1:52 Mitch: “Everything changed.” My Brain: When the fire nation attacked.
@ilikememes14024 жыл бұрын
xD
@microwavegum4 жыл бұрын
🤯
@vrilmaxxed4 жыл бұрын
🤯
@smoke41314 жыл бұрын
🤯
@Alexantey4 жыл бұрын
😁
@JazzyBerry90004 жыл бұрын
Why wasn't nuclear elaborated on as much? I feel like it has the most potential
@Methus3lah4 жыл бұрын
Is that... is that a pun?
@brooksp11914 жыл бұрын
Simply because those who promote this "renewable only" mentality use nuclear to boost their argument, but ignore it when it actually matters. While China is reducing and switching to "renewables" most of that cost and energy produced comes from nuclear, not solar or wind. India is heavily investing in non-uranium(drawing an absolute blank on the name) based nuclear. Lastly countries that have been going renewable without nuclear are seeing their emissions rise as they are shuttering nuclear plants and the solar and wind can't keep up. Don't get me wrong renewables are fine, but scale horribly. Expecting them to be a main power source without nuclear is a recipe for disaster.
@mdikeee48174 жыл бұрын
the people need T H O R I U M
@kbee2254 жыл бұрын
It's not renewable
@kbee2254 жыл бұрын
@@Methus3lah it's not a pun. Electrical potential is independent of the method of energy generation.
@ferencgazdag14064 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is the strange kid, he isn't green, he is yellow, he isn't renewable, unless he's a breeder reactor, he isn't very popular unless he is fusion, but still, he is the strongest in our arsenal against Climate Change.
@flagmichael4 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is good stuff, but no source can do it all. PV solar causes generation to drop just as demand is peaking, every single day when the sun goes down. Peaking generation is needed to offset this. Steam plants, like nuclear and coal, ramp up too slowly to help there. Wind is not reliable enough. Geothermal can do the job but in the US there is not a lot of it available. The two sources that fill the bill are hydro and natural gas. (Storage is nowhere near ready for this huge job yet, but it can get there.) As it stands today, hydro is already committed. That leaves natural gas peaking plants to take over. That requires adequate gas supplies, which essentially require fracking. It is not a stretch to say photovoltaic solar demands fracking. Where nuclear fits in is largely in displacing solar and wind for base generation. It is more reliable than either of those.
@pauladams18294 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is way to slow, costly and inflexible.
@wademt4 жыл бұрын
flagmichael parts of your narrative makes sense, but you’re cherry picking reality by leaving out important parts of information. 1. The worlds energy supply is currently meeting humans present needs (more or less). This includes lots of fossil fuel energy sources. As it stands, we don’t need to develop new fossil fuel resources, because of the growth in renewable resources. Further, we don’t need to develop storage solutions to meet all of the storage needs to switch to intermittent renewable, just enough to match the incremental deployment of those resources. 2. As the existing fossil fuel resources reach their end of usable life, they can be replaced with a plethora of technologies that include renewable, storage, efficiency, demand response, and even price signals. This is how we make progress. All of the existing NG leakers don’t have to be turned off tomorrow. But new ones don’t have to be built either, if the required effort is made to continue to make progress.
@wademt4 жыл бұрын
“Strongest”. What does that even mean? At most it is a bridge to the transition to renewables. Someday humans will look back and wonder what people were thinking in using nuclear power. One day people will understand that the negative impacts to the earth and its environment far outweigh any need for the power itself, and that all energy consumption must be evaluated in the context of its consequence to the earths environment.
@ferencgazdag14064 жыл бұрын
@@wademt It can displace all fossil fuels everywhere in less than half a century. No other source can do that, all renewables are bound by natural resources. It is the strongest, what only is beneficial in times of strife. The humans of the future will look back from their saturated Dyson swarm, wondering why we banned nuclear, if other options were so much better anyway. They will laugh at us from their nuclear fusion powered spaceships, collecting asterioids to mine, wondering what this "resource shortage" was all about.
@andyatmosphere2 жыл бұрын
If you’re gonna talk about the lies… you have to talk about the truths.
@jamesginty6684 Жыл бұрын
watch youtube video called "Exposed: The smear tactics against wind and solar"
@Movetheproduct Жыл бұрын
Truth is... Oil will always be king.
@pisscow6395 Жыл бұрын
@@Movetheproduct Bullshit. It's dying out as we speak. Besides, dead dinosaur juice won't be around forever
@Movetheproduct Жыл бұрын
You invest in green energy and see how far that gets you, lil homie.@@pisscow6395
@ClinttheGreat Жыл бұрын
@@pisscow6395 Oil is not dying out, what are you talking about.
@SoopCanSam-EthoPlaylists4 жыл бұрын
Why not mention France who is >70% nuclear power????
@jonasweber94084 жыл бұрын
>70%
@LuckyAces4444 жыл бұрын
Doesn't fit their narrative.
@mestrohugo4 жыл бұрын
People view nuclear energy as a bad thing. Even if it is the best choice to fight climate change
@angie996564 жыл бұрын
@@mestrohugo But, it's not. It's just another cul-de-sac tying our society to a resource exploitation scheme and also, it isn't renewable. Maybe that's why it isn't discussed in a video dedicated to renewable energy. It's at best, a stepping stone to a fully renewable energy economy, which is easily doable without nuclear.
@zangetsuzanpakuto52214 жыл бұрын
@@LuckyAces444 exactly😒
@Thomashorsman4 жыл бұрын
In case you didn’t know, Britain uses 0% coal on most days
@zytolen53564 жыл бұрын
That's a lot.
@Jellybelly1baby4 жыл бұрын
True, don't know why they put out Germany. 2030 without coal? This is too late
@abhilashpatel30364 жыл бұрын
What about nights??
@alexholbourne7084 жыл бұрын
@@abhilashpatel3036 We mostly rely on burning gas when the wind isn't blowing and the sun isn't shining. Coal is essentially phased out at this point.
@rain51db44 жыл бұрын
Wow
@shoudehuang12444 жыл бұрын
As a non-americian, I have never heard of these "big" lies.
@dmanzawsome4 жыл бұрын
Everything is "big" when its in America I guess
@Riel_Rami4 жыл бұрын
I've never heard the pro fossil fuel lies as an American. But I have heard the lie that wind and solar are good despite them being far inferior to hydroelectric and nuclear power.
@tylershepard42694 жыл бұрын
Darko Esparza That doesn’t necessarily make them bad. I agree hydro and nuclear are good, but they’re enormously expensive.
@n0steeze4 жыл бұрын
@@tylershepard4269 They both create more power for your dollar. Initial setup cost may be more, but overall I don't believe they're more expensive in terms of what we get out.
@alveolate4 жыл бұрын
@@n0steeze not just that... hydro is enormously damaging to the environment. dams massively modify huge areas of natural habitat, on top of forcing affected human settlements to move and flooding potential archaeological sites. nuclear plants+logistics generally doesn't cause such disruption; but choosing a site is difficult due to negative perception. i wonder if this negative reception is partly due to big oil's propaganda tho. if nuclear power never suffered from this public image problem, we could already eliminate 99% of fossil fuels and rely mostly on nuclear right now.
@teddylee95452 жыл бұрын
Fast forward to November 2022. How things change! You skipped through “ when the wind does not blow and the sun doesn’t shine.
@roghostt3 жыл бұрын
Noooo I don’t want to live through any more pivotal points in history
@BUBODUBO3 жыл бұрын
Hell no
@rosecapitalgroupinc3 жыл бұрын
2020 was enough....lmao
@andrewthomas6953 жыл бұрын
You must be very old if you've done more than one. 👍
@spitshinetommy37213 жыл бұрын
You have no choice.
@seraphstray15523 жыл бұрын
Stop voting for establishment/ career politicians then. We're going to be consistently f'd in the a as long as people keep falling for emotionally charged speeches from these psychos who get into power and do nothing for us.
@johndelong55744 жыл бұрын
If everyone died, imagine the savings.
@usm1le4 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Why stop with the coal and move to other things to save money when people can just die to pollution and so much money is gonna be left.
@DaniiMarie3334 жыл бұрын
Ok mr gates & co... After you!
@japace614 жыл бұрын
And the losses
@austinhernandez27164 жыл бұрын
Savings wouldn't exist for us as we wouldn't exist. So what do you mean
@vipertube71824 жыл бұрын
@@austinhernandez2716 Exactly think about that no one would be spending money, all savings
@d-cynic64604 жыл бұрын
The biggest lie is to not talk about nuclear fusion/fission being more effective than coal while being greener than solar/wind/hydro.
@arielsproul88114 жыл бұрын
I like to compare nuclear reactors with mass shootings, much lower kill rate than other things, but you hear about it every time it does kill someone
@d-cynic64604 жыл бұрын
@@arielsproul8811 No no no. You are completely wrong.and brainwashed by media/stereotypes. Without getting political shooting is becoming far too common in US. Second, Nuclear Reactor kill on average less people than solar. It's all stereotypes with Nuclear Reactor breaking down. It's same as people being afraid of Airplane and thinking it's dangerous while seeing images or movies of plane crashing. In reality airplanes are hundreds of times safer than car. I am also talking about Nuclear Fusion which is a relatively new and it's much better than old nuclear fission. It creates more energy while producing less nuclear waste. It also uses water instead of uranium to generate power.
@arielsproul88114 жыл бұрын
1: I thought the most brainwashed sounding thing in my comment was saying that mass shootings actually cause very few deaths compared to things like car crashes and obesity issue 2: didn't actually know that nuclear kills less people than solar, I'm going to have to look these stats up because fact checking is always good 3: oil: nooo you can't just generate lots of clean energy for cheap Fusion: haha deuterium go brrrr
@leoperez67374 жыл бұрын
@@d-cynic6460 You know I was reading some articles about renewables and although I think they can have massive improvements with current technology is cheaper to have a combination, of wind, hydro, solar and some energy storage than a nuclear alternative. Reasearch is still important though.
@zecaafonso64674 жыл бұрын
Nuclear it's clearly better than hydrocarbons since it can be tuned up and down to meet expected demand. The issue with nuclear it's the upfront costs and long ROI. Still If you can diversify renewable sources, I'd rather produce extra energy and store it (or sell) rather than rely on nuclear. Eventually we will figure out how to recycle solar panels, but not nuclear waste (but I hope im wrong)
@patrickkyle46012 жыл бұрын
I liked the fact about the 480 exajoules of energy from the sun --one hundredth of that means covering the total land mass of China and India in solar farms
@AA-il8ee2 жыл бұрын
Did you catch the fact about not having a disposal solution for solar panels, which only have a 25 year life span. Maybe just dump it in Africa like other 250,000 tons of hazardous electronic waste we don't feel like dealing with 👍
@eraofrage Жыл бұрын
@@AA-il8eeeveryone should cover their roof and use their own energy
@mrkiky Жыл бұрын
@@eraofrage There will be many roofs that won't be able to handle the load required under them, so we still need some place to put panels to compensate for that .
@LanaDelReysBabe Жыл бұрын
Exactly 50acres or 1 Nuclear power produces 14x more energy than 50 acres of solar panels. Nuclear is the future
@IamgladthatIamglad10 ай бұрын
@@AA-il8ee reuse the craps?
@n16r3d04 жыл бұрын
"70% taxes on the super-rich" - well, I'm sold. One small question, though: which of the millionaires should I vote for to make this happen?
@eig19794 жыл бұрын
Feel the Bern...
@retiefgregorovich8104 жыл бұрын
Only if you want the super rich to take their money elsewhere.
@ulfrinn87834 жыл бұрын
Also, what do you think the "super rich" will do? They're not going to pay that, they'll move to other countries so not only are you not getting 70% of what they earn, you're no longer even getting what they were paying under current tax plans. The burden would fall down to the working classes who will not only be taxed up to their eyeballs, but the cost of energy, and the cost of everything that requires energy to produce will go up as well. Seriously "tax the rich" people are idiots.
@ulfrinn87834 жыл бұрын
@Joséf in TX Rich people aren't going to pay that at all. They'll take their money and move to another country as they can afford to do so, and the massive cost of all these stupid proposals will fall on the shoulders of the middle class... assuming all the jobs didn't leave the country with those rich people. So now the burden of paying for all these stupid ideas fall on their shoulders, if they are even still working. What happens to the economy and society after that? Yeah, when you hear people promise a bunch of dumb shit nobody needs, and the way they're trying to sell it as a good idea is claiming rich people will pay for it all, run.
