Proud to see it working now - I was the lead of the team at Siemens selling the windturbines for this project.
@oriel2296 жыл бұрын
HOW MUCH SLUSH MONEY DID SIEMENS PAY FOR THE CONTRACT??????????????????????
@anutosho14 жыл бұрын
@@oriel229 Your keyboard is broken (and your brain too, possibly)
@92Pyromaniac5 жыл бұрын
Your videographer deserves a promotion for that shot of the tower mating at night - truly magnificent!
@JosephDietz7 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite stories of the year.
@rkenny83995 жыл бұрын
Tack så mycket Norge och Skotland för att hjälpa till att rädda vår fantastiska planet..
@waterstofwerkt69946 жыл бұрын
Brilliant promo movie. Must have been made by a top PR firm or a firm deserving to be a top PR firm. The shots, words, voices and everything about it moves the viewer profoundly. Of course the story is a good one but it's all in the telling.
@huyked7 жыл бұрын
Cheers to those are are able to dream, and work towards it. You are an inspiration, and truly bring honor to what it is that is to be human.
@whykhr7 жыл бұрын
No, wrong. This is Big Oil at its worst, Bait-and-Switch scams and sucker traps to get people to embrace Big Oil's energy plan = 80% NG/20% wind/solar. Yep, that will work.
@huyked7 жыл бұрын
Tell me more.
@huyked7 жыл бұрын
Thank you for subscribing to my channel, jack frost!
@whykhr7 жыл бұрын
The renewables pixie power fantasy has already failed. 20 yrs now our governments have been pushing wind/solar/efficiency. Since that all started at Kyoto, Japan in 1997, emissions have increased from 1.5%/yr for the previous 24 yrs to 2.2%/yr for the subsequent 19 yrs. Some success that was. They've already blown over $2 trillion on wind and solar with zero results. A recent analysis of the success of decarbonization efforts for electricity generation over the past 63 yrs have shown that Nuclear and Hydro both worked and were very successful. Hydro being severely limited by geography. While wind and solar has been a dismal failure, showing no correlation between wind & solar penetration and the carbon intensity of electricity generation ( gms CO2 eq emitted per kwh generated). This of course is all due to the terrible problems of wind & solar electricity generation. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGLJZXWBqKuleaM James Hansen & Michael Shellenberger: Nuclear Power? Are Renewables Enough?
@pauladams18147 жыл бұрын
huyked Falling wind and solar costs are set to spur even greater investment in renewable technologies. Goldman Sachs Research’s Alberto Gandolfi forecasts that by 2023, renewables will be able to operate without government subsidies. From there, Gandolfi expects wind and solar deployment to accelerate, reaching $3 trillion over the next 20 years. www.goldmansachs.com/our-thinking/pages/alberto-gandolfi-wind-and-solar-boom.html?mediaIndex=1&autoPlay=true&cid=sch-pd-google-windandsolarboom-searchad-201707--&mkwid=U91OTWID
@oliverwabwire28366 жыл бұрын
Absolutely phenomenal! An inspiring story on capacity of humans to do good; some hope for future generations of this planet.
@kevinharmon32677 жыл бұрын
Took me a while to believe that it is actually FLOATING. Incredible.
@markgigiel27227 жыл бұрын
Bernoulli.
@rcOhio6 жыл бұрын
No kidding! Me too! I couldn’t wrap my head around the multiple stability issues to overcome!
@SeedFactoryProject6 жыл бұрын
It floats the same way a ship does - a metal container filled with air and ballast. They used iron ore, which is about twice as dense as regular rock. That ensures the bottom of the container stays down. The rest is air, which provides the buoyancy to float. The three suction anchors keep it from drifting sideways. Those are open-bottom cylinders which are driven into the sea floor by sucking the water out of them. The water pressure above forces them down into the mud or sand.
@rcOhio6 жыл бұрын
Dani Eder very interesting. Thank you for the information/clarification!
@francisrivera41686 жыл бұрын
Dani Eder very well said +++++++
@ilhamsuhendi906 жыл бұрын
It's BIG and it floats. Amazing.
@GabieRetana7 жыл бұрын
I'm about to cry. This is truly inspiring.
@aacowboy127 жыл бұрын
heppolt wind tubrine
@markgigiel27227 жыл бұрын
Awww. Don't cry.
@Psychlist19727 жыл бұрын
+jack frost Your comment is a hot mess. I think you were saying that in Cape Cod Massachusetts in the USA, an oil tycoon convinced people to complain about noise.
