UK Hits Clean Energy Milestone: 50% of Electricity From Low Carbon Sources (theguardian.com)
Half of the UK's electricity came from wind turbines, solar panels, wood burning and nuclear reactors between July and September, in a milestone first. From a report on The Guardian: Official figures published on Thursday show low carbon power, which has been supported by the government to meet climate change targets, accounted for 50% of electricity generation in the UK in the third quarter, up from 45.3% the year before. The rise was largely driven by new windfarms and solar farms being connected to the grid, and several major coal power stations closing.
Burning wood releases a lot of CO2 and should not be considered clean.
It's a self-correcting loop, but only as long as there is no market manipulation, such as massive pet industry subsidies or restrictive legislation that prevents new methods of generation from coming online to the grid.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Um, no. According to the article the main driver was Natural Gas and Nuclear. Solar/Wind barely budged. Another mdsolar deceptive article.
The entire population of the UK is less than two Tokyos.
You fail at basic math:
UK population: 65.3 million
Tokyo population: 13.62 million
65.3 / 13.6 ~ 4.8.
UK population = 65,299,992
Tokyo population = 13,620,000
That's more like 4.8 Tokyos
Silly rabbit
I never said he had the power to do it. Just that he would promise it. You may have noticed that politicians promise all kinds of things that they are actually unable to do. And Trump is very bad about promising all kinds of things, and then walking back from those statements.
Hell, Trump _did_ promise coal miners that the jobs would come back. And they won't, for the reasons you mentioned.
Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
But not hidrocarbons, people forget that in western europe and the us it was common to have acid rains.
Now for some time every coal fired power station has to have a scrubber for it sulfur and particulate emissions.
That is expensive to operate, specially if competing fuels have little or no sulfur content, or generate very little particulate emissions.
The problem that the coal industry has is that it is a very dirty fuel, it has a massive direct impact as we are seeing in China.
Because, most people are by nature ignorant of the historical facts this gets discounted or we get a nice green narrative.
On the other side, solar and wind are another nail in the coffin for coal. Mostly cause they mess-up with the break even points on the operation of a power plant.
A coal plant can't be put on and off all the time, it has a lead time before it starts generating power, equipments will tear up if put into too many cooling off and power on cycles.
Also, wind and solar costs are centered on the fixed cost of financing the installation and maintenance, no extra fuelled required. So they have an incentive to sell power at any price available once built.
Even if the first operator gets bankrupt, the next one buying the assets for peanuts can make a killing.
Unless it is bought by an adamant coal operator that has an ideological bent on destroying everything not emitting carbon.
That doens't mean hidrocarbons are dead, it is just shifting from fuel sources that require high priced installations and have very low flexibility, hence natural gaz.
Now, if solar and wind keep growing at the same rates, we will see more displacement of hidrocarbon fuel sources. Though we will have to deal with baseload problem on energy sources that are intermittent.
And where do you think the carbon in coal and oil came from?
They came from plants and animals that died millions of years ago. That carbon has essentially been taken out of circulation. By digging it up and burning it we are adding it back to the ecosystem. Burning wood is roughly carbon neutral if you are not burning it faster than the wood grows because it just circulates carbon already in the ecosystem.
Firewood comes from treesthat take decades to grow (if not longer) . We burn through it in a fraction of that time.
We can but we don't have to. The trick is to burn it at a net rate no faster than it grows. That is a choice we make. If we burn the wood faster than the sources of it grow then it is no longer carbon neutral.
Carbon neutral means carbon neutral, it says nothing about whether it's good or bad. Slave labor turning a windlass is carbon neutral but probably sub-optimal in terms of modern morality.
So saying wood burning is carbon neutral doesn't ignore anything, it's simply a statement. That said, yes, shifting to a wood burning energy stance is probably not optimal.
Directly... but he can incentive it (like he already did in his campaign)
for the @GP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conurbation
This kind of media coverage turned viable the contruction of Belo Monte hydroelectric dam complex (that destroyed several lands inhabited by indigenous peoples and raises several environmental issues: I call it "FUD")
So the entire population of the UK is 1.7 Tokyo-greater-metropolitan-areas.
But the entire population of Japan is only 3.3 Tokyo-greater-metropolitan areas.
The greater Tokyo metropolitan areas is sizeable when compared to the UK, but it's also sizeable when compared to the entire population of Japan itself.
