Renewables Overtake Coal As World's Largest Source of Power Capacity (ft.com)
The world's largest source of power capacity is now renewables, as roughly half a million solar panels were installed every single day last year. In addition, two wind turbines were erected every hour in countries such as China, according to the International Energy Agency. Financial Times reports (Editor's note: may be paywalled; alternate source): Although coal and other fossil fuels remain the largest source of electricity generation, many conventional power utilities and energy groups have been confounded by the speed at which renewables have grown and the rapid drop in costs for the technologies. Average global generation costs for new onshore wind farms fell by an estimated 30 percent between 2010 and 2015 while those for big solar panel plants fell by an even steeper two-thirds, an IEA report published on Tuesday showed. The Paris-based agency thinks costs are likely to fall even further over the next five years, by 15 percent on average for wind and by a quarter for solar power. It said an unprecedented 153 gigawatts of green electricity was installed last year, mostly wind and solar projects, which has more than the total power capacity in Canada. It was also more than the amount of conventional fossil fuel or nuclear power added in 2015, leading renewables to surpass coal's cumulative share of global power capacity -- though not electricity generation. A power plant's capacity is the maximum amount of electricity it can potentially produce. The amount of energy a plant actually generates varies according to how long it produces power over a period of time. Coal power plants supplied close to 39 percent of the world's power in 2015, while renewables, including old hydropower dams, accounted for 23 percent, IEA data show. But the agency expects renewables' share of power generation to rise to 28 percent by 2021, when it predicts they will supply the equivalent of all the electricity generated today in the U.S. and E.U. combined.
So, is it time to go back to all the nay sayers who have over the past 10 years asserted this point was impossible, and say "I told you so"? Or will they just continue to assert that the numbers are all lies, and only coal can make electricity?
Learn to love Alaska
... they overtake coal for amount generated per unit time.
Renewables may have higher total peak, but coal plants have level output and can run 24/7, while sun is only about a third of the day and wind varies with the weather - at a power output proportional to the CUBE of the windspeed.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
That this still needs to be pointed out shows just how dangerous and naive the green left still is.
Dog is my co-pilot.
Yes, this is slashdot.
The article says more new renewables were installed last year than new coal.
This is a great outcome for renewables. Renewables are still mostly more costly than coal, but renewable costs are still reducing each year. I can't wait to see what happens when renewable costs are actually cheaper than coal.
Of course, in many situations renewables are overall cheaper than coal. For example, centralised coal plants require distribution networks which are expensive. For people not attached to a grid, solar pv plus local storage may be cheaper than coal today.
The big thing I've become interested in recently is off-river pumped hydro storage for overnight and peak loads. Because it's not tied to a river it can use any large local height differences to provide intermittent storage. And of course most dammable rivers are already dammed, but there are lots of hills and cliffs that could be used to provide off river pumped hydro.
but coal plants have level output and can run 24/7,
Are you actually asserting that demand is level 24 hours a day?
at a power output proportional to the CUBE of the windspeed.
is this relevant somehow?
Do we know how much of the produced renewable energy is from hydroelectric stations (water dams)? I would suspect that it's still more than 70%.
The article mentions mostly wind and solar power, perhaps they're the main growth factory.
By the way, do they count burning wood as renewable energy? Renewable and green should not be confused.
Yes, they've been doing exactly that with oil for generations. The petrochemical corporations have even persuaded governments to fight wars on their behalf.
The effect on the competition has been devastating.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
when you can't externalize the environmental costs.
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Exactly.. We spent $2 trillion dollars and over 4,000 lives to protect Oil Company interests in the middle east.
That's a huge subsidy that doesn't get counted as a subsidy.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Its not saying renewables produce more power but that more renewable capacity was added this year than non-renewable capacity. But the bulk of capacity remains non-renewable.
It said right here:
""
But the agency expects renewablesâ(TM) share of power generation to rise to 28 per cent by 2021, when it predicts they will supply the equivalent of all the electricity generated today in the US and EU combined.
