Originally posted by chuckChuck
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There is no payback on solar or wind without tax payer subsidies. The energy is not concentrated enough to be put to practical use other than a few panels on homes here and there. The appetite for a home owner to take on specialized equipment with maintenance costs and a payback time that matches its life cycle is not going to happen in masse. But by all means a little program to encourage people to throw up a few panels to offset 1/3 of their bill might be feasible, but then other solutions are more feasible such as energy upgrades - insulation, furnace, appliances.
Watch the vid about renewables and how much land and damage to nature they did. Wildlife having to be relocated for panels. Useful farmland converted in addition to urban sprawl. Birds bats getting chopped to bits in windmills and cooked by the excess heat.
Only nuclear has a chance to offset fossil fuels and the environmental movement blocked it once already and now are doing it again.
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Furrow. What is the point of posting on public discussion forums if you are not prepared to hear different opinions and points of view?
If you only want to hear from people who agree with you, start your own private chat group and invite your like minded friends.Last edited by chuckChuck; Apr 28, 2019, 10:37.
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostWhat is the point of posting on public discussion forums if you are not prepared to hear different opinions and points of view?
If you only want to hear from people who agree with you, start your own private chat group and invite your like minded friends.
Chuck you are in a mild form of denial because you perhaps do not understand that the factors of production directly related to our lifestyle and survival and evolution as a species rely on super concentrated forms of energy. That's ag, transport, resources, construction, travel, electricity etc. Once you accept how much of our energy usage is dedicated to our standard of living and very survival, then you will understand that panels can never replace that. Do they have a use? Well sure, maybe 20% of grid energy could be renewable based, but then that load needs backup because its not reliable, so we need double the infrastructure. Including backup fossil fuel infrastructure that needs to be in place and you see quickly those renewables are a farce.
The natives near regina have a windmill and a 10 mw solar farm. Today the windmill is shut down cause its too windy and the panels are covered with snow. Where are they getting their energy from now?
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Originally posted by jazz View PostThere is no payback on solar or wind without tax payer subsidies. The energy is not concentrated enough to be put to practical use other than a few panels on homes here and there. The appetite for a home owner to take on specialized equipment with maintenance costs and a payback time that matches its life cycle is not going to happen in masse. But by all means a little program to encourage people to throw up a few panels to offset 1/3 of their bill might be feasible, but then other solutions are more feasible such as energy upgrades - insulation, furnace, appliances.
Watch the vid about renewables and how much land and damage to nature they did. Wildlife having to be relocated for panels. Useful farmland converted in addition to urban sprawl. Birds bats getting chopped to bits in windmills and cooked by the excess heat.
Only nuclear has a chance to offset fossil fuels and the environmental movement blocked it once already and now are doing it again.
Every option has some downside and cost. Nuclear is expensive to build, waste storage is a challenge.
Solar panels will pay for themselves without subsidies and can be put on existing roofs and buildings. They require backup or storage, but they are a viable and affordable option right now that is cheaper than Saskpower farm rates. Panels will need to be recycled.
Saskpower is investing in a lot of wind and some solar, gas, and imports from Manitoba but there are no plans for new coal plants.
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Originally posted by jazz View PostChuck you are in a mild form of denial because you perhaps do not understand that the factors of production directly related to our lifestyle and survival and evolution as a species rely on super concentrated forms of energy. That's ag, transport, resources, construction, travel, electricity etc. Once you accept how much of our energy usage is dedicated to our standard of living and very survival, then you will understand that panels can never replace that. Do they have a use? Well sure, maybe 20% of grid energy could be renewable based, but then that load needs backup because its not reliable, so we need double the infrastructure. Including backup fossil fuel infrastructure that needs to be in place and you see quickly those renewables are a farce.
The natives near regina have a windmill and a 10 mw solar farm. Today the windmill is shut down cause its too windy and the panels are covered with snow. Where are they getting their energy from now?
I am not advocating that we stop using fossil fuels until we have viable replacements.
If renewables like solar, wind, hydro and geothermal are a farce, you better tell Saskpower because they are planning to use a lot more of them. And yes we still need baseload but with more renewables you use less fossil supplies which is the reason they want to use them.