@Psychlist19727 жыл бұрын
+jack frost Dude, your comment made almost no sense. Did you read it? I wasn't commenting on the message itself, because I have no idea if that's true or false. But thanks for the name-calling. Maybe try posting sober next time. This is what you wrote: "Still uses oil beautiful its a start better than in Merica in cape cose ma a oil typhoon lives there and convinced drooling Neanderthals to complian about noise and it being a sore site for offshore wind Reply" PS. I was born on the cape and raised in MA.
@robbonner6 жыл бұрын
it is awesome!
@macbraz31547 жыл бұрын
Great work Scotland. Proud to say Australia has also just installed the largest battery farm in the world at 100mwh from the legendary Tesla. Be good to see these turbines hooked up to batteries.
@mohammedshoubaki5766 жыл бұрын
they will, to 1MWh battery by statoil
@burningbum5 жыл бұрын
Yeah but Australia is also completely corrupted by the coal industry. Remind me how many tons of waste were just approved to be dumped on the Great Barrier Reef?
@megmartel60055 жыл бұрын
Ady - you have been brainwashed by the Green Left. Wake up. UN socialists want $US2.5 trillion EVERY year to give to 3rd world. This is wealth transfer NOT "action on climate emergency" They could use this money to build nuclear but UN hate nuclear & hydro (the only feasible renewables)
@suburbia20502 жыл бұрын
@@megmartel6005 What you think there is no coal industry or coal waste in Australia? You are claiming someone else is brain-washed? Lol
@ashanarchy72552 жыл бұрын
While battery storage is hugely important for getting to net zero. The cobalt and lithium mining required for the raw materials to make Tesla batteries are ecologically devastating. Fortunately there are hundreds of other ways to store energy. Pumped underwater air storage batteries, heated sand batteries, co2 ( closed loop, none escapes the system). Resivour batteries, gravity batteries, flywheel batteries, etc.
@pauladams18147 жыл бұрын
Elegant and a way to produce much needed clean energy ♡.
@FullFinnoy Жыл бұрын
Awesome! This is absolutely superb sight. What an achievement. Good job for humanity's development.
@ActualGenius6 жыл бұрын
Extremely well developed, produced, and executed. Congrats and thanks!
@benadams93126 жыл бұрын
This is in my home town so it's cool to see how it's built!
@Travlinmo6 жыл бұрын
The best thing I like about this is that Statoil is OIL and they are moving to be the floating turbine leader. The skills oil companies have in 'deep water' for oil production have so much potential to make floating wind a giant resource in the world. The oil development companies don't have to go away, just change paths. It will be impossible for most but the amount of energy that is needed from renewables is way more than that will be pumped out of the ground. ~Good luck Statoil.
@saeedghanbari75735 жыл бұрын
This is a big step towards sustainable clean energy! Great job!
@dragonfly37145 жыл бұрын
This wind turbine industry is built only to provide extreme revenue to already rich companies. At the bottom of the priority list is the consideration for nature. This industry has spent a lot of time and money looking like green energy. They also rightly use it as perpetual energy. Windmill energy can certainly be green energy but then in only certain conditions. It is that the energy is used in the area it is produced. The condition is that it should not be transported on high-voltage lines in the air voltage and that necessary transformers are far away from areas where people live. Current with 50 hz / possibly 60 hz AC creates, as known, environmentally harmful conditions for animals and humans. Many feel great discomfort with magnetic fields, and many suffer from a number of diseases including blood cancer. Today, this company Equinor (formerly Statoil) is a world-renowned company for the sale of oil, energy and more. And they are like all other such companies a devastating factor for nature on land and at sea. Equinor is a Norwegian company and aims to sell energy to a number of European countries. To achieve this goal, Equinor does not care that nature is being destroyed.
@t435626 жыл бұрын
What I love about wind turbines is that it is possible to take one production process and repeat it again and again to scale up - so you have a chance to get better and better at making them which isn't possible when working with large power stations where you're only making one very large system. Also if you have X money you can scale the number of turbines you build to fit it and that doesn't prevent you from adding more in future. etc.
@jamesrosemary29326 жыл бұрын
And, as technology improves, you can replace the generator, rotor and gear box at anytime without having to build new towers.
@megmartel60055 жыл бұрын
Blades are made of steel, fibreglass, copper, iron & plastic - they also don't last forever and kill millions of birds & bats, cause health problems for humans ...and is hugely expensive (without subsidies) and inefficient (only work when wind blows). They also always need backup ie baseload power from coal/other. At best wind & solar "renewables" are adjuncts NOT replacements for fossil fuels. If UN were serious about CO2 "crisis" they would back nuclear & hydro not wind & solar. It's about wealth transfer not climate change.
