SilverNicktail
SilverNicktail t1_ixve5q1 wrote
Reply to comment by SilverNicktail in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
> https://www.statsjamie.co.uk/high-energy-prices/
This one blames the rise in energy costs entirely on gas, and the shortfall in generation in not rolling out enough generation to replace the elimination of coal. That's two sources you've not read.Next!
> https://www.sciencefocus.com/news/why-cant-renewable-energy-sources-keep-uk-energy-prices-down/
Literally the same thing again, lol. This time you didn't even read as far as the fucking byline:
> Huge increases in gas prices have sent UK energy bills skyrocketing. Renewable energy has been unable to help but there are other solutions.
Energy costs in the UK right now are entirely caused by the profiteering of fossil fuel companies, and a conservative government that refuses to stop them. Again, the issue here is that the UK doesn't have enough renewable generation and storage, not that renewables increased the price of generation. You're VERY BAD at this.
This one is LITERALLY IN THE URL ARE YOU FUCKING BLIND??
Four in a fucking row, holy shit. Every single one of these links says that the price of gas is the problem and you're twisting reality to blame renewables for the price gouging of gas companies.
Damn, one of the links you copy-pasted without reading it was actually half-decent, though even this makes it clear that some of the cost issues of renewables are part and parcel of the transition - teething issues in changing generation types. Producers have rolled out generation, but need to be putting more effort into storage so that fossil fuel plants covering variability and shortfalls - whose margins get much worse when they're used as backup rather than primary generation - can be retired altogether. Ironically, the argument being made at the end of the article about the need for the business model of generation to change is really an argument for the nationalisation of utilities, but I'm sure that both an American writing in Forbes and a hypercapitalist like yourself both completely failed to realise that.
In short, in some cases renewable rollouts have pushed prices, but they don't have to, and it isn't a permanent thing.
Sigh Aaaaand we're back to yet another article you didn't read from the UK's energy crisis that makes it extremely clear that the problem is THE PRICE OF GAS.
> https://greenworld.org.uk/article/energy-crisis-why-are-renewable-prices-rising-too
And again. Holy shit, my guy. The dead giveaway that you didn't read any of these - other than them proving you wrong - is that they all (apart from Forbes) say the same thing, and you wouldn't need six of them to say one thing.
> European Windfarm and Solar companies are going out of business, because renewables are too expensive and unprofitable. https://stopthesethings.com/2022/04/24/transition-to-bankruptcy-europes-wind-turbine-makers-face-massive-financial-collapse/
......Where do I even start? Question: do you think that a blog site dedicated to the destruction of the wind turbine industry might be biased in any way? The actual ReCharge article blames the current high inflationary rates and a large hike in the price of raw materials for the bulk of the industry's current woes. I'm sure non-renewable sources don't need things like.....steel..........They're also calling for shifts in government policy to make the industry more sustainable, because of the current auction system and a focus on minimal cost that results in reliance on outsourcing instead of domestic production. If you've managed to make that "renewables are unprofitable" whilst ignoring - oh, I dunno - everywhere and everything else on Earth, then you're honestly a bit weird.
Paywalled, but I'm guessing given how obvious it is that you haven't read these articles you don't know what's in it either. Judging by the byline, a single solar company went bust, and this is supposed to mean something to the wider market?
It's a good thing no gas suppliers have gone bust during the energy crisis or this point would look really stupid.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-58732683
> As you can see, a large part of inflation in europe is energy related and I already mentioned dependance on NG partially due to renewables.
Bitch, you can't even spell "dependence". It's also pretty dumb to admit that the rise in energy prices is because of gas, and then blame renewables for it.
Wait, is that what you've been going for this entire time? That gas usage is the fault of renewables?? Countries didn't switch to gas because of renewables, lol. They switched to gas to get away from coal. Your own fucking sources show that! Remember this??
> https://www.statsjamie.co.uk/high-energy-prices/
Actually, you don't remember this because you didn't read any of this shit, but bear with me. Can you see when the "gas" bit is largest? Yeah, and you see how that's before the mass rollout of renewables? And you understand that time is a linear concept, yeah? Causality? At this point I'm wondering if you have basic fuckin' object permanence.
Natural gas was brought in because it's cheaper and cleaner than coal (not the same as being clean), which is why it's now the primary generation source in a lot of countries, and somewhat naturally the source that covers shortfall in variable renewable generation because it's already there.
