California Will Close Its Last Nuclear Power Plant (sfchronicle.com)
An anonymous reader quotes the San Francisco Chronicle:
California's last nuclear power plant -- Diablo Canyon, whose contentious birth helped shape the modern environmental movement -- will close in 2025, state utility regulators decided Thursday. The unanimous vote by the California Public Utilities Commission will likely bring an end to nuclear energy's long history in the state. State law forbids building more nuclear plants in California until the federal government creates a long-term solution for dealing with their waste, a goal that remains elusive despite decades of effort.
The decision comes even as California expands its fight against global warming. Owned by Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Diablo Canyon is the state's largest power plant, supplying 9 percent of California's electricity while producing no greenhouse gases. "With this decision, we chart a new energy future by phasing out nuclear power here in California," said commission President Michael Picker. "We've looked hard at all the arguments, and we agree the time has come."
The decision comes even as California expands its fight against global warming. Owned by Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Diablo Canyon is the state's largest power plant, supplying 9 percent of California's electricity while producing no greenhouse gases. "With this decision, we chart a new energy future by phasing out nuclear power here in California," said commission President Michael Picker. "We've looked hard at all the arguments, and we agree the time has come."
Do we have any rails coming in from West Virginia?
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
The Big One is going to hit in two months.
California is run by morons.
No way are they going to be able to replace all of the energy lost from that plant from renewables. It's going to come from some other state, spewing coal and sulfur... or possibly they simply will increase the brownouts, but it's OK because all of the large cash cows have learned to have their own generation facilities for anything important.
Nuclear energy is the cheapest form above all the others, it's a shame to see the world fold this away even as they scream the Earth needs saving. You were saving it friend, and now you are letting it go.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
California -- the only US state to experience rolling blackouts due to incompetent "central planning". More to be coming soon...
You sure about that? Germany's economy is larger than CA but using renewables they have more energy than they can use.
putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
Natural Gas is still a lot safer and solar is cheaper. That probably wouldn't be true if American's political climate wasn't so crazy. The mad rush to privatize things that shouldn't be privatized coupled with our bad habit of looking the other way on regulation means nuclear power is risky. Government run enterprises tend to be very, very efficient unless they're being run as pork. e.g. the DMV and Post Office both do amazing things (as long as you don't live in the South, where the DMV massively underfunded). That means there really isn't much profit to be had privatizing it without cutting corners on safety and, well, look at Fukushima. A completely preventable disaster that nearly destroyed a city...
And don't forget that we can't recycle the fuel because we're terrified some of it will get lost and turned into nukes. Not that it's ever stopped anyone from getting them (re: North Korea).
TLDR; Get Americans to stop privatizing dangerous things and allow the waste to be recycled and we'll put nuclear back in rotation.
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Germany also has the highest household electricity prices in Europe with Denmark, IIRC, roughly 33-50% above the EU median and the bouts of having more energy than they can use do not help at all with that although it does help companies in Europe who get paid to "dispose" of the excess when-ever needed. From what I can find online, CA would probably need 50-100% increase in household electricity kWh rates to reach similar pricing.
Accordingt to this, more than half of Germany's power comes from coal+gas+nuclear.
There's a lot of power being exported, but also some import - mainly from France, which means more nuclear.
Sometimes yes, other times not so much. They are the largest CO2 producer in Europe though.
Using renewables and nuclear power imported from fance.
Germany's economy is larger than CA but using renewables they have more energy than they can use.
Nope.
During brief times of year, that MAY be true, as with the headline you are thinking of where German power pricing was negative on Christmas day in December.
However most of the time Germans are importing power because they shut down all nuclear plants - they are currently producing about 35% of their power from renewables
But all that importing and expensive renewable power facilities means that Germans pay some of the highest power rates in the world. Even if on Christmas you do get a break because the office buildings are shut down...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Are you referring to the market manipulation conducted by the energy traders empowered in the Bush years?
Although it was popular all through Obama's term to blame things on Bush, are we not just a little past that now?
Because California is still seeing blackouts.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
we have a proposition on the calif ballot to stop all new nuke construction. i was 14. i didnt know we had nuclear power plants. my father was a rocket scientist, but i was a bit behind the news on some science, as he had dropped out and become a hippy artist. anyway, i knew that in the future, we would get all our power from nukes. i told my mom i was shocked that we HAD nukes, and that people were trying to STOP them. my mother said "they havent figured out what to do with the waste". i was then shocked that anyone would build a nuke and NOT figure out in advance how to deal with the waste. so i went from pro nuke to anti nuke in seconds. nothing has changed. all you nuke apologists can go to hell, you arent scientists, you are ghouls. you worship death by radiation. as far as i am concerned, you are no different than the mutants in the second Apes movie, with their cobalt bomb.