I'm really failing to understand what the point of all of this is, and what the O.P. was even trying to say.
I'm still giggling over Trumps letters regarding that wind farm: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-38397644
The guy is absolutely bad-shit insane! lol!!
*bat-shit even!
Just watch, Trump's response will either to be to continue to complain about the wind farm near his golf course in Scotland
He can complain as much as he likes. I come from a very rural part of Scotland. My friends and relatives are pleased about the wind turbines and there are plenty. There probably won't be many more large ones for a while but there are plenty smaller ones going up the whole time.
They don't spoil the view and they don't pollute. Bring it on!
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
Please, for the love of god, would you ppl QUIT DOING SOLAR FARMS. Building this over land is about as stupid as it gets. Do it over parking lots or roofs. Those sites convert light into heat. Lands convert light into sugars. If you are worried about AGW, then you need to reduce the FUCKING HEAT. If you are not worried about it, then quit subsidizing solar.
Fucking idiots.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Wow, look at that. Someone saying something good about nuclear power for once. Of course they will if it let's them hit a milestone like this. I thought nuclear was expensive, dangerous, and if you look at it wrong it will explode and melt your face off.
Here's the milestone I see, nuclear power is being recognized for what it is, carbon free, inexpensive, plentiful, and safe. This is a big deal to me because it is so rare to see anyone say anything good about nuclear power. With this announcement they may not say explicitly that nuclear power is safe and cheap but it is implied, at least they recognize it as carbon free.
I've done the math and it would be exceedingly difficult for any nation, especially one as small as the UK, to be energy independent without nuclear power. I've read some rather crazy claims that we can put solar panels in Africa to power the UK but at the same time we cannot build nuclear power in the UK. Well, if nuclear power is too dangerous to put in the UK then put them out in the African desert and run the wires to the UK, that way you'd get your energy night and day and not have to worry about looking at it wrong and it exploding in your face.
I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
Please, for the love of god, would you ppl QUIT DOING SOLAR FARMS. Building this over land is about as stupid as it gets. Do it over parking lots or roofs. Those sites convert light into heat. Lands convert light into sugars. If you are worried about AGW, then you need to reduce the FUCKING HEAT. If you are not worried about it, then quit subsidizing solar.
I've often wondered if we could put solar panels along the highways here in the US. There's a lot of places where the median between lanes is 40 feet or so, and a lot of those stretches have guard rails on both sides. Some stretches have 40 feet or more of guarded dales along the sides, up to a chain link fence.
I once estimated that to supply the entire country's electrical needs (simple, back-of-the-envelope thing without taking into account peak load and other issues) we'd need solar panels along about 5,000 miles of highway, given some assumptions. We currently have about 45,000 miles of highway, and many of those lead straight into or through cities and towns, so power cable routing and right-of-way shouldn't be that bad.
(To compare power cable losses, consider how far high tension lines already have to go to bring electricity to places.)
To take an example, I80 or I70 through Nebraska and Kansas go through (or near) multiple small towns and has a very wide median. All of the bridges have wide, sloping expanses with guarded sections that could host a solar panel already.
Is there any reason we shouldn't just be planting solar panels along highways?
There's a big difference between a 4% ROI in a month and a 4% ROI in a decade. There's a big difference between a 4 degree warming in a century and a 4 degree warming in ten thousand years. [Emphasis mine]
This has nothing whatsoever to do with the question of planting trees to offset the carbon emissions of burning coal vs. planting trees to offset the carbon emissions of burning trees. It doesn't matter where the coal came from or how long it took to be created. Only the levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere matter, along with their rate of decrease/increase. The trees that grow to offset coal carbon don't grow any slower than the trees used to offset tree carbon. And do I really need to point out that carbon from burned coal does not enter the atmosphere two goddamn orders of magnitude faster than the carbon from burned trees?
Economics are not relevant at all to the scientific and mathematical question of carbon emission or net carbon emission, except to the extent that methods of tree planting, coal/tree harvesting and transport probably involve carbon emission.... which is a tangential argument and involves a lot of variables to conclusively solve (and that solution would likely vary by geography and climate.)
It's easy to get to "good numbers" by just shutting down all the bad stuff. Unfortunately, that basically leaves us with 50% of Not Enough.