@qcwred4 жыл бұрын
How libtards think. Let's make the rich pay for it when the rich control the government so they arent gonna agree to that, why would they.
@Nicksperiments3 жыл бұрын
After recent hacking attacks on the power grid, having all power generation being IOT is the worst think you could possibly do
@hrushikeshavachat9003 жыл бұрын
IOT will actually end up protecting the grid from such attacks as the IOT enabled grid can be connected to self repairing softwares which can prevent such attacks from happening
@TheAlphadark3 жыл бұрын
@@hrushikeshavachat900 more complexity means more possible problems. While adding better software to protect are systems is a must regardless of what we do there will always be that risk for hacks more connective means more possible avenues of exploitations.
@hrushikeshavachat9003 жыл бұрын
@@TheAlphadark I agree with you but the advantages of connecting the grid with each other has an overriding effect over the disadvantages of the same.
@neutrino78x3 жыл бұрын
@@hrushikeshavachat900 yes but not with the capability of actually shutting the plant down. all it should do is inform the operator of the situation, with a human making a judgement as to whether power is to be lowered. remote signal should not be able to make a decision that affects the lives of so many. We have a lot of computers in the military but they are air gapped. Especially the nuclear warheads. A computer CANNOT make that decision. It's a human being interpreting orders and making a decision to press a button. Impossible to hack because no network is involved.
@minimalniemand3 жыл бұрын
decentralized control of the grid will make it more secure, not less.
@carlcortez793 жыл бұрын
If Germany is so enthusiastic about shifting to green energy, why they’re investing in Nord Stream 2?
@NaumRusomarov3 жыл бұрын
If Germany wasn't so enthusiastic about shifting to green energy, why are they investing in renewables?
@AlohaBiatch3 жыл бұрын
Germany has the worst energy policy on the planet. This is why they have the highest prices yet high pollution (coal use). France (nuclear) , UK (offshore wind farms), Denmark, Japan (solar) are all good examples to follow.
@CitkogaSquad3 жыл бұрын
@@AlohaBiatch easy, bacause using gas instead of coal reduces the overall emissions
@meltingzero38533 жыл бұрын
It is precisely because of deployment of renewables that you will need natural gas. There is no solution for energy storage, so you have to cover the downtime of the intermittent energy sources solar and wind with natural gas. Plus, as Patryk said, it has way less carbon emissions than coal and oil. Personally, I think Germany's green plan is hypocritical and a failure, though. They should never have abolished nuclear but instead should have shown backbone against the blatantly bad media coverage of Fukushima. But German politicians wanted to use the draft of public hysteria to get elected, specifically ones who should know better due to physics university degree. Not looking at anyone specific.. *cough* Merkel *cough*
@ironandzinc3 жыл бұрын
Oh... but...but...but....bbbbased
@Hybzy Жыл бұрын
I am an electrical engineer who has been working in the energy industry for 20 years (both fossil fuels and renewables) and recently completed a master of economics with my dissertation being on the economic viability of technologies used in the energy transition. This video was put together by people who obviously did not spend more than 5 minutes researching. It's a complex issue, so maybe they misinterpreted much of the supposed books/experts they consulted, but overall it's pretty sloppy and they get a lot wrong, from both the engineering perspective and the economic perspective.
@MiJi_29 Жыл бұрын
Man i knew this video is rigged by an overreacting goofy ahh 🤓 guy.
@Loagz_Beatz Жыл бұрын
I am also in the process of getting my BA and I agree. It's youtube though what do you expect?
@werdsfrghnwyrjuw2q3 Жыл бұрын
Hey man, what do you expect? This is a gaylord paid by Soros to carry on with the hippie bullshit as they've always done.
@oGrasshoppero Жыл бұрын
@@Loagz_Beatz Dont need a BA to know green energy is garbage. We did the math on it in my high school science class back in the mid-90's. I am still in shock that it can be a topic of conversation even till this day.
@bennymaster4439 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to check our your dissertation if you don't mind sharing!
@x9x9x9x9x94 жыл бұрын
As someone who works with batteries my fear is the lithium wars. We really need an alternative to lithium before we can make every car electric. Also lithium is hard to recycle and pretty bad on landfills. I do think its better than fossil fuels and all the damage from that but I really hope we can get a better battery soon. As for the lithium wars. I fear south america is the next "middle east" in terms of proxy wars. Australia is currently the highest producer of lithium but South America is very promising in its deposits and I fear what we are seeing happen in Venezuela and what has happened in in most South American countries over the past few years is The US, Russia, China, etc... purposely destabilizing the region. I am not all conspiracy theory minded about this and paranoid but I do fear this future.
@Amarianee4 жыл бұрын
At least when it comes to cars, hydrogen fuel cell is where the research needs to be. Honda, Toyota, and Hyundai already have HFC vehicles on the market. I have a customer (insurance claims) that LOVES her Honda Clarity, it's a great car. Hydrogen is renewable, it's safe, and if we put the money into development and research the cost would begin to drop significantly. Although, plenty of people in the U.S. own 50-60k gas guzzlers, so the price isn't even currently exorbitant.
@x9x9x9x9x94 жыл бұрын
@@Amarianee Hydrogen is definitely doable. I still think I prefer the idea of electric over any combustion engine since there are less moving parts.
@gengchen35604 жыл бұрын
Um, yeah. Please have the solid state batteries be finished developing soom
@OrganicGreens4 жыл бұрын
That' That's why hydrogen cars are a better answer.
@x9x9x9x9x94 жыл бұрын
@@OrganicGreens definitely. The only reason I think electric is better is less moving parts in an engine meaning less maintenance also not having an engine in the front or a gas tank in back means a bigger crumple zone so safer in a crash. I just watched a video recently about how Tesla got the highest safety award because of this.
@daiMac_4 жыл бұрын
Scotland sitting here with a 100% renewal goal by the end of the year that we're on track to reach, hurt we're not even in the running for home to new industrial revaluation Or in the eu
@badadrenaline4 жыл бұрын
Hey, brexit means brexit lol.
@StuartB1384 жыл бұрын
I direct you to “We’re so Sorry Scotland” by Fascinating Aida. 😢
@mylesjones8514 жыл бұрын
It's a real shame that the ~7% deficit to gdp ratio (Scottish gov. spending compared to how much they make) means its being funded by the rest of the UK 😬
@BigBunda23044 жыл бұрын
Myles Jones incorrect, the Scot Gov doesn’t overspend it’s budget, the Uk Gov over spends on the reserved matters it still controls in Scotland, for example, Trident 4 billion pounds right there that Scot Gov would cut away
@iareid82554 жыл бұрын
Daibhiidh, it is disingenuous of you to say that Scotland is aimimg for 100% renewable generation when Scotland is a small part of the U.K. national grid. For your information adding more renewable generation brings serious drawbacks and makes the grid more unstable and increases the chance of a grid or partial grid failure. Should Scotland have the misfortune for that to happen it will take days to restore power as wind and solar are incapable of a black start. Yes, the U.K. grid has avery good record but the increase of renewables as part of teh mix is worrying. We had one partial trip last year due to too much wind being generated. Th epublic generally are misled by teh media and the real fact is that renwable generation is not as good as conventional, in other words it is inferior to proper generating stations and can never replace them.
@Caesim93 жыл бұрын
This video: Germany's power grid is shifting to renewable energy. Germany in real life: Imports 50% of it's energy as nuclear energy from France and coal energy from Poland.
@smrtfasizmu61613 жыл бұрын
Electricity produced in nuclear reactors is responsible for very little CO2 emissions (the only reason why it is not 0 CO2 emissions is because fossil fuels are used in the process of mining Uranium).
@Caesim93 жыл бұрын
@@smrtfasizmu6161 I know. I added this bit because the german government is dismantling all nuclear power plants in Germany. Which is weird and laughable when Germany now relies on the energy the neighboring countries produce. And it shows the dream of powering an industrial nation with wind, solar, geothermy and water energy is nothing more than a dream.
@FrainBart_main3 жыл бұрын
Germany is a net exporter of electricity according to _cleanenergywire_ (talking about yearly balances of course). The problem is not total yearly net import/export though, the big issue with having a lot of solar PV/wind is keeping instantaneous demand and supply in balance. To achieve this, they rely increasingly on neighbouring countries with reliable and dispatchable electricity generation. And this will become a major issue in the future since most of Europe is going in the wind/solar direction. That is, of course, if cheap bulk energy storage is not developed.
@blonder19693 жыл бұрын
Germany Imports 7% of it's energy not 50
@stephenglover88283 жыл бұрын
And what about natural gas and Nordstream 2
@jeffschuster330910 ай бұрын
The lack of intelligence and integrity in this video was too much. I have been an engineer working in the energy efficiency, renewable energy, and energy conservation industry for 35 years. I don't know where these two got their information, but it is a complete bunk. I would be very impressed if you could get a solar company to install a solar panel for $0.50. A typical solar installation for a 5 kW system for a house is $15k. If you want a battery, which you do, you will pay an additional $5k. Solar prices have decreased over the past several decades. Why exaggerate? Their ignorance of renewable energy is only surpassed by their ignorance of the economy and taxation. I am a proponent of renewable energy. I am an opponent of lying. Especially with a video that claims it is dispelling lies.
@alifleih5 ай бұрын
They did not specify it properly, but ASAPScience meant the charge per watt. And they are correct: the cost was around $106 a watt back in 1976, but by 2022, that became $0.26 per watt. So yes, they were much, much more expensive, and that's why relative to fossil fuels, solar adoption was infinitesimally small back then. Also keep in mind inflation. A solar panel installation might have cost $20,000-$30,000 back in 1980, but in today's terms, that basically means around $100,000. But with today's tax credits, an installation can be around $10,000-$15,000 on average.
@MeowMeowisme4 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing out the obvious. They are fake scientists spreading misinformation to suit their cult
@Justinn2294 ай бұрын
................. try again
@arnoldwatkins8053 ай бұрын
Even if we stop using gasoline we still need tge same amount of oil for all the other things that come from oil such as plastic rubber bunker fuel diesel asphalt lubricants and much more. So just based on that fact alone this video was trash
@C3l3bi13 ай бұрын
@@alifleih again this is false because when said things generates energy only 30% of the time and is useless in winter, What exactly is the calculation when said energy is produicng me 0? if i run a nucler plant 24/7 and sell my electricity i would have made thousands if i run a solar panel farm, even doe its chaper "technically" the opportunity cost is WAY more.
@arthurbdt23293 жыл бұрын
Nuclear energy can make you independant, with fast-breeders reactors France has enough energy on its soil for thousands of years
@fixafix693 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately you need to convince a LOT of idiots to approve something like this and it really isn't easy
@monsieur27613 жыл бұрын
Not true. There's no way France can be powered by Fission for thousands of years and the reason is simple: energy demands grow exponentially with time, meaning that we also have to take care of energy demands per capita of the future. So basically, the only hope that seems to me right now is Fusion power, which is in it's developmental stages. Till then, Fission is the way to go.
@dukedashwolfgg22833 жыл бұрын
Is it sustainable though?
@arthurbdt23293 жыл бұрын
@@monsieur2761 No. Most western countries have reached their peak energy demand. Fast neutrons reactors are a specific kind of fission reactor that produces more fissile isotopes than it consumes and can indeed match the energy demand for a couple of centuries at least.
@RustyOrange713 жыл бұрын
@@monsieur2761 or significantly reduce the load. Not advocating for a policy of significant population reduction... just saying what politicians think but dare not say. No doubt they will implement such policies at the behest of their masters any way.
@spalderz3 жыл бұрын
I'm an engineer who operates the power grid. What I can say is this video is worth a junior year college presentation in engineering school. Thousands of engineers in transmission system operators aren't just sleeping in their job & they know the grid won't be 60% more efficient just by using IOT. Do these really guys think the current generators aren't communication with each other?
@t.j.peterson34193 жыл бұрын
Well they aren’t engineers so I’d guess they don’t really know any facts. They base the entire idea based on the *feel good* things like windmills and panels that aren’t going to save our economy like they think, but destroy it instead. The most promising idea I’d say is nuclear, but still. That full transition is not going to happen in their ideal timeline.