Diablo Canyon Power Plant is in San Luis Obispo County, on the beach, and near two different faults. Given recent seismic events in California they may just be deciding it is past time the plants are removed as a major ecological hazard in the event of seismic activities or a Fukushima Daiichi grade Tsunami.
Given that the plants are almost 50 years old and pressurized water reactors, it seems like there are a half dozen individual reasons worthy of shutting it down, and legislators have thankfully chosen to shut it down before fate takes the choice away from them. While I agree that the loss of 6 percent of the power supply in California is damaging, I think it will likely help spur future solar/wind/hydro/geo plants in California, while also offering the opportunity to consider battery backups for buffering peak loads and offering an alternative to fast ramps of power plants which often waste power and raise either emissions or maintenance costs when conducted.
With batteries and renewables a large quantity of power can be buffered, helping to reduce the loading of power generation facilities across the state and help ensure both California's future power independence as well as avoiding voltage and current irregularities that exist today.
Citation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Germany is not importing power.
We export about 1/3rd of our power generation.
We mostly are a transit country for exports into our neighbours, some charts show this as import, but they usulally have also transit charts or export charts.
Get a damn clue, moron.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
Germany is not importing power.
We export about 1/3rd of our power generation.
We mostly are a transit country for exports into our neighbours, some charts show this as import, but they usulally have also transit charts or export charts.
Get a damn clue, moron.
[Citation Needed]
Holy shit dude. Stop sucking all that cock. You cock sucking moron. Please, just kill yourself you cock sucking inbred fucking moron. You would do everyone a favor. Just hold that gun to your head and pull the trigger. Do everyone a favor. You fucking piece of garbage.
Russia is actually.
Read my old posts, there are enough citations. ...
And: learn how to google
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
California will set up a windfarm to operate its data center. Outage expected in 3..2..1
Germany has one of the highest electricity rates _and_ they are forced to increased coal use: https://www.cleanenergywire.or...
The 2020 emission reduction target is now completely out of reach. But don't worry, they are going to build more coal power plants instead: https://energytransition.org/2...
Diablo canyon is down the road.
I've got nothing against nuclear. I toured the plant last year or the year before. Super impressive.
Anyway, it's my understanding that Diablo Canyon isn't being shut down by regulators so much as PG&E can't make a profit from it. Solar and Gas are too cheap for [heavily regulated] nuclear to be profitable.
Here's the story from 18 months ago:
http://beta.latimes.com/busine...
News?
The numbeds for power prices are wrong.
I doubt anyone pays more than 25cents, on a remote north sea island, perhaps.
I pay 18 cents, and could drop that perhaps to 18 or 14 if I was not to lazy to switch provider.
The average is hardly above 22 cents.
kW/h prices are hardly relevant anyway, relevant is the total amount you pay per month or the percentage of your income.
And in that regard Germany is quite low. I pay 100Euro a month for electricity AND natural gas.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
Looking at 2017 (expand the timeline to the year) - it sure does look like they export most of the time - with a few blips of import. Looking over other graphs I saw them import from France but on the *same* day they were exporting 10 times that amount to other countries - so end result.... a power grid working as designed to move power from one spot to another - that sometimes results in imports that wouldn't be needed if the country was in isolation?
Germany is not importing power.
We export about 1/3rd of our power generation.
We mostly are a transit country for exports into our neighbours, some charts show this as import, but they usulally have also transit charts or export charts.
Get a damn clue, moron.
[Citation Needed]
Look at the German power export balance chart that was cited three levels up. It shows a massive difference between power generation and power consumption (in 2016 Germany generated 648 TWh but used only 595 TWh). I don't know how the commenter came to the conclusion that Germany is an importer...as even his own links prove him wrong! https://www.cleanenergywire.org/factsheets/germanys-energy-consumption-and-power-mix-charts
We export about 1/3rd of our power generation.
Just as well that Germany is now 100% renewable. It would be a crime against humanity to burn more coal, let alone brown coal, just to assuage the irrational fear too many Germans have about nuclear energy, wouldn't it?