""
So by 2021, they hope it will be up to 28 percent of total capacity. Thus... no, renewables are not the majority of power generation and the title is wrong.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
Renewables Overtake Coal As World's Largest Source of Power Capacity
Although coal and other fossil fuels remain the largest source of electricity generation
So, renewables are the largest source of power... except for the fact that coal and fossil fuels are the largest source of electricity generation? WTH? Is there a difference between power capacity and electricity generation?
The petrochemical corporations have even persuaded governments to fight wars on their behalf.
That is still preferable to corporations waging war on their own behalf.
That's a huge subsidy that doesn't get counted as a subsidy.
Nor should it, because it was NOT a subsidy. The price of oil skyrocketed when war broke out in 2003, and remained high for more than a decade. Subsidies encourage over production. The Iraq war did the exact opposite. It depressed output, and pushed up prices.
You obviously think the Iraq war was dumb, but it is also obvious that it was even dumber than you think. We paid more in excess oil prices than we spent on the war itself.
Hello there Koch brothers sock puppet!
Half a million panels installed per day infers half a million panels produced per day - where exactly is all this production happening?
DISPATCHABLE. Wind and solar are not dispatchable.
'Capacity Factor' is a way to measure power station facilities in a way that ignores negative externalities. For power sources that have a large impact on the environment it is a favourable measure to use. The higher the 'Capacity Factor', the greater the environmental damage.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Yah. Other talked about oil. Wanna talk nuclear? How much govt money has been poured into *that* since project Manhattan because... STRATEGIC? Breeder technology?
C'm on
This would have been a prime time for you to point out what you think it should be counted as, but you stopped short at arguing he had simply misfiled it under subsidy.
Why is it preferable to companies waging war on their own behalf? From what little I can tell it it preferable that companies wage war on their own behalf... from what little I can tell.
The whole point of the Iraq war and the wars against Syria and Libya, saber rattling against Russia and Iran. And the economic attacks on Venezuela. Is not to control the price of oil or the profit, but to control the 'flow' of oil. Which is the US deep state uses oil and capital to hold the rest of the free world hostage. Need oil? Yes you do. And you need to buy it in US dollars. Using heavy equipment and facilities underwritten in US dollars.
Nope. If they wage their own war, at least they pay the costs.
Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
Yep. Except for the Oil-Execs, that benefited hugely from all this (and the destruction of the planet they are driving forward).
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
The U.S. were once pioneers of wind power(4) in size not only in space but in wind turbines (you might think that the danes were the only pioneers?).
You need to take a look at the good old west. Water pumps powered by wind turbines. Offgrid farms getting their first electricity from wind turbines.
Wind power plants are indeed smaller production unit than a big coal or even a nuclear power plant, that needed to be manufactured as well as their parts (also done in the US). While manufacturing solar panels got outsourced like chip manufacturing.
Meaning! you can employ more people with wind power than with coal power, coal power and nuclear power destroys much more jobs that it generates!
It is different with wind turbines, they need good old american craftsmanship to build a solid turbine that sustains harsh conditions.
Some american wind power history:
1941
American visionary Palmer Putnam built a 1.25 Megawatt! turbine(1) in 1941.
Indeed after some time it threw a blade. But before that it produced more energy and ran longer than the german multi million dollar 1980s disaster called Growian.
Whiners fall down and never try again. Pioneers stand up shake the dust off, don't mind their bruises and climb that horse again, and again till they succeed.
1982-1988 ..
MOD-2 a 2.5 Megawatt turbine with 91m (~275 ft.) diameter rotor. (2) and so on
Pioneers can and will fail, but as Kennedy said, that you don't go to the moon because its easy, but because its hard! And generating power from wind is hard but in the recent 30 years we got quite a good understanding how to do it and how to size up the turbines!
Can you feel the changing wind right now? Do you got faith of the heart or fraid of the trump? (3)
This is what made america great, having faith of the heart and this is what can make america great again.
(1) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
(2) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
(3) https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
(4) https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
The oil companies didn't have to pay for their own security and they didn't have to pay for the true cost of oil.
It's also very expensive to maintain a naval and coast guard fleet to protect oil tankers. The oil companies should be paying for it.