Was that actually your argument in this comment? That electricity prices have gone up because of pre-existing gas generation in the grid, and that's the fault of renewables because....there...aren't yet enough renewables to not use it?
Congrats, that's the stupidest fucking thing I've heard in quite some time. Amazing.
I cannot believe how much of my Saturday morning I just let you waste blaming renewables for the price of gas. I've got my shift at the concrete mine to get to!
SilverNicktail t1_ixvdtrh wrote
Reply to comment by tkyjonathan in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
Reddit's not letting me respond in full for some reason, so let's try this in chunks.
> You must be mentally challenged. All your arguments are smears about me working for or helping rich and powerful companies. This is an argument from intimidation, plain and simple.
Didn't say you worked for anyone. Seriously, I didn't, go back and look. You're really really bad at reading and comprehension.
> This is an argument from intimidation, plain and simple.
ROFL
Also, some guy said this, can't remember who:
> I always like it when people smear and name call in conversation. That way you know their argument is weak.
Cough
> Some links for you, because you seem to like to find "counter narrative" facts to reality:
Which things I wrote or quoted are counter to reality? You've not managed to contradict them. In fact, it's really fucking obvious that you just threw something like "expensive renewable energy" into Google and pasted me whatever results came up. Let's go through your bullshit here:
> China to dominate 95% of solar panel supply chain
It's always a sign of someone being really honest when they move the goalposts. Here's the stupid thing you actually said:
> Except the concrete, nickel, copper, lithium and a variety of rare earth minerals. All mined in China. Where solar panels are almost exclusively made, because the process is so toxic, it fails western standards.
Which I refuted because that's not where stuff's mined, the part about western standards is bullshit, and you don't mine concrete, lol. An honest person would admit they were incorrect, whereas a dishonest person would move the goalposts and double-down on the one thing nobody argued with. Guess which one you are.
You also completely failed to address that your argument about mining being destructive applies far more to fossil fuels than it does renewables, but let's be honest, we all expected that. Introspection is for thinkers.
> Denmark and Germany have the highest energy prices in Europe (graph included) http://www.keanegruending.com/climate-policy/denmarks-race-to-renewable-electricity-how-costly-and-environmentally-efficient/
You didn't read this particular blog post, did you? 'Cos it says this:
> So if electricity in Denmark is inexpensive to produce, why the high cost for end users? It has to be some sort of expensive subsidy towards renewables, right? Not so fast. Taxes are actually the primary constituent of Denmark’s electricity costs. 56% of the consumer cost of electricity goes towards taxes that support the Danish welfare state.
Fuckin' WHOOPS. I'll forgive you, though. You're new to this whole "evidence" thing. You didn't realise that you have to actually read and understand your sources. Next!
SilverNicktail t1_ixsnzge wrote
Reply to comment by tkyjonathan in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
>You are basically just making an argument from intimidation.
Hahaha, holy shit.
"Your public comment history consists of defences of capitalism."
"THIS IS INTIMIDATION!!!!!!!1!!11!1!"
You're fucking hilarious, mate. Do another one.
> Yes, I gave you 3 countries with large unreliable infrastructure as a point of reference to high energy costs.
Source: trust me, bro.
> Except the concrete, nickel, copper, lithium and a variety of rare earth minerals. All mined in China.
Concrete's mined in China, is it? lol
The vast majority of copper comes from the Americas. https://www.statista.com/statistics/264626/copper-production-by-country/
Nickel is incredibly common but the largest exporters are Indonesia and Australia. https://nickelinstitute.org/en/about-nickel-and-its-applications/
The largest producer of lithium is Australia, by quite some distance. https://www.nrcan.gc.ca/our-natural-resources/minerals-mining/minerals-metals-facts/lithium-facts/24009
I know that some folks - not that I would want to "smear" anyone, lol - think that countries outside the US consist of "Europe" and "Chy-na", but it turns out that's not actually how things work.
See those links, by the way? Those are called "sources". They're what happens when your opinions are evidence-based.
> Where solar panels are almost exclusively made, because the process is so toxic, it fails western standards.
If that were the case, there wouldn't be any solar manufacturing in North America, would there? Except that there is.
Glad to hear you're against environmentally damaging resource extraction though. With that in mind, you're gonna flip your fuckin' lid when you learn where coal, gas and oil come from.
> That then needs to be connected to the grid through new lines running through people's back yards or forested areas.