Why I even saw some hyperventilating clown claim that a Fukushima size event would destroy the entire country ... no, they really claimed that!
California can just outlaw air conditioning.
Have gnu, will travel.
No way are they going to be able to replace all of the energy lost from that plant from renewables. It's going to come from some other state, spewing coal and sulfur...
You sure about that? Germany's economy is larger than CA but using renewables they have more energy than they can use.
Don't be fooled, this is what shutting down the nuclear industry looks like in Germany.
Heil Hitler, Nazi!
Except that Russia is not actually in Europe.
California is currently failing in many respects.
The national economy is up around 3%, and California revenues are also up about 2.9 %.
That's about a 1:1 ratio, but CA grew at twice the rate of the economy in 2016. Their growth is significantly slowed since about two years ago. Also, that 2.9% increase in revenues is offset by about 2% increase in expenses, so it's not going to reduce their deficit a lot.
The CA population has lost about 930,000 people(*) according to census data (linked in the article), mostly middle class. The middle-class in CA have moved away to Arizona, Washington, and Texas leaving the poor and ultra-rich behind. Not completely, of course, but losing that much middle class has gotta put stress on the CA economy.
Their labor force shrank from 62.1% to 59.1% in that same time - a huge decrease to happen in just over a year.
CA is dead last (50th out of 50) in economic freedom.
Some analysts are suggesting that CA is already in a recession.
So... yeah. It's entirely reasonable to predict that California is facing very bad times in the near future.
And by extension, the California management.
(*) Don't bitch about linking to Breitbart. The link to the census bureau report is right there in the linked article.
Dispose indeed ... I find it curious how few people understand that renewables for Germany are a form of mercantilism.
1 Suppress internal consumption with high electricity cost
2 Subsidize internal industry with low electricity cost
3 WTO doesn't dare say a thing, because global warming
4 Profit
It only works because they raced to that particular scheme the fastest of course, otherwise everyone would just have high electricity costs and nothing else would change.
PS. I meant "high consumer electricity cost" and "low industrial electricity cost".
Given the fact that the People's Republic of Kalifornia is indeed run by morons, they will no doubt increase the brownouts while at the same time raising taxes in the form of fees to "combat climate change". And it will be the new normal here.
Kalifornia is already restricting running natural gas lines to new construction. A pathetic attempt to reduce the Aliso Canyon (Porter Ranch) demand so they can eventually shut it down.
Why, don't you just come to Germany and read a newspaper about it?
And honestly, what has the WTO to say about german energy prices?
Why are you not happy! The more Audi or Porsche has to pay for energy the more expensive is the car in your country! Is that not good for you to compete with us?
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
Washington state would love it if California would stop taking BPA electricity, causing Washington residents to depend on Canadian power ... It more than tripled the cost of power. Perhaps for states with more than 4 representatives they should be required to generate 60 percent of their own electricity and to pay market rates for imported power off the grid.
Your wholesale prices, which Audi and Porsche pay are very low. That's why it's such a brilliant scheme.
As for why the WTO might intervene, they don't generally like industry subsidies unless specifically allowed.
You sure about that? Germany's economy is larger than CA but using renewables they have more energy than they can use.
Great example. Germany's renewable energy generation capabilities stands at 33%. Last Saturday it produced precisely 0% of Germany's consumption with import running full steam from France for some of that wonderful nuclear goodness. They have had more energy than they could use precisely 2 days last year, and then only because their energy mix is so heavily geared towards base load and intermittent load with few peaking plants in between.
And they get all that for the privilege of paying some of the highest electricity costs in the world (almost 3x what Californians currently pay, those two windy days where they had excess energy being a notable exception)
Germany is not importing power.
Tell it to your own energy charts which showed quite a bit of import happening over the weekend. That's the thing about having intermittent energy sources. Germany is a net energy exporter but relies heavily on imports to keep the lights on when there's no wind. You imported 25TWh Jan-Oct last year.
Get a damn clue, moron
Learn to internet.
And you will be poor and "THEY" will be rich. Unless you are a 0.01%-er, and you wouldnt be posting here if you were, the state of california only benefits the obscenely rich. The middle class and lower classes here are pitted against one another on purpose while we are forced to fight over artificially limited resources to keep us fighting and under control.
Ive live here a long time now. A transplant. This is not a place for regular people to thrive. Its wage slavery and class warfare.