If they had to pay for those things- their prices would be much higher. So their prices are subsidized by tax payers.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Why are the four replies to the 'Renewables will never work' comment modded down? So you can't see any logical rebuttals, that's why. That's how the Left operate. Idiotic, incompetent, arrogant scumbags. Nation-wreckers.
'Renewable' energy cannot provide sufficient power without backup from non-renewable energy.
I saw the title of this submission, and it immediately set off my bullshit detector.
The thing you need to recognise is just how much energy we get from fossil fuels. It's insane. We use 2% of our natural gas production to produce ammonia, for example, but to do the same thing using renewables would take 30% of the world's entire renewable and nuclear power capacity. Then there's steel production. Then there's concrete production.
The only way this submission is accurate is if you define your terms in such a way that you are specifically trying to get a certain result.
But it is. High oil prices makes oil companies really happy - their cost is mostly fixed, so expensive oil is pure profit.
I work for the oil industry so our company felt the falling oil prices and lower profits of oil companies (and deepwater horizon, that also hurt a lot).
"It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
Subsidies don't always encourage overproduction, that's too simplistic. Subsidies are about promoting something, certainly, but how the subsidy is crafted depends on what it's trying to encourage. There are farm subsidies for leaving your field fallow, for example. That's the opposite of overproduction.
Also, when you say, "It depressed output, and pushed up prices." in the same sentence like that you're implying a causal relationship. You're implying that prices went up due to a supply and demand dynamic. This was not the case, prices went up by a great deal more than could be explained that way, generating huge profits for the oil companies.
Great summary! Thanks for that.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
Hello there liberal troll. You believe all sorts of shit the leftist elite want you to believe, and despise anyone who disagrees with you. I just feel sorry for your inability to escape the groupthink.
So lives count less then inflated prices for power? How, what an extreme justification for killing.
To me, you just said a green fertile planet is only justified if there are no people. That clean coal is an anthima to life, but, you see, there are many coal plants going in to production. Just not in the first world, supposedly in the third world. Why coal? They need reliable constant power. Wind, solar, are not reliable. Not a constant power. They brown out. They throw spikes, and are not hardened for extreme events. And another factor, you cannot live near it. Check the Scottish and German studies. A minimum of a thousand meters, and still health effects were occurring to the inhabitants. That's good?
So this is why China has so few birds.
Greg Raven
As long as there's any left, I'll take mine first.
There are farm subsidies for leaving your field fallow, for example.
Yes, because it's a subsidy for farmer's income, not for food. Calling it a food subsidy would not make sense. The problem with "oil subsidies" is people are trying to lump in multiple things.. subsidies for production and apparently also subsidies for oil company income. Now in this thread the person making the subsidy claim said "protect Oil Company interests in the middle east" so that sounds more like production than income, since the income doesn't accrue in the Middle East but at the host nation.
This was not the case, prices went up by a great deal more than could be explained that way, generating huge profits for the oil companies.
Got a source for that? Demand for oil is pretty inelastic.
Do you really believe that? Why wouldn't US companies continue to buy from Saddam? What difference would it make to them who they paid for the oil? If you were correct in your assertion - which you're not - then why didn't the US seize the oil; why isn't the oil being pumped by US companies and brought to the US?
That never happened. You pretend you understand something; buy a line of crap and then distort facts to fit your fantasy.
If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
no actually protecting our business interests is one of the few things our government and military should be doing
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
Venezuela did it to themselves. They were doing quite well, but put all their chips on oil instead of diversifying. This is what killed them. The same "economic attack" being claimed here is the same thing GM gripes about when the US populace as a whole went from Suburbans to Priuses and Jettas, and hasn't switched back to bigger vehicles even though gas is relatively cheap now. It isn't a deliberate thing, but the invisible hand doing what it does best.
As for oil, it isn't like China and Russia are doing the same thing. China controls a good chunk of oil fields in Iraq, and were getting a sweetheart deal from Iran until sanctions were lifted. Russia now has prevented a pipeline from being laid, so all US oil has to be shipped via ship through the Strait of Hormuz, which the US pays ransom money to ensure Iran doesn't mine it.
