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Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #120
@LP

Thanks for all the insights LP, but it sounds a bit technical for me at my stage of increasing senility. I'm pretty happy with my HP W10 laptop so I don't really feel inclined to drag out the old Dell and start tinkering.

Reality always wins in the end.

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #121
Where did that figure come from DJC?  It's over 20%.

That was the figure I heard with the closure announcement but I think they meant “one fifth” rather than 5%.  Yallourn currently produces 1,450 megawatts and supplies 22% of Victoria's electricity.

Given the additional 5,000 megawatts of clean energy coming on line in the next 7 years, it’s easy to see why Energy Australia has decided to close Yallourn earlier than scheduled.
“Why don’t you knock it off with them negative waves? Why don’t you dig how beautiful it is out here? Why don’t you say something righteous and hopeful for a change?”  Oddball

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #122
The EU is about to hit Australian imports with a tariff for inadequate action on reducing fossil fuel emissions.
“Why don’t you knock it off with them negative waves? Why don’t you dig how beautiful it is out here? Why don’t you say something righteous and hopeful for a change?”  Oddball

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #123
Look at how far clean energy and battery technology has come in the last 20 years and imagine how far it will advance in the next 20 years. I wouldn’t be surprised if  upgrading batteries will be worthwhile in 5-10 year cycles from an efficiency and safety point of view. I don’t see too many laptop owners wanting to ditch LiPo batteries and revert to NiMH batteries.

On the other hand, how much has coal-fired electricity generation improved over the last 50 years and how much Improvement can we expect in the next 50 years in reducing pollutants? And I mean real improvements rather than the white whale of “clean coal” which just seems to be a shiny object to deflect criticism or justify lobbying for government handouts.

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #124
Australia is a global leader in all the key areas, solar cells, hydrogen, emissions reduction and battery technology. But our local researchers get so poorly funded by the government the inventions are immediately sold off by the parent institutions to foreign investors, then Australia has to buy the technology back as just another ordinary consumer.

If we were serious about Australia's two biggest long term issues, energy and water, we'd have built a nuclear plant next door to a desalination plant decades ago, and right now we'd be planning it's redundancy in the next 20 to 30 years while emitting near zero carbon in the interim!
The Force Awakens!

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #125
Australia is a global leader in all the key areas, solar cells, hydrogen, emissions reduction and battery technology. But our local researchers get so poorly funded by the government the inventions are immediately sold off by the parent institutions to foreign investors, then Australia has to buy the technology back as just another ordinary consumer.

If we were serious about Australia's two biggest long term issues, energy and water, we'd have built a nuclear plant next door to a desalination plant decades ago, and right now we'd be planning it's redundancy in the next 20 to 30 years while emitting near zero carbon in the interim!

Nuclear is so far advanced anything else in terms of power output its ridiculous. It's all about the environment with nuclear power....but coal is probably worse for the environment. Call it a marketing exercise to change the thinking and be done with it already.

In terms of Aussies selling ideas overseas....this really needs to be looke at.
Pony up the dollars for proper research and development now and see the benefits for generations.

We have the brains.
We have the desire.
We have the resources.
We have the technology.
We DONT have the backing.
It's ludicrous.


Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #126
Nuclear is so far advanced anything else in terms of power output its ridiculous. It's all about the environment with nuclear power....but coal is probably worse for the environment. Call it a marketing exercise to change the thinking and be done with it already.
Just an aside, many people in conventional power argue for coal as a safe alternative to nuclear, but the truth is emissions from coal power contain more radioactive isotopic waste than is ever emitted by a nuclear plant even if the nuclear plant fails. It's just that the coal radioactive emissions are trickled out over the lifetime of the facility, distributed evenly through thousands and thousands of cubic kilometres of emissions, in a way it may actually be more insidious!

Green energy initiatives can be even more harmful, relying on very dirty industries to create rare earth elements and engineering metals. It's just that because the processing is NIMBY, people ignore the damage it does and declare what they import as green! btw., Much of those green assessments are based on 25 year lifetimes, we are hearing much about that at the moment. My associate who inspects installations for solar and wind calls it the great green fraud!
The Force Awakens!

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #127
Whenever anyone asks me about Green energy, I remember the Prius.

Has anyone seen one recently, and do they know anyone that still drives one?

I wonder what they do when they are disposed of?
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #128
There is so much politics in this, it's almost impossible to make genuine progress or sense of it.