You work to keep Schmidt, Bezos, Gates, Buffett, Zuck and the like large and in charge along with their government and banking buddies. You've been had.
You even think yourself a liberal (free) in a liberal (free) state. HAHAHAHA. Its a god damned police state.
But you got your THC coming. Tune out baby.
The old people, like Tim Leary, were THINKERS.
You are users who are being used. - tsarkon
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
Except that Russia is not actually in Europe.
Except for the European part.
His ignorance covered the whole earth like a blanket, and there was hardly a hole in it anywhere. - Mark Twain
Germany's energy policy is a disaster. Electricity is becoming a luxury good.
Even the "newly" elected government just decided to scale back its energy and climate goals because they are unsustainable economically. That is assuming they actually manage to form a government. Going on 4 months since the election without a new government now.
There was an earthquake on January 4 that shook Berkeley and the east bay pretty well (M4.4 and M2.6) and several smaller ones over the next several days with January 9 being the most significant (M2.4). I keep a close eye on the Hayward fault because my aunt's house is right on it and my house is 2 miles from it (but 50 miles south of my aunt).
Hayward fault is pretty active and that's a good thing, there is a lot of potential for stress to build up and rip through suddenly causing catastrophic damage in the region. Lots of smaller quakes is more manageable and less costly. But the science still points to there being a serious (>M6.8) in the near future, and the quakes along these faults tend to be very shallow with very localized damage. We could lose a reservoir dam like we almost did with Calaveras last month, or it could be near a hospital in Fremont and flatten the building, or it could be out in the country side with little to no property damage. It's russian roulette rather than a bomb that takes out the whole region.
What is more concerning to me personally because I was about 1.5 miles from the epicenter was an earthquake (M3.9 and M3.1) in Santa Clara County that hit December 26 along the Calaveras fault. This fault was recently discovered to be connected to the Hayward fault. And for a long time both Hayward and Calaveras were considered number 1 and number 2 faults of most concern in the region, it's worse now that they are confirmed to be influencing each other.
Kind of makes me second guess my decision to buy a $1M+ home in the bay area.
Are you talking about pre-1990 before German Reunification? That's hardly the Democrats fault that East and West Germany were brought back together and quickly rose to the top, displacing many nations (including France).
>they have more energy than they can use.
Is it expensive to add automatic load control to electric stations that reduce production?
For example, covers for electric batteries, blocking the wind turbines from rotating, blocking water turbines from rotating, stopping throwing coal into the furnace.
Serious question.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
I believe the renewables provide the surplus.
Not the base.
A 3rd of this country's welfare recipients are in California.
That's a nice little unsupported bogus made up statistic you have there. California does spend the most on welfare overall but since they are the state with the largest population (and a high cost of living) that's hardly shocking. Per capita they are high but not wildly out of the norm - with around 4% of the population receiving some sort of assistance. California is among the least federally dependent states in the US.
It has been losing population for the last 20 years
You must be talking about a different California than the one on the west coast of the US. Population growth there has been steadily growing with no sign of that changing any time soon.
Most of the welfare recipients are white people in red counties within CA, actually. It's weird how much you hate them.
Most of the states that depend most heavily on federal aid are strongly red states. Most of those that depend the least on the government are blue states. Make of that what you will but I think there is some irony in there somewhere.
California used to be 4th until the Democrats took over. Go ahead, prove me wrong.
You made the claim. It's up to you to back it up with facts.
No. It's trivial. Wind and solar are electronic inverter driven these days; it's just send a digital control message to the turbine/inverter to set the maximum export value and the firmware/electronics do the rest.
Same for hydro - just tell the facility to reduce power and they'll adjust the gates with response time measured in seconds.
Coal is a bit more difficult - there is lots of thermal mass which can take a long time to heat up, if you need to increase power. Reducing power can be done by throttling the steam turbine or diverting steam direct the condensor. Load following control with coal is possible but less preferred.
Nuclear too can load follow. BWR reactors are controlled by coolant mass flow in the core. Just turn the pumps up and down and the core power and steam generation follows within seconds. PWR reactors are similar but are controlled by steam flow. Throttle the steam to the turbine and the core will reduce power. In practice, many national regulatory agencies don't like this during to concerns of thermal expansion /contraction on the core. So it's avoided in the US, but it is a key operating strategy in France.
No way are they going to be able to replace all of the energy lost from that plant from renewables. It's going to come from some other state, spewing coal and sulfur... or possibly they simply will increase the brownouts, but it's OK because all of the large cash cows have learned to have their own generation facilities for anything important.
