Can Green Energy Make The Grid SAFER?

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PBS Terra

PBS Terra

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 536
@AndrewMcColl
@AndrewMcColl Жыл бұрын
Here's a thought - start the ball rolling by putting solar panels on school roofs. The power gathered can be used by the school, and any excess (like what's gathered on weekends and during holidays) can be fed back into the local grid. Also, school kids can get involved with the installation, learn about the technology, and become advocates for it as they get older.
@jackieknits61
@jackieknits61 Жыл бұрын
Not to mention home economic classes and gardening. Even if the school is in a very urban area, gardening makes for a healthier person in general, and allows a hands on way to understand where our food comes from.
@Victor-tl4dk
@Victor-tl4dk Жыл бұрын
Yeah,. they'd have to change the crazy liability laws though.
@requiemforameme1
@requiemforameme1 Жыл бұрын
Happily, I think some of that has started! Many public buildings have solar panels around where I live (NYC); you can cruise around Google Earth and see some depending on the date. As divisive as he is, I really liked the Tesla Roof idea. (It’s basically a huge battery wired to solar panels.) I think there was mumblings of wiring this to a grid, so you could have redundancy and/or even sell energy back via the Roof. But electric companies probably aren’t so keen on spending infra money for Elon.
@ajr993
@ajr993 Жыл бұрын
You just aren't educated or knowledgable at all. Solar panels are already frequently installed on schools and any other building with large angled rooftops. Why would you pick out schools specifically though? You put solar wherever its the most economical. School kids would NOT get involved with the installation. That's stupid. First of all there's about 100 safety standards and regulations that would prevent this, and no company is going to have kids on the roof near ongoing construction. There's the risk of falling, there are heavy sharp objects, there are dangerous power tools, there is high voltage, and having too many people on a roof is dangerous. Really idiotic idea.. Plus kids are assholes generally speaking and they don't care at all. Maybe 1% of kids would care but if you've ever had to babysit or take care of children, you'll know they're mostly turds and they hate school. Also advocating for it as they get older is useless, you can't wait 20 years for kids to grow.
@pinkelephants1421
@pinkelephants1421 Жыл бұрын
And the swapping out of diesel school buses for electric school buses. Apart from mornings and afternoons, they aren't used most of the time but their huge battery packs store a lot of electricity. Some USA schools are already engaged in the charging of their buses from rooftop solar and selling the excess to their local electricity grids during & at peak demand rates. Some of those schools are able to recharge from their own battery storage systems, but others are doing so at off-peak time of use electricity rates, pocketing the difference for a profit. Fleet operators of large vehicles in various places around the world, including the US, are also engaging in this and there are other companies that have started up to specially support their customers with EV infrastructure & storage installations and software platforms to facilitate all of this. Delivery companies for example, have large battery packs on some of their vehicles, often standing unused overnight, so being able to get full utilisation out of those expensive items & hasten payback times is just good business sense There are far more jobs in 'green' based economy than a fossil fueled one.
@athos1974
@athos1974 Жыл бұрын
I installed solar panels on the roof of my house years ago. I bought an electric car four years ago, and have a recharge battery system set up in my garage for the car, using the solar energy. I haven't been to a gas station in four years and doubt I will ever again. Some months, my usage is low enough I have spare power that sell back to the electric company. The more energy self-sufficient you can be, the less you are at the mercy of utility companies. When the pandemic started I plotted out an acre in the backyard to grow vegetables. I might even try a fruit plot next year. Meanwhile I am working on a multi-rain barrel set up for watering. Start with one project and then keep expanding from there.
@pbsterra
@pbsterra Жыл бұрын
Nice one!
@ellasmommy9278
@ellasmommy9278 Жыл бұрын
❤ You are completely awesome. I wish my finances allowed me to do as you do.
@purpleicewitch6349
@purpleicewitch6349 Жыл бұрын
That’s great if you’re allowed to have a house and that kind of resources. Wish we all were.
@athos1974
@athos1974 Жыл бұрын
@@purpleicewitch6349 Well I kind of cheated, in that I did not buy the house, I inherited it from my father when he died. So I definitely had an advantage over many people.
@jenfisher-bradley2623
@jenfisher-bradley2623 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately now it's getting too hot humid and unstable to grow food. Global food systems are collapsing as we speak.
@Dovietail
@Dovietail Жыл бұрын
We need to put solar panels on top of parking lots, etc, instead of destroying habitat on the ground. My grocery here in AZ has a solar panel-covered parking lot. It's cool and pleasant underneath in dappled shade, and valuable energy is created overhead. It's wonderful!
@newscoulomb3705
@newscoulomb3705 Жыл бұрын
3:48 Sounds like another justification for high-speed rail, which can double as an additional pathway for electricity transmission.
@pbsterra
@pbsterra Жыл бұрын
Yep, love the pathway for transmission ideas!
@artboymoy
@artboymoy Жыл бұрын
OOO... hadn't thought of that.
@artboymoy
@artboymoy Жыл бұрын
I was thinking that we needed to get to the micro grid solution for stable and reliable energy. Different areas have advantages and should be tailored to that instead of generating energy hundreds of miles away from where it's used. Would also like small modular reactors to get into the mix more for areas that don't seem to have a robust renewable plan and in general to provide a cleaner safer back up to renewables. I am still looking to add storage to my solar system and want to add a handful more panels to help load it up.
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
Small reactors don't live up to the hype but I'll agree about domestic solar & storage. If there's flowing water on your land hydro is well worth looking into too. Domestic-scale wind is surprisingly difficult to get working because it needs to be so far above obstructions, grid-scale wind on 150 metre towers works fine.
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
Micro grids are becoming more common, Germany seems to be the leader at the moment.
@ellasmommy9278
@ellasmommy9278 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see this happen by 2050. I feel like there's an option we haven't explored yet and I just can't think of what it could be. I think new construction houses should have solar panels already installed
@RosscoAW
@RosscoAW Жыл бұрын
Not to be too blunt, but socialism. The pace of climate solutions under a capitalist system is a direct, 1:1 consequence of the profitability for shareholders of particular methodologies of generating or transitioning to renewable energy -- whether that's, as it is in most cases, private shareholders (investors) or the rare cases of nationalized or public shareholders (governments), the capitalist profit motive logic remains the issue. An issue exacerbated by over 40 years of propaganda and right-wing industrial policy entrenching and expanding fossil fuel-generation and -dependant industries to the point that big oil and big auto are *substantial and unavoidable* political lobbies that can out-compete *climate scientists themselves* within the legislative and regulatory lobbying systems. The solution that hasn't been tried, in the West, is to have a system that doesn't prioritize the shareholder's profit motive at the risk of failing fiduciary duty and the legal consequences for Board Directors therein, and to instead have a system of democracy where the average worker has democratic control of their business(es) and could have therefore been capable of independently making the decisions necessary to steer economic activity away from climate catastrophe, instead of actively trying to profit off of it for the sake of short-term profits. Meanwhile, China seems to be literally the only entity actively interested in -- and legitimately planning for -- a proper transition away from total climate catastrophe, while also not failing to forget about the undeveloped global south who will continue to pollute if it's the cheapest thing to do and are simultaneously establishing the infrastructure necessary to develop said global south *faster and sooner* so that their respective economies can reach a level of development and sustainable energy use in the future that won't also imperil the world the same way the West's total negligence and kicking of cans down the road otherwise surely will. Unfortunately, the only realistic hope for a genuinely renewable *global future* is almost entirely dependent on China being able to economically uplift the rest of the world to the point of being both importers and consumers of China's own China-made green infrastructure resources, EVs, etc, before mid century. Meanwhile, America is doing everything possible to support big business, prevent a rapid green revolution, and obfuscate attempts at global development and uplifting of the global south, simply because it doesn't exclusively benefit and reinforce America as the only global hegemonic superpower; yeah, okay, maybe because America has been absconding of that responsibility and actively undermining global security and legislating policy that has been contributing to hastening climate catastrophe, for the sake of American shareholder profits and scant else. TL;DR: Avoiding climate catastrophe involves the entirely world being shifted to an entirely new energy and economic system, as fast as possible, while America has been actively making things worse for literally everybody everywhere forever, with the sole exception of billionaires and shareholders, who are having a helluva time not letting a good crisis go to waste for the past few decades; Wall Street loves this shit. They love it. That's why they've been nurturing and ensuring this catastrophe. The solution that hasn't been tried is *getting rid of the 'profit' problem.*
@acmefixer1
@acmefixer1 Жыл бұрын
​@@RosscoAW Your complaint was socialism at the beginning and getting rid of capitalistic profit at the end. Make up your mind!