Exactly.. We spent $2 trillion dollars and over 4,000 lives to protect Oil Company interests in the middle east.
2?
I don't know where you get your numbers but you're an order of magnitude short, it's more like 20.
No sig today...
How many carbon based power plants were taken off-line and replaced by renewable generation capacity last year?
After much research, I haven't found a single instance of that happening - ever.
Have renewables caused a moratorium on all new carbon based power plants? I don't think so. Asia (as of last year) was opening more than one coal power plant PER DAY:
http://climatechangedispatch.c...
Renewables have two mathematically inescapable problems:
1. Renewable's land requirements per kWh are far too high.
2. Renewable's storage requirements to meet base load demand simply do not exist - presumably because storage costs are also very high.
I ran the numbers on a very small 2kW self-installed system - it would take me over 10 years in a best case scenario to recoup the costs at current utility rates.
Until renewables become far cheaper, generate more kWh per square-foot, and solve the storage problem - they will never reduce or replace carbon based generation.
That would be pretty much the definition of colonialism, a policy which became generally discredited as untenable and utterly wrongheaded about a century ago. Would you mind getting along with the program?
Only when those same companies actually pay US taxes.
The price of oil skyrocketed when war broke out in 2003
What have the profits of the oil companies been since 2003?
Cheap natural gas, made possible by tracking.
Exactly.. We spent $2 trillion dollars and over 4,000 lives to protect Oil Company interests in the middle east.
That's a huge subsidy that doesn't get counted as a subsidy.
Off by a large margin....try more like $7 TRILLION, and growing. This number doesn't include the cost of the Iraq War, btw.
The title is correct, but then we have to define "renewables". It includes solar, wind, geothermal, and hydroelectric.
With that in mind, know that wind and solar, the big newer, flashier energy sources in the media, are not the major sources of renewable energy. Hydroelectric (falling water) accounts for over 70% of renewable energy. Wind is at 15%. Solar is at 4%.
Percentage-wise, solar and wind have grown very quickly, but in the grand scheme of total energy production, wind and solar are still small potatoes.
Disclaimer: I'm not writing this post as a nay-sayer. I actually work in sustainability. I WANT more solar and wind power. I'm just trying to make sure that people don't accept hype-ish headlines as implying certain things. Within sustainability, we always have to manage the expectations of the hype. Everyone thinks we can "just put up some solar panels" and make free electricity for EV charging stations when FREE is never reality.
Good lord, editors! The summary contradicts the title. Please at least look at the post before approving, or else find someone else to edit.
Jeez, doesn't anybody pay attention to the details any more?!
Exactly.. We spent $2 trillion dollars and over 4,000 lives to protect Oil Company interests in the middle east.
That's a huge subsidy that doesn't get counted as a subsidy.
I agree that some part of the middle east wars were about oil, but there is a lot more going on also. I think it is important to realize that due to the hydraulic fracturing innovation and resulting boom, the US has more natural gas than we know what to do with, and oil prices remain very low. This may be part of a strategy to destabilize some other powers (Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, etc) since a large part of their national budget is related to oil income. If the cost of oil is 1/2 or 1/3 what it used to be, those countries are most certainly either feeling a heavy pinch now or are concerned about how long their savings will last.
On the issue of terrorism, we have created a location in the world where the people who want to fight about their religion can go fight. That location is really far away from the USA. The number of people who have died of terrorism in the US since 2000 is incredibly low compared to the amount of angst that the US government has generated. Probably because there is a 3500 mile wide ocean in between. Iran and Saudi Arabia are fighting their proxy religious war in their own backyard, relatively out in the open. That's not a great outcome, but it might be the best of a lot of potentially worse outcomes.
I'm not saying any of this is good, or that I agree. But saying that these conflicts are based on oil is a very narrow viewpoint. There's a lot of things to consider. In my opinion the oil issue only a small part of the chessboard.
Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
I am glad there has been an increase in capacity, which is really potential capacity. However, I will be curious when they start basing the stats on delivered capacity. Numerous projects have not been producing their potential capacity. Several of the large solar have been at 20 - 30 percent of potential. Add in the push to start shutting down wind along migratory bird paths, we will see a reduction in delivered capacity.
