Recent comments in /f/UpliftingNews
FormalAnnual9730 t1_j6m4ant wrote
BrevityIsTheSoul t1_j6lxqhc wrote
Reply to comment by hanshooty in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
exceed
sunflowerastronaut t1_j6lw8oy wrote
Reply to comment by Mayor__Defacto in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Who is saying that they will replace them right now? Who's saying they will all be replaced at the same time?
This cynicism is fabricated and doesn't belong on the sub.
>While coal is in long-term decline it is unlikely to disappear in the immediate future –
That is what it says in the article
>The issue I have with the take in the article is that it’s only on paper.
The only issue you have with the article is that you didn't read the article. Your second issue is that you like to bring your negativity to the wrong sub, gtfoh
Mayor__Defacto t1_j6lvy9n wrote
Reply to comment by sunflowerastronaut in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
And will take a decade to build up to the point that we can actually do this. My point though still stands. While in theory coal plants are not profitable to run compared to building wind and solar, realistically speaking it’s not possible to simple turn them off and replace them with wind and solar right now. You have to just build wind and solar while closing them gradually as capacity comes online.
The issue I have with the take in the article is that it’s only on paper. It’s currently cheaper, but if everyone tried to build it at once it would not be.
sunflowerastronaut t1_j6lu836 wrote
Reply to comment by Mayor__Defacto in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Not for long. That's in the bill too
Mayor__Defacto t1_j6lt9w9 wrote
Reply to comment by sunflowerastronaut in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Missing: the industrial capacity to actually construct all of the turbines and/or panels required.
DueGuest665 t1_j6lt5uo wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
This has always been about vested interest.
Even if you don’t believe in climate change there is good reason to invest in solar and wind based on health effects of particulates.
The best thing would be government schemes to get people to invest in there own power generation with supplemental energy from a central source when needed.
Problem is it doesn’t make for as profitable business model.
The Industrial Age worked on a paradigm of mass production and distributed consumption.
The technological age is more based on distributed production and consumption and business models are struggling to adapt.
Mayor__Defacto t1_j6ls01o wrote
Reply to comment by BoyInBath in US company gets $120 million boost to make 'green steel' by Ok_Champion6840
What? Electric Arc Furnaces are the main way of recycling steel lol, that’s Nucor’s whole business. Most profitable steel company in the world.
WandaMaximumoff t1_j6lon44 wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Solar panels made in America are rapidly increasing in popularity. In addition to the United State’s growing ability to manufacture the components of solar panels, policy incentives, such as those that result in financial benefit for solar customers and tariffs on imported solar panels, have contributed to the rise in companies manufacturing their solar panels in America and consumers seeking them.
The United States solar industry employs around 250,000 people as of 2022 and is expected to see continued job growth year over year. Additionally, those who prioritize clean energy adoption and supporting U.S. manufacturing are driving the industry. https://www.forbes.com/home-improvement/solar/american-solar-panel-manufacturers/
hanshooty t1_j6lgqt6 wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Nice, please define outstrip?
Emergency-Card-573 t1_j6ldu99 wrote
Reply to comment by User2079 in National parks along Lake Superior to be first to fully decarbonize by sunflowerastronaut
I think Lake Superior is blue in the background. This picture, I think, was taken on the Kewanee Peninsula by Copper Harbor. I don't remember the senic overlook, but it definitely brings back memories.
Mousewaterdrinker t1_j6l3gxx wrote
Reply to comment by Kytoaster in Medical marijuana approval to distribute to residents in Georgia by Sariel007
I'm from south eastern kentucky. I have stage 4 cancer. I guarantee I wouldn't have survived chemo without illegal cannabis. Even if they do legalize it here I'm still going to buy it illegally because it'll be a cold day in hell before the government makes a red cent in taxes off something they would've put me in jail for just a year ago. Yeehaw fuck the law.
SerendipitySue t1_j6kwwma wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
Sustainability is important and right now solar is not sustainable in the usa. As life of solar panels is about 25 years. And generally speaking we rely on china for the panels and parts.
Putting the national power grid at the mercy of a country that is not officially an enemy yet certainly is not a friend...does not seem wise.
Glad to see it is more economically worth it, till the special credits expire. Would like to see more solar houses. That makes for a more robust power grid if international relations deteriorate. A few houses going off grid..accommodations can be made.
boombotser t1_j6kv4no wrote
Reply to comment by SoulSearchingRaven in National parks along Lake Superior to be first to fully decarbonize by sunflowerastronaut
It’s really really big
sunflowerastronaut t1_j6ktzng wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
>The plummeting cost of renewable energy, which has been supercharged by last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, means that it is cheaper to build an array of solar panels or a cluster of new wind turbines and connect them to the grid than it is to keep operating all of the 210 coal plants in the contiguous US, bar one, according to the study.