My god, he's done it, people. The Achilles' heel of renewable energy production that somehow everyone else in the world missed, but this brave, noble soul has found for us - electricity goes down CABLES!
Who knew??
And this only affects renewables! Trust him on that!
Man, you're just so very well-informed and extremely clever. We should definitely be listening to someone who thinks you mine concrete.
EDIT - I can't respond to this chucklefuck's latest blah-blah for some reason, Reddit's fucking up.
SilverNicktail t1_ixsah7s wrote
Reply to comment by tkyjonathan in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
> Ah goodie. I always like it when people smear and name call inconversation. That way you know their argument is weak.
Didn't do either of those things - literally didn't call you any names at all, and your comment history is very consistent and very public - but sneering about it is a good way to try and deflect ain't it?
> LCOE fails to factor a lot of the additional costs of unreliable energy sources that is the burdened onto the grid.
And do you have any figures showing that costs outside LCOE are higher enough for renewables that it offsets the higher costs of fossil fuel generation?
Meanwhile, electricity costs in Texas have skyrocketed because of the increased cost of gas...
You know what doesn't need unreliable fuel supply from hostile nations? The sun.
Every anti-renewable FUD-spreader points at the same small number of places with higher prices and says "renewables did that", ignoring anything that doesn't agree with them - like PG&E in Cali going broke because of climate-induced wildfires, ironically.
Should we factor climate damage into the total cost of non-renewable energy sources? (Actually, we totally should.) I don't think it'll end well for them.
SilverNicktail t1_ixrzm70 wrote
Reply to comment by tkyjonathan in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
You think that electricity bills are going to be higher because it costs......less to generate energy? That's an...interesting outlook.
Wind and solar *are* cheaper, by the way. Lower LCOE than any fossil fuel, and nuclear on top of that.
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/electricity_generation.pdf
I'd quit listening to people who promote FUD about this stuff. They're often taking cash from the fossil fuel industry.
​
Ah....literally your entire post history is a....bizarrely energetic defence of the rich and powerful. Whilst railing against the existence of governance. I'm sure you are blissfully unaware of the irony.
SilverNicktail t1_ixry9a4 wrote
Reply to comment by 96vette in U.S. Renewable Energy Will Surge Past Coal and Nuclear by Year’s End by VanillaSwimming5699
Ethanol is a little over 1% of electricity generation in the US, and that needle has barely moved. I don't think this is a real concern compared to the displacement of coal and gas.
SilverNicktail t1_ixjwbwa wrote
I can think of some Michigander shitheads she won't be pardoning, huehuehuehuehue.
SilverNicktail t1_ix4cp4x wrote
Really hoping Canada lifts their ban. I've been banned from giving blood the whole time I've lived here, because I grew up in the UK. Worse, I'm a universal plasma donor.
SilverNicktail t1_iwsjmna wrote
Reply to comment by NotACapedCrusader1 in Bankers bet billions on new wave of debt-for-nature deals by NotACapedCrusader1
Yeah it's an interesting idea, first I've heard of it. "We'll help out your economy big-time by restructuring your debt, but you have to spend X amount of what we've saved you on conservation". I wonder what the enforcement mechanism on that is. It seems like something that might appeal even to conservatives in those countries.
SilverNicktail t1_iwjat2k wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in LDS Church comes out for federal bill that recognizes same-sex marriage by creamboy2623
Just like how they had a revelation on polygamy on the eve of legislation banning it.
SilverNicktail t1_iwdjq2y wrote
A lot of people see the post-pandemic worker strikes and reinvigorated worker movement as chaotic and problematic. I see it as both inevitable and utterly necessary.
Go get 'em!
SilverNicktail t1_ivu9jto wrote
Reply to comment by PhDandanxiety in Through solar power, India saved burning 19.4 million tonnes of coal in the first half of this year: Report by starwolf_98
Canada and the USA are both oil producing nations, and despite those companies representing a tiny portion of the workforce, they represent a large percentage of bribery political spending. They're more than happy to fund radicalisation and fascism if it means they can keep wrecking the planet for profit for one more year.
Every province in Canada reduced emissions - the oil-producing one increased emissions to match. Bastards.
SilverNicktail t1_iunt957 wrote
Reply to comment by AsslessBaboon in Tokyo begins same-sex partnership recognition by AsslessBaboon
That's how these things go all the time, eh? Smaller regions do it, society completely fails to collapse, and eventually every says "ah, sod it."