Colonialism involves colonies, where the inhabitants of the area in question are citizens of the mother country. Are you serious in claiming that the inhabitants of various middle-eastern countries are U.S. citizens?
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Protecting the freedom of the seas benefits all countries engaged in seafaring. Piracy should be tolerated by no one.
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You're implying that prices went up due to a supply and demand dynamic. This was not the case, prices went up by a great deal more than could be explained that way
You misunderstand supply and demand. If supply is halved, that doesn't mean the price doubles. It means that the price rises until people use half as much, which is WAY WAY more than doubling. Historically, if the price of oil doubles, demand falls by about 3%. So a shortfall in production of 3% is enough to double the price of oil.
Even if your assertion is true, it does not account for the price of the alternative, the severely reduced availability of oil in the US. How much would even higher oil prices cost US people and businesses? How many people would have died from a lack of heating oil?
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The oil companies didn't have to pay for their own security and they didn't have to pay for the true cost of oil.
Except the Iraq War did NOT make the transport of oil more secure, and did NOT lower the "true cost" of oil in anyway. It did the exact opposite.
It's also very expensive to maintain a naval and coast guard fleet to protect oil tankers.
It is unlikely that America's navy makes the Persian Gulf more secure. If America withdrew, the nations of the region would have a huge incentive to cooperate on security. They don't do that now because they know their immature squabbling will have no consequences.
How about just counting it as a 'war crime', or otherwise classifying the stupidity of it other than to try to tie it to 'cost of energy production' at all. Call it 'graft', 'senseless waste of human life' whatever else you want, but the wars in the middle east, whether or not they were for 'control of oil' resulted in an INCREASE in prices. Had we done nothing 'society' would have been better off, price of fuel over the last 50 years would have been cheaper and a few different people would have been rich.
There may be other 'subsidies' in the oil industry that could reasonably be debated, this is not one of them.
Which I admit are significant. I love the idea of renewable energy. I have a Tesla Model 3 reserved, and I love the idea of generating my own electricity in a carbon free manner.
Politically, generating your own electricity without pushing external costs on others squares nicely with my Libertarian views.
Unfortunately, the finances matter. In the 3rd world, they matter even more.
Right now the external costs of carbon based generation are being borne by pretty much everyone. It's unfair, but that's the way it is. I don't have faith that government can equitably fix the external cost problem - so renewables have yet another hill to climb.
I'm an optimist here though - I think the engineers will get the cost of renewables down and fix the storage problem - I do not have the same optimism that governments can fix the carbon external cost problem - so it's up to the engineers to make renewables so cost efficient that the external costs of carbon become almost irrelevant. If renewables are productive enough, cheap enough, and reliable enough - they will win.
I'm hoping my kids see that in their lifetimes.
Capacity in solar and wind energy production is misleading since neither can produce as much power per unit of capacity as fossil fuel plants can. The US EIA, https://www.eia.gov/electricit... ,lists capacity factors for non-fossil fuel energy production. It also lists capacity factors for coal and fossil fuel energy production, https://www.eia.gov/electricit... .
The tables show that each unit of coal and fossil fuel energy capacity produces approximately twice as much energy over a year as the same amount of capacity of solar and wind. Until wind and solar have twice the capacity of coal, they have not overtaken coal in energy production. Even capacity factors overstate solar and wind energy production since neither wind nor solar can produce continuously power over a 24 hour day as coal and fossil fuel plants can.
Fun fact: we didn't get any oil in Iraq.
That tower of cards you're building on a false premise is falling...
Fun fact: I was was there and we most certainly did. I guarded one of the fields.
Aye! And a glut of as little as 3% is enough to absolutely destroy the price of oil per barrel.
There is a strong feedback loop between alternative energy and traditional energy.
As electric cars grow more popular, gasoline will become cheaper (and impair the value proposition of owning an electric car).
Of course at the same time, unprofitable oil leads to less production which eventually leads to a shortage.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Dude, it was during a war. The price for everything went up and to act like you were in a coma during those years and they didn't is disingenuous. The prices people were being paid over there was ridiculous. I know, I was there sucking up all that money I could. Demand had little to do with any of the Iraq War. Greed was the motivating factor.