@brucebaker35235 жыл бұрын
It will be interesting to see how well they hold up to extreme conditions and what the actual output over the years will be.
@TheGizmo11225 жыл бұрын
Well statoil, now Equinor has a lot of experiense working offshore, so hopefully they will do ok :)
@groovy_jameshurt35 жыл бұрын
This is Beyond Amazing.
@stucrawford62305 жыл бұрын
Great to see Scotland as a world leader in wind turbine innovation. Dragging the UK into the 21st century My country England still plugging away with old nuclear Power stations.
@davidholgate1235 жыл бұрын
Yes they had proper Scottish accents haha.... They are using Scotland as a testing area by the looks of it.
@toeterduivel5 жыл бұрын
Actually... (newer) nuclear power plants are greener than you might think. But these floating wind turbines are still awesome! :)
@suburbia20502 жыл бұрын
LOL England has quite a few in the top ten of the Worlds largest Wind Farms which have been producing more energy than nuclear for a while now, the UK has been leading the world in offshore wind energy so dont think Scotland is particularly dragging anyone in this regard. I find it strange someone can suddenly find a youtube video on a floating wind turbine and feel confident to make a statement about UK energy production and not have had any other interest in all the other videos out there on UK offshore wind sites in the last 10 years. Great to see more innovation but not the ignorant trolling.
@deyevoleg7 жыл бұрын
It's awesome. Thanks for sharing!
@21matchstickman7 жыл бұрын
Brilliant technology & application. Keep up the good work.
@HieuLEO87 жыл бұрын
Very inspiring project, congrats to who involved.
@nickromis58875 жыл бұрын
5000 tons of iron ore ballast! Impressive amount. I wonder if this is per substructure or total...
@dbm_media5 жыл бұрын
this is the most amazing energy source ever
@patrickmckowen29997 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Wish I could have been part of something so wonderful and good for our planet. I hope this shows other big oil companies what needs to be done - change from "big oil" to "big wind or solar" Cheers
@megmartel60055 жыл бұрын
Patrick - wind & solar are adjuncts only. They will never replace biofuels, nuclear or hydro because they always need baseload (back up) & are hugely expensive without gov subsidies. Interesting that UN back the unreliable, expensive wind & solar but not nuclear or hydro which are real substitutes for fossil fuels. UN also want $US2.5 trillion EVERY year from the West to give to poor countries. This is wealth transfer NOT "fighting climate change" It's a rort. CO2 is not a problem for humans or the planet. Globalists want control over the rich West. They want communism for the West while they remain mega rich.
@saturniiina6 жыл бұрын
This is absolutly amazing!
@alexstevensen42925 жыл бұрын
I'm giving it all she's got captain!! we need more powerrrr!!
@fidaranimation3 ай бұрын
It was a very interesting documentary
@edwardjohnson77306 жыл бұрын
I thought Scotland was cold! Why then do they need such big fans?
@mrkraja20025 жыл бұрын
I Just Love the Technology (as long as it helps Humans and don't hurt the Nature). Such Mega Windmills are Awesome. 😘
@ternerito7 жыл бұрын
Very cool project. The Norwegian people were easier to understand than the Scottish guy. :)
@bernarddover14426 жыл бұрын
amazing people !! real mathematicians !! genius !!
@ErnieVox5 жыл бұрын
We need this in South Africa
@mikea18937 жыл бұрын
nice to see, it just would have been nice to see them all working in the video not just one for a half a sec.
@Dave-in-France7 жыл бұрын
When I see green energy projects like this, it makes me so optimistic for the future of mankind.
@kewintaylor70567 жыл бұрын
Amazing its really float and stay upright?
@AndriiOsipov17 жыл бұрын
Well done!
@FullFinnoy Жыл бұрын
Finland is home to the world's first commercial-scale sand battery. It uses sand rejected by builders. A new way of storing renewable energy is providing clean heat through the long Nordic nights. The battery consists of 100 tonnes of low-grade builders' sand, two district heating pipes and a fan. The sand becomes a battery after it is heated up to 600C using electricity generated by wind turbines and solar panels.
@jpinguela5 жыл бұрын
Parabéns do Brasil. Esse é o mundo que todos queremos. Abraços;
@juanrueda27174 жыл бұрын
felicitaciones!, los admiro, como investigador también tengo el sueño de que en Colombia se instalen este tipo de turbinas. Cuenten con un colaborador en Colombia. Att Juan Gabriel Rueda Bayona
@TheRoidemortetfleur6 жыл бұрын
How much carbon print was needed just to get it built and setup? I'd just use a tugboat. That matters if it took 2 years of carbon worth just to set it up then you must make the process even more efficient. That said. I'm glad to see the idea to fruition.