SilverNicktail t1_iulgfmj wrote
Reply to comment by peet192 in The shrinking ozone hole shows that the world can actually solve an environmental crisis by wicke_s
No, that's the same hole. There's new research that the Antarctic hole may have contributed to early summer warming in South Africa over the past few decades. Not remotely the same thing as "another hole".
SilverNicktail t1_iul7w4o wrote
Reply to comment by frealfr in The shrinking ozone hole shows that the world can actually solve an environmental crisis by wicke_s
No it hasn't, and no we shouldn't.
SilverNicktail t1_iul4aov wrote
Reply to comment by MTFHammerDown in The shrinking ozone hole shows that the world can actually solve an environmental crisis by wicke_s
Not 20%, more like 50%, but significantly reduced over the "do bugger all" scenario. A long way to go, but progress has been made. Gotta keep fighting the rest of the way.
SilverNicktail t1_iu56l6s wrote
Reply to Real GDP in the U.S. unexpectedly rose 0.6% in Q3, Biden says the economic recovery "is continuing to power forward" by NewsYouCanShmooze
Around the world conservative governments have this "reputation" for being good with the economy, but as far as I can tell it's entirely fictional, invented and promoted by themselves and their media chums. In reality, conservative governments - at least in my lifetime - are mostly about taking taxpayer money for themselves and their friends. Thieves, basically.
SilverNicktail t1_iu1z18n wrote
Reply to comment by CStink2002 in What Really Happened at the Penn State Protest Against Proud Boys Founder Gavin McInnes by bythesea_man
Pretty sure being a terrorist group with members convicted of sedition for that time they attempted to trap and execute lawmakers got them a lot more attention than being told to piss off on a University campus.
SilverNicktail t1_iu06oo2 wrote
Reply to Carbon emissions from energy to peak in 2025 in ‘historic turning point’, says IEA | Russia’s invasion “is in fact going to accelerate the clean energy transition” by alphahydra
Kinda surprised they're pegging 2025 considering CO2 emissions are predicted to increase by only 1% this year (also an IEA prediction). Peak is definitely approaching.
SilverNicktail t1_itxuzeo wrote
Reply to comment by onlyfps in What Really Happened at the Penn State Protest Against Proud Boys Founder Gavin McInnes by bythesea_man
Did you miss the whole "seditious conspiracy" bit?
Sorry bud, the vast majority of people aren't going to fall for the copy-paste apologies and excuses. We're not stupid enough to buy them.
SilverNicktail t1_itvshpn wrote
Reply to comment by Sad-Lie6604 in What Really Happened at the Penn State Protest Against Proud Boys Founder Gavin McInnes by bythesea_man
The Proud Boys are a terrorist organisation. They're literally listed as a terrorist organisation in Canada. Their members have pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy.
Wind your fuckin' neck in.
"Oh, just go along to the Klan rally and see what they're saying. I bet they're not such bad dudes!"
SilverNicktail t1_itrxzhb wrote
Reply to comment by Dirk_94 in Women will have equal share of seats in [New Zealand] Parliament with Soraya Peke-Mason's swearing-in by giblefog
How do you think MPs get into office, exactly?
SilverNicktail t1_iswvnc8 wrote
Reply to Lynx, wild horses and vultures return to eastern Spain in latest rewilding project | Rewilding by AsslessBaboon
When countries across the EU have put efforts into rewilding their mammalian populations, they have generally been extremely successful. Very glad to see the trend continuing.
SilverNicktail t1_isjxw78 wrote
Reply to comment by CannedApples13 in C of E must welcome gay people or face questions in parliament, says MP by dolphins3
The USA has neither a Parliament nor a state religion.
SilverNicktail t1_iy05irm wrote
Reply to comment by ClassyRedandGlassy in A novel medication for hemophilia B has just been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The treatment is a form of gene therapy, intended to replace a dysfunctional gene that leaves people unable to control their bleeding. by Sariel007
People who can be cured of a rare genetic disease? "New cutting edge medical technology costs a bloody fortune" is so unsurprising to me as to be completely mundane. The improvement right now is that holy shit, we can cure hemophilia, and the improvement in future will be doing it better, more efficiently, cheaper. Plus, the cost of this treatment compared to all the other care they will require over their lifetimes if not treated - this might well be cheaper.