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  • AlbertaFarmer5
    replied
    Originally posted by burnt View Post
    Oopsie, watts this - you can't recharge your EV when you want to?

    Oh my, and the gov can use your EV as a power supply when they need it?

    6 Jan 2022
    EV Chargers To Be Separately Metered

    https://iowaclimate.org/2022/01/06/e...ately-metered/
    Looks like Chuck is right again. The utilities have it figured out, and we have nothing to worry about.

    They will make sure EV's aren't being charged while the sun doesn't shine, or during peak usage hours, and that they can discharge them to stabilize the grid when the sun isn't shining. There might be a few minutes in between those times when it will be acceptable to charge the EV, unless of course you happen to have a job requiring you to use that EV during those minutes. But at least when you do get to charge it, you will be able to pay your fair share towards road taxes with the promised higher rates for EV charging.

    Leave a comment:


  • burnt
    replied
    Oopsie, watts this - you can't recharge your EV when you want to?

    Oh my, and the gov can use your EV as a power supply when they need it?

    6 Jan 2022
    EV Chargers To Be Separately Metered

    By Paul Homewood      A few weeks ago, the government announced plans for new regulations, requiring domestic electric car chargers be programmed only to work at off peak times. This was clear admi…

    Leave a comment:


  • jazz
    replied
    Looks like some tesla remorse from the ESG crowd after the cold snap. LOL

    https://calgary.ctvnews.ca/prairie-tesla-owners-battle-loss-of-heat-amid-extreme-cold-weather-after-software-update-1.5729102

    Leave a comment:


  • Guest
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
    Maybe it is magic after all.
    Can anyone explain this step?
    Most of the high-pressure CO2 is reheated in the heat exchanger and returned to the combustor, where the whole cycle begins again
    CO2 is most definitely not combustible.
    How are they reycling it back into the combustor?
    NG wink, wink
    But it’s all good
    Long as the woke believe it’s all good
    Like green coal , Middle East blood free oil ,emission free solar panels , etc etc
    But in all seriousness if they can Pull off it’s all good
    It will use NG from Alberta , give some natives hope and a reason to get up in the morning , and it will run 24/7
    I wish them luck

    Leave a comment:


  • ColevilleH2S
    replied
    Isn't harvesting O2 by cryogenic separation way less energy intensive than by hydrolysis?

    Leave a comment:


  • TOM4CWB
    replied
    Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
    Maybe it is magic after all.
    Can anyone explain this step?
    Most of the high-pressure CO2 is reheated in the heat exchanger and returned to the combustor, where the whole cycle begins again
    CO2 is most definitely not combustible.
    How are they reycling it back into the combustor?
    With all the oil/NG reserves at Frog Lake... re-inject C for enhanced recovery; Water hydrolysis from solar/wind/Nuclear energy can yield the pure O2.

    This is 'Net Zero Carbon' with clean water for human consumption; is smart development of their own, these folks [Frog Lake Peoples] are to be applauded for initiative and creativeness. God Bless their project!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • AlbertaFarmer5
    replied
    Maybe it is magic after all.
    Can anyone explain this step?
    Most of the high-pressure CO2 is reheated in the heat exchanger and returned to the combustor, where the whole cycle begins again
    CO2 is most definitely not combustible.
    How are they reycling it back into the combustor?

    Leave a comment:


  • WiltonRanch
    replied
    Originally posted by jazz View Post
    The natives are being lead astray again. Instead of working with real resource companies to exploit their reserves of minerals and FF, they have now bought into another govt backed scheme that will end in failure.

    Just like this Cowessess wind turbine and solar array. Array is always covered by snow and nobody can be bothered to clean it off, wind turbine is always down for some reason. Runs maybe 30% of the time. Probably cant afford the maintenance.
    Frog Lake has a lot of oil on their reserve. They also have their own oil companies which employ band members and contributes a lot to their coffers. Not to say they don’t have their problems but they are alright guys and gals who I know up there. Oil and gas employs a lot of First Nations people in this corner of the world.

    Leave a comment:


  • AlbertaFarmer5
    replied
    Originally posted by caseih View Post


    doesn't matter as long as the wing nuts believe it does, and it uses NG
    wished i was better in physics, marketing , etc. lol
    What is far more important, is that you ( along with most of the rest of us) are here to learn and to ask questions.

    Unlike everyones favourite troll preacher, who already knows everything and has all the answers, and refuses to learn anything, just repeats the same mistakes over and over again.

    That is what I enjoy about this platorm, and debating topics such as this, I get a chance to learn, either from posters more informed than I am, or from researching assinine proclamations from imbeciles who haven't got a clue.

    Leave a comment:


  • Guest
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
    .the resulting CO2 recycled through a combustor, turbine, heat exchanger and compressor and then a miracle happens? The CO2 magically turns into fairy dust and disappears off the face of the Earth forever?
    But no mention of what happens to the CO2 that would make it emissions free. It can't be recombined to make a hydrocarbon again because that would require more energy than you got out of it the first time.
    So I looked up the details on the power plant in Laporte Texas mentioned in your article.
    As it turns out, they haven't reinvented the laws of physics, or chemistry.
    CO2 is captured and salable.
    So the same amount of CO2 is produced. It will just be reused typically in the food industry. When you open your bottle of Pop or meat product, that CO2 will still be released. A market that is miniscule compared to the amount of CO2 we would be producing if every fossil fuel power plant were due capture their CO2 in this method and try to sell it. So it is very energy intensive, not scalable, and still requires natural gas which your comrades are against, as pointed out by hamloc.
    But it sure sounds good in the CBC article.
    But no mention of what happens to the CO2 that would make it emissions free. It can't be recombined to make a hydrocarbon again because that would require more energy than you got out of it the first time.


    doesn't matter as long as the wing nuts believe it does, and it uses NG
    wished i was better in physics, marketing , etc. lol
    Last edited by Guest; Jan 5, 2022, 12:41.

    Leave a comment:

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