@godonlyknows133 жыл бұрын
I think they were discussing a nation-wide grid that passes power back and forth between states, taking power from areas of the nation with a surplus and supplying areas with a deficit... Is this what current systems are doing? Is there a nation-wide power grid communicating with the rest of the grid in all regions? (Real question, i'm not an expert at all lol. Maybe there is, idk.)
@vongmanu44193 жыл бұрын
@Dmon ! Anti renewable? When Germany shut down nuclear power plants and replaced it with coal, do you know what kind of people supported it? The same people that shout for more renewable energy today. These idiots. Currently nuclear is the best option and thats fact ask anyone within the field and they will tell you the same like my prof. did.
@vongmanu44193 жыл бұрын
@Dmon ! not gonna read that sorry bro no time.
@vongmanu44193 жыл бұрын
@Dmon ! Im a cold hearted rational human beeing. Im not discussing shit on the internet anymore bec. its useless bec. of people who cant take their emotions out of it. Always so emotional it makes me sick. I suggest you do the same.
@barnesnplebian64624 жыл бұрын
70% tax on the rich? American politicians: *laughs*
@domspern4 жыл бұрын
They are cherry picking facts. At that time, the average effective tax rate for that 70% marginal tax bracket was under 20%. Today, the average effective tax bracket is under 20%. The rich have access to knowledge to avoid paying taxes to a point they consider to be fair (under 20%).
@papalouis91114 жыл бұрын
yea like trump is every gonna tax himself
@davidnugget6254 жыл бұрын
They don'y want to drive the rich out of the country. They already pay a shit ton in stuff like property tax and sales tax. They don't want to drive them out and lose it.
@thiagomoreno87614 жыл бұрын
Muhammad Ahmed this is literally the most idiotic thing i have read in months😂
@domspern4 жыл бұрын
@@MuhammadAhmed-qh7ut , no the argument doesn't defeat itself. The point is that increasing the marginal tax rate will not result in the higher taxes desired because it ignores human behavior, the available tax loopholes, and the multitude of ways to create and generate wealth. In other words, it will not achieve the desired goal.
@tomlaureys1734 Жыл бұрын
France tried a 70 percent tax on the rich under President Francois Hollande. The rich French people fled the country. Because it failed they stopped the tax under the next administration. California is also trying to highly tax the super rich and the rich Californians are fleeing the state. It doesn't work so try some other idea. "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." George Santayana.
@robramsey51204 жыл бұрын
“A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.” ― Max Planck
@TheHellogs44444 жыл бұрын
I think we need to build some tech to change that, or we're doomed to grow at 10% at best
@NickRoman4 жыл бұрын
Of course that must also work for killing all of the scientists and propagating propaganda, like religionists have done forever.
@eny9684 жыл бұрын
Εyyyy max planck was a professor at my university! :D
@MrCrashDavi4 жыл бұрын
Yikes
@eny9684 жыл бұрын
Cool Dude word. Im all for clean energy but its not possible without nuclear plants
@WeeklyDisaster4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for actually acknowledging nuclear power, A lot of people usually skip out on that even though it’s not that bad all things considered
@allebas87054 жыл бұрын
especially if we use thorium instead of uranium
@sarahl12394 жыл бұрын
Nuclear power isn’t bad except the USA considers all spent nuclear fuel as waste despite the fact that 97% of it is recyclable.
@philmanke76422 жыл бұрын
HA, Ha, HA.!.!> It is precisely "that bad".!.!.!. No Less.!.!. Govt guaranteed stock and profits.! ! It is a guarantee of corruption and lethargic management.!.!.!. We have distributed solar energy looking right at us, right NOW, every day, for free.!.!.!. Just put in the structure and use it..!.!. The greatest LIE is that it can't be done.!.!.!. I did it, ten years ago already.!.!. Still going great.!.!.! .!.! .Free energy,.!.!. Just a small drag from the status Quo, and you will give up your ability to think soooo easily.!.!-- I laugh.!.!.!.
@yatarookayama8329 Жыл бұрын
well they had to put some truth in the video to not just be lies !
@Evan_Case4 жыл бұрын
Damn, those hands are waiving so much you ought to set a wind turbine up nearby.
@Lumibear.4 жыл бұрын
Yaaaas.
@explorelonelyplanet36964 жыл бұрын
I had a dought is this female way of expression or normal one
@thedave80974 жыл бұрын
@@explorelonelyplanet3696 Gestures are normal, but his are very feminine for some reason
@wjcrabtree4 жыл бұрын
@@thedave8097 "...for some reason."
@LindaGailLamb.08084 жыл бұрын
I could power a wind turbine with all my hot air; I never shut up 😁
@thomasa.anderson50132 жыл бұрын
I live in the Antelope Valley, which is a high desert area in Southern California. I want to preface this by noting that I am for solar and have a solar system that powers my home. With that being said, the solar farms that have sprouted around the high desert are astounding in both good and bad ways. It's great that they can generate so much electricity, but they devastate the local ecosystem. From the front of my house, I can see the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. During late March and early August, those foothills would turn a beautiful orange, as the wild poppies would bloom. Now, It's a sea of black solar panels. A large portion of the wild life that used to live there is gone. People think "Oh it's a desert. Nothing lives there" but that is totally wrong. There is a large variety of wildlife, from coyotes, deer, bobcats & desert tortoises to a large variety of ground squirrels, quail, burrowing owls and hundreds of cold blooded species. The majority of these creatures are displaced with these large, fenced off solar farms that can cover hundreds of acres. The same goes for the wind farms that, while not as bad, still devastate the local ecosystem with all the access roads, buildings and cement pads that are needed for the thousands of wind turbines that dot the Tehachapi Pass. We really need to focus on modern Nuclear power plants.
@jalexand0072 жыл бұрын
A lot of places now want to have animals and plants around solar farms. So maybe they will open those up to bring back the wildlife.
@kcbroncohater2 жыл бұрын
Haha...... sucker.
@prissylovejoy7022 жыл бұрын
What’s hysterical, ie: insane is that the Gov sees absolutely no problem killing out obscene amounts of wildlife in favor of a solar/wind farm but will turn right around and let California citizens suffer through drought after drought because they want to save 1 species of fish so they won’t build more reservoirs and dams etc. California gets plenty of rain and the state would have an abundance of store water resources but you know, it’s not our agenda to do things the for the good of the people. Nah.
@viarnay2 жыл бұрын
we are heading to a mix of renewvable, nuclear and fosil, that's it.
@matthewroling5539 Жыл бұрын
Try living in a black or brown community near a coal fired power plant or refinery and then edit this comment.
@upendranaidoo72704 жыл бұрын
*ASAP Science mentions South Africa * Me a South African: "Yay... Ooo baby no, what is you doing?!" @12:30
@thomashugo14314 жыл бұрын
Upendra Naidoo 😭💀
@Corvid83174 жыл бұрын
Ey
@lil30334 жыл бұрын
First , I was like "ayyyyy" then I properly processed what he said then I was just like " haibo "
@missrose3974 жыл бұрын
same
@upendranaidoo72704 жыл бұрын
@@lil3033 the sad thing is I don't think many of us even knew this happened/is happening yet we live here 😐. We could honestly produce a decent amount of solar power if we could somehow afford to implement it. Then we wouldn't have to struggle with loadshedding 😩
@Jopacob3 жыл бұрын
Germany about to connect Russia’s Nord2 gas pipeline.
@tehdreamer3 жыл бұрын
US gonna be mad bruh
@AntonySimkin3 жыл бұрын
The Nord2 is a useless project that will never pay for itself, it's used by russian propaganda to blame others for russian failures. They finish the nord2 but Europe has enough pipes already, they don't need more. The idea of Nord2 is to avoid paying Ukraine the taxes for using their territory to transport. They finish the Nord2, Europe continues switching from fossil, and Russia would have to cry in the corner. So...
@tehdreamer3 жыл бұрын
@@AntonySimkin haha nice fairytale, but when will Ukraine pay the millions of debt on oil and gas back to Russia?;) Its amazing how much Ukraine hates and belittles Russia yet expect gas for free hahaha
@AntonySimkin3 жыл бұрын
Ofcourse it's Ukraine hating Russia. Ofcourse it is. Giving other countries billions? NO PROBLEM. Ukraine has the pipes all over their country to transport - they charge for that big business - they are the haters. I aint saying they are saints, but don't lie to yourself either. Anyway Russia had to renew the contracts with Ukraine despite the Nord2 so Putin got owned anyway. Playing chess is a hard game. Playing politics - even harder. If you spend your time on buying expensive stuff for no reason - you lose.
@kmckask48313 жыл бұрын
@@AntonySimkin Ukraine belongs to Russia so. It should belong to them
@webster46002 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Germany! We in Germany will have a lot of problems without our coal power plants as there are just a few nuclear power plants, which the politicians are ALSO willing to shut down. So the Problem is: How to secure the base load of our electricity network? The Answer is: We buy electricity from other countries around. A Professor from University in a city called "Cottbus" told an interviewer, that Germany had several issues with keeping the base load within the last Couple years. The solution was firing up coal power plants in Countries in South-East Europe to save Germany from a Blackout. This has recently happened in the Winter from 2021 to 2022. In Conclusion: Germany relies more and more on renewable energies, which is not a constant power source so we need to buy electricity form countries which use coal so we can avoid a Blackout.
@germancomment22442 жыл бұрын
Oh wow .... You mention a specific time span and at the same time say that the base load is the problem. That doesn't fit together well. In reality the future is is about mosernizing the grid and energy storage..... There will still be some fossile component, but nobody needs it to be as high as now. Nuclear is the most expensive energy you can get, if you include caring about the waste for thousands of years. Fusion could be an option in some years though.
@T00muchF00Dchannel2 жыл бұрын
Hey you’re not allowed to say things that go against their narrative.
@milansvancara2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, energy prices are skyrocketing in neighboring countries since then and those people have much lower average income... Basically all german neighbours eastern/southern from Germany are at unbearable situation because of this and there is another eave of huge anti-EU populist narrative because of this... Renewables are awesome, but shutting down other sources before building new ones is truly stupid and very very selfish in case of Germany too
@runeaanderaa68402 жыл бұрын
These people are so wrong about EVs. The EV sales in China and EU are already where they said the sales should be in 2025.
@Josh-my4xj4 жыл бұрын
I feel like this was targeted at Americans too vote.
@matter454 жыл бұрын
the people in charge determine the future
@moreknowslessshows4 жыл бұрын
@@matter45 americans can not be targeted
@gebali4 жыл бұрын
@@matter45 But the public chooses, either by action or inaction/apathy, who is in power.
@R1CK_54NCH3Z4 жыл бұрын
Trump has rolled back as many environment protections to allow waste dumping, technological advances to the point of wanting to bring back filament light bulbs, most of which seems to be for no other reason than Obama was for it. As American consumes a quarter of the plants resources, a more power efficient American will help greatly as keeping up with america used to a thing, which used to come from leadership. When Germany has done the obvious things to as smoothly as possible transition to a renewable economy, America is going to be playing catchup if trump loses (graciously) otherwise on Americas present course for another 4 years of trump, I think the technical term would be (your f#@ked)
@theAadi474 жыл бұрын
Well, EU is a leader in the green renewable space, but there's a good reason for it. USA gets oil from Saudi Arabia, and are keeping good relations with them. And US has a monopoly over middle east oil. The major supplier of oil to the EU is Russia, and they are used to using it as a tactic to make EU agree through threatening to cut oil supplies, so called arm twisting. Germany is most affected by it. So it is their situation that has made them leaders in green energy, not some moral goodwill etc. So if you have good relations with Russia you naturally have a nice energy supply. I dont know if every country is going to jump on the bandwagon of renewable, largely because these technologies are already at peak efficiency.
@tiacho28934 жыл бұрын
Me: This is going to be another crappy day in an already crappy year. AsapScience: Let me tell you some hopeful facts about renewable energy and the future. Me: Let me put on a pot of coffee and settle in.
@flytrapYTP4 жыл бұрын
Why does everyone write comments in script form.
@beactivebehappy98944 жыл бұрын
@@flytrapYTP because it's the trend that has come back since more people back in the old school days were fond of plays, so it's that which has connected again with the folks!