@ArtemPanarynOfficial7 жыл бұрын
Congratulations!
@revbobmartin5 жыл бұрын
I wonder how they will hold up to the extreme weather, storms, extremely high winds and waves of the northern seas.
@mohamedalishafiqueahmed94962 жыл бұрын
World class island
@AriVovp6 жыл бұрын
How much does each cost?
@usu155507 жыл бұрын
Congratulations and many thanks to Statoil - 6 MW per turbine - not bad!
@owenbevt35 жыл бұрын
One of the few things I can be prowd of in modern Britain.
@leslieallan3925 жыл бұрын
A truly great achievement, just a bit puzzled as to why ,with our history of building floating production platforms for the major oil and gas companies,we couldn’t have built all of these in Scotland?.
@thomasnorb40775 жыл бұрын
What "we"? Why would a Norwegian company build it in Scotland though? The idea and technology wasn't invented by Scots, so you don't reap the benefits.
@jaroslavbabinec96962 жыл бұрын
Uau. Excited..
@yt-xo4lb7 жыл бұрын
In what time it will cost back? They will be independent.
@davefoc5 жыл бұрын
Very cool. Regardless of the cost/benefits it's cool to be alive to see such amazing structures being built by my fellow humans. Many of the negative comments below are directed at the energy for construction versus energy produced. None of the negative comments I saw offered any kind of documentation or references to studies. The Wikipedia article on wind turbines presents quite a bit of information that refutes most of the criticisms that were put forth in the comments: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impact_of_wind_power From that article: The energy return on investment (EROI) for wind energy is equal to the cumulative electricity generated divided by the cumulative primary energy required to build and maintain a turbine. According to a meta study, in which all existing studies from 1977 to 2007 were reviewed, the EROI for wind ranges from 5 to 35,[18] with the most common turbines in the range of 2 MW nameplate capacity-rotor diameters of 66 meters, on average the EROI is 16. So EROI (Energy Return on Investment) is 16 on the most common size of windmills and presumably as time goes on that number will climb towards or above the highest EROI's obtained today. This seems to be a complete refutation of one of the most common criticisms made in the comments.
@miles97846 жыл бұрын
about 20% of the UK's energy is now from wind and constantly increasing. brilliant stuff
@burgesspark6855 жыл бұрын
NO NO NO Thats just propognda At best it is 20% of the UKs *RENEWABLE ENERGY" which includes things like biofuels which cause starvation in 3rd world and burning wood chips which is devastating forests in USA.
@suburbia20502 жыл бұрын
@@burgesspark685That was an anticipation figure while the infrastructure was being brought online (has been taking 10 years mostly of legal red tape to get one online), no need to be so shrill and to throw back even more absurd platitudes (although I have seen your posts on numerous videos about Wind Power and can only conclude you are an incentivised troll). Just 4 years later and Anyone with a web browser and a brain to do a search can literaly sit and watch the live official electricity generation figures of the UK. I am doing that now and Renewable (Wind, Solar and Hydro-Electric) is accounting for 61.4% of electricity production for the UK today, with Wind being the lions share at 35.9% of the whole of the UKs generation. Biomass is 3.5% oh and by the way not everyone includes Biomass as ahe official definition of renewable, only some dodgy private companies/governments do. In the UK grid burning biomass also comes from incinerating household waste (UK waste is even sent to Norway to incinerate which contributes the electricty back into the UKs national grid). Your "wood pellet" comment is hilarious, you have never heard of the logging industry in North America? You think that North America can not manage that asset? Eitherway its a tiny % of the UKs electricity grid. Your embarrasing "starvation" faux concern is not backed up by any statistics, most of the "food" burnt in UK biomass is UK agricultural waste and unused animal food. For anyone interested the site "grid im kate" google seach provides interesting real time production and consumption, remember the UK energy electrical grid included two-way flows between other countries as well, including France, Ireland and Norway.