There are solar panels which produce power (70%?) that were made in the 1970s. So you may pay upfront costs of 10 years worth of power but you get DECADES of power after that point. Then it's basically free. Just being simplistic that is a good deal if you have the money and it's a great loan situation too. We all know that utility rates will go up over the next 10 years.
Storage is the big problem and expense we need to be investing in solutions for. So maybe then we end up with 30 years upfront costs... then it becomes a bigger loan situation. Obviously this is impossible because we never had to factor in our energy costs into trying to afford the biggest most bloated house we can afford.
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Optima yellow top batteries have lasted me eight years so far with heavy discharge cycles and with ZERO maintenance. They are AGM lead acid. They are also only about $40 higher than a regular car battery. Not what I would call "incredibly expensive" especially, for my case, a doubling of life. If I got 3 years out of a regular Interstate deep cycle battery, I was doing good. Regular deep cycle battery don't really like deep cycling either, they just tolerate it more than a standard auto battery. Try again, hater.
So, is it time to go back to all the nay sayers who have over the past 10 years asserted this point was impossible, and say "I told you so"? Or will they just continue to assert that the numbers are all lies, and only coal can make electricity?
OTEC!
Maybe when renewables actually PRODUCE as much power as coal, that might be a better day to beat your chest.
OTEC can do Base-Load Power!
Never say never.
You're not thinking big enough. Broaden your thinking, you're not seeing the trees for the forest.
'We' are not europeans. Check where Iraqi oil actually goes.
Of course oil is fungible.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
There are two kinds of colonies.
a) I sent a troop of settlers to a different island/land and they found a city and consider themselves still citizens or at least of the same nation than me. Example would be the greek settlements all over the Mediterranean
b) I sent even more troops and conquer another nation and call that a colony. Like India being a colony of the english empire or Cameroon and Namibia being colonies of germany.
In case of b) the local natives never where citizens of the empire occupying and controlling them.
So your parent was completely right, but perhaps he should have chosen imperialism instead of colonialism.
Perhaps you should visit one of the oil harbors under US or European "control"? Nothing goes there if it is not sanctioned or is even initiated by the big oil bosses. Corrupt governments, lack of democracy, that is what the oil companies want and use/abuse.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
I've dug into it pretty deeply and previously even the most extreme source (which was disproven) said 3 trillion.
So... got a link? Sure it's hard cash and not some funny business?
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
The decrease in stability increased price/profit. This was a subsidy because it was an expense by the government to generate profit for a private corporation. Much like the $0 cost loan guarantees were called "subsidies". Oil company profits were up, the price doesn't matter to whether it was a subsidy.
Learn to love Alaska
Most of this renewable power this article is cheering about is hydro and biomass. Wind and solar, the two sources that everyone wants to claim will solve all our problems, are only actually generating a very small percentage of global electricity, and that's mostly wind. Solar barely registers on the scale of GWH generation globally.
Nope. Protecting the people is. Business interests aren't people. Though you've hit on the good reason why the taxes need to be higher on the rich. Tax 90% of all income over $5M a year (gross, not AGI) would be a good place to start. The rich benefit from wars. The poor never do. If China invaded the US and won, the homeless guy in San Fran might see a change in the uniform of the person who orders him to not sleep on the park bench, but no other change to his life. But Bill Gates and such would see a huge difference when MS is nationalized.
The (current) military exists solely to protect the profits of the 1%, and serves no other purpose. Taxing the middle class for that is absurd.
Learn to love Alaska
(and the destruction of the planet they are driving forward)
virtue += 10;
The English Colonies in North America didn't grant English citizenship to the locals. So I guess the "colonies" weren't colonies. The definitions of "colonies" I found didn't require the definition you gave. The colonists are generally linked to the home country (the US military occupiers are US citizens), but the natives are undefined, and often not citizens, as we see today in the Middle East.