@nzuckman
@nzuckman Жыл бұрын
@@acmefixer1 they weren't complaining about socialism, they're saying it is the solution.
@gamingtonight1526
@gamingtonight1526 Жыл бұрын
Research the climate crisis a bit more, mate. 2050 is 20 years too late!
@aprildawnsunshine4326
@aprildawnsunshine4326 Жыл бұрын
​@@RosscoAW agreed. It's really reminding me of all the public works projects of the 30s and 40s though. We really invested in revamping the countries infrastructure and that's what we need to be doing now. It's time for another New Deal. Now if only a non Christian like me stood a chance of getting into office 😔
@alexfrank5331
@alexfrank5331 Жыл бұрын
Texas: Fossil fuel is reliable. Also Texas - Fossil fuel power plants failure every winter.
@russellklegraefe6425
@russellklegraefe6425 Жыл бұрын
Three things that weren’t covered : 1. Offshore wind can generate a lot of our electricity. Since most people live near the coast then the generation will be a short distance from the point of use. 2. Only a very small portion of the land, something like is 0.5%, is needed to create all the electricity needs of the country. The generation doesn’t have to be in the middle of the country and run hundreds of miles on new lines it can be more on the edge of where the winds are highest and where the sun shines the most. 3. Reduction of consumption of electricity is actually more attainable at the moment than building all new sources if people would just turn the TVs off, when not in use, or reduce the number of devices that instant on, we could probably shut down a few nuclear plants.
@beyondfossil
@beyondfossil Жыл бұрын
Well done. I was going to write the same thing!
@linus4693
@linus4693 Жыл бұрын
What about solar power. I’m from Germany and here in Germany/northern Central Europe solar power is a big thing. We can generate a lot from it. We can even provide almost half of our house energy with solar energy ourselves. Although we have a more similiar climate to Seattle or Portland region. I didn’t understand why the US is not doing that although the have way more sunny days in probably 95% of the country than Germany.
@russellklegraefe6425
@russellklegraefe6425 Жыл бұрын
@@linus4693 I am an American but also live in Germany. Solar is part of the solution. If you read point 2, you’ll see that I mention “where the sun shines the most”, meaning solar generated power. We need multiple possibilities that can be used in different situations. The point of the video was the power grid. My points were to show that there are ways to reduce the need to do massive upgrades and therefore getting quicker results. Rooftop solar is great if you can afford the initial investment.
@ruedelta
@ruedelta Жыл бұрын
@@russellklegraefe6425 Offshore wind is too expensive to maintain. A small portion of land is required but you are just intensifying the transmission issue. And most energy consumption comes from producing heat, so Americans need to use much less heat and A/C. That means putting on 4 layers indoors during winter and not turning on heating until it's below 40F indoors, as is the case in many Chinese households. Alternatively, rebuilding houses to passive house codes are another way to lessen electric load. Electronic devices by comparison draw far less power. If your thermostat is above 60F in winter and below 85F in summer, you're part of the problem.
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L Жыл бұрын
@@ruedelta offshore wind has been plenty profitable in the UK
@ShutterJunkie
@ShutterJunkie Жыл бұрын
I think as long as humanity is plagued by insatiable greed we will continue to live on the very edge of our doom.
@ADHDsquirl
@ADHDsquirl Жыл бұрын
We are fleas on a dog's back.
@nonexistence5135
@nonexistence5135 Жыл бұрын
@@ADHDsquirl if a dog had 8 billion fleas it would die very quickly
@gavincoyne9099
@gavincoyne9099 Жыл бұрын
thanks capitalism 😍
@davidmenasco5743
@davidmenasco5743 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if greed is exactly the best way to characterize the problem. It's a mindset and a system that has been built based upon that mindset. The system rewards continual extraction and exploitation and penalizes solutions that reduce the need for future extraction and exploitation. The system rewards oil companies with no regard for the damage they cause. These "external" costs traditionally have been ignored by economists. When they are accounted for, we see that fossil fuels are MUCH more expensive than was previously acknowledged. Unfortunately the oil companies have been so profitable that they have become the wealthiest and most powerful entities the world has ever seen. They reinvest part of their profits into massive lobbying efforts and propaganda campaigns that hold back any possibility of government action that could adversely affect the companies' bottom lines. If we can break the grip of fossil fuel companies on government policies worldwide, solutions would come pouring forth like coins from a winning slot machine.
@wgoode97
@wgoode97 Жыл бұрын
@@davidmenasco5743 a death grip, at that
@sarahwithanhyouheathen3210
@sarahwithanhyouheathen3210 Жыл бұрын
My biggest question is this: How can we get money out of politics so the zillionaires have to quit paying our lawmakers to keep renewable energy from happening?
@ecurewitz
@ecurewitz Жыл бұрын
Ban all political contributions beyond a certain amount
@JALNIN66
@JALNIN66 Жыл бұрын
That is absolutely the number one issue. Sadly the current elected officials are unlikely to pass laws that reduce their own power and ability to make money even though it's disgustingly corrupt. All we can do is vote for and support progressives like AOC and Bernie Sanders. I would love to see the day that the majority of our government actually works for us again. One can dream, right?
@photobobo
@photobobo Жыл бұрын
@@ecurewitz You are asking the very same people (politicians) to ban something that they benefit from.
@arielquelme
@arielquelme Жыл бұрын
Wont be happening It is human nature to consciously or unconsciously buid hirearchy Hirearchy gave birth to politics It is just... Inevitable... No matter how small
@caroljo420
@caroljo420 Жыл бұрын
End Citizens United, make lobbying and bribery illegal (like it used to be), and publicly fund all elections. Laws that are already in the books MUST be enforced! And get rid of the electoral college! Those are just the start.
@catherineleslie-faye4302
@catherineleslie-faye4302 Жыл бұрын
Every system we can power using locally generated green power - be it info booths, foot path lights, street lights, bus stops or even electric trollys, is a step towards a greener healthier Earth.
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
...but still with a grid connection to cope with Dunkelflaute. I agree, absolutely necessary.
@Arkine13
@Arkine13 Жыл бұрын
Need to make that self-sufficiency in terms of water, food and pretty much everything else (harvesting your own lumber for building and not having to hire a certified technician to come test the lumber for moisture content...when you can buy a tester online for very cheap and build a lumber dryer for very cheap...but it's not government "approved" so if they catch you building with it they can tear your entire project down--never fool yourself, you don't own your land, the government does. That's why they can take your property and sell it if you don't pay property taxes, aka rent, the government owns "your" land). There are states that are EXTREMELY restrictive on water collection, there are cities, towns and stupid HOAs that won't let you plant gardens, have any animals that are considered farm or livestock, or have solar panels or wind generators on your property without their permission (and paying their fees). The amount of red tape that people have to go through to be "self-sufficient" is ridiculous and in some cases will never be approved because of government (state, local and federal) laws have literally made it illegal to be self-sufficient. This whole net-zero push is actually making people less self-sufficient because of the approval process for every damn thing. And don't tell me it's about safety, most people want to build safely--they don't want to live in unsafe conditions and will often over engineer their designs, so it's not about safety, it's about the government and everyone else that has their fingers in the whole damn thing getting their cut of the money. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad this video mentioned that you can generate enough power for small groups to be off-grid and not put a strain on the rest of the system (and have power if the grid does go down), but there's a lot more to being "off-grid" than just the powerline.