Nuclear energy is the cheapest form above all the others, it's a shame to see the world fold this away even as they scream the Earth needs saving. You were saving it friend, and now you are letting it go.
If you add the cost of eventually decommissioning the plant, the cost of the electricity goes WAY up. And by the time it is shut off, there should be plenty of new wind and solar and natgas power up and running
It helps to understand the economics of what is going on here. Germany provides transit for electricity from France which is why they import and export at the same time. It's very true Germany is a net exporter, but none the less they were forced to import some 25TWh of electricity last year to keep the lights on during bad weather.
A lot of this has to do with a big power split between baseload and renewables with a large shortfall of peaking capacity in between. They are heavily reliant on interconnects for stability. That is also not a very good position to be in. Mind you neither is paying quite as much as they do for electricity.
The red state vs. blue state comparison is flawed because there are no purely red or blue states.
Nobody argued to the contrary. But as long as presidential elections maintain an electoral college with a winner take all system there will remain such a thing as red states and blue states whether you like it or not and regardless of what the underlying demographics might be.
Democrats are TWICE as likely as Republicans to have taken food stamps.
Did you actually read the article you linked to? From your article: "But when the political lens shifts from partisanship to ideology, the participation gap vanishes. Self-described political conservatives were no more likely than liberals or moderates to have received food stamps (17% for each group),"
You complain that I'm ignoring underlying demographics and then you do the exact same thing. The gap you point to is entirely explained by the fact that it is MINORITIES (non-whites) and WOMEN who are more likely to receive assistance. These groups happen to generally vote Democrat. Again from TFA: "Beyond politics, equally large or larger gaps emerge in the participation rates of many core social and demographic groups. For example, women were about twice as likely as men (23% vs. 12%) to have received food stamps at some point in their lives. Blacks are about twice as likely as whites to have used this benefit during their lives (31% vs. 15%). Among Hispanics, about 22% say they have collected food stamps."
I'll just leave this here- Notice how much power California imports from other states.. Also notice the natural gas numbers...
http://www.caiso.com/TodaysOutlook/Pages/supply.aspx
before that's a problem. Meanwhile if a nuke plant goes bad I'll live many, many years in poverty as I'm forced to leave my now irradiated property behind until I eventually die of cancer in my 40s (maybe mid 50s if I'm lucky).
That's the trouble with nuke plants. The disasters are acute. Meaning all the damage is up front. The annoying thing is that if we were rational beings nuclear would be the perfect energy source.
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California, being the most populous state, has some not insignificant energy needs. How are they going to make this happen? It seems like California is good at just kicking problems further into the future without actually addressing them presently.
Oh, Diablo Canyon 2, why can't you be more like Diablo Canyon 1!
Germany is a big exporter of power, but "Energy in Germany is sourced predominantly by fossil fuels, followed by nuclear power, biomass (wood and biofuels), wind, hydro and solar." So exporting a lot of fossil fuel and nuclear power.
Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
>> Nuclear energy is the cheapest form above all the others
Nope.
That was 30years ago, when nuke was subventionned because of the need to make nasty bombs.
Nowadays solar is the cheapest source of electricity. Unsubventionned.
Next country to be "unnuked" : Germany :)
aaaaaaa
That's the plain and simple truth. Nuclear Fission only looks like it works if it is cross-funded by obscene truckloads of taxpayers money and nobody looks too hard at centralized power cartels (funded by said taxpayers money), reactor runtimes and maintenance costs (also paid by taxpayers mones). Factor in waste handling, storage and the risks of nuclear disasters and the balance sheet goes really deep-red.
The numbers don't add up and the whole concept simply doesn't work. Even the conservatives in Germany have noticed this. Replenishing Plant Wackersdorf - a multi-billion dollar project for the treatment and replenishing of nuclear waste - wasn't closed down by left-wing hippie protesters raising a stink of the better part of a decade, it was closed down by southern Germany state officials doing the math. Some backroom clerk adding up the numbers and seeing in awe and amazement that it wouldn't work, even with the best predictions. Same goes for the most advanced fast breeder at Kalkar - a building estimated more expensive than the Pyramids of Gizeh, inflation factored in.