@burgesspark6852 жыл бұрын
@@suburbia2050 what utter garbage you write - except thats an insult to garbage seriously - look around and tell me where all these wind farms that generate the imaginary "61%" of our power are ??? The reality is that London alone needs a wind farm the size of Wales to satisfy its power requirements The current energy crisis has been caused 100% by the uncontrolled and moronic shift to renewable energy sources which are incapable of supplying our needs As for your insults - its typical of left-wing environmentalists to jump on the "incentivised troll" argument whenever anyone disagrees with your lunacy. and you seriously are arguing to burn wood (which emits 4 times the CO2 of coal) 😂😂🤣🤣😂😂🤣🤣😂😂🤣🤣 In the second half of the 16th century, Britain plunged into an energy crisis. At the time, the primary source of energy driving the British economy was heat derived from the burning of wood, and Britain was literally running out of trees. As the supply of wood dried up, its price began to soar and inflation set in, compounding the problem and spreading it to all corners of the economy. With imports from continental Europe insufficient to close the growing supply gap, the resulting crisis was dire. And then they discovered coal. Well, they didn’t exactly “discover” coal - it had been known for centuries that coal could be a useful fuel - but they did learn that coal could replace wood in many important applications. They also recognized that they had a lot of it. With a higher energy density than wood, coal is a superior fuel that enabled meaningful improvements in the British economy. Trees could be preserved for construction purposes, homes could be more efficiently heated, and companies could leapfrog their competitors. It is now well understood that the wide adoption of primary fuels with high energy density enables a better standard of living. Transitioning to higher density fuels is something that usually occurs spontaneously in an economy unless politicians interfere. Wood to coal to oil to gas to nuclear. In another example, the history of propulsion technology at sea is marked by a completely sensible journey up the energy density ladder. Wind power gave way to coal, which was displaced by diesel, which ultimately gave way to nuclear technology in military vessels. Given this, it is astounding to learn that the European Union and Britain are incentivizing a return to the primitive concept of burning wood for energy on a massive scale. Not only are they going back to the future, but they also claim doing so is carbon neutral (spoiler alert: it isn’t, not even close). Nearly 40% of Europe’s so-called renewable energy is currently obtained by combusting wood, much of it coming from forests in the US. In a farce so perverted and obscene that it can only be the work of bloated and arrogant bureaucracies, a carbon accounting loophole is causing huge amounts of CO2 to be pumped into the atmosphere today that will take decades to abate using natural means. Further, the fact that mature trees sequester huge amounts of CO2 compared to newly planted saplings is ignored, making the premature death of that generation irrelevant to the political calculations of environmental impact. Studies show that the burning of mature US trees absolutely overwhelms the carbon impact of all electric vehicles ever sold in the UK. All the economic sacrifices made in the name of minimizing our impact on the climate are turned into a mockery by this one insanity.
@snorttroll4379 Жыл бұрын
I think windmills are optimised at 600 metre rotor diameter and 900 metre towers.@@burgesspark685
@pauladams18147 жыл бұрын
Just amazing ♡
@CortezEspartaco26 жыл бұрын
I wonder how they're anchored to the sea floor? They must be extremely strong anchors to not be ripped out of the floor. Very impressive.
@gordondolan64436 жыл бұрын
16m tall suction anchors- can't you follow the video?
@hornetobiker7 жыл бұрын
Why not in shallow waters so wave power could be collected at the same time?
@emlillthings79145 жыл бұрын
Probably limited due to ecosystems near the shore. Waves can be harnessed at see though, wavegenerator instead of tidal
@pauladams18147 жыл бұрын
In June 2010, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said $557 billion was spent to subsidize fossil fuels globally in 2008, compared to $43 billion in support of renewable energy.
@MrOso366 жыл бұрын
Oh gosh another false claim. Oil and gas industry gets the same depression allowance that Tesla or that any other business is allowed. Stop spreading false information.
@pauladams18146 жыл бұрын
Fossil fuel firms' multi-billion-pound state subsidies revealed in accidentally leaked secret files Taxpayer support for export deals benefits coal, oil and gas firm massively but renewables hardly get any www.google.co.uk/amp/www.independent.co.uk/environment/fossil-fuel-firms-billion-pound-uk-state-subsidies-oil-gas-firms-leak-climate-change-environment-a7690966.html%3famp
@pauladams18146 жыл бұрын
joe m Friendly policies keep US oil and coal afloat far more than we thoughtMost energy subsidies go not to renewables but to producing more of the dirty stuff. www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www.vox.com/platform/amp/energy-and-environment/2017/10/6/16428458/us-energy-subsidies
@zerosparky95107 жыл бұрын
I have some shares of stock in Statoil, i live in the US. love seeing this.
@yaimavol5 жыл бұрын
Amazing that people actually think 400 year old tech is the answer for us. These turbines are very expensive to maintain. Every country that has switched to wind and solar has seen very steep increases in utility prices. This is hurting the old and poor the most.
@BudahOfBirmingham7 жыл бұрын
And yet we are going ahead with Hinckley point?