>The new analysis, conducted in the wake of the $370bn in tax credits and other support for clean energy passed by Democrats in last summer’s Inflation Reduction Act, compared the fuel, running and maintenance cost of America’s coal fleet with the building of new solar or wind from scratch in the same utility region.
>On average, the marginal cost for the coal plants is $36 each megawatt hour, while new solar is about $24 each megawatt hour, or about a third cheaper. Only one coal plant – Dry Fork in Wyoming – is cost competitive with the new renewables. “It was a bit surprising to find this,” said Solomon. “It shows that not only have renewables dropped in cost, the Inflation Reduction Act is accelerating this trend.”
>Coal, which is a heavily carbon-intensive fuel and responsible for 60% of planet-heating emissions from electricity generation, once formed the backbone of the American grid, generating enough power to light up 186m homes at its peak in 2007. However, by 2021 this output had dropped by 55%, while jobs in the coal mining sector have more than halved over the past decade, to less than 40,000.
I-mnotgivingmyname t1_j6ksbfs wrote
Reply to comment by johnschult in Medical marijuana approval to distribute to residents in Georgia by Sariel007
Pretty much have to have a life changing condition. Not just pain like every other state.
urmomaisjabbathehutt t1_j6kqte2 wrote
Reply to comment by SilverNicktail in US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
the tories had been restricting with a moratorium onshore wind since 2015 with Cameron, that stopped onshore development, rishi said in december that he could "ease" the restrictions, "pending public consultation"
that would be an U turn on his summer campaing to became leader where he promised to scrap plans to relax the ban on onshore wind
so i'd take it with a pinch of salt and won't expect nothing on a hurry
for example nothing stops him easing the ban in a greenbelt Tory stronhold as a greenwashing show, since he would know that wealthy NIMBYs will oppose them
Ok_Champion6840 OP t1_j6knmb5 wrote
Reply to comment by lemmeeatyourass in US company gets $120 million boost to make 'green steel' by Ok_Champion6840
It is extremely expensive to redesign an industrial scale process like steel making which consumes acres, possibly hundreds of acres of plant space, has logistics like rail access or shipping, mountains of coal ready to be consumed as fuel or massive pipelines of natural gas.
Gotta start somewhere.
SoulSearchingRaven t1_j6knhnf wrote
Reply to comment by User2079 in National parks along Lake Superior to be first to fully decarbonize by sunflowerastronaut
Cool :)
User2079 t1_j6kmqv0 wrote
Reply to comment by SoulSearchingRaven in National parks along Lake Superior to be first to fully decarbonize by sunflowerastronaut
The picture doesn’t look like it is Lake Superior. Lake Superior is so big it holds 10% of the worlds fresh surface water and is an inland sea. It is truly amazing to see. One of my favorite places to visit and my fav Great Lake (Michigan is surrounded by big lakes).
BoomZhakaLaka t1_j6kmpol wrote
Reply to US renewable energy farms outstrip 99% of coal plants economically – study | US news by Ok_Champion6840
the second issue to overcome is variability - i.e., to keep the lights on you need to be able to turn generation up in real time to meet demand. Because that's not how solar and wind farms work, they pair with storage. Put them together for the needed flexibility.
Fortunately, around 2020, storage-integrated variable facilities became cost competitive with combined cycle natural gas. NREL - for the desert southwest and plains, at least.
So really all of the biggest economic barriers have been removed. Every major utility in the southwest is already pivoting, but not as fast as some people would like. A few lesser problems are on the horizon - first-order voltage modulation without synchronous machines is hard, and the vast majority of solar&wind equipment we've installed so far isn't designed to do it. the 2016 blue cut fire
I always get a very mixed response for talking about this stuff - I worked for the first US developer of utility scale solar. At the time; there were problems getting banks to lend on these projects. I frequently spoke with the leadership of Edison, PG&E, SDG&E, Pacificorp.... about these technical challenges, and how to meet them. Unfortunately CAISO chose to overbuild without requiring flexibility (SCADA curtailment); they lean on exports instead, which isn't scalable - the EIM will become less of a solution as more participants overbuild variable resources.
acemetrical t1_j6kmivv wrote
Reply to comment by youself20 in US company gets $120 million boost to make 'green steel' by Ok_Champion6840
Rearden Metal
lemmeeatyourass t1_j6klofg wrote
Reply to comment by Ok_Champion6840 in US company gets $120 million boost to make 'green steel' by Ok_Champion6840
It’s not really, the process to create the material is still behind from the actual generation. Solar wind and hydro are making great strides in terms of Watts and consistency. But the end result as in storage is still also behind. We can create ways to make steel factories use green energy to heat the steel but from what I see in the power industry it’s very costly to set it up.
MyMainWasBetter t1_j6kl3wn wrote
Reply to comment by Bear_buh_dare in Medical marijuana approval to distribute to residents in Georgia by Sariel007
>Brine Keeyump
I'm never not calling him this from now on.
At least he's on his final term. We may have two democratic senators, but we won't be a blue state till we win the governorship.
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