I think I've mentioned this once before, when working in Asia I would come across whole factories that were built to sell green manufacturing into the EU, so that they get a CE tick of approval. But the real factory doing the bulk of the work was a dark dank and dirty sweatshop down the road that would become a wasteland in the future, that was the EU version of a NIMBY moment. Yet now they will place sanctions on Australia for not doing enough, when all the EU has really done historically is move it's waste offshore!

A friend in the UK is particularly sceptical, his side gig is home farmed free range chicken eggs. Under the EU, he wasn't permitted to sell them locally, roadside or direct to the public, the stores nearby his home had to sell eggs trucked in from Belgium, Netherland or some other eastern block country which had the EU approved green stamp! Ignoring thousands of kilometres of diesel fumes for every tray of course!

When it suits it seems that the rules change!
The Force Awakens!


Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #130
Nice "What if" article on CNET regarding nuclear and climate change.

https://www.cnet.com/features/is-nuclear-power-the-missing-piece-of-our-climate-change-puzzle/

This article ultimately gets to the point of discussing pebble bed reactors, they are the nuclear industry Tesla compared to Chernobyl's Model T, and much much safer with an intrinsic design that needs intervention just to keep running, the exact opposite of old systems that can runaway chain react if their isn't intervention to stop it.

But you won't hear that from the climate change protestors because they have too much money tied and invested into renewables, even if they don't really make sense or fulfil the promises.

Australia is dead set stupid if given it's resources it does not to get on board with these technologies, they can form the 24x7 fundamentals of new export energy technologies like clean hydrogen, which needs energy itself just to produce. Further in Victoria, clean energy can be used to convert brown coal into a plethora of urgently needed chemical compounds, and Vic has one of the world's richest reserves of brown coal that will eventually become redundant to the energy sector, why not make a clean environmentally friendly use of it?
The Force Awakens!

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #131
That was the figure I heard with the closure announcement but I think they meant “one fifth” rather than 5%.  Yallourn currently produces 1,450 megawatts and supplies 22% of Victoria's electricity.

Given the additional 5,000 megawatts of clean energy coming on line in the next 7 years, it’s easy to see why Energy Australia has decided to close Yallourn earlier than scheduled.

Main reason is falling electricity prices and the rising costs of maintaining  the 1970's infrastructure.
Energy Australia is just a front for the Chinese Light and Power Company who fully own the business and if it aint making money  then they dont want to know. Earnings for fully Aus Power Companies are on the slide thanks to heavy regulation and they wont be investing much back into the system so we all know what that means and thats Foreign investment to make things happen and gradually a lot of the Fully owned Aus companies will be swallowed up or go under.
Coal becoming redundant....?...Chinese love our coal, burns better and they are sick of the rubbish that Russia and Saudia Arabia sell them. When the Sabre rattling with China stops and its business as usual then that coal might be useful in funding new power sources. The reality is a lot of those companies like Energy Australia alias CLP  will be the ones building nuclear reactors in Australia and advancing Solar/Wind power etc.


Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #133
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jul/14/amazon-rainforest-now-emitting-more-co2-than-it-absorbs

At some point in the near future, covid will become a manageable infectious disease, a part of the background hum. But the impending ecological catastrophe (the one Murdoch and his more debased flunkies assures us is a hoax), isn't going anywhere.

Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread

Reply #134
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jul/14/amazon-rainforest-now-emitting-more-co2-than-it-absorbs

At some point in the near future, covid will become a manageable infectious disease, a part of the background hum. But the impending ecological catastrophe (the one Murdoch and his more debased flunkies assures us is a hoax), isn't going anywhere.
Hi @PaulP‍ , is this the result of clearing?

I recall the Attenborough doco talking about this inversion that occurs, when too much forest structure is damaged or altered the forest changes from CO2 absorbing to CO2 emission, with the effects worsened by changing rainfall/weather patterns.

It's not hard to draw a parallel between the Gladys' COVID response and the lack of climate change action, when they eventually flip and they will far sooner than the deniers realise, it will be too late and the price paid will be beyond the trivial inconvenience we would have suffered for early action. If the nutter brigade thought COVID lockdowns were intolerable, God help them when the real aggressive climate action starts! in the meantime local cancels ban wood burning and gas heating, but carry on laying millions of square meters of asphalt day after day after day, but they put electric cars on it! :o

Interestingly, COVID airfares are a slice of what is to come, $40K each way to the UK!
The Force Awakens!