@0HARE
@0HARE Жыл бұрын
Looks like we can do this. Let’s get started!
@newscoulomb3705
@newscoulomb3705 Жыл бұрын
One form of renewable that deserves more consideration is tidal. Its consistency and proximity to high population densities make it one of the most effective forms of renewable energy, and currently, it is one of the least used. We're already seeing great examples and implementations of this technology in the Orkney Islands.
@pbsterra
@pbsterra Жыл бұрын
Agreed! I'd like to look into it more.
@Goni983
@Goni983 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciated the breakdown in the video with all details. Hoping we can get it done soon. Im seeing virtual power plant projects moving forward in my area.We have a lot of opportunity to improve so lets get to it!
@paulsolimando86
@paulsolimando86 Жыл бұрын
Yes, decentralized power sounds like a good idea, but little by little, power companies are removing the incentive for homeowners to be able to add their excess solar power to the grid by removing the ability to send back power to the grid. They lobby the government to lower the amount of money they have to pay, and they replace power meters so that if the power is flowing out of the home, the meter still goes in the same direction not allowing to get a pay back from the utility.
@zemtek420
@zemtek420 Жыл бұрын
I think they are wrong on needing more transmission lines. If you are producting energy locally there is no need for more transmission lines. Every house should be able to produce their own energy though wind and solar by utilizing ample battery backup.
@kaymish6178
@kaymish6178 Жыл бұрын
The problem is that the renewable energy resources are not close to where people live or industry is located, so they need to transmit ppwer from where the renewable resources are to where the demand is. Building a nuclear powerplant closer to the areas of demand would be far more efficient.
@zemtek420
@zemtek420 Жыл бұрын
@@kaymish6178 if you make each house its own powerplant then very few transmission lines are needed. Have every house covered in solar panels. Utiize covered parking lots with solar roofs and of course the buiding roof itself for places like Wal Mart. We can produce enough energy locally via solar and wind with energy storage backup. Not sure how people would like a nuclear plant in their backyard. At least not till we make them 100% safe. And I really cant see that happening till we master fusion.
@aaronchapin9331
@aaronchapin9331 Жыл бұрын
so...people who rent flats are only able to use a percentage of whatever the building can produce? i foresee a mad rush for bigger and bigger homes under this model
@zemtek420
@zemtek420 Жыл бұрын
@@aaronchapin9331 not sure. But I do know each home can be energy independent with a combo of renewables and energy storage.
@bballboyjumpshot9353
@bballboyjumpshot9353 Жыл бұрын
Love this series, extremely informative
@santoast24
@santoast24 Жыл бұрын
I dont think geothermal gets nearly enough actual attention. I would love to see 100% renewables, geothermal is and should be a massive portion of that. Theres some really good points about how wind and solar tend to compliment each other well, but they dont perfectly, we will need something that can always provide a good base load. If we get 1/5 of our production from local solar & wind sources, I think we could and absolutly should strive for almost another 2/5ths to be combined geothermal and nuclear. Personally, hydro should be out of the question, and completely phased out. If you dont know why, try fishing for Salmon on.... any river where Salmon were once plentiful.... We all hate fracking right? Fracking xists solely as a proof of concept for how to access the necessary depths to efficiently produce geothermal pretty much anywhere. And its a damn good proof too.
@switted823
@switted823 Жыл бұрын
Costa Rica gets most of it's energy from hydro, however I agree with you on geothermal and nuclear energy are even better options. Even a country with lots of rivers like Costa Rica needed a reliable source of energy to help it cope when the rain is low. That source is currently bunker oil, but geothermal or nuclear energy would be a much better option that would help with the increasing push for electrification.
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
It’s kind of site-specific. Also, if you keep taking heat out of the earth, at some point you run into another problem set. Wind and solar are more available in more places and safer in the long run. My understanding, anyway.
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
@@switted823 nuclear waste. Think about it.
@switted823
@switted823 Жыл бұрын
@@solarwind907 What about it? More like "What About the Waste? The secret billion year nuclear waste repository with Dr James Conca", watch it in full.
@aaronchapin9331
@aaronchapin9331 Жыл бұрын
geothermal electricity production is only feasible in a few places on the planet. and they're already doing it in those locations. if you mean, geothermal heating/cooling, that's ground source heat pump technology, which is indirect solar power. great system, but very expensive to install
@Beryllahawk
@Beryllahawk Жыл бұрын
I feel like it's extremely wise to keep including nuclear power plants in our array of power sources; even with the (extremely low) risk, nuclear is still a better choice than fossil fuels. The very biggest thing I'm hearing here is that demand is not going to match supply/generation, and that makes sense, because people do the things we do whenever we do 'em. The micro-grid concept seems like it would be extremely useful, for all the reasons mentioned. But I would want to see that kind of localized generation happening in the poorer quarters FIRST, or close to the same time, as the rich neighborhoods. It seems to me that the areas within our cities that are most impacted by climate change AND by the direct negative effects of fossil fuel power plants should be the places that get relief soonest. They've suffered so that the rich can be comfy, isn't it fair to just...not be like that anymore? I recognize that the real world won't work this way, that the wealthy will continue to make the changes first and fastest, but I don't see why we can't aim for doing better. There are SO MANY options for us, and this is a case of "Yes, and, and, and, and..." We should do ALL of them, we should pursue every single possible solution and implement them all, in whatever places they'll work best, across the globe. No one should be left to suffer, no one should be told that they can't have renewable energy, this is not a single nation's problem. This is the whole world's problem, and the solutions that will work best HAVE to be applied to the whole world if they're going to work in a way that gets us to our goal.
@RaheelPervaiz123
@RaheelPervaiz123 Жыл бұрын
Adding Nuclear capacity and reducing energy waste are teh only options really...
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
The risks surrounding nuclear are increasing markedly because of the various things happening to water (water is used for cooling & for isolating radioactivity), particularly flooding, increased hurricanes etc & sea level rise. Almost all nuclear power stations are on coasts or large rivers. Vulcanism is also increasing so a Fukushima-like event could be repeated.
@juliatarrel1674
@juliatarrel1674 Жыл бұрын
There are also several teams working out how to use waves to generate energy. One of my favourites (though I have no idea about feasibility) is finding coasts that have rocky narrow inlets in cliffs and sticking turbines in there. Wave crashes in, air is forced up through the turbine. Wave retreats, air is forced down through the turbine. Every time the turbine spins, it turns a generator. Almost-free power; just requires occasional maintence on the turbine and generator.
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
(& occasional complete replacement when a larger-than-predicted wave or tsunami blows the complete assembly into the sea or even just turns it inside out).
@alanhat5252
@alanhat5252 Жыл бұрын
People have been working on this for more than 50 years & nothing of commercial scale has been produced. The problem seems to be the extreme variability of waves - from negligible ripples to geysers when amplified by these shapes, plus, certain weather conditions fill the water with highly-abrasive silt or vane-clogging seaweed. These seem to be problematic with all wave-powered generation systems unfortunately. Salter's Ducks seem to be the most promising but Salter & his university team have been working on them for decades with no final product. Systems harnessing the tides are coming along very nicely though & Scotland is pretty certain it will be producing most of its electricity from the tides within a very few years. The important thing with tidal is getting stations widely spaced so that few are on slack tides at the same time & transmission of electricity can compensate.