@nmelendez20604 жыл бұрын
Yes, so accurate. Hello twin
@cleanserbeamer62074 жыл бұрын
Trump 2020
@xx-cj6ew4 жыл бұрын
Don't worry, forest fires, methane bubbles, clathrates, and ice albedo are speculated to put us over 2C warming even if all emissions stopped immediately. A little stress gets the blood pumping in the morning better than any coffee! :P
@HouseholdDog3 жыл бұрын
To capture 20% of the wind you would plaster the entire planet with windmills. Even then it would only capture ground wind.
@karlheinz40983 жыл бұрын
In this research is only groundwind mentioned
@trezythirdy35273 жыл бұрын
do you have an article of the fact?
@thunderflare593 жыл бұрын
They have to be in certain places and at least 16 meters tall, if I remember correctly.
@Caesim93 жыл бұрын
@@chief5981 wind turbines in Germany, right now, are destroying our soil (their diffusion pushes humid air into the upper atmosphere, water particles acting as greenhouse gas and dehydrating the soil). They vibrate and it has already been proven that they damage buildings and fauna such as worms are suffering. As well as insects and birds dying from them. But any investigation gets blocked by our politicians.
@chief59813 жыл бұрын
@@Caesim9 green energy is political. Just like Covid, immigration, and gun control. It’s not about stats or science.
@michaelmyers2865 Жыл бұрын
Thank you two gentlemen for demonstrating the Dunning-Kruger effect.
@kagemushashien8394 Жыл бұрын
What's that? The Dunning Kruger effect.
@matthewroling5539 Жыл бұрын
I think this comment shows that you’re already there.
@JacoLuus Жыл бұрын
Kruger-Dunning, but yes you are correct. The tax the rich comment just makes the video seem like propaganda.
@craig-michaelkierce13668 ай бұрын
MichaelMyers2865...very well said. Ha...
@user-xi8sf8xl7r8 ай бұрын
@@JacoLuushow?
@TrampMachine4 жыл бұрын
Nuclear could do it all alone but we could easily meet power needs with a mixture.
@harold55604 жыл бұрын
I agree with you, but Nuclear energy is just financially or environmentally unsustainable. The accidents associated with nuclear energy and waste management are incredibly expensive and destructive.
@hunterlisk57734 жыл бұрын
Well according to this any way could do it all alone
@manahanjulsbernardd.67934 жыл бұрын
@@harold5560 yeah but the fact that the materials to build solar panels and wind turbines consists of non renewable materials and only lasts for 20-30 years makes nuclear power more desirable imo.
@TheConcretecoffin4 жыл бұрын
@@manahanjulsbernardd.6793 they are mostly aluminium and glass by weight....
@stacymuise41624 жыл бұрын
Nuclear gets a bad rap, but it's for sure one of the most promising options to mitigate climate change. It's so important to compare energy sources on equivalent terms! The pros and cons of each of them need to be properly evaluated, and not glossed over nor blown out of proportion.
@nuclearattackwombat83904 жыл бұрын
Arguing that we need to phase out oil and coal is 100% correct. However, I feel this video argues its point in a sensationalized and frankly dishonest way. The "energy from the sun hitting the earth" statistic is technically accurate, but irrelevant. We don't have anywhere near the technology or infrastructure to harvest even a fraction of that energy. The video acts as if doing so is trivial and the only reason we haven't done it already is due to Big Oil Propaganda. There is a lot of talk about countries setting goals and announcing their intentions for everything from renewable energy to electric cars. The video treats these goals and intentions as fait accompli, despite decades of nations failing to meet their carbon emission targets or straight-up ignoring them. It would make a lot more sense to look at already accomplished projects to get a real sense of the cost and scale, rather than look at what countries "intend" to do and what they expect it to cost. The China data in particular is *extremely* suspect, given that they have consistently and provably lied about their pollution levels for decades. As a side note, Germany recently had a significant *increase* in its carbon emissions due to a strong anti-nuclear movement forcing them to rely more heavily on coal. Political "intentions" are far too fragile to be relied upon. The IMF subsidy study makes two major mistakes. First, it has an extremely broad definition of "subsidy" for the specific purpose of inflating the figure to something more impressive. Second, it includes natural gas subsidies, which are a *good* thing from a climate change perspective. Related note, 80% of fossil fuel subsidies in the USA are for natural gas. That's the sort of thing we should encourage, not disparage. The "internet of things" talk specifically mentions that such a system will be expensive and complex. The video then answers the question of cost and complexity with... a public opinion poll? How is that even relevant? I think having a "smarter" power grid is an excellent idea, but I'm not comfortable with the misleading way the issue of cost has been sidestepped. The "renewable energy jobs outnumber fossil fuel jobs 3 to 1" statistic is a straight-up lie. There are millions of jobs in the USA that depend on fossil fuels, and this is arguably *the* biggest obstacle to transitioning to renewable energy. The video talks about transitioning fossil fuel jobs into renewable energy jobs, but glosses over just how extreme that transition is. The political importance of this cannot be understated. Any politician who ignores this is going to have severe trouble making any kind of progress, assuming they can even get elected at all. The discussion on taxation and wealth is both bizarrely off-topic and severely misleading. Yes, we could pass an anti-rich-guy tax. All that's going to do is get them to move their assets to overseas tax shelters, assuming they haven't done so already. The whole thing comes across as an attempt to convince the viewer that somebody *else* will foot the bill for renewable energy. Besides that, my major complaint is that the video completely neglects Natural Gas and Nuclear Power. Renewable energy is *already* very popular. The problem is that two of our best oil and coal alternatives have been stigmatized. Natural Gas is constantly lumped in with other fossil fuels despite drastically lower carbon emissions, and Nuclear Power probably deserves its own video on just how far people's fears and perceptions are from the reality. This is particularly important because these two technologies are critical for transitioning jobs away from coal and oil. It's a lot easier transition an oil plant worker to a nuclear or natural gas plant than it is to train them to manufacture lithium batteries.
@MikeWhiskeyEcho014 жыл бұрын
Dare I say, I find this rebuttal more informative than the video! Thank you
@nlahmi4 жыл бұрын
That's the video we should have seen. Thank you. This was AsapScience's first video that I dislike
@GuiMM20014 жыл бұрын
When a comment is better than the actual video
@tacka024 жыл бұрын
I unsubscribed to this channel because of this video for this reason. When did science have to be political. Bill Gates said it best when he said he biggest problem facing us is the fact that people think this renewable energy transition is going to be easy that if we just spent billions of dollars in transforming our infrastructure into wind and solar that problem of climate change magically goes away is both wrong and just as dangerous as the climate deniers themselves if not more so.
@avz89114 жыл бұрын
Thanks bro ur comment was more informing than the vid
@asagk3 жыл бұрын
Sorry, but what you present here is pure nonsense. I live in Germany and we already import lots of energy at a very high price since we increasingly produce too little energy due to shutting down power plants. It is true that our government wants to shut down even more power plants while supporting the idea to increase usage of energy by huge amounts through the use of electric mobility (e-cars etc.). The only problem along with that concept, we produce lesser and lesser energy but use want to use more and more of it at the same time. No guess how the energy deficit is solved?! Yes, correct ... we import energy from our neighbours who produce energy by burning coal, gas or the use of old nuclear plants. The only advantage, we produce less CO2 by having others produce 'dirty' energy for us instead. The price for electricity over here in Germany has skyrocketed over the years and is even going to get much higher in the upcoming future.
@randomclipsofthings78963 жыл бұрын
Finally someone who gets it
@joshhaughton18933 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for someone to mention that due to the introduction of the irregular power output from renewable's to the grid, Germany actually had to fire up coal plants because nuclear can't scale (up/down) demand quickly enough.
@meltingzero38533 жыл бұрын
@@joshhaughton1893 It sure would be nice to get SMR LFTRs up and running which by design are almost as load-responsive as actual gas plants. Unfortunately, I can't see that they will be employed any time soon. China keeps postponing their plans, and the NRC who needs to greenlight a license for western companies is stuck in a chicken-egg-situation because LFTRs don't use the already known solid fuel. However, I have to say that I didn't know the increase in German coal power was due to intermittency more than because of nuclexit.
@Jasonth1313 жыл бұрын
And most of the engergy price is taxes
@MK-ib4dp3 жыл бұрын
If only CO2 was really a pollutant. It’s NOT
@hstapes2 жыл бұрын
There were so many loop holes in the top tax bracket in the 1950's to 1960's that when the rate was reduced and the loopholes plugged revenue from that bracket INCREASED. Hardly proof that high tax doesn't effect growth.
@Printed_Riffs3 жыл бұрын
In response to your comment on the 50's and 60's marginal tax rate: If you look closely, you'll see that not a single person ever paid that rate. That's where the teams of lawyers, accountants, and lobbyists started tweaking the tax code to give giant tax breaks for narrow categories.
@Hayaku773 жыл бұрын
Exactly. The way that it is stated in the video is misleading. It was a "symbolic" tax rate, at best.
@trezythirdy35273 жыл бұрын
I had the same thought.
@Nierez3 жыл бұрын
Who is to say the goverment will make a better use of that extra tax income? I don't know about Americans but I wouldn't trust my goverment with that kind of money.
@Printed_Riffs3 жыл бұрын
@@Hayaku77 it's the crony capitalism: tax breaks and incentives that we pay to entice big companies that are the true tax culprits.
@kamj96143 жыл бұрын
Even so no matter what they do the rich will always find a way to avoid taxes and those insane rates will get stuck on your average joe
@liammckenna14794 жыл бұрын
The "Huge growth" of the 1950's just so happened to occur at the same time that just about all the other leading developing countries were trying to rebuild all of their destroyed factories. The United States will never experience that level of relative economic dominance again. I love the idea of renewable energy, but there are too many things said in this video without proper context.
@AnkitSharma-nf5qm4 жыл бұрын
1950s, the United States suffered four recessions. There was one in 1949, 1953, 1957, 1960 - four recessions in 11 years. The rate of structural unemployment kept going up, all the way up to 8% in the severe recession of 1957-58. …there wasn’t significant economic growth in the 1950s. It only averaged 2.5 percent
@liammckenna14794 жыл бұрын
@@AnkitSharma-nf5qm I did not know that, and I haven't yet done my own research to verify what you say, but assuming that what you say is correct, it still does not take away that the United States had great relative economic dominance at the time due to the mentioned reasons. Edit: I at least see Wikipedia agrees with you.
@sublivion50244 жыл бұрын
This video never mentions the UK - the world leader in offshore wind power. In fact, it puts a cross over it and says the EU and China are leading renewables - which is a blatant lie. Both the EU and China are putting more money into coal, while the UK is banning it in less than 4 years.
@frankduffy74714 жыл бұрын
Thank you Liam. You've said it without being mean. I was looking for a way .
@eschwarz10032 жыл бұрын
yes there are so many instances where "American dominance" in markets gets conflated with some sort of American superiority complex and arrogance by some, that is now dragging the country down in willful ignorance
@Not_Sure_4 жыл бұрын
If I was super rich, I'm sure my tax lawyers would know what to do.
@AnkitSharma-nf5qm4 жыл бұрын
@Edmond Schwab Bruh In 1950s, the United States suffered four recessions. There was one in 1949, 1953, 1957, 1960 - four recessions in 11 years. The rate of structural unemployment kept going up, all the way up to 8% in the severe recession of 1957-58. …there wasn’t significant economic growth in the 1950s. It only averaged 2.5 percent
@ShnoogleMan4 жыл бұрын
@Edmond Schwab That's not the argument against taxation that you think it is. It's true that they got out of a lot of taxes then, and they will also get out of a lot of taxes now. It will still increase our total revenue overall, which is the goal.
@NorthStar4624 жыл бұрын
The big lie is how media and videos like this fail to make a distinction between income taxes and capital gains taxes, and fail to take into account capital investment and other tax write-offs and deductions. No income taxes paid is not the same as no taxes paid. And if you don't like tax loopholes, push to close tax loopholes. Don't push for higher taxes.
@scottsrfun4 жыл бұрын
But it would be your decision. lol
@47ravenlord4 жыл бұрын
You would get together with other super rich people and fund a takeover of some random country, mold the rules around yourselves and then when stable you destabilize and buy away the country that was stupid enough to tax you one city block at a time until they cease to exist. You would need to cause chaos and massive instability to plummet land costs to make sure the whole endeavor was not only satisfying, but profitable......and now you understand what Joe Biden and his handlers really are...chaos spreading real estate de-valuers paving the way for the Chinese. Now you should call me a liar or a nut job....but afterwards, research Chinese land purchases in the United States over the last 60 years and the massive correlation between the most expensive purchases, and whatever "tragedy/ploy" was occuring there at the time....then come back and apologize :)
@MASSTERZINGER2 жыл бұрын
the only question left is - where to store that energy
@raydenvice7602 жыл бұрын
you can't store electricity it will go bad.
