Originally posted by shtferbrains
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Further research Baghdad Bob surrendered to coalition forces, was detained, questioned, and released. He genuinely believed the bullshit he was broadcasting because the sources he said were credible to the best of his knowledge. He retired to the UAE and not much is known since. Similar parallel here?
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Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
Chuck2 I think your totally misrepresenting reality. Alberta with roughly 12% of Canada’s population was installing roughly 90% of new solar and wind capacity. If renewables are the cheapest source of new generation why aren’t the other 9 provinces with government owned government regulated electricity generation systems installing all the new solar and wind capacity? Why was it in Alberta? I would argue it is because they can make a better return on their investment. In the other nine provinces government would be footing the bill. But still curious why aren’t provincial government owned and regulated utilities installing more wind and solar?!?!
Alberta's deregulated market made renewables an attractive investment. thats why you led the growth in renewable capacity.
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In 2023 the investment in solar alone exceeded oil investment.
Total clean energy investment in the world in 2023 is much larger than in fossil fuels.
Look at the IEA charts and reports here:
[url]https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-investment-2023/overview-and-key-findings[/url]
Solar is in light blue oil is dark blue 2013 vs 2023 in Billions of USD
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
Saskatchewan is installing more wind and solar, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia are also all planning more renewables to expand capacity.
Alberta's deregulated market made renewables an attractive investment. thats why you led the growth in renewable capacity.
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Because the hypocrisy and double standards are so glaringly evident in Alberta.
If you are in favour of energy investment, jobs and the economic benefits how can you then be opposed to renewable energy investment?
And other provinces are installing renewables and investing in clean energy.
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostIn 2023 the investment in solar alone exceeded oil investment.
Total clean energy investment in the world in 2023 is much larger than in fossil fuels.
Look at the IEA charts and reports here:
[url]https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-investment-2023/overview-and-key-findings[/url]
Solar is in light blue oil is dark blue 2013 vs 2023 in Billions of USD
So solar now produces 2% of world primary energy. Fossil fuels produce 85% of total global primary energy. Yet we are now investing more in the source that provides 42 times less energy than the other.
It keeps getting worse. Last time you stepped on this garden rake and it smacked you in the face, it was only 28 times more expensive.
Don't you have any adults in your life who can do math who could help vet your posts so you don't keep making the same mistakes over and over again?
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So according to your "libertarian" math you disregard all the previous decades of investment in a mature and established industry and only compare present investment and output?
That must be libertarian analysis? Because it certainly isn't based on common sense!
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostSo according to your "libertarian" math you disregard all the previous decades of investment in a mature and established industry and only compare present investment and output?
That must be libertarian analysis? Because it certainly isn't based on common sense!
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Yes, but I want to hear your libertarian math based analysis. Because I am betting it will be another whopper!
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Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostSo according to your "libertarian" math you disregard all the previous decades of investment in a mature and established industry and only compare present investment and output.
Did you know that the first grid scale solar farm was built in 1983, if it isn't yet a mature established industry 40+ years later, then that says a lot about the viability of solar.
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Very small amounts of previous investment in renewables vs large amounts of previous investment in oil and gas all based on very generous public subsidies and incentives.
Try to compare Apples to Apples!
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So the IEA is wrong?
And A5 you have a handle on global investment in energy and know more than the IEA?
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