Now Germany is moving out of nuclear alltogether and for once we're actually ahead of schedule - even with all the fuss about the new powerlines crossing the republic. AFAI understand we've simply decided to front a few extra billion and move those underground, so nobody can complain of them blocking their view. We crossed the 80% renewables a few weeks ago. If Germany can do this - really not a country known for it's sunny days - the rest of the world can do it too.
People have to see the light: Nuclear Fission as we know it is a 60ies techno-romatic pipe-dream. And a dangerous one at that, with a 200 000 year waste problem attached.
IMHO the world should move to decommission classic nuclear fission ASAP. I'm glad the californians did this. I personally don't want to many chernobyls and fukushimas happening before the world finally catches on.
As it stands, we can easily replace Fission with non-coal renewables like Solar, Wind, etc. And the pace of that is picking up faster than anyone would've thought, because costs per KWH are already orders of magnitude cheaper. And regulations are trivial compared to anything nuclear.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Anecdotes are not statistics. The average household electrcity cost In Germany for the first half of 2017 was a little over 30 cents per kWh.
And before someone points out the large portion of that being taxes, the taxes are what's used to subsidize construction of those new renewable power plants. That's why you really should be using levelized cost to compare the expense of power generation - it takes into account all lifetime costs and eliminates these transients due to unrelated factors, and factors in cost-shifting due to subsidies and over time (loans, interest). The snapshot price of electricity in 1H2017 may actually be skewed high if a lot of new plants were being constructed at the time, which is probably the case.
Ummmm...Gates, Buffet, Bezos...these guys are not even in California. What are you ranting about?
Prevailing West winds. Save for LA, those west winds do a wonderful job of keeping that nastee smoke N stuff messing up those deplorable states ...
Nonsense. Germany imported 28,5 TWh and exported 82,4 TWh in 2017. At no time, Germany has to import power to keep the lights on. There are plenty of plants on stand-by. Also for comparison, ten years ago in 2007 (so long before Fukushima and will all nuclear plants still running) imports were rvrn higher at 44,3 TWh and exports lower at 63,4 TWh. Most of the imported power is actually transit as GP pointed out.
https://www.ag-energiebilanzen...
https://www.energy-charts.de/
You make it sound like it is a big deal, that there are rare days where Germany imports more electricity than it imports. But we are talking about tiny amounts (about on 0.05 TWh net imports compared to a production of 1.6 TWh on Jan 11, which was the worst day). Of course, this amount could have easily be produced in Germany by spinning up some plants. It was just cheaper to import. At the same time, you fail to mention that France was often importing a significant amount of power continuously for weeks at a time in 2017 because it could not fulfill its own demand as too many nuclear plants were down.
True, but you should compare to 10 years ago:
coal 142.0 TWh -> 94.2 TWh
lignite 155.1 TWh -> 148.0 TWh
nuclear 140.0 TWh -> 75.9 TWh
renewables 88.3 TWh -> 216.6 TWh
(source: https://www.ag-energiebilanzen...)
This while at the same time reducing imports and increasing exports.
I agree that lignite and coal should have been reduced first and not nuclear, but it is clear that renewables are a success and that the trend for lignite and coal is still down and not up as many here incorrectly claim.
Well, most of the taxes and fees are *not* used as subsidies for the renewables. The renewable surcharge was about 7 ct in 2017. But yes, one should look at LCOE.
https://www.lazard.com/perspec...
a disaster at a natural gas plant is a one time thing. Absolute worst case scenario a chunk of city burns down and gets rebuilt and a few hundred folks die in the initial blast. A nuke meltdown takes the whole city out for years, maybe decades. Now, a nuke disaster is completely preventable, but it's expensive as hell to do that. That means there's lots of money to be made buying up nuke plants, cutting corners and pocketing the difference. And if you think for a second there aren't mountains of folks lined up to do just that you're being naive.
We need to fundamentally fix out political system in America before nuclear can be considered 'safe'. As usual it's a people problem, but that fact doesn't make the problem go away. .
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...to sue California and states like it for actively contributing to global warming via deciaio nd like this.
Besides which
1) Why is it the federal governments problem to "deal" with nuclear waste produced in a state.
2) Define "elusive solution". Multiple solutions exist, just dump it in the Marianis Trench. The increased risk to humans is minimal..certainly much less than the prospects of "global catastrophe" being pushed re: Global Warming.
3) Where is the long term, read "infinite" solution to the waste created by solar power. That industry creates some nasty shit in production of solar cells. Burning it just releases to the atmosphere with no idea of the long term consequences. Nope, before we build out any more solar the "federal government must come up with a solution to this problem".