@officialbasti2 жыл бұрын
For instance in hydrogen fuel tanks. But that definitely needs more research and development in order to increase their efficiency. Other than that they can store vast amounts of energy in very little space due to their high energy density, require little materials, can be easily and cheaply recycled and don't lose any energy over time either.
@CartuchoGames4 жыл бұрын
People still don't know how taxes work 😔
@juliaset7514 жыл бұрын
Yep. Just try to explain marginal tax rates to people, I’ll wait for the snoring to start now. LOL
@maci12453 жыл бұрын
You earn 64 emeralds snd get left 2
@WakefieldTolbert3 жыл бұрын
Yes. My CPA rolls his eyes when people start in on tax rates and who pays what. And we didn't even get to state and local and sales tax nor luxery goods not business loss and depreciation, capital investment, etc. One must certainly guess intuitively however that the tax on a yacht or Porsche Carrera is going to rake in more dough than the tax on an old Chevy.
@clarkwatson32173 жыл бұрын
Says the kid who has never paid taxes
@maci12453 жыл бұрын
@@clarkwatson3217 🤣
@psionicsknight66514 жыл бұрын
You know, it makes sense the oil companies would pay massive money to tell us lies. The tobacco industry did the exact same thing. Still, this video does give me hope things’ll change for the better! Especially with what China and the EU are doing.
@mattakudesu4 жыл бұрын
The tobacco companies literally paid to tell people that cigarette were healthy and even advertised it on kids shows
@memestar11184 жыл бұрын
Let’s not praise China
@psionicsknight66514 жыл бұрын
Jonathan Green I know, it’s disgusting. Hence the comparison.
@emilyl39524 жыл бұрын
Jonathan Green that’s what Juul did 🙈
@tiacho28934 жыл бұрын
Considering their profits, it is a wise investment. Throw a few million in an ad campaign for an "green initiative" or "we oil companies are just love the environment too" and put a million into the actual plan. A few billion dollars can be made year over year on an investment of 0.1%. Other companies dream of that ROI.
@halimalnami15604 жыл бұрын
ASAP science: Vote for politicians who want to tax the rich Me living in an absolute monarchy
@MinecraftRocks20124 жыл бұрын
US: Taxes the rich Companies: Leave the country Jobs: leave the chat US: *surprised pikachu face* Typical naive replies: LeT ThEm LeAvE, ThEy DoN't CoUnTrIbUtE To ThE EcOnOmY Jobs: Are we a joke to you?!
@Somerandomdude-ev2uh4 жыл бұрын
@@MinecraftRocks2012 oh yeah, just like everyone left when they previously had high taxes. Noone is currently in the US because of it
@gforce95vn4 жыл бұрын
@@MinecraftRocks2012 let them leave. Others will fill the void they left, maybe with better & cheaper products because that's how capitalism works.
@Sam_on_YouTube4 жыл бұрын
If you're in an absolute hurry onarchy, there's a pretty good chance it is being propped up by the US. If not, then it is almost certainly being propped up by Russia or China.
@HarryModN4 жыл бұрын
@@MinecraftRocks2012 The US: Increases tax on income and profit over a billion dollars more. Companies: Stay in the country because they don't want to lose one of the biggest consumer bases on earth
@josephstjames66422 жыл бұрын
8:59 the eight richest individuals have provided more things of substance to society than the bottom 50%. Not against increasing taxes on the rich but rich people can’t just be seen as a bucket of free money. True question is how to get the bottom 50% to contribute more. I like the idea of free education and more opportunity provided to them.
@a243964 жыл бұрын
The video glossed over one of the most important parts: renewable energy sources are not good options for a "base load" of power supply because their supply is variable. The only way renewables can replace existing base load sources is to create power storage options for holding the power generated at a scale that simply does not exist today. That's the obstacle that needs to be cleared: storage of power that's generated in excess of current requirements. For obvious reasons, solar only works when the sun is up. And no smart grid, however much it's hyped, is going to be able to address the fact that the entire United States is in darkness at the same time - which means solar can NOT be a reliable supply of power without some way to store that power at night. Sure, it's possible - but without some really exceptional advancements in electrical storage and massive reductions in cost per megawatt hour for storage you're not really capturing the true cost as compared to fossil fuels. For that matter, you've also ignored the potential that radioactives play in our energy future. The most modern version of a nuclear power plant, if built today, would probably be a molten salt reactor with thorium fuel - which is not subject to the kinds of accidents that older nuclear power technology were subject to. And they are suitable for providing a base load and aren't impacted by darkness or calm winds... Just recommending some additional thinking on this and reflection on if the "group think" is leading everyone astray...
@lotoex4 жыл бұрын
There are other ways (maybe less efficient ways) to store energy from the sun/solar panels. If we used the excess energy to heat up some water and stored it in some kind of high pressure steam tank, then could use that to make energy later in the night. Seems very inefficient, but maybe do able. Or turn that excess energy into some potential energy by moving a lot of water in some kind of artificial lake/dam. Or use it to grow stuff that we then burn for energy ( carbon neutral, because the growing of the plant is taking carbon out of the air and burning it is releasing it back, unlike digging out old carbon such as coal.).
@harycary63694 жыл бұрын
Good point. Tesla just announced during their Battery Day event significant improvements to both the cost and availability of battery storage. Though several years away these improvements should move the needle particularly in the second half of this decade.
@paulschmidts54294 жыл бұрын
a24396 Actually recent studies show that Baseload capable renewables like Biomass, dry-rock Geothermal and Battery backed Photovoltaic are close to the current production costs of fossil fuel electricity, with a carbon tax they would already start to outcompete them. www.lazard.com/media/450337/lazard-levelized-cost-of-energy-version-110.pdf More recent reality shows us that battery backed Photovoltaic even outcompetes the continued operation costs of already existing nuclear powerplants, in a sunrich state like California. www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2019/07/01/new-solar--battery-price-crushes-fossil-fuels-buries-nuclear/ Now granted, if you live far from places with reliable Sun light intensity over the year like deserts and equatorial regions, you gonna eventually need seasonal storage large enough to provide for the whole electricity demand for weeks. For that the best option is Power to Gas and Gas from Biomass, since the gas grid has the existing storage capacities and large amounts of back up suitable GCC have and are being built already. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power-to-gas Now you will only need 20% of your electricity to come from these back up powerplants, so the share of expensive electricity is limited. It only makes sense to build P2G infrastructure once wind and solar provide 80% of the electricity in your grid already. www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S096014811400593X?via%3Dihub Now as a sidenote on molten salt reactors: The Gen4 international forum expects that R&D on a Molten Salt Reactor is gonna take atleast until 2030. Then you can start operating a demonstration plant to verify wherever a reliable electricity production from MSRs is possible. The demonstration phase is gonna take atleast another 10 years. After that you could start building the first commercial MSR powerplants, typical timeframe from start of planning to first electricity production is 20 years. So we would then phase out fossil fuels only beginning in 2060... www.gen-4.org/gif/upload/docs/application/pdf/2014-03/gif-tru2014.pdf www.worldnuclearreport.org/The-World-Nuclear-Industry-Status-Report-2019-HTML.html#npved Now it seems unlikely to me that a powerplant comprised of exotic alloys and large ceramic structures, with similar complex refinery attached, is actually gonna be cheaper then the already existing extremely expensive Nuclear powerplants. Neither seems it likely that you could train up the staff and built the necessary assembly facilities in practically no time, so most likely the build of MSRs would be small anyway and therefore their contribution to solving Global Warming.
@liamp4874 жыл бұрын
I'm a professional who works a large scale renewable energy developer. I can say that in the industry itself there isn't much group think in this area (but perhaps there is in academia). Everyone is aware of the Base Load issues and there are numerous innovations happening to help deal with this. Unfortunately Nuclear is still currently a large factor, but as we move more into the the future the reliance will significantly decline as innovation in energy storage (i.e. flow batteries opposed to just lithium ion, and hydrogen) improve. Furthermore there are great strides in the decentralised energy economy. By this I mean bypassing the grid all together, many large factories are developing large onsite solar / wind generation facilities as well as energy storage to manage in times of low generation, their reliance on the grid is hugely declining. The same can be said for cities, with the "smart cities" business rapidly gaining traction. (fyi I am based in the UK)
@WowOafus4 жыл бұрын
The video mentioned nuclear as one of the needed renewables
@kaischmelzle5474 жыл бұрын
I am from Germany, and for the last 8years Germany didn't do as ambitious as they claim!
@kaischmelzle5474 жыл бұрын
Economical would be more Renewables such as Wind and Solar! (Ecological too)
@jerrymctee59964 жыл бұрын
Well they shot themselves in the foot by shutting down nukes. Soo they buy power from France... And they are nuke heavy. A certain irony in that....
@KarlTykke4 жыл бұрын
@@kaischmelzle547 That is why electricity in Germany is so cheap
@michaeltewes78334 жыл бұрын
@@KarlTykke My nephew lives in Germany and he said electricity is up 50% since they started closing down coal electric power plants
@kaischmelzle5474 жыл бұрын
@@jerrymctee5996 No Germany Exports too much electricity! And there are heavy substitutes on outdated, harmful, fossil technologies such as Brown-, Blood-coal and (Frackin and Natural)Gas
@legoboy-ox2kx3 жыл бұрын
Germany's solar actually shows why solar doesn't work well for large scale power generation. It works great on a small scale wherever you have open roof real estate or for remote uses. Nuclear is the best thing we have, but Wind can work well for some areas too
@danielhuneke58623 жыл бұрын
Wind turbines kill lots of birds tho.
@Khajiidaro3 жыл бұрын
Nuclear energy is the absolute best for renewable energy but too many believe it to be far too great a risk. Sadly I'd also rather not vote for the guys who are adamant about renewable energy since they keep being hypocrites about different topics.
@goodking97993 жыл бұрын
@@Khajiidaro It's not renewable, but definitely the best.
@Khajiidaro3 жыл бұрын
@@goodking9799 it'll last longer and polute the planet far less than coal and oil. Plus everyone calls it renewable since those reactor rods can last for awhile and with the fact that we could artificially make nuclear materials, plus we reuse depleted reactor rod in weapons and armor, it is more renewable than coal and oil.
@noahhunt8713 жыл бұрын
@@goodking9799 there is enough uranium to power the world forever
@joelreidy25855 ай бұрын
Be yourself…this is a good documentary but the information is the star
@psionicsknight66514 жыл бұрын
Also, I’m just gonna say it: Solarpunk... it’s coming, people... (For those who don’t know; Solarpunk is a new fiction genre that focuses on settings (future or otherwise) where eco-friendly, renewable energy is the primary, or sole, energy source, and what effect it has on society.)
@asterasea35684 жыл бұрын
it's not just fiction! people all around the world are building a solarpunk future!
@asirithwelzorn59074 жыл бұрын
So like cyber punks or steam punks but eco-friendly?
@KevinC434 жыл бұрын
Saracen Govender yeah
@weRbananas4 жыл бұрын
I am number 4/ Lorien legacies anyone?
@weRbananas4 жыл бұрын
Or some of the ideas presented in the lord of opium (sequel to the house of the scorpion)
3 жыл бұрын
The problem with renewable energy is that it is dirty(in electrical meaning) since it is intermittent. I am pro-solar, tide, and wind-based power. But the baseline must be backed by heavy turbines from nuclear or at least hydro to safety net the grid from collapsing. It is not ecological to think that battery alone would be able to sustain the grid in high-demand moments.
@drakekoefoed16422 жыл бұрын
storage gets twice as good more than once a year. it will not be a problem, and if it was, hydrogen can handle it.
@EdricLysharae2 жыл бұрын
@@drakekoefoed1642, storage does not get twice as efficient every year. Where did you get that stat? And we can't bet on storage not being a problem. Hydrogen via electrolysis is a very effective storage of renewable energy, and I support it being a grid smoothing mechanism when renewables are producing excess energy that is not being consumed. We have yet to get electrolysis on an industrial scale, with a similar issue in storing that gas.