@gordondolan64436 жыл бұрын
Oh yes! UK governments have been taken to the cleaners by France & later, China. Contract penalties are unbelievable; there is no way out. Well done, UK!
@silviamilagrosvallestorres14317 жыл бұрын
Wao This is fantastic
@SpeedyBoyy6 жыл бұрын
Music ? anyone know ?
@unrealone16 жыл бұрын
So how much does each turbine cost and final cost of the farm?
@oriel2296 жыл бұрын
Come on now unrealone 1, don't spoil all the little greenies' moment of fantasy. It's like telling infants Santa Claus isn't real.
@unrealone16 жыл бұрын
Thank's good reply, yes and all the turbines have to come down every 20 years and be recycled? The greens are true idiots.
@oriel2296 жыл бұрын
I doubt they'll ever come down, once the subsidies stop. Without the cost of removing them, they'll stay there until they fall over. It will be Greenpower RIP Rust In Peace.
@Y0uKnoWh06 жыл бұрын
The money for decommissioning is held in an escrow account, so regardless of what happens they will be removed at the end of their life cycle unless the company decides to re-power for another life cycle. The freedom to leave them standing and rotting after they expire is not left up to the companies to make, government forces them to escrow the money for decommissioning or face a hefty fine.
@FranFerioli5 жыл бұрын
Try google. Offshore cost estimate are easy to find and falling fast.
@ohlawd36995 жыл бұрын
Cool.👍
@charieb46046 жыл бұрын
Love to see it in rough seas
@MrBoreray5 жыл бұрын
You will ! North Sea is brutal.
@vivekprabhu26516 жыл бұрын
Congratulations
@ExploringCabinsandMines6 жыл бұрын
How much energy to make all that steel ?
@riggald98645 жыл бұрын
About 3 months' generation.
@jglammi5 жыл бұрын
How many thousand of birds do they kill? How much in subsidies do they take?
@stephenverchinski4095 жыл бұрын
Who is statoil?
@thomasnorb40775 жыл бұрын
It was Norway's "state oil" company, now called Equinor.
@sourceflights6 жыл бұрын
I love wind turbines
@wolfgangh.70272 жыл бұрын
Interresting project but: One can barely understand a word because of the (unnecessary) music.
@rokadamlje53657 жыл бұрын
Should rename yourself Statwind!
@djdoy63416 жыл бұрын
It's is green eco-friendly future
@romzes50587 жыл бұрын
Классно, есть чему позавидовать.
@albertoperalta97065 жыл бұрын
how is this different from GE off-shore wind turbines?
@92Pyromaniac5 жыл бұрын
These are floating, not fixed directly to the sea bed.
@riggald98645 жыл бұрын
"...world’s first *floating* wind farm" The other offshore wind turbines are in shallow waters, on a solid pylon that reaches into the sea bed.
@dsthorp7 жыл бұрын
Humans at play!
@redmasc7 жыл бұрын
But Trump said the future of energy would be coal.
@ronnybatista52067 жыл бұрын
He simply knows that renewable energy is not the solution.
@rdormer7 жыл бұрын
Energy Companies: Let's make power with coal. Environmentalists: We don't like that. Free Market Wankers: How *dare* you question the unassailable wisdom of the free market? Don't you know that the job creators are infallible and flawlessly allocate resources for the highest possible good blah blah blah blah 'scuse me while I misquote Adam Smith and touch myself. Energy Companies: You know what? Wind is getting really cheap. Let's just do that instead. Environmentalists: Yay! Free Market Wankers: Pffft, whatever, they don't know what they're doing. Ideology is funny. By their own "logic," if the market is choosing to spend money on this, it is the unassailably correct action. But they don't like it, because "libtards" do, so they contradict themselves without a second thought. Because above all else, you can't *ever* admit that people extolling the virtues of renewable energy may have been right all along.
@DogsBAwesome7 жыл бұрын
he'll be dead soon
@pauladams18147 жыл бұрын
brian whittle Fingers crossed
@dlwatib7 жыл бұрын
The POTUS is largely irrelevant to the future of energy. It's mostly in the hands of the state PUCs, the utility companies, and us, the consumers. The POTUS can get the EPA to back off on regulating the coal industry to death. He can't force us, the utility companies, or the state PUCs to stop buying solar panels and wind turbines and switch back to coal-fired power plants instead.
@sullivan9125 жыл бұрын
How many sea birds have these killed?
@kitemanmusic5 жыл бұрын
How many chickens have died?
@kend06387 жыл бұрын
How is the electricity transported to the main land?