Of course I'm being a bit sarcastic, but I'm not the one setting the bar for "safe". It's far past time to call out this bullshit. If NYC can sue fossil fuel companies for giving them a product they beg for then we should sue governments making bad choices that lead to increased use of fossil fuels.
Yet another person that can't manage relative risk and probablities.
In your "worst case Natgas accident" people die immediately and it might take years or decarxez to rebuild. In the nuc plant accident there might be some places that are "unlivable" but most are entirely livable with a slight increased risk of sometime in the future getting cancer which btw may be entirely treatable.
Don't get me wrong, nobody wants accidents to happen and the costs of mitigating them isn't as great as you think. But the impacts of a nuclear accident are far overblown.
You make it sound like it is a big deal, that there are rare days where Germany imports more electricity than it imports.
I'm sure it is rare. Yet a single grid destabilising power outage in even a portion of an economy the size of Germany is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
At the same time, you fail to mention that France was often importing a significant amount of power continuously for weeks at a time in 2017 because it could not fulfill its own demand as too many nuclear plants were down.
You're comparing planned events to unplanned events. Don't do that. You may cause a power outage, and even one of the even a portion of an economy the size of France is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
Not per capita.
"until the federal government creates a long-term solution for dealing with their waste, a goal that remains elusive despite decades of effort." Why don't just shoot it to the Moon?? Would that be really so costly? We just need a really big cannon. I've read it in a book once.
"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
I doubt the rest of the nation would be able to pick up the pace and make up for the 20% loss in GDP.
Except that:
a) the price for Germany is wrong, which you can clearly see here: https://www.check24.de/strom/?...
And b)
The taxes are not used for subsidizing green energy, they are just taxes
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
Coal actually was reduced first.
Nuclear is only reduced since Fukushima, as the Merkel Government sopped the exit from nuclear power, Schroeder and the Greens had forged before.
Germany never was really importing electricity. We only import when european wide market fluctuations make sense to import. Usually we are exporting.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
When we talk about "import" and "export" we obviously talk about NETIMPORT and NETEXPORT
Of course in a "global economy" in the biggest super grid of the world, we rather import power than fire up a coal plant.
Last time I checked that was considered to be a good thing.
Interesting that you complain.
Learn to think, internet does not replace thinking.
You imported 25TWh Jan-Oct last year
Likely as transit country and we exported it to Switzerland who exported it to to Italy. Did I mention: get a damn clue?
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
I'm sure it is rare. Yet a single grid destabilising power outage in even a portion of an economy the size of Germany is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
Yes, and such things only happen when the infrastructure fails. As a few years ago very bad winter wether loaded so much ice on the posts of the high voltage grid that large areas had a power outage because of a physical non existing grid.
You're comparing planned events to unplanned events. Don't do that. You may cause a power outage, and even one of the even a portion of an economy the size of France is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
And without physically cutting the relevant region form the grid, such power outages don't happen.
The last one that happened was in north Italy 10 years ago or so, because they manage their grids different than Germany or France. Germany and France are immune to that. Even if 10% of either countries power plants would suddenly "disappear", the rest of the grid would cover that, and getting imports running if needed, too.
A typical grid like the one in France and Germany has always so called "reserve power" and other means attached to cover unplanned outages.
There was no outage in France in Germany he last 50 years that was not caused by a bagger cutting a line or any other physical damage to the grid itself.
Even the outage in Italy was bottom line caused by a cut in a power line.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
As for why the WTO might intervene, they don't generally like industry subsidies unless specifically allowed.
I was not aware of that. I googled a bit, thanks for the info.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
You make it sound like it is a big deal, that there are rare days where Germany imports more electricity than it imports.
I'm sure it is rare. Yet a single grid destabilising power outage in even a portion of an economy the size of Germany is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
There was no such thing in Germany. In contrast, France had these kind of HUGE fucking deal issues. This is exactly my point.
At the same time, you fail to mention that France was often importing a significant amount of power continuously for weeks at a time in 2017 because it could not fulfill its own demand as too many nuclear plants were down.
You're comparing planned events to unplanned events. Don't do that. You may cause a power outage, and even one of the even a portion of an economy the size of France is not a big deal. It's a HUGE fucking deal.
I can't parse your ramblings. Nuclear plants have far more unplanned events than wind power which is actually well quite predictable.