@Touton701
@Touton701 Жыл бұрын
I’m all for the green energy switch, but here in Newfoundland, they proposed to build wind farms in the areas that belong to the Native Americans and have been used for hunting for thousands of years by both the locals and natives of the province and yet they don’t care about the natives and were told all day every day from main stream media we need to care about them and protect their land so that in itself confuses me
@ricardoxavier827
@ricardoxavier827 Жыл бұрын
Electricity, produce, energy storage shape type hydrogen, to release in electricity again. Rain become energy. Solar become energy. Wind become energy. No matter the weather, becomes energy, to storage in hydrogen shape storage way. Hydrogen pipelines networks around.
@mischevious
@mischevious Жыл бұрын
Same here in the US. Our National forests, parks, public lands, protected habitats and native reservations are all being leased out or already slated for renewable energy projects. Projects that will destroy those ecosystems as well as local economies. Indigenous land rights are being outright ignored. Even where land rights are abundantly clear and where native populations are still heavily dependent on their lands for their own subsistence. If they protest they’re confronted with armed forces in riot gear, beaten back and even killed by water cannons and other improper use of crowd control weaponry. And if their stories even make the news, very rare, they’re cast in a negative light. Oh, and environmental activism and protest is increasingly the punishable crime of terrorism. We appear intent on sacrificing who and whatever necessary in order to perpetuate our current, wholly unsustainable current living standards. Even the environmental movement has been co-opted by “green” capitalism. They’re no longer concerned with saving wild nature, protecting ecosystems or even keeping our own environment clean and healthy. Ask them what they want, “renewable energy!”. At any cost apparently as long as we don’t have to give up our cars, computers or cell phones. Fact is there isn’t enough lithium on the planet to pull this transition off. Or enough steel, or aluminum etc etc. And the whole thing relies on a now globalized supply chain that depends entirely on diesel fuel, colonialism, imperialism and slavery. Just ask the millions of Congolese slaves toiling their lives away in toxic lithium mines that will eventually kill them just so we can enjoy our cars, computers and cell phones. Ask them if they’re willing to sacrifice their lives in this heinous way just so we can enjoy our privileged lives. If this is who we are, and apparently it is, I want no part of it. I’d rather see our entire species die. Preferably sooner than later so the rest of life on Earth might still have a fighting chance to overcome the damage we’ve already done.
@Touton701
@Touton701 Жыл бұрын
@@ricardoxavier827 what I was talking about how we are told every day to protect our natural landscapes and care about the Native Americans and native population but then also being told, we need to take away their land from them to build wind farms so we can impose our will upon them. This is just colonization, 2.0. Or at least that’s what it sounds like we’re gonna take their land from them, and force them to live our way of life not there own
@beansnrice321
@beansnrice321 Жыл бұрын
Heck yeah, I ball parked it! My guess was, "the Dakotas?" lol.
@kimberleemodel7182
@kimberleemodel7182 Жыл бұрын
Mine was montana
@strehlow
@strehlow Жыл бұрын
One question/quibble. Energy storage is typically measured in Watt Hours, not Watts. The battery amounts given were listed in GW. Was that a typo that should have been GWH, or were you showing the maximum rate that the installed batteries can release that energy?
@kemsatofficial
@kemsatofficial Жыл бұрын
Nuclear. Just do it right. No shortcuts. No cost cutting. It works & is safe, specially if we don’t try to nickel & dime the power plants’ construction.
@mischevious
@mischevious Жыл бұрын
Sure, right up until heatwave temperatures melt the grid causing nuclear meltdowns that strip away stratospheric ozone in a matter of hours and the sun’s UVC radiation kills us all! What we need to do is power down all remaining operational nuclear plants before this happens.
@marianneb.7112
@marianneb.7112 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree.
@ricardoxavier827
@ricardoxavier827 Жыл бұрын
Electricity, produce, energy storage shape type hydrogen, to release in electricity again. Rain become energy. Solar become energy. Wind become energy. No matter the weather, becomes energy, to storage in hydrogen shape storage way. Hydrogen pipelines networks around.
@kimberleemodel7182
@kimberleemodel7182 Жыл бұрын
Except the spent fuel will remain radioactive for longer than the great pyramids of giza have existed. I wish it was easy to swap out a coal plant for a nuclear plant, but it doesn't seem responsible to generate waste that will be invisibly dangerous for 1000 times longer than our own lifetimes.
@kemsatofficial
@kemsatofficial Жыл бұрын
@@kimberleemodel7182 Uranium isn’t the only fissile material. Fission will heat water to turn a turbine. I’ve heard Thorium reactors yield waste that stops being dangerous in ~200-300 years; that’s manageable.
@garymiller8287
@garymiller8287 Жыл бұрын
thanks Terra for the broad brushstroke of the needed transition to renewables
@mannybravo237
@mannybravo237 Жыл бұрын
The 'future' is already here! Tell this green plan energy transformation to the petro companies.
@diannadima7082
@diannadima7082 Жыл бұрын
Pray tell why Arizona is not involved in this program? We have the most sunshine for the longest periods per day. Everyone, every household should be solar or wind, especially in the Rim Country. Especially for apartment complexes.
@Skipping2HellPHX
@Skipping2HellPHX Жыл бұрын
You don't need anywhere near as much transmission or energy storage if you have a locality's entire base load carried by weather-independent carbon-free sources like nuclear and geothermal
@KoRntech
@KoRntech Жыл бұрын
First issue is how vulnerable grid elements are as recently shown again this fall with some individuals taking aim at substations, which has happened several years ago. Mixed use will be helpful in places it makes sense. But baseload is king and nuclear can do it, people need to look at what's reality and what actually is dangerous and hazardous to life.
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
Nuclear is really, and actually hazardous to life. Nuclear power plant controls are quite Hackable. Nuclear energy is best Kept on the sun and sent as photons to solar panels here on earth.
@Dr.Gehrig
@Dr.Gehrig Жыл бұрын
This was good, but I wish there would have been more emphasis on the reality that there are 6 carbon clean energy families: solar, wind, hydro (including tidal), geothermal, and then, yes, nuclear and bioenergy, which they seemed to disparage quite a bit which is odd, considering about 10% of global electricity is already nuclear (about 20% in the US).
@l.m.2404
@l.m.2404 Жыл бұрын
In Canada, fossil fuel taxes are horribly detested but they work. People will look for the best way for them to save money and I for one, purchased a very reliable electric bike for commuting to and from work after selling my car. I have never regretted it and I belong to a car share program that owns only hybrid vehicles for those out of town trips and carting stuff home from IKEA. New gas vehicles will not be available in Canada in 3 years so people are going to be dragged, kicking and screaming into a better tomorrow.
@nickmcconnell1291
@nickmcconnell1291 Жыл бұрын
Boy am I glad to see PBS tackling this subject. This is exactly the right question. Will the weather become so bad that renewables may be compromised? Alternately I hope you will cover what happens to farming if the weather becomes so erratic. About 12,000 years ago people began to settle down in small villages. This was because the weather had finally stabilized enough, after the last ice age, to allow crops to grow with regularity. This was the dawn of our civilization as we know it. What happens when that certainty goes away? How do we feed Earth's population or is it even now a foregone conclusion that it will collapse? As to power....The people and entities talking about mega-grid are the existing utility companies and power plant owners. They still want to be the owners of the generation and delivery of power so they get their cut of profits. We may have to let these companies go under and be disrupted. Decentralized power is the way to go. Instead of spending money on the mega grid let's get every homeowner and landowner able to produce their own power and store it in their own batteries that can share back to the grid. Much cheaper for govts to subsidize this than to build out grids and more secure overall. Then localize community power with solar and wind farms with large battery storage. This model gets rid of most of the need to build a bigger grid. We might not even need to change the existing grid much at all if enough individual households can produce and store their own power needs. Existing grid power could be used for those who do not own property....apartments, etc. Finally if we can get robo-taxis actually working and cheaper than car ownership then a large percentage of parking lots in cities can be reclaimed and used for solar panels and green spaces with trees to absorb CO2. I also encourage PBS to review the work of Tony Seba and to get Tony Seba involved in at least one of your shows as a guest or expert co-commentator. His think tank (ReThinkX) has done the math and calculations on how to go to completely renewable energy and how it can be done for much less money than we think.