@vivabratislava7 жыл бұрын
kend0638 underwater cabel
@MrBluegreennrg6 жыл бұрын
@ 1:45, underwater cables
@gordondolan64436 жыл бұрын
In barges
@kumarmithilesh18865 жыл бұрын
what about #cyclones and Hurricanes will it survive the wind force.
@owenbevt35 жыл бұрын
not many Hurricanes in Scotland.
@riggald98645 жыл бұрын
You don't get tropical storms around Scotland. Too far North.
@martnije74926 жыл бұрын
I made these drone shots
@grahamflowers2 жыл бұрын
Betz limit has been smashed and debunked by the gyro wind turbine regards Graham Flowers
@pavelbaidurov2285 жыл бұрын
Like from Russia
@DNTMEE5 жыл бұрын
"Cut the cost by 60%." 60% of what? The projected cost before it was actually done? 60% of the cost of other installations? It's not clear. If it is by 60% of what it was projected, then that means little since projected costs are usually quite conservative with a number of large "fudge factors" thrown for unforeseen costs. These can add up to a lot. 50% or more is not unusual. The designers want to be sure to cover their ass should things not go as planned. Same for the contractors. No one knows the true cost until the project is done. If it's 60% of several other installations (not just one other installation) of the same magnitude and capabilities, then it is quite an achievement and kudos to them. Assuming it lasts as long as the others and does as well. That only time well tell.
@markgigiel27227 жыл бұрын
Pollution, resource constraints and entropy will eventually get us all.
@SifatShahid6 жыл бұрын
WoW!!!!
@NSAwatchesME6 жыл бұрын
That's HUUUUUGE
@terrytong86656 жыл бұрын
Wow Scottish Accent changed
@canigetawitness35634 жыл бұрын
Bad acting
@sssr1987sssr5 жыл бұрын
Мдааа уж. Создают препятствия для судов и подводных лодок . А в это время в России строят АЭС 5 поколения.
@markgigiel27227 жыл бұрын
Tesla was figuring out how to beam energy without wires. Too bad we can't do that. The windmills would be so much easier.
@MrOso366 жыл бұрын
Tesla was figuring it out but he never got it to work. Tesla did a lot of great work but he also failed a lot too.
@gordondolan64436 жыл бұрын
Nikola Tesla was in some regards- a total wanker & con man...
@jesushuerta18525 жыл бұрын
Screw this crap, in the U.S. we have " beautiful, clean, coal".
@isn0t425 жыл бұрын
This is just about as "clean".
@isn0t425 жыл бұрын
@Darrell & Anna Taylor who needs forests when we could build a giant solar farm?
@calvinabbott69205 жыл бұрын
Make them submerged farms that would work at all times.
@yaimavol5 жыл бұрын
@niels lund The core of a wind turbine is made of rare minerals that are mined in China with a huge carbon footprint. Given the tons of concrete and steel required to build one, it takes a hundred years to pay back the carbon debt of one wind turbine. 400 year old tech is not the answer or the future. Get real.
@didanz1004 жыл бұрын
Stupidity at it's best.
@briangarrow4487 жыл бұрын
Some day we will see these structures on continental shelves surrounding the United States. Whether Trump wants them or not. The world will drag us into a cleaner future for our children and grandchildren.
@whykhr7 жыл бұрын
It ain't a cleaner future, Jesus man why on Earth do we see Big Oil like Statoil here and DONG energy (Danish Oil and Natural Gas) promoting these wind farm scams? As Shell Oil stated: " Wind and Solar are the Dancing Partners for our Natural Gas". Wind cannot avoid their intimate & inescapable brotherhood with fossil fuel, as big renewable proponent Robert Kennedy Jr stated: _“…For all of these big utility scale power plants, whether it’s wind or solar, everybody is looking at gas as the supplementary fuel. The plants that we’re building, the wind plants and the solar plants are gas plants….”_ You might achieve 20% wind/solar but the rest will be 80% fracked natural gas. Including methane emissions, fracked natural gas is just as bad as coal. Some clean energy that is. As the World's #1 Climatologist, James Hansen stated: _"....The tragedy is that many environmentalists line up on the side of the fossil fuel industry, advocating renewables as if they, plus energy efficiency, would solve the global climate change matter. But suggesting that renewables will let us phase rapidly off fossil fuels in the United States, China, India, or the world as a whole is almost the equivalent of believing in the Easter Bunny and Tooth Fairy. "_ _"...it is much less than worthless. If you drink the kool-aid...you are a big part of the problem...The problem is that, by drinking the kool-aid, you are also pouring it down the throats of my dear grandchildren and yours. The tragedy in doing so is much greater than that of Jim Jones' gullible followers, who forced their children to drink his kool-aid. All life will bear the consequences..."_
@briangarrow4487 жыл бұрын
whykhr I never claimed that this was the only solution for cleaner energy. These are only one tool in a very large bag of solutions that will need to be implemented by humanity. And I understand their shortcomings. I have spent over 40 years working in utilities, including doing ecological clean up around a large coal powered energy facility. There is no silver bullet to solve our energy problems. Everything has a downside. I don't need to list off all the issues with every form of energy production to you, we both know how stupid that would be. I believe that floating wind turbines could be used in a number of locations around the world. As far as drinking the Kool Aid- nope, don't touch that shit. It's nasty. Didn't like it a half century ago and I still don't...