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostFurrow. What is the point of posting on public discussion forums if you are not prepared to hear different opinions and points of view?
If you only want to hear from people who agree with you, start your own private chat group and invite your like minded friends.
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostInsulation and efficiency upgrades are the first best option.
Every option has some downside and cost. Nuclear is expensive to build, waste storage is a challenge.
Solar panels will pay for themselves without subsidies and can be put on existing roofs and buildings. They require backup or storage, but they are a viable and affordable option right now that is cheaper than Saskpower farm rates. Panels will need to be recycled.
Saskpower is investing in a lot of wind and some solar, gas, and imports from Manitoba but there are no plans for new coal plants.
And you don't need to go to 100% to have that effect, at this latitude, anything much over single digits will cause costs to go parabolic.
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Let me relay my experience with energy efficiency. In 2008 nat gas was almost $7 per GJ. More than 3 times what it is now. Well those bills and my desire to do something environmental lead me to put in a $20k geothermal system. So all good we start running it. Works pretty good. Then gas starts dropping and electricity starts increasing. Geo needs an eclectic pump running all the time circulating. So no big deal, my gas bill dropped and my power increased. Meanwhile gas fell to $2 GJ. Then electricity kept increasing and increasing and pretty soon, it was less money just to turn off the geothermal.
One winter I tried running the geo thermal full out to run our home in a polar vortex. I got a power bill close to $2000. We dropped the geo back to just supplemental heat and let the NG heat the house. Brought the bills in line but still high. Now the carbon tax has been applied which would raise elect bills again. So in response the geo system is now turned off. We put R60 in the attic, found some little efficiencies here and there. The geo guys are trying to convince me to put up panels offset my geo costs. its all just a giant shell game. But no more expensive equipment with uncertain economics.Last edited by jazz; Apr 28, 2019, 11:30.
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It is all BULLSHIT, here is a explanation for simple folk. http://humansarefree.com/2018/11/all-lies-about-global-warming-debunked.html http://humansarefree.com/2018/11/all-lies-about-global-warming-debunked.html
I like this...If you look at satellite data and weather balloon measurements, you then note that the temperature rise around the world is relatively modest; that it is much lower than the rise that is predicted for us by authorities, and that these predictions rely on calculations that are highly uncertain.
This is because the simulation inputs cannot take into account past temperatures (for which there is no precision data[3]), except by subjectively adjusting x, y, z data that are not always known.
So why believe WAGs? Any number could be right or wrong.
Now the news is Oil Sands emissions are 60% higher but were measure once in 2013 with instruments in a plane. All other numbers are calculations, so just say we met our targets and NOBODY is calculating any way to dispute us!
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Originally posted by jazz View PostLet me relay my experience with energy efficiency. In 2008 nat gas was almost $7 per GJ. More than 3 times what it is now. Well those bills and my desire to do something environmental lead me to put in a $20k geothermal system. So all good we start running it. Works pretty good. Then gas starts dropping and electricity starts increasing. Geo needs an eclectic pump running all the time circulating. So no big deal, my gas bill dropped and my power increased. Meanwhile gas fell to $2 GJ. Then electricity kept increasing and increasing and pretty soon, it was less money just to turn off the geothermal.
One winter I tried running the geo thermal full out to run our home in a polar vortex. I got a power bill close to $2000. We dropped the geo back to just supplemental heat and let the NG heat the house. Brought the bills in line but still high. Now the carbon tax has been applied which would raise elect bills again. So in response the geo system is now turned off. We put R60 in the attic, found some little efficiencies here and there. The geo guys are trying to convince me to put up panels offset my geo costs. its all just a giant shell game. But no more expensive equipment with uncertain economics.
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Warren Buffet, who owns one of the largest wind farms in Iowa, said it without embarrassment:
“On wind power, we get a tax credit if we build a lot of wind farms. This is the only reason to build them. They do not make sense without the tax credit.â€
The ecological balance is just as bad: onshore wind turbines kill hundreds of thousands, even millions of birds and bats per year. As for wind turbines at sea, they kill many marine mammals, again in the utmost indifference of ecologists.
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