Learn to love Alaska
So many issues with your last paragraph. "...it's cost prohibitive to build NG..." Really? It's affordable to build a coal fired plant, but unaffordable to build a natural gas plant? I realize that coal is the cheapest fuel input, but only a fool would claim that natural gas is "cost prohibitive". They are both thermal electrical generators, the basic technology is the same. And lots of thermal electrical generators already use natural gas.
"They're now scrambling to build thousands of KM of power lines." No, not really. Those lines are already built. How do you think that "small towns and cities" are powered now? Some do have small generating facilities nearby, but most bulk import power from major generating facilities like Genesee.
It is true that there is a big power line building program under way, one that is controversial to the landowners affected. However this is mostly about future plans for industrial development northeast of Edmonton. The rest of the justification for this is that renewables are causing the sources and destinations for electricity to separate, more than in the past. This requires more electrical infrastructure to take the electricity to market. For instance the best wind generating areas in Alberta are in the extreme southwest, in the Foothills area. The closest major market for that power is Calgary. Lines have to be constructed to connect the two. Lines probably already exist but they won't have enough capacity for the wind generating potential found there.
Regarding "solar or wind is also prohibitive", um well. While true in the past, this is increasingly untrue. Costs are tumbling very quickly, and Sunny Alberta is called that for a reason, you know? It's not just because we have a lot of optimists here.
While I appreciate your colourful description of Grande Cache in the winter, I am a lifelong Albertan. We know what winter is about and we are equipped for it. It's nice to talk about the mental and physical stresses of winter in a "hey, don't you hate shovelling snow" sort of way. However when you link it to the NDP government you reveal a partisan agenda that has nothing to do with renewable energy or Seasonal Affective Disorder.
Here would be the appropriate analogy: "OMG, Russia is so cold in the winter! Wouldn't winter driving in Moscow be so much better if Vladimir Putin wasn't in power?"
See how that doesn't make any sense?
> The price of oil skyrocketed when war broke out in 2003, and remained high for more than a decade.
That was pretty good for the oil companies.
You're assuming there are only one kind of subsidy. Subsidies can be tailored to reduce the price you pay for a product - or just to give money to those who produce it so they keep doing so. Just because it wasn't the former kind, doesn't mean it wasn't the latter kind.
Farm subsidies fit almost entirely in the latter category as well - they actually make food more expensive world-wide because farm subsidies in Europe and America make it impossible for farmers in other countries (which have more suitable climates) to actually compete despite their cost of production being lower. That actually means that, eventually those unsubsidized farmer start going out of business - forcing their countries to become food importers rather than exporters, which raises prices even in the countries that used to supply their own food with exports to spare. Nobody wins.
In fact- farm subsidies are so bad that, every year, farmers in Europe and America burn crops because the subsidies are contingent on keeping supply below a certain level - they burn so much produce every year that just the food burned could feed every hungry person on the planet. Nobody in the world needs to be hungry- we produce enough food to feed everybody on earth twice over but we burn so much that huge numbers of people still starve and a massive percentage of the global population have no food security - they may get enough food over time to survive but they never know if they will eat today.
Subsidies don't always bring prices down - many are DESIGNED to keep prices high. Some oil subsidies are in that category as well.
Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
>Colonialism involves colonies, where the inhabitants of the area in question are citizens of the mother country.
So according to your bizarre and unique (made up) definition - the Dutch colonies (which once spanned half the globe) were not colonies then. Since nobody in them were citizens of the mother country, the best you could hope for was 'employee of the corporation' - but most were simply 'slaves' or 'natives to be shoved aside'.
In fact, hardly any colonial power EVER granted citizens to the people of the colonies - that would mean you have to give those people RIGHTS and no colonial government wanted to do that. Citizens of the motherland who went to live in the colonies usually retained their citizenship - but the people being taken over never gained it.
In the aftermath of colonialism a lot of colonial powers gave a path to citizenship for their former non-citizen subjects - which usually only consisted of some rules to make emigrating to the land that once ruled you a little easier than it is for other people. The levels of that vary greatly even within a single colonial power. For example citizens of former British colonies can get automatic citizenship in Britain - but not ALL former colonies. It does not apply to South Africans for example.