@LamarreAlexandre
@LamarreAlexandre Жыл бұрын
That would work in theory, but the fossil fuel industry is still extremely rich and powerful. They can buy politicians, the can pay for publicity in media, they can manipulate people so that they can have local referendums that can block new powerline that would help transfer energy from the producers to the users. The fossil industry is a formidable ennemy.
@chuckkottke
@chuckkottke Жыл бұрын
The ave annual electricity consumption is 886 kwh/month. By insulating well and using energy efficient fridges, that figure can easily drop to 240 kwh/ month. We can and should build up the grid and transition to renewable energy, but don't forget to pick the low hanging fruit. 🍓 😉 🌎
@tHebUm18
@tHebUm18 Жыл бұрын
Should get Tony Seba on here--100% renewables + battery storage is not just possible, but will happen far faster than most experts predict as it's the most economically viable option today for new electricity generation, not some future technology--today. And definitely no supergrid--all more localized generation is cheaper.
@normzemke7824
@normzemke7824 Жыл бұрын
Climate change is NOT a technology problem. The root problem is how humans organize their societies. The people at the top always want to maintain their status, which leads to CEOs putting profits over the environment and politicians focusing only on getting reelected. From the largest international corporations to the smallest mom-and-pop business, from the leaders of superpowers to the local city councilor: everyone in power has a vested interest in staying ahead of everyone beneath them. Some leaders have the moral strength to do the right thing, but far too often the temptation is too strong and the greater good is sold out for one person's benefit.
@GhostOnTheHalfShell
@GhostOnTheHalfShell Жыл бұрын
The German Town of Feldheim is a great example of a town that made their own grid. DW has a couple videos on the topic.
@htopherollem649
@htopherollem649 Жыл бұрын
sorry, if you fact check DW Documentaries you will find that they are filled with incorrect information . once they proved themselves to Not Be a Trusted Source for scientific knowledge it (for me) invalidates any valid climate related information they may intersperse with their, at best , half truths.
@nathanmiddleton1478
@nathanmiddleton1478 Жыл бұрын
I still feel these discussions don't include multi-unit dwellings and especially those of lower means when it's US-centric. There simply is no way for me to charge in my area unless I find one of the handful of local public charging spaces, and they happen to free. I won't be buying an EV anytime soon for this very reason. Until there are literally charging units on each side of every block, in each neighborhood of a city, it won't be a future that that includes people like me.
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L Жыл бұрын
Scotland is another good example, all the domestic power usage is provided by wind, hydro and nuclear. A majority of the total electrical usage is too, but not 100% because of a few industrial uses. A large portion of the year, we’re sending wind energy down south to England. In low wind months we import a bit of extra nuclear from Yorkshire and Lancashire. Most of the carbon intensity of the grid in Britain stems from southern England (and a bit from a part of Wales, blanking on whether it’s the north or south at the moment), which is also where most of the people live… I believe those gas power plants are reaching end of life around the turn of the decade though. The sub-grids in the north of the island have basically set a template to follow.
@robbabcock_
@robbabcock_ Жыл бұрын
Great stuff!
@stynkanator
@stynkanator Жыл бұрын
The thought of local energy development is exciting!
@LuckyDogProductions
@LuckyDogProductions Жыл бұрын
Iceland's electrical service wires and power infrastucture are underground..... more expensive than telephone poles, but they don't blow over in the wind.
@undertwotimes
@undertwotimes Жыл бұрын
Megagrid sounds like a waste of resources to me, I think more localized power generation is the way to make the most efficient reliable grid. Keep up the great videos, love the content.
@marianneb.7112
@marianneb.7112 Жыл бұрын
Hasn't worked at all well for Texas.
@beverlyness7954
@beverlyness7954 Жыл бұрын
That's my thought as well. Go small instead of go big.
@cantankerousRat
@cantankerousRat Жыл бұрын
You call for reliability, but yet you call for reduced redundancy. I think these two concepts are at odds with each other.
@lyledal
@lyledal Жыл бұрын
"Distributed energy resources..." So, folks in the community who don't own a house or property where they can put up solar.
@steveallwine1443
@steveallwine1443 Жыл бұрын
A large number of states have community solar projects, where you buy into solar arrays set up in local parks, zoos or other public areas, and your share of the array’s output is taken off of your utility bill. It allows for any ratepayer to own a solar project, even if they’re a renter in an apartment.
@AnimilesYT
@AnimilesYT Жыл бұрын
If this video isn't going to mention a structural change in zoning laws to go from car dependency to actually sustainable forms of transportation, then I'll be mad :D
@Dutchy_Pascal
@Dutchy_Pascal Жыл бұрын
Referencing Strong Towns & Not Just Bikes would indeed be helpfull.
@debwefoxx9389
@debwefoxx9389 Жыл бұрын
Always interesting and informative but I would also appreciate a video about ideas for dealing with how long batteries last, the toxic chemicals in spent batteries and how we can find safe ways to deal with them. I know there’s limits to what each episode can entail so this is a suggestion for the future. I haven’t seen every episode at all and will look through the channel to see if you already covered it The narrator is a naturally attractive and obviously intelligent person- can we do an update with minimal makeup and no more low cut shirts? Can you imagine a man reporting in a shirt that low? Let’s catch up to awareness on this silent sexism please . It does nothing to increase her authority and believability, two important qualities in news and social change
@ricardoxavier827
@ricardoxavier827 Жыл бұрын
Electricity, produce, energy storage shape type hydrogen, to release in electricity again. Rain become energy. Solar become energy. Wind become energy. No matter the weather, becomes energy, to storage in hydrogen shape storage way. Hydrogen pipelines networks around.
@kimberleemodel7182
@kimberleemodel7182 Жыл бұрын
Yea, they didn't even try to suggest reducing consumption.
@TedApelt
@TedApelt Жыл бұрын
Step one should be using solar and wind to pump water behind hydroelectric dams. The total generating capacity of the Grand Coulee Dam is 6,809 megawatts and its average annual energy output is about 2,300 megawatts. The total generating capacity of the Hoover Dam is 2,080 megawatts and its average annual energy output is about 478 megawatts. By using solar and wind to pump water upstream to those two dams, we could increase their output by as much as 6,111 megawatts, with months of storage. The same is true for many other hydroelectric dams.
@StellarLimpkin
@StellarLimpkin Жыл бұрын
This positivity for the future is just what we need!
@Jondiceful
@Jondiceful Жыл бұрын
A megagrid is insanely inefficient with current transmission technologies. The energy lost in transmission is just too high. You need superconductors to get around that problem which is currently too expensive to be practical. A breakthrough here could make a megagrid possible, but barring that no megagrid is going to help let alone be worth the expense. Distributed grids are also somewhat misrepresented here. For residential uses, they can provide most or all of the energy needed. It's commercial and industrial demand that outstrips the supply. So we need to break the problem into solvable pieces. A distributed grid for residential would ease the burden on other sources powering commercial and industrial demands. And as for nuclear, the new micro-nuclear power is a promising way to provide industrial power supply without needing thousands of miles of inefficient and vulnerable transmission lines.
@peterh5165
@peterh5165 Жыл бұрын
Look up ultra-high voltage transmission with solid-state DC-DC conversion: very low losses. Also, China is already using them (one country can see into the future, one country cannot).
@VMAN00ful
@VMAN00ful Жыл бұрын
13:17 it's nuclear, not newculer.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to cooking, electric and induction is more efficient in terms of heat transfer, and doesn't heat up your room forcing your AC to work harder like gas does.