@kilx812 жыл бұрын
You are wrong.... We need abundance in solar and wind power. In denmark on a windy day Germany actually pays to stop some of the wind turbines. The power grid just can't keep up. If instead that power was saved for later use. In batteries or as hydrogen. Too much isn't enough green tech. Doesn't matter if you loose 80% of the power making hydrogen As long as you only use the surplus of energy.
@EdricLysharae2 жыл бұрын
@@kilx81, the trick is having that much available storage and the retention of the energy in that storage. Small example: I have solar panels on my roof. At my latitude, they output 60 kWh at the height of summer per day and 12 kWh in the dead of winter per day, assuming clear skies. My house's reserve battery holds 20 kWh. I use about 12-30 kWh per day, depending on how much I drive my EV. The battery costed two times as much as my solar panels. The inverter to make that battery viable brought both of those pieces of gear to three times the cost of the panels. This personal example should show the challenges in the costs of storage capacity compared to the production capability of the renewable resource harvester. The system you propose might work in the lower latitudes, but once you start getting further North and South, the storage and distribution challenges of renewables start to compound.
@kilx812 жыл бұрын
@@EdricLysharae It's not about just you having some days generating more than you need and exporting to the grid. It's about too much. Generating more solar and wind power than needed. Batteries are only for short term storage. Hydrogen you can store for a long time. In Denmark we have wind power capacity to cover more than we need on a windy day. However if all wind turbines runs at those times the grid would be overloaded. The wind turbines standing still should be running and charge storage instead of getting payed for downtime. On a global scale we just aren't at a capacity lvl to generate enough surplus yet. Solar panels are going to get cheaper and cheaper. Even in close to poles north or south. In summer you have longer days to generate excess to use in winter.
@Himoutdoors2 жыл бұрын
I’m guessing by the quality of this presentation that neither of these gentlemen are engineers, nor understand the first thing about energy or utility grids. It’s not a lie. It’s true.
@the_stray_cat2 жыл бұрын
rule one in life. listen to the experts. and look at the price of gas .if things dont change we all will be up[ a creak with out even a boat.iven if These people dont know bout what they are talking about, the people they get their info from ar correct. green is good ^w^.
@Himoutdoors2 жыл бұрын
@@the_stray_cat if 80% of the worlds energy still comes from oil & gas, then you’d have to be pretty stupid to stop investing in O&G before any credible alternative has been found. No investment means no new supply. With demand the same, or increasing the price will skyrocket. You like paying through the nose to heat and service your home and move your car around? I don’t. That’s why I don’t listen to these marketing types who don’t have any idea about the energy market. This is dangerous propaganda.
@the_stray_cat2 жыл бұрын
@@Himoutdoors and just how much dose it caust to fill a gas tank? almost 5 bucks a gallon, more in some places. thats more then ever, and all prices are rising because of it. they dont want to invest in it because the people who buy huge chunks of land for digging oil would lose out and if cars where ran on electric then they would need less maintenance which means you pay less, and they get less.its like why tax lawyers fight to keep tax laws so convoluted, if everyone can do taxs by them selves no one will need them and then the tax people are out of a job.
@mrkiky Жыл бұрын
Would've been nice to see some actual numbers. I don't care if you sell a solar panel with 50 cents. Tell me how much energy you spend creating it, how many resources it takes to make it, and how much energy you get out of it throughout it's lifespan. What happens to it when its lifespan is over? You can sell anything for 50 cents, for a while. You can artificially sell anything super expensive too. Money is just a means of facilitating trade of goods and services of different nature. When talking about the viability of something like this, money should not be in the equation, and yet in this equation it's the main thing.
@davefink2326 Жыл бұрын
2:38 "and if I had some ham, I could have ham and eggs for breakfast. If I had some eggs. . . "
@tedclapham4833 Жыл бұрын
Wind and Solar are far too intermittent to be base load power even with battery storage which will cost trillions, far more than the planetary GDP.
@leonwennerholm38323 жыл бұрын
2:43 If we actually were to collect 20% of all wind, we would basically need wind power plants everywhere, including the oceans, if we could produce wind power plants that are 100% efficient. It´s simply impossible to put into practice.
@TheUniversalid3 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't try to get into this field with opinions like this. Lol
@leonwennerholm38323 жыл бұрын
@@TheUniversalid idc, but wind power is completely destroying the nature in my country. I suppose you live in a city, because it doesnt affect you?
@herrschaftg353 жыл бұрын
@@TheUniversalid: Again, yet another moronic statement from you that is completely void of logic.
@crazydragy42333 жыл бұрын
@@hunterj7019 Exactly. Renewables are still pretty new and there's a lot of opportunity to get better. Complaining about what's basically proof of concept is kinda stupid. We need to invest more into research of these things.
@MrChickennugget3603 жыл бұрын
@@crazydragy4233 Or put the funding into Nuclear which is safe despite what the Simpsons say. France almost completely went Nuclear. Clean Safe, and not dependent on changing weather conditions or massive solar/wind farms that will take up all the earth's surface.
@epsilonalpha24304 жыл бұрын
Most of these arguments could apply to nuclear energy. I think a lot of people would support wind and solar if they subsidised the off peak energy with nuclear but they don't, they use coal and gas. The future should be nuclear fission, backed with solar and wind and later replaced with nuclear fusion
@marcorodriguez84774 жыл бұрын
We must keep working on this technology. People argue against new things because they are currently not feasible or too expensive or whatever. But imagine if Ford never mass produced the car because the manufacturing process was too expensive. We would be stuck in the stone age if we kept this mentality
@Fr00stee4 жыл бұрын
people say nuclear is bad since all they know about is the shitty old reactor designs that have safety issues. This reduces interest in nuclear power, disincentivising research into new types of reactor designs which holds the technology back even though it has so much potential. I know recently a couple of companies have been doing research into portable mini nuclear reactors that are pretty cheap to build
@Devora_Shadowolf4 жыл бұрын
I know nearly nothing about reactors. So please feel free to enlighten me. But my main fear about the nuclear power is the waste. I've heard it gets stored in underground concrete bunkers, and while I'm sure its just a waiting space until a solutions gets figured out. What if that solution isnt considered a big priority and we spend 10 years stuff nuclear waste near underground springs or someplace unsuited to storage.
@Fr00stee4 жыл бұрын
@@Devora_Shadowolf I'd say that nuclear waste isn't really an issue unless you are dealing with the super highly radioactive waste, however there isnt much of it
@brooksp11914 жыл бұрын
@@Devora_Shadowolf The waste is mainly derived from the use of Uranium-234 and fission which produces the highly radioactive waste. The goal of nuclear is to switch to either a non-uranium fuel and ideally fusion as both produce less radioactive waste and in the case of fusion almost no waste.
@MrJohanFrederik3 жыл бұрын
What is “forgotten” quite often is that renewables are intermittent and seasonal. Smart grids and batteries are unlikely to solve seasonality. You can’t power your winter heat pump with the summer production of your PV…
@PhreeLark3 жыл бұрын
EROI is the issue. And all this "green" energy needs fossil fuels. To produce.
@nealrcn3 жыл бұрын
Why do you think solar does not work in the winter
@MrJohanFrederik3 жыл бұрын
@@nealrcn it works, but the output is much lower. Where I live, solar radiation is 10x stronger in summer compared to winter. Here’s an interesting solar output graph: www.exeoenergy.co.uk/solar-panels/solar-panel-output/ . You see the months where you’d need the electricity for the heat pumps - output is about 1/6th of summer output
@anthonymendoza13272 жыл бұрын
@@MrJohanFrederik You just over build. Keep in mind that energy generation is over built as it is to handle peaking. Plus the charts are for the UK. In Arizona where I live, you can actually get more energy in the Winter months because the cells are cooler. You just ship that excess energy north.
@hstapes2 жыл бұрын
Companies pay all kinds of taxes outside of income, including taxes on their payroll. Amazon paid $2.6 billion in corporate tax in 2018 and reported $3.4 billion in tax expense over the previous three years. You're muddying the waters with your own simple thinking. They just reinvested their income into the business so it wasn't revenue. Like when you pay into a 401k. When the money is withdrawn, then you pay tax.
@RealJackHQ7 ай бұрын
Amazon has received tax credits that other small and medium sized businesses do not receive. In 2018, Amazon's effective federal income tax rate was -1.8% according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. In 2021, they hit record profits ($35 billion profit which was 75% higher than their previous record established in 2020) and yet only paid an effective rate of 6% on that when other competitors paid more (on top of said "other competitors" also paying payroll taxes and 401k contributions). The tax code has to be reformed altogether to prevent inequities such as these. Whether you want to abolish the corporate income tax, have every company pay an effective flat rate of 6% as described earlier in order to pay for federal services that companies benefit from, or have a progressive bracket where the highest possible rate for corporations is 6%, there has to be a change from what we have now to make this tax code fair for all.
@Nolan-js6je4 жыл бұрын
This is what inspired me to pursue environmental engineering. I want to work on designing and manufacturing solar panels. I want to be a part of the Third Industrial Revolution.
@mloppy8544 жыл бұрын
I thought the exact same thing
@randomperson-de1rs4 жыл бұрын
Yes good for you Ty
@Medhead1014 жыл бұрын
Third industrial revolution and 'The great Reset' is just global communism or technocracy where the individual is supplanted by the collective dictated to by 'experts'. That world will look like something out of George Orwell's 1984. No thanks.
@switched7774 жыл бұрын
Aim high dude, I bet you will be part of it!
@JohnnyG1964 жыл бұрын
Heck yeah! Be the hero that the future needs.
@jasonquinn45163 жыл бұрын
If we're being science based, then comparing energy potentials of nuclear against wind and solar is like night and day. Nuclear is a constant, zero emission energy source that has magnitudes higher output that can legitimately power our societies...and largely able to do this in any environment. Wind farms are impractical to build in many places where the air pressure isn't fluxuating enough to drive the turbines to make any appreciable power. Solar energy suffers a similar fate. Many places don't get enough direct sunshine to properly optimize a huge solar panel array. Also, I might add that solar arrays and wind farms share a common hang up that is extremely problematic; it's their footprints. The kind of solar and wind setups that are of a scale to produce a decent power output take up an enormous amount of space. Maybe this is ok for some massive solar array in a Nevada desert, but if it is needed in more habitable environments then acres and acres of land must be cut down and cleared out to make way for these. Perhaps when we are able to launch solar arrays/reflectors as satellites, then that would give us some serious access to the tremendous energy our Sun has to offer us. Until then, our current photovoltaic cell technologies and methods are only capturing an unbelievably small fraction of a fraction of the Sun's energy. Until we colonize space or find a stable method of commercial fusion energy, the planet's best hope for leaving the fossil fuel era as efficiently and responsibly as possible is nuclear fission reactors.
@tempo53663 жыл бұрын
I see why nuclear energy seems like a great solution, but it really isn’t. It’s very expensive if you consider all costs, uranium supplies are running out, even faster if we invest into more nuclear power plants on a big scale, only one country in the world found a permanent solution for the waste problem and there is still the danger of making a significant area uninhabitable due to accidents. Im not saying that we shouldn’t use nuclear energy, but in my opinion it can only be a mid-term solution to a renewable energy based grid. Nuclear fusion would help us, but it’s also not the ultimate solution.
@trinalgalaxy59433 жыл бұрын
@@tempo5366 one word: Thorium. its plentiful, cleaner (few dangerous fission products that are shorter lived), and just as powerful. even with that, uranium supplies are not low considering the amount used in reactors.
@zettovii13673 жыл бұрын
@@trinalgalaxy5943 Not to mention that Uranium is actually renewable to an extent, so the waste problem isnt as much of an issue as people make it out to be.
@trinalgalaxy59433 жыл бұрын
@@zettovii1367 this is even more true as we reuse the waste to get more power.
@mradulalms3 жыл бұрын
whatever dude just cover the Sahara desert in solar panels nobody lives there anyways (yep money is big here and taxes come in and stuff)
@rowan28284 жыл бұрын
we're in the 4th industrial revolution btw, the third already happened, did you guys miss that?
@alphahorn61634 жыл бұрын
When was the third?
@rowan28284 жыл бұрын
@@alphahorn6163 it was the late 20th century from what i've read, here's a link ied.eu/project-updates/the-4-industrial-revolutions/#:~:text=The%20third%20revolution%20brought%20forth,expeditions%2C%20research%2C%20and%20biotechnology.
