them. The truth is the fallacies were always there, obviously, but being caught up in the hubris of the "Great Transition" people are blinded to them. I am lucky in the sense that I'm an open-minded Gen-xer, I question everything and take nothing at face value.
It helps to not sit in front of the propaganda box of course, the television set will program you to believe all sorts of nonsense, after all, that it's purpose! It is the greatest method of social engineering ever invented. Many have pointed out this fact but that's like pointing out to a Heroin addict that their drug is bad for them. TV is Heroin for the mind, just as addictive, and like the hooker on Heroin the Pimp is always there to take your hard earned money for themself.
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Ford Motor Company spent over $100 million on advertising in digital, print, and national TV in the last year.-
Technology companies analyzed by TV measurement firm iSpot spent about $196 million this year through Aug. 8 on TV commercials that were about AI in some way. You see, you're just a whore being pimped out.
Humans are self destructive by nature and they like to take all other species and their environment down with them. There are only a few that aren't, the rare exceptions, but the rest of us are voracious consumers chewing up the planet. Renewable energy, solar, gave a way to do this and feel good about ourselves. It was an ego boost, but the planetary destruction caused by mining and manufacturing these wonders is no less than that of burning coal. Equal actually in the sense that all the panels are now made in china and it's the world's largest burner of coal. So out of one side of our mouths we talk ecodribble and out of the other we order another train load of coal.
I don't want to hear anymore lies about renewables either, we have had decades to begin making solar panels from the energy they produce and we still burn coal and oil, and always will! The great lie that solar farms can generate more energy more cheaply than coal plants is dispelled by the simple fact that they don't use them to make the panels. Oh I'm sure kub or adam could come up with some story about an obscure mine or a factory or two that has solar panels sitting beside it but I'm past all that virtue signalling too. China burns mountains of coal, for the simple reason that it is cheap, economically viable. And what that simply means is that they can build panels and turbines at a price people can afford and without coal and oil they couldn't.
I point all this out so that some here may realize the truth, that we are not facing a bright green future with strawberries and cream, quite the opposite in fact! Energy consumption per capita peaked in the 1970's and we use less and less now with each passing year. This is obvious in the collapsing third world nations where hunger is rising and the basic systems like rail and electricity supply have been faltering for decades. Even in advanced nations tent cities are popping up like wildflowers in the spring, and tens of millions of formerly prosperous people are now dependent on ever diminishing government handouts for their basic food and shelter.
You see it all around you, even the wealthy see it as they exit their limousines in the city center. Solar panels are great! If you can afford them... You'll get 20 years or more of cheap electricity, all paid for by the coal and oil used to make them in China. But they won't make "America Great Again" or mitigate the inexorable decline of modern industrial civilization. The transition from the suburbs to the squatter camps. The resources are gone now, there won't be any great revivals like in centuries past. If you fuck this up, if you follow the herd, buy a cheap pine-frame home in the doomed suburbs, put your life savings in a dead-end future, you'll likely be sitting in the dark in 20 years, or in a nylon tent city.
This is a homeless encampment in the 1930's Depression. They called them hoovervilles because the "voters" mistakenly believed Hoover was the cause of the great depression. Have a close look at them, they are actually what's being marketed today as tiny-homes. Most even have stoves inside! And Look! They have space around them, like they have their own little yards

This is all the homeless can get their hands on now, cheap Chinese tents made from oil. Tents under freeway overpasses, because lumber is expensive? That's part of it, it's not laying around in abundance like it obviously was in 1930. Another part is that people today have no skills. They coundn't even build a tiny home like those above. But the biggest part I suspect is because today no one want's to face the truth about what's happening to our civilization, and these encampments are likely to be moved on at any moment to try and hide that fact.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technolo ... ad-google/
We're 17 years past the peak now and the 3rd World is going hungry and dark. We'll be next, we're well on the way in fact.