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
Electric stoves definitely heat up your house. We’ve used them for 40 years. Now induction cooktops heat your house up a lot less. Much less waste heat with induction cooking.
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 Жыл бұрын
@@solarwind907 it is true electric heats up your house, but it is still alot less than gas and more slowly, because more of the heat reaches your food. You are definitely right about induction
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
@@linuxman7777 agreed
@dryzalizer
@dryzalizer Жыл бұрын
I basically never see this question asked: How long is the life span of a solar panel and how recyclable are they when that life span ends? I'm all for renewables but I've seen some wind and solar farms that are poorly maintained and only producing a fraction of what they could be, not many years after they were built.
@malcolmrose3361
@malcolmrose3361 Жыл бұрын
The first experimental solar panels are still producing - they're about 40 something years old. The usual guarantees are that the panel performance will degrade by about 1% per annum - but a twenty year old panel that only produces 80% of the electricity it first did is still producing. So unless you have limited space why rip out the old panels? Just add a few new panels to bring you back up to your desired production - the newer panels are cheaper and often more efficient than the older ones so the additional investment would probably be negligible. As for recycling them - it's currently an issue because there aren't that many panels to recycle, and because the panels basically only contain small amounts of valuable metals within them - getting to those bits in a cost effective manner is difficult. Since the US government doesn't mandate that the panels have to be recycled only 10% of American panels aren't just dumped in landfill, or whatever. On the other hand they're mostly plastic, glass, silicon and aluminium (all of which we recycle lots of) - so with the right incentive it's possible. In the EU (where makers are obliged to recycle) there are some fledgling businesses working on the issue but it's early days.
@kaymish6178
@kaymish6178 Жыл бұрын
Current estimates are about 30 years before output degrades to unacceptable levels and they are nonrecyclable they just become toxic waste. Then there are panels damaged by storms; Katrina generated tons upon tons of toxic waste from smashed solar panels. They were all swept up and carted to landfill where they leach into the ground water.
@solarwind907
@solarwind907 Жыл бұрын
Solar panels come with a 25 year warranty. Every satellite out in space is solar powered. Pretty damn reliable technology. Lasts a long, long time. Lead acid batteries are extremely recyclable. Aluminum or steel solar racking is recyclable. Electrical wiring is recyclable. Why don’t you provide a link to all the wind and solar farms that you’ve seen showing the operational data and how badly they failed overtime? I’d love to see that data.
@thaliacrew1
@thaliacrew1 Жыл бұрын
The distributed grid should be underground, which is already the case in places with high wind, like Boulder, CO, and new developments since 2000. Underground utilities are not nearly as susceptible to the effects of weather and climate change as energy distributed above ground on power poles.
@JugglinJellyTake01
@JugglinJellyTake01 Жыл бұрын
Most cost effective methods on energy consumption: 1) Energy efficiency - behaviour 2) Energy efficiency - insulation, planting trees (cooling), 3) Energy efficiency - active transport and public transport reduces the heat island effect 4) Energy efficiency - reduce consumption / waste 5) Energy efficiency - cease flying, especially gadgets such as power tools and kitchen gadgets that are rarely used 6) Energy efficiency - reduce or eliminate meat, fish and dairy A large part of the problem is waiting for someone else to fix the problem when it is costing people money, emissions and quality of life having to work more hours for unnecessary consumption and use of energy.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 Жыл бұрын
2:00 The mix is actually somewhat greener than what that chart implies. At least 30% of energy, at the point of use, is as electricity. Electricity generation from fossil fuels and nuclear wastes most of the thermal energy, although it is counted as part of total primary energy. Electricity from wind and solar is not counted with those losses. So more of the whole energy mix is carbon-free than what that chart implies.
@nope2095
@nope2095 Жыл бұрын
My spouse works in power systems with machine learning, specifically in batteries, and they say the way to really get the ball rolling is to make batteries more profitable.
@kylemayberry5073
@kylemayberry5073 Жыл бұрын
There's a couple things that make me skeptical about net-zero: 1) Lack of unified support. It's a complicated problem requires a complicated solution and there's not a single "best" path forward for the general populations to understand, support, and demand from their governments. That doubt in the how opens the to door to skepticism on the why. 2) Unless developed nations pay developing nations to use carbon-free, they'll go with what's cheapest to expand their infrastructure, which is coal because it's been around the longest and has had the longest timeline to refine it's cost efficiency. 3) Natural gas touts itself as the on-demand, lower-carbon energy source for a transition. But they still just heat water to spin a turbine, same basic technology as nuclear which is demonstrably safer with lower environmental impact. So if anything new needs to be built to bridge a gap between renewable and demand it should be nuclear, but oil and gas have the lobbying funds to scare away from nuclear and muddy the waters so that they're the "best and cheapest option"
@MariaMartinez-researcher
@MariaMartinez-researcher Жыл бұрын
It appears you are applying American current political situation/closed mentality to the whole world. Chilean here. Almost all sides of the political spectrum and their basis agree that climate change is real, and we celebrate the big solar projects in construction. Even the ultra-right guys who deny climate change agree with those projects. The coal powered electric generation is being phased down ASAP, with the obvious difficulty of it being still necessary to support a grid that covers most of the country. We are a third world country, but a capitalist one. We don't expect to be given the money to go renewable, we *attract investment.* Renewable energy is a business. As we are not an oil producing country, no lobbies to care about in that regard (there are a bunch in other fields, though). Natural gas comes from Argentina, and some is produced locally. Going nuclear is hardly a good solution for us because we are a land of earthquakes, Fukushima is well remembered, but mostly because of the very expensive investment it would require. We have plenty of Sun, wind, waves, possibly geothermal. There are subsidies for people willing to go solar at home. So, no, not everyone in the world is in the same mindscape of the USA.
@JNArnold
@JNArnold Жыл бұрын
As the other comment has pointed out, other countries still expanding their energy grid won't necessarily choose coal or other non-renewable energy options. In fact efforts by "developed" countries to expand renewable energy is making those options cheaper and easier to buy into, meaning that these other countries can skip the fossil fuel stage and go straight to renewable. The biggest obstacles won't be the smaller and growing countries, it will be the ones that are already huge and already have huge energy needs, as it will always look like a cheaper option to just keep using the existing infrastructure than to replacing.
@jeffallen4377
@jeffallen4377 Жыл бұрын
I have been interested in this subject since the 1970’s. Adoption of RE is being held up by our present system. For-profit companies are the gatekeepers and they have in interest in the status quo. Many projects are held up and charged a connection fee to be linked to the grid. Some are never built because of this reason. Public utilities and non-profit corporations in cooperation with local citizens and local governments would be the best way to get RE rolled out and maintained. It would require federal and state governments’ cooperation with all involved. Compare it to rural electrification from the 1930’s on here in the USA.
@seanc6128
@seanc6128 Жыл бұрын
Winter storms do not have names, the names applied to them by The Weather Channel etc. are not official and are therefore meaningless.
@willjapheth23789
@willjapheth23789 Жыл бұрын
In Texas the wind is strongest in midday and weakest just before dawn. Atleast where I live.
@joweb1320
@joweb1320 Жыл бұрын
Tony Seba and RethinkX have shown it is very possible to run everything on wind, solar and batteries.
@pirminp7090
@pirminp7090 Жыл бұрын
You mean private households or heavy industry? I am not sure heavy industry can run fully on wind and solar
@joweb1320
@joweb1320 Жыл бұрын
@@pirminp7090 Everything can. Look up RethinkX energy reports. The reports show even hydro and nuclear will become stranded assets.
@incontroversyistherekindne6683
@incontroversyistherekindne6683 Жыл бұрын
@@pirminp7090 That's a good question. Perhaps, how about seeing the work of Stanford University professor Mark Z. Jacobson on KZbin? The answer appears to be that heavy industry can run fully on wind and solar.