@materialgirl48964 жыл бұрын
Yeah, basically internet of things is the 4th
@benjaminkopecky46894 жыл бұрын
The definition of what they defined as a industrial revolution seems off, pretty sure I heard a differing definition from a channel about economics.
@sethhhhhhhhhhhhh4 жыл бұрын
Rowan I’ve also heard it’s considered 2.5 because it was an age of technological advancements. But idk, pretty cool tho
@kenmarriott5772 Жыл бұрын
How about synthetic fuel which uses CO2 to produce. Thus Net Zero when burned. Safe. It can store any source.
@ethanmasters67594 жыл бұрын
You can’t bring up Germany when talking about renewable energy. Right now they are failing miserably, there power grid is drastically under prepared, with the required infrastructure being created at a snails pace. It’s so bad that they have to pay neighboring countries to take in electricity that their grid can’t support!
@whatelseison89704 жыл бұрын
Not just that, they're actually backtracking a lot of the progress they had made; even tearing down existing wind turbines. From my POV it's a matter of lukewarm pollical will resulting in bullshit half measures. They're hardly a unique or isolated case of that either.
@Withnail19694 жыл бұрын
@@whatelseison8970 tearing them down for what reason? because they stopped working? i've seen them siezed up and not turning here in the UK before.
@whatelseison89704 жыл бұрын
@@Withnail1969 Full disclosure: I'm not German and have never been there. That's just my hot take assuming this DW documentary is accurate. kzbin.info/www/bejne/h6OYgXh3gJanabc
@Withnail19694 жыл бұрын
@KD they are pretty useless and feeble sources of power compared to fossil fuels but the people who make this kind of video are clueless about the realities.
@davidr73334 жыл бұрын
"Never let the truth get in the way of good propaganda."
@LoreleiStockhausen4 жыл бұрын
I think my two issues with this video is two things: 1) It claims that the fossil fuel industry tries to confuse us, but it isn't clear what things they have done. Many of us believe there is misinformation about global warming and renewable information produced by fossil fuel companies, but the video just repeats this belief and move on from there. I would like a few examples. 2) This video jumps to government investment and policies as the solution to how we transition society into the renewable economy. The issue of relying on government intervention in the United States specifically is how it goes both ways. The U.S. has a long lasting problem with its relationship between corporations and public policy. The reason U.S. was 30 years behind its international partners in outlawing lead paint is because corporate lobbies have huge influences on elections and, by extension, who controls policy. Until the problem of current corporations protecting their short term interests through government policy that harms our ability to transition to new, more efficient economic states, we should instead invest as private citizens in what we want. Buy electric cars, purchase power from renewable power companies. If you want something, someone will sell it to you and if enough people want it, it will become more efficient and competitive. The politicians usually can't intervene faster than consumers can buy and shake up the market.
@phils65824 жыл бұрын
The link below (and sources referenced) give a pretty good overview and timeline of how fossil fuel companies conspired to undermine action to prevent climate change and misinform the public. www.ucsusa.org/resources/tweet-story-fossil-fuel-industrys-climate-deception The (short) report linked to at this page (www.climatechangecommunication.org/america-misled/) give an overview of the techniques used.
@Astrotase4 жыл бұрын
So What are you saying?
@phils65824 жыл бұрын
@@Astrotase It's a response to point 1) of Eric's post. Should have made that clearer, sorry.
@crinolynneendymion87554 жыл бұрын
Many of us believe? You're one person Eric. Who's this us you're trying to co-opt? Don't believe you know. Sorry, stopped reading right there.
@LoreleiStockhausen4 жыл бұрын
@@crinolynneendymion8755 I think in context of the constructive criticism I was trying to make, the "we" made sense, but I can understand how speaking for the audience can ruffle feathers. I think sometimes when looking at a message as a member of that audience, it is useful to think in terms of "we" as oppose to just "I", especially when you are considering how a group of people might respond to a message for purposes of criticism. I assumed in my statement the intended audience of the video is people who already believe in climate change and are aware that there is a campaign to undermine climate science. My constructive criticism was "Even if I (the proverbial audience member) believe there is a campaign to undermine climate science and renewable energy, I think it would better to go into that more than to skip it as a given." The "many of us believe x" could have been "even if we all believed x", and it would have not really impacted my message of "it would be better to show evidence of why x is true". X here being that there is a campaign by fossil fuel companies to undermine climate science and the cost effectiveness of renewable energy. Regardless, have a great day. I found your criticism useful though I think your all-or-nothing approach might be a bit extreme. I find it useful to see the message first, and then provide some helpful criticism of elements of that message. To get hung up on the elements of the message like grammar and word choice just hinders ones own ability to learn and take in information. Like one could have easily dismissed my comment on how poorly written the first sentence is. Constructive criticism would recommend changes that would make my message clearer and avoid common rhetorical traps like using vague language, unverifiable claims, and confusing terms. I know if I was writing a university paper, I wouldn't want to use the phrase "many of us believe" for the precise reason you stated plus it doesn't usually matter I think people believe in most contexts. Also, I am extremely wordy.
@sgtkwol4 жыл бұрын
Really fun fact, we get taxed 20 billion for oil subsidies. Some of that has been used to confuse you.
@lluisboschpascual4869 Жыл бұрын
Interesting to see how fast this gas become old and untrue
@petrcechchelsea4 жыл бұрын
Almost no mention of nuclear or how Germany actually increased CO2 emission after 2011 when they started to shut of their nuclear plants. You gloss over energy storage, when the technology is almost non existent on a power grid scale and is absolutely necessary if you want to switch to 100% renuables.
@ambulocetusnatans4 жыл бұрын
*renewables
@jismy0124 жыл бұрын
germany has nearly double the co2 production compared to france due to the shutdown of nuclear energy. yes nuclear energy is super expensive but the problem with wind energy is that it is not reliable. solar energy is good if you have huge amounts of sunlight such as places like california. the problem with california is that theres still the problem of storing energy because they produce more energy than they need. wind energy is always backed up by gas powerplants. for every couple wind turbines there is a gas pwoer plant to back that up. in reality if youre using gas power plants 50% of the time it does not compare at all to the co2 emissions of nuclear which is pretty much nil
@Oinksaysthepig4 жыл бұрын
Hold up. The shutdown was an hasted overreaction by the German government because of the Fukushima nuclear desaster (and controversial). In no way was it motivated to save CO2 emissions. The rushed execution and resulting compensation increased the CO2 levels. You can't just mix that into the much more recent movements aimed to abolish coal all together (because of public pressure first and foremost). Step by step and not overnight. Granted, with a tight schedule (because again of public pressure), but room to figure out things on the way.
@laelfoo22854 жыл бұрын
Energy storage is um not a problem. Not a problem at all actually. They're called batteries, so idk how that contributed to anything you said
@deejnutz20684 жыл бұрын
@@laelfoo2285 I've looked into solar for my own home. (The same issues scale up to commercial levels of energy.) In order to keep the AC running during the heat of summer, and keep the heat running during the cold of winter, I would need a solar array that is three times larger than my actually kwh usage, and a battery with enough capacity to store 24 hours of peak energy usage. The price per kwh seems cheaper for solar, but the problem is that the price per kwh doesn't account for factors like sun quality, and how much sun you actually get during the day. So yeah I can buy a 1 kwh system for one thousand dollars, but over a 24 hour period I'd be lucky for that system to generate even 12 kwh. Whereas a fuel based 1kwh generator will produce an effective 24 kwh's in a 24 hour period. So yes, the price per kwh is cheaper on paper, but in practical uses, if you want to go off grid, or 100% renewable you HAVE to buy 3x the energy, and then you also need the ability to store that energy. Renewables are great for supplimental power, but without a consistent power source to back it up, you will end up needing to import energy like Cali and Germany are finding. Which leads to greater energy loss and ultimately leads to an increase in emissions and in Cali's case, rolling blackouts.
@Leggir4 жыл бұрын
There's some misnomers in this. A 60% increase in efficiency for wind turbines, isn't the wind turbines getting more efficient, but rather a decrease in the system losses. Due to physics, the peak efficiency of wind turbines is ~40%, similar to internal combustion if the heat is used to heat or cool spaces. The turbine fins are pretty much tapped on efficiency as well. While solar panels are getting more efficient, we can only bank on current levels of efficiency (~23% not in labs), not expected future results, which may not come. Nuclear is currently the black sheep and no one seems interested (in the west) to build 4th Gen power plants. Finally it has to be stated that like most things in life, the transition will be a 2 steps forward and 1 step backwards. For example the molten salt solar towers that have now been shutdown in the USA not because of oil, but because they never reached advertised output and money out for repairs and investors > money in from sales.
@taeyoungcho34584 жыл бұрын
But the catch is that these renewable energy does not have any variable cost, which is directly or indirectly from the sun. I think the main thing that this video is missing is why we should transition, and that is the climate change.
@noop9k4 жыл бұрын
France is greener than Germany thanks to Nuclear energy. China is rapidly building reactors. Russia too, while selling gas and coal to Germany and Poland. You are required to burn fossil fuels to stabilize energy grid, because renewable sources are intermittent. More green energy, more natural gas or coal burned. Unless invest in very expensive energy storage facilities. The politicians in Germany are full of crap.
@ssd213454 жыл бұрын
@@noop9k hydrogen is okay storage for renewables that can export to countries who still rely Russia for their gas. But water pump are MUCH more efficient for storing the energy
@benni55414 жыл бұрын
@@noop9k i always hate these videos promoting germany as a good example for "green" energy, we phase out privat solar subsidies, increase powercost every year (now ~30ct/kwh) and shutdown all nuclear due to fokushima while burning oil,coal and gas like crazy. Now we want to shutdown coal aswell increasing power cost more amd at night buy nuclear from france and still have double their co2 emmissions. Thanks Merkel and we even have to compensate nuclear due to dumb dumb merkel granting them decades of runtime in early 2000 and now oitlawing them.
@Baigle14 жыл бұрын
The wind turbine peak efficiency figure is inaccurate. Modern technological solutions exist for each source of energy loss/ output limitation. This says nothing of how expensive it would be to increase the value, however. It takes effort and money to get the 47.1% hybrid panel multi-junction solar concentrator cells from the lab to the real world. It will take a couple decades for the 1 company or patents to run out on 90% efficient rectifying solar antenna arrays. 2nd and 3rd generation nuclear plants that we have in the US have a design lifespan that realistically extends beyond 100 years. The US energy sector is viewed as a "slow bear" concept, with proliferation, obedience and dedication, and guaranteed safety as core concepts. Canada, France, and many other countries like China and India are doing the nuclear experimenting for us (like the sulfur - iodine to hydrogen - oxygen cogeneration process). Other concepts that are not currently considered for Gen 4 plants are electro-nuclear designs, which might be able to achieve 80-95% fuel-to-energy efficiency. Right now the new Gen 3 and 4 designs are estimated at 40% conversion efficiency due to their high output power and heat cycle losses. Leave it to the silly ninnies to counter-enact policies that create a complicated and corrupt system. P.S. Asphalt roads in the US accounted for 94% of total road surface material in 2016. Asphalt's average albedo (solar adsorption) between fresh and worn is around 92%. The US is covered in more than ~65,000 (going from inflated 2001 data here) square miles of road surface. The average solar power density in the 48 states is ~4.5kWh/m2/Day (from NREL GHSI map). That means that asphalt roads and parking lots are wasting more than ~65.5TWh/Day by turning solar energy straight into suface [and atmosphere] heat (75.76TWh/Day * 92% adsorption * 94% road surface).
@luxorien2 жыл бұрын
Nuclear was the missing piece that could have helped us bridge the gap between fossil fuels and renewables. Unfortunately, we spent the last forty years NOT building the needed infrastructure, so we are stuck with fossil fuels a while longer.
@ajl89752 жыл бұрын
Renewables aren’t the answer. Sustainable nuclear fusion is the answer. What we should have done is built a load of nuclear fission plants in the mean time that could be easily converted to fusion when the time to shift does eventually come.
@lu70lo2 жыл бұрын
@@ajl8975 There's no such thing as sustainable nuclear. Radioactive rocks are a finite resource, and they cost energy to mine. The Sun is infinite, and sunlight, water, and wind currents can be harvested more cheaply and easily.