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>Except the Iraq War did NOT make the transport of oil more secure, and did NOT lower the "true cost" of oil in anyway. It did the exact opposite.
Failing at the goal doesn't mean you subsequently get to pretend that wasn't the goal. Just because the execution was terrible doesn't mean the plan wasn't bad as well.
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You think there are no health effects within 1000m of a coal plant ? Hell the health effects of coal are far worse, over a much larger area - and of course you get it double because living anywhere within about 50-thousand meters of a coal MINE is seriously hazardous to health as well.
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It strikes me that at approximately every 120 degrees around the earth we have a huge desert. The American SW, Australia and northern Africa. Wouldn't it be great if we could put a metric shitton of photovoltaics in those three locations and tie it all together with a HVDC distribution system? Think of all the people we could employ to keep them wiped clean! And the sun would always be shining on one or two of the locations.
It's not that alternatives are so great - they are inferior in every way. It's that coal is far inferior, thermodynamically and thus economically, to natural gas. This is what has all but killed coal. Alternatives are worse that nat gas but we still have nat gas so we use its greater efficiency.
Alternatives can NEVER drop-in replace fossil. Instead a change/reduction in lifestyle is always be required to switch because the thermodynamics requires getting less for the same economic and energy inputs.
The price of oil skyrocketed, which made US based oil production viable for the first time in decades. It also provided the kick-start of the Balkan oil-shale project that helped get the US out of the financial tumble in the mid 2000s and helped the US become a net exporter of oil.
Everything is renewable! Coal gets replaced, more coal gets created over time. Same with oil. Even same with Nuclear.
Wind energy is often said to be renewable; however the windmills take energy out of the wind causing it to slow down thus moving heat and cold and particulates slower - this has more than zero effect on the environment.
False propaganda to push an agenda
Take a look at the second graph to get a good dose of reality over ideology:
http://www.theenergycollective...
All it took was a very quick google image search.
If you spend anywhere near the amount of time you write about this stuff on actually learning about it we wouldn't need to have these discussions where I try hard to not write as if I am looking down on an idiot.
If we have sufficient alternative energy and good enough electric vehicles, we don't NEED THE OIL or the WARS in the first place.
You can use natural gas for heating but also, heating oil isn't going to drive the price of oil to $130 per barrel alone. We may be in an oil glut for another 10 years. With smart subsidies for alternative energy and electric vehicles, and conservation (LED bulbs are cheap and pay for themselves in about 2 months now and pure profit for the consumer after that), we may never see the end of the oil glut. We may finally be at the beginning of the end of oil driven engines.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Nope. Protecting the people is. Business interests aren't people. Though you've hit on the good reason why the taxes need to be higher on the rich. Tax 90% of all income over $5M a year (gross, not AGI) would be a good place to start. The rich benefit from wars. The poor never do. If China invaded the US and won, the homeless guy in San Fran might see a change in the uniform of the person who orders him to not sleep on the park bench, but no other change to his life. But Bill Gates and such would see a huge difference when MS is nationalized. The (current) military exists solely to protect the profits of the 1%, and serves no other purpose. Taxing the middle class for that is absurd.
Why $5M? You don't think the folks making $30k/yr would see a change if China took over? Maybe they should pay a 90% gross income tax, too.
Stop! Dremel time!
There wouldn't be that much in change for them, either. If everything you own is nationalized, for most people under $30k, they'd see a net benefit. Wipe out their student loans (nationalized), wipe out their mortgage (then let them rent it back at market rates), and such, being invaded by the communists would improve the lives of most Americans.
Learn to love Alaska
I very much doubt that. Not that "ideal" Communism couldn't improve the lives of the working poor, but I don't think the average Chinese citizen is better off than the average US citizen.
Stop! Dremel time!
You may not be stupid but you appear to pretend to be very frequently - the above line is missing an "only", which should be obvious but you are bound to jump on it as if it was not.
Consider that wind and solar are currently ONLY occupying the niche above base load almost everywhere other than in people's dreams.
Your charging at windmills is pointless - the "green" stuff you hate so much is just another collection of useful tools to add to the energy mix.