@pirminp7090
@pirminp7090 Жыл бұрын
@@incontroversyistherekindne6683 Happy to see it happen. Just wondering what a realisitc timeframe might be. And also costs of it
@pirminp7090
@pirminp7090 Жыл бұрын
@@incontroversyistherekindne6683 I have now looked him up. The videos are a bit out of date but we are still not closer to the goals he proposes. And sometimes saying just build this thing 20more times isnt reasonable if the materials for it arent there in this quantity
@koenraadhendricus
@koenraadhendricus Жыл бұрын
Great video as always, weathered is awesome. Love from Amsterdam
@JarrettOriginal
@JarrettOriginal Жыл бұрын
Every time someone pronounces nuclear "New-Cu-Ler" I can only think of Homer Simpson.
@steelhorses2004
@steelhorses2004 Жыл бұрын
How far away are small scale safe nuclear reactors? The only nuclear plant being built in the US started planning and permitting almost 20 years ago and still isn't finished. The planning/permitting and construction process takes way too long for nuclear to be a way to get off fossil fuels by 2050. The prototype small modular reactor isn't projected to be complete until 2029. The project started in 2014. Don't count on it being on time either. 2050 really isn't a realistic goal. How many miles of new High voltage power line infrastructure can be built in a year. How will that be paid for? $10 million per mile times 10's of thousands of miles needed. Astronomical. I'm not against any of this I just don't think any critical thinking was applied to a goal of 2050.
@stephenbrickwood1602
@stephenbrickwood1602 Жыл бұрын
Prof. Mark Jacobson is on the money 😊
@SA-ks9vz
@SA-ks9vz Жыл бұрын
On every high rise, install solar panels and brick tower battery devices (Instead of batteries) for storage to release at high peak and down times, that would reduce overall demand on the grid. In solar farms and wind farms you can build multiple brick tower storage devices.
@Dannysoutherner
@Dannysoutherner Жыл бұрын
I respect the idea of solar, wind energy but it will never replace what we have unless we choose to go back to the stone age. Wind and solar, with proper storage systems can help cover for peak loads and some blackouts due to whatever reason. If you convert the entire desert and all office buildings, which are usually flat, into solar collectors then maybe solar and wind can really make a difference. The NIMBYs are a problem, they don't want windmills in Mathas Vinyad and solar arrays in the 'pristine' desert! Can't mess up the view! Now if we tap the volcanos for heat, like Yellowstone, make steam and electricity, that is an endless supply. Same with Hawaii. Iceland does it.
@agrarianyeti8134
@agrarianyeti8134 Жыл бұрын
What is also scary is the pollution the production of this infrastructure will cause is added carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. The metal to be mined and processed uses so much diesel and coal. I am all for the change, we need to do something decades ago, but I don't think we'll ever be rid of the fossil fuel industry. Plastics are the most useful fossil fuel product we have. I don't see any way we could have our modern society without plastics. Some people are alive because of stints and other implants that are plastics. I'm not trying to prove any point, I really am so sad that the nay sayers and leaders paid by lobbyists delayed action for so long, it feels like it's close to too late and the solution might be push over the tipping point if we aren't careful. Thank you for another great video and furthering awareness on this prudent issue.
@Witchydigit
@Witchydigit 11 күн бұрын
I think a big issue that isn't going to be noticed by researchers focused solely on science and numbers is going to be systemic societal limitations on the ability to even use renewable energy sources. Yes, there are of course far remote villages in Africa, India, Asia that still use traditional carbon burning methods for cooking and heating. But even in what we would consider "developed" countries, like right here in the US. I'll give my own case example. I'm a 30-year-old Millennial desperately trying to buy my own house so I can have financial stability and not be under the burden of rent increases that push me out of my home. In the area I'm looking, I could possible afford a smaller mobile home on its own lot that I can buy. Except that there are minimum size requirements for single family homes, and if the lot I buy falls within city limits, I won't be able to afford any of the models that meet those minimum requirements. So the county does allow tiny homes as a more cost-effective option (barring the fact that it is less space for around the same price as those smaller mobile homes that don't fit the minimum size requirements, but are too big to be built under the tiny house ordinances). Except the tiny houses are built on 30 or 50 AMP circuits, and an electric range will overload the house's power system, because it draws too much energy. So the only option I have for a house that will cost me less in monthly fees than renting is unable to run fully on renewable energy, despite the fact it's in a state that has some of the best solar generation in the country. The problem with looking at numbers alone and not the stories behind them is that you miss the ways that our society has been set up to keep the very industries that are destroying our environment in power. Another good example is transportation. Without reliable, safe, and effective public transportation, working class people in developed countries are forced to get whatever car they can. Do you think the adults working at the McDonald's or 7-Eleven have the luxury of considering an electric vehicle, when their last car dies on them and they have to pick whatever car is the right combination of affordable and low mileage in a day, because they have to get to work tomorrow? I lucked out with a hybrid in that exact situation, but only by virtue of being the only car available in my price range I felt comfortable taking on the highway. By all means, make the numbers make sense. But if we don't fix the systems that keep people struggling to survive, we are never going to get enough people able to join to make a difference. This isn't even addressing the fact that the majority of carbon emissions are from industry, and anything at a consumer level that can be done is going to be a drop in the bucket compared to regulating major industries to higher environmental standards. But we all know businesses are more important than real people, and intangible market value will always be prioritized over the tangible harm to people and environments their practices bring.
@pinkelephants1421
@pinkelephants1421 Жыл бұрын
The presenter made an excellent point about using the preexisting built environment (before) disruption of natural habitats. It's more efficient in terms of the sourcing of raw materials to buildout the grid AND in terms of reducing energy losses due to resistance heat loss found along long transmission lines. The utilisation of energy production & consumption at or near point of use is simply a first principles of physics way of thinking, one that we should do much more of if we want a sustainable future.
@windlessoriginals1150
@windlessoriginals1150 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@LENZ5369
@LENZ5369 Жыл бұрын
I looked at the review the Stanford prof cited -it's worse than the asterisked "with storage" he undersold. The paper proposes the primary solution to variability and unreliability with 100% wind/solar is to build much more than we need. Off the top of my head demand can vary upto around 40% due to time of day, weather, season, etc. -building so much more is extremely wasteful, environmentally harmful and time consuming...good thing we aren't on the clock with climate change or anything. Overcapacity is still better than their other "solution" which is to just bet on some awesome tech being invented that will solve the problem. "However, while it is true that keeping a system with variable sources stable is more complex, a range of strategies can be employed that are often ignored or underutilized in critical studies: oversizing solar and wind capacities; strengthening interconnections" "With every iteration in the research and with every technological breakthrough in these areas, 100% RE systems become increasingly viable" -'On the History and Future of 100% Renewable Energy Systems Research' (2019)
@kittimcconnell2633
@kittimcconnell2633 Жыл бұрын
Fact is, the Sun is ALWAYS shining. With satellites reflecting microwave to collectors on the ground, and with the contiguous grid running 3000 miles east to west, we extend the amount of time we can collect sunlight.
@spoony8232
@spoony8232 Жыл бұрын
I love how American politicians say going clean electric is too expensive, but are also fine with spending over $800 Billion a year on their national defence. I bet it has something to do with the millions that the oil companies hand out to them, but I could be wrong.
@richardmenz3257
@richardmenz3257 Жыл бұрын
Geo Thermal, Wave tidal are some other renewables that could help.
@liftoffthecouch
@liftoffthecouch Жыл бұрын
Love getting ads from the oil industry before the video even starts. LOL!