@whykhr7 жыл бұрын
We do have solutions for clean sustainable energy. Hydro & Geothermal work but are severely limited by geography. Wind & solar have very little role to play, they are in fact not sustainable, their material inputs are far too high coupled with a low EROI and severe intermittency and geographic unsuitability issues. That leaves ONLY one sustainable clean source of energy, that is nuclear power. Fortunately there is a large bag of nuclear solutions, fission, fusion or fission/fusion. MSRs, TWRs, IFRs, LSFBRs, LMFBRs, PHWRs, LFTRs, DMSRs, PBSMRs, ADFRs, PWRs, BWRs. Lots of options.
@theoa85247 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is simply too expensive. People want to pay 2 cent / kwhr to save the planet. Only renewable can do that. The Gas portion can be replaced with other options over time.
@whykhr7 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is too expensive, why because you say so. Why don''t you do some research before making statements about something you know nothing about? The head of Rosatom was just on Sky news and they sell nuclear, wind & solar. And he stated nuclear is 1/2 the cost of wind and 1/3rd the cost of solar. And that is not apples to apples. Nuclear is 24/7, night/day, winter/summer, heat spell/cold spell, north/south, rain/snow/monsoon/volcanic eruption power that lasts for 60-100 yrs an order of magnitude improvement over intermittent wind & solar. So you want to backup up the 80% of wind/solar/gas with gas and just pretend you have other options which you will ADD to the already high cost of wind & solar. You sound like a car salesman, low upfront cost but a shitload of added costs after you sign on the dotted line. If renewables were so practical why has fanatic renewable Germany failed miserably with 20% wind/solar/hydro while France achieved 100% nuclear/hydro in the same time with 1/2 the electricity cost?
@amyjorga96947 жыл бұрын
В Украине тоже хотят установить в черном море, осталось только денег собрать или найти инвестора
@waraynon43515 жыл бұрын
If only one of you hears my call to help me develop my invention that can produce electricity even inside your bedroom because it's pollution free and most of all no refueling and recharging needed, you might not be needing to create thus very expensive structure on the sea that might endanger inhabitants in that area and damage echo system.
@riggald98645 жыл бұрын
And how much power does it produce? What is its load factor?
@mohamedalishafiqueahmed94962 жыл бұрын
WORLD ISLAND wind farm
@davidwheatcroft27975 жыл бұрын
To replace fossil fuels, HALF of Britain would have to be covered in windmills. You can insulate 500 roofs for the price of ONE windmill, and that will save in 2 years MORE energy than the windmill makes in 25 year life. Make sense to build them? Did my BSc in 2 years. Chemistry. I speak 5 languages, IMC pilot. "Not in a million years!" Do the NUMBERS, boyo!
@riggald98645 жыл бұрын
So what makes these two options either/or?
@samueltorres85663 жыл бұрын
Sir, the psychiatrist clinic is that way --->
@artadont19917 жыл бұрын
Красота
@mickwest79185 жыл бұрын
Its a great idea - the dead birds become fish food before you can count them, God knows no one will miss a few thousand Scottish Sea Gulls, and the price of power won't go up much, Al Gore will be so proud of you because no matter how high the oceans get these will always float at a constant level, and when Scotland is entirely under, the Scots will be able to the wind mills and not drown in the High Lands.
@MrBoreray5 жыл бұрын
If Scotland was 'entirely under' then no England,Wales,Ireland,Netherlands,France would be the 'Alpine islands' shared with Germany,Switz,Austria,Italy etc etc
@eastvalleycomputer7 жыл бұрын
Look's cool but music make's it an infomercial. Maybe just float a city next time put wind power on it. Why land? Sea level rise. Build an ark you'll need it. So much long chain hydrocarbon to burn, so little time.