@XlendneryGD
@XlendneryGD Жыл бұрын
Omg
@LawIV
@LawIV Жыл бұрын
120% renewables works out to be the cheapest scenario if you can monetize the seasonal excess
@b_uppy
@b_uppy Жыл бұрын
Move the US Capitol to the central US for one and build more rail everywhere, including rural areas. That would solve some of yhe grid problem. Provide a lot fewer distractions to politicians as well. Get rid of private ownership of passenger/freight rail and its monopolies. This brings back electrical deman and reduces the need for electric vehicles while also providing equity. Rail is preferable over roadways because rails allows more water to percolate in as well. The train companies can be privately owned but have a lot more competition. Allow private ownership of rail cars as well, and build in with rail the let's trains travel similarly to two lane roads with pull out lanes so less rail tie ups.
@nzuckman
@nzuckman Жыл бұрын
I really don't like the overemphasis on wind and solar, and the way nuclear is treated like an afterthought. We have ~500 km^2 of solar panels and ~72,000 wind turbines, and together they produce as much power as just 91 nuclear power plants. Just think about how much less land nuclear needs than wind and solar! Land use is one of the biggest environmental impacts of our infrastructure. It's not enough for our power sources to be carbon free, they also needs to take up as little space as possible so that more room is left for nature!
@ricardoxavier827
@ricardoxavier827 Жыл бұрын
Electricity, produce, energy storage shape type hydrogen, to release in electricity again. Rain become energy. Solar become energy. Wind become energy. No matter the weather, becomes energy, to storage in hydrogen shape storage way. Hydrogen pipelines networks around.
@nzuckman
@nzuckman Жыл бұрын
@@ricardoxavier827 hydrogen actually has an unexpected problem: leaks from pipelines and processing facilities release H2 into the atmosphere, and these react with OH- radicals that would otherwise react with and break down methane. Depending on the overall severity of the leaks, these could actually make global warming worse.
@diannadima7082
@diannadima7082 Жыл бұрын
The Mongolin Rim inAZ is so windy many hours of the day. I do not understand why we do not wind energy in this area. We have to continue to do this and store as much as we can. With EV cars drawing on our grid is going to cause problems. More businesses need to go Solar. Like Senior housing. We struggle to pay our power bills every year. It goes up and up to a point we just cannot afford to pay our bills. I wish they would give us Solar energy for Sernior Housing.
@gonzac36
@gonzac36 Жыл бұрын
Storage & batteries are the biggest part of the solution, new transmission lines are a red herring
@codyjboudreaux
@codyjboudreaux Жыл бұрын
How about nuclear?
@artboymoy
@artboymoy Жыл бұрын
SMRs FTW.
@kaymish6178
@kaymish6178 Жыл бұрын
​@@artboymoy SMRs are just a dog whistle to try and trick phobic people into not being irrationally afraid, and a lack of support from capital due to government over regulation. Full sized plants end up being cheaper on a watt for watt basis because of decreased overhead costs and greater power output.
@genehammond7239
@genehammond7239 Жыл бұрын
Enjoy so moch the information you brings us Maya Thanks !!!
@drakemia4079
@drakemia4079 Жыл бұрын
If we all work together we can figure it out
@gsilcoful
@gsilcoful Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this practical look at the grid.
@danielsykes7558
@danielsykes7558 Жыл бұрын
District heating with steam, microgrids, geothermal, macrogrids, offshore wind, some nuclear and hydro, and plenty of wind and solar.
@danielsykes7558
@danielsykes7558 Жыл бұрын
Let indigenous folks decide where to put the nuclear and hydro
@AdalbertPtak
@AdalbertPtak Жыл бұрын
In Germany, for instance, practically all powerlines are underground. So no fires from that.
@FlameofDemocracy
@FlameofDemocracy Жыл бұрын
Yes. The regenerative grid theory would imply that more energy could routinely be made, and stored than used. Start with a strategy to win, from the outset.
@wiezyczkowata
@wiezyczkowata Жыл бұрын
what we need is good battery so we can store loads of excess so we can use it at night and when the weather is bad, that would not put a pressure on grid, what we also need are biogas plants - we could get rid of a lot of animal waste and either use it as a biogas or make an electricity and heat out of it, we could go biogas cars as well as electric, we do have loads of gas cars in Poland, it's cheaper to drive then fuel
@Moxiah
@Moxiah Жыл бұрын
I definitely miss the Razor crest.
@vovan7349
@vovan7349 Жыл бұрын
Isn't Vermont also getting its energy almost entirely from hydropower?
@williamkrebs4813
@williamkrebs4813 Жыл бұрын
Would biogas like methane collecteted at landfil /water treatment be an option for times when wind solar and hydro are not enough?
@aaronchapin9331
@aaronchapin9331 Жыл бұрын
those gases are already collected in many (if not most) municipalities. usually it's processed used to fuel the trash vehicles as CNG (compressed natural gas)
@davestagner
@davestagner Жыл бұрын
A modernized grid with broadly distributed storage will be MORE reliable and LESS expensive than the current grid of massive base load power plants. Environmental concerns aside, from a simple economics perspective, it's just plain stupid to continue with the power grid we've been living with until now.
@lyndaschroeder8117
@lyndaschroeder8117 Жыл бұрын
We also need to upgrade all our appliances so that they run on little energy and we need to change our personal ways of living like 2 showers a week, not seven and also be very strict on oil use, only drive to work and the store, not let teenagers and others drive around to make noise with oil wasting vehicles. etc. etc. etc.! We have become a spoiled and wasteful society. If we change that, which I believe we can by rewards,and other positive means,. it will help the power problems.There are a lot of young and brilliant youths coming up who if supported and rewarded will have ideas we could never even imagine! I am hopeful and excited for that.
@kimberleemodel7182
@kimberleemodel7182 Жыл бұрын
And things like work from home, using bikes/ebikes for short trips, and straight up living closer to the places we go.
@martyinsd
@martyinsd Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I try to be hopeful about the planet's future, but it's difficult for someone like me who first learned about climate change in Jr. High School (in 1970, hello!) ; and we still have yet to solve this problem?
@veganconservative1109
@veganconservative1109 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I remember those Time mags too. Why aren't we a frozen snowball yet? And what about those killer bees? Aids depopulating the entire continent of Africa? Wasn't the world supposed to end in 2012? Seems every 12 years they predict its end and then just move the date back again when the world fails to end. Rinse and repeat. Why do people listen to these things. For ever 'climate change' expert there are other accredited experts saying (with actual data) that climate change is inaccurate. The polar bears are just fine. Summertime in Antartica melts ice... then it grows back again in winter. Like usual. Carbon dioxide is beloved by plants and is probably why we aren't in Ice Age #whatever by now. I like happy plants. Good for the food markets. Yeah, carbon!
@kerryjlynch1
@kerryjlynch1 Жыл бұрын
Good show & terrific comments. After 40 years in the electric power industry, I think we're moving into the future better than we think. Developments in process now for generation, transmission, and distribution exceed a lot of the status-quo capability that people analyzing this now have to assume. It will be possible to break our dependence on inefficient, expensive, & heavily subsidized fossil fuels. 27 years until 2050 - compare a 27 year-old car to what you're driving now!
@p.0-npcg.248
@p.0-npcg.248 Жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure that the tipping point for power transfer localization and sustainability is when solid state lithium batteries will become as cheap and of similar capacity as the existing Li-ion and Li-pol that are used in transport
@teucer915
@teucer915 Жыл бұрын
Show up in California and make Matt and his co-workers drinks based on the vibe of their favorite player characters.
@Gwenpool2369
@Gwenpool2369 Жыл бұрын
i wonder if energy prices become much lower in certain areas of the US, would that cause people to move? factories might move to use the cheaper energy, moving jobs.
@redmagic52
@redmagic52 11 ай бұрын
i think we all should take in the factor of the solar storms that the sun throws out on us that can cause some black outs on us
@holofish
@holofish Жыл бұрын
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