@ajl89752 жыл бұрын
@@lu70lo all resources are finite. We do not have enough copper to link together a grid that would be purely reliant upon renewables. That’s not even getting into the requirements of lithium for the battery storage that would be necessary for reliable renewable energy. None of your suggestions are cheap, or easy. I know, I looked into it when I did my dissertation for me engineering undergrad. I bet you weren’t even remotely aware of the problems that icing causes on the leading edge of wind turbine blades or the effects of dust erosion on wind turbines. Nothing is cheap. Nothing is easy. Nuclear is the best solution.
@ajl89752 жыл бұрын
@WholeWheat KittyFeet if you think that’s bad, wait for the planned rolling blackouts in Europe this winter. People are going to freeze all over Europe.
@vodkaboy2 жыл бұрын
not everybody can be Norway..
@jjt7120032 жыл бұрын
Why do we have to tax more? We have a 3 trillion annual budget in which government always over spends. We have the money from existing taxes, the government can spend it on renewables any time they want.
@RealJackHQ7 ай бұрын
Good point :) Plus, we don't have to spend a bunch right away. We can bracket things out over years. Instead of...let's say spending $700 billion one year on nuclear power plant construction, we can spend $50 billion every year until we reach that hypothetical $700 billion mark. This also prevents the need to raise taxes given that debt won't increase, which makes treasury bonds more attractive, thus generating more revenue from that instead of having to need taxes and fees as much.
@miguelbasile54434 жыл бұрын
I’ve learnt more n these videos than I have in my science class this year
@tanv2784 жыл бұрын
Randomvids NZ Cus you haven’t had one this year
@callistoval4 жыл бұрын
That's not true, school are actually useful in some ways.
@kinganonymous18724 жыл бұрын
Then u havent been paying attention nor studying because I can still remember learning about this stuff every single year from like 3rd grade. I learned the most in 9th grade though.
@weenorboy63274 жыл бұрын
Learnt
@henrypereira17454 жыл бұрын
@@weenorboy6327 Strange that you didn't correct the others with their errors. 🤣
@samuelmoore89324 жыл бұрын
I’m incredibly angry this isn’t taught to us. Edit: for clarification, I live in the USA
@AsapSCIENCE4 жыл бұрын
It's weirdly hard to piece together, and for some reason it has all been politicized which is really sad. We can at least educate each other on KZbin! :)
@Superfan1094 жыл бұрын
AsapSCIENCE True that. And thank YOU for educating this people on such an important topic.
@SaberX22484 жыл бұрын
Where do you live? Me and my colleagues teach this in our school, and most colleagues I talk to in other high schools do the same...! I live in the Netherlands. Still, the part about the super rich isn't something in our curriculum hahahaha should be though! :D :D
@samuelmoore89324 жыл бұрын
Saber I live in the US, things like this aren’t taught here much because they are seen as “political.”
@SaberX22484 жыл бұрын
@@samuelmoore8932 Political in regards to job safety? Conservation of how the country is run? Or mostly political due to lobbies etc?! Is a teacher allowed to teach this stuff anyway, even if it's not in the school's curriculum, or don't teacher really do that?
@gengchen35604 жыл бұрын
Why didn’t you mention hydroelectric, hydrogen, geothermal, and fusion energy though?
@IFearlessINinja4 жыл бұрын
They are all extremely insignificant relative to the others. Fusion is not yet matured enough, give it 50 years maybe
@no-lifenoah78614 жыл бұрын
Fusion hasn't been discovered yet, I don't think
@drezvynde4 жыл бұрын
given the widely known issues with chemical storage solutions for electric energy like lithium batteries etc. hydrogen will become more and more relevant in the next years as a short and long term storage solution
@stevetaylor28184 жыл бұрын
@@IFearlessINinja Hydroelectric currently generates 16% of the world's electricity, that's not very insignificant. Compared with only 10% by nuclear.
@sanjikaneki62264 жыл бұрын
@@no-lifenoah7861 it is discovered but atm it is energy negative overall jut give it like 10 years or so
@godssara6758 Жыл бұрын
You left out the child slave labor used for mining. You left out the toxic waste and toxic lakes . You left out the birds killed and the whales. You left out the amount of land waste
@frankunderbush4 жыл бұрын
Murica today: go to war for oil Murica tomorrow: go to war for wind Edit: damn this blew up fast....like Iraq
@sarb19434 жыл бұрын
Hopefully
@ResidentialGondola4 жыл бұрын
Well, even though this is a joke, it has some horrible truths. Wars for oil will change into wars for lithium and rare earth minerals used to make batteries.
@seandarager4 жыл бұрын
_fights texas_
@denvitaranden4 жыл бұрын
There is a very depressing fact and a very uplifting fact about America and war; the depressing things are two fold, out of 244 years of existence, America has been at war for 227 years. And that every war that America has been involved in, including the revolutionary war, has been built on a lie or deception. The uplifting fact is that the American people never really wants to go to war, the have to be coaxed, cajoled, guilted or outright tricked to go to war. Which means that if the American people actually got to choose informedly (sorry, not a word. hope you understand what I mean.) they wouldn't go to war.
@arielsproul88114 жыл бұрын
@@ResidentialGondola eh, I'm thinking wars for thorium over wars for lithium,
@aleksandarstojanovski91932 жыл бұрын
all i can say is, leave the engineering problems to engineers
@Fatmanstan6062 жыл бұрын
Has worked amazing so far, why stop now
@rrdutch41112 жыл бұрын
Yeah but then engineers would have to actually leave their office to build, troubleshoot, repair, and replace the things they design🤔😅 Working on an assembly line, it took 5 engineers 3 hours to figure out how to squirt extra oil into a crankcase, it was quite humorous imo…
@esthermas47032 жыл бұрын
@@rrdutch4111 i always see a bitter comment from a technician emm because engineers are not technicians? and nobody says technicians are not important, someone has actually to DO what others design.
@ryanross65742 жыл бұрын
I was trying to think of an analogy. Every new generation of Engineers design things they believe are the pinnacle of innovation and perfection. Yet, every manufacturing job I’ve had, their machines are always malfunctioning, and an engineer can never be found to explain why. Meanwhile, an engineering marvel such as the aqueduct: still in use. The simplest for of electrical generation is shown to last the longest (Hydro). Engineers over engineer as a way to showcase their own perceived intellect, and when confronted with the increase of dis function and disrepair; engineers are either No where to be found, or blame the technicians while providing no insight to anyone into how your design works or functions. Because engineers would rather see a business shut down than admit their design has a flaw, especially when someone without a degree points it out before it fails, and is ignored🤷🏻
@nerd9347.2 жыл бұрын
As my father is an engineer, I feel inclined to type the following: thank you for having a f*cking brain.
Nuclear can be great, yes, but I'm also a huge fan of decentralizing the energy supply a bit. Solar on rooftops and more spread out wind farms goes a long way toward that goal.
@diegocastro74344 жыл бұрын
Could be good, but by diversifying power sources grids could be more stable and it would be cheaper in the long run. Nothing wrong with getting lots of energy from nuclear AND from solar/wind/hydro/geothermic. Keep in mind that nuclear energy power plants also require massive investments and cannot be installed everywhere (places prone to hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, ect).
@yesno93744 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. Lots of countries are investing so heavily in renewables...whilst also shutting down nuclear power stations. Like Scotland, where I live. Renewables will never be able to stand alone. Nuclear is already so clean, and so cheap, I see no reason to avoid it. France has nailed it.
@darkwoodmovies4 жыл бұрын
But two plants blew up, so I guess nobody wants a plant within a thousand miles of them.
@bryanbirrueta69024 жыл бұрын
Peter Bradshaw I agree with all your points except for the “renewables will never be able to stand alone.” That is an ignorant comment in a well-phrased thought process.
@b.w.1386 Жыл бұрын
If the top 3 richest people own 50% of the wealth... then let them pay 50% of the tax.
@RavenGRut4 жыл бұрын
"competitive commercial country" in the color of the German flag, nice touch.
@trulyUnAssuming4 жыл бұрын
yet German car companies are currently anything but competitive. At this point my optimistic version of the future is a future, where all the talent set free by those manufacturers collapsing, is going to set their mind to something new. Like Hyperloops competing with air travel.
@SamKhoury3 жыл бұрын
7:44 They're correlating 2 things that really have nothing to do with each other, the high tax rates and the strength of the economy, and omitting some details about the tax code during 1950s and 1960s. First, the economy wasn't strong because of those high statutory tax rates because hardly anyone paid those tax rates. The tax law at that time had numerous tax exemptions and income tax shelters that enabled the wealthy to pay a much lower effective tax rate. It annoys me when people try to make these simplistic and false arguments about how our economy can absorb much higher tax rates. There's a much more scientific way to determine optimal/ideal tax rates that will determine which top tax rate will generate the most revenue while having the least negative impact on the economy.
@dl68603 жыл бұрын
YES!!!
@sirnikkel67463 жыл бұрын
Oh, well, a well deserved dislike to the video.
@jasonsilverman31253 жыл бұрын
They are also repeating a myth that growth rather than sustainability and equity is the marker of a good economy. But their argument that high marginal taxes rates are necessary is spot on. No tax cuts have ever decreased unemployment but they have increased social inequality. Tax the rich and corporations!
@SamKhoury3 жыл бұрын
@@jasonsilverman3125 I disagree that no tax cuts have ever decreased unemployment but I do agree that the top income tax rates should be increased. The 1981 tax cuts and monetary policy both led to the recession ending in late 1982 and then a long period of economic growth where unemployment fell dramatically. However the 1986 tax cuts probably took tax cuts too far and helped increased the wealth of the top earners. To imply that no top tax rate is too high and won't hurt the economy is simply false. Remember it's the private sector the drives the economy not the govt so the govt taking too much in taxes will eventually hurt the economy. Like I said in my first response the optimal tax rates can be determined and nobody can logically argue that there should be no limit to what the top federal income tax rate should be especially when you consider that some states have double digit income tax rates. I live in NY state and not only pay state income taxes but I also pay a lot in property taxes and sales taxes.
@aaronburdon2213 жыл бұрын
@@SamKhoury The primary problem is not the tax rate. It's tax loopholes. Billion dollar companies can afford lawyers and lobbyists to fight for their interests in congress e.g. exemptions and loopholes. Raising the tax rate only hurts the small businesses due to the fact that they are actually required to pay it (usually anywhere from 35-50% of their income). Corporations are usually exempt or use a crapload of loopholes and pay a much lower rate.
@elidennison99024 жыл бұрын
Nuclear.... Let's go Nuclear... We solved the problem people just don't like the answer... Nuclear...
@jamil56154 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGauYnyjr65laq8
@callumcampbell94924 жыл бұрын
Where you gonna put the waste?
@Bingizzzz4 жыл бұрын
Callum Campbell I thought that thorium reactors don’t produce as much waste as uranium reactors.
@callumcampbell94924 жыл бұрын
@@Bingizzzz they are something like 3 to 4 x more expensive
@jackasshomey4 жыл бұрын
Geothermal: ...and you think your life sucks nuclear?
@rokleskovec4410 Жыл бұрын
Coal and oil are cheaply storable. So cheaply noone even thought about. Reneweble energy has terrybly expensive=complicated storage. That drives avtual prices of renewable very high=cheap green means expensive for customer.
@mafiousbj4 жыл бұрын
A professor told me around 2012 during my geology studies that the "Green Revolution" would happen when all the groups that controlled fossil fuels at the time would decide to transfer to green by popular demand or when they owned those new techs. With oil companies re labeling themselves as "energy" companies and investing heavily into green tech together with big car manufacturers i see his point. Those were the companies with the capital to invest and develop new tech. "Small" start ups like Tesla are outliers not the rule.
@HimitsuHunter4 жыл бұрын
They've started doing just that this year. Mostly as a result of the downturn from the pandemic. Not sure how the trend will continue but it's started.
@mafiousbj4 жыл бұрын
@@HimitsuHunter once it began it will probably go on. They were probably waiting for the point of economic viability
@TheMaxtasy4 жыл бұрын
Jeah, I guess about 40 Years to late. I mean, we talk about this since the 80s. I truly believe we are to late and the next 20 years will be an ongoing downward spiral, of wars, climate crisis and mass migration. Our current rulling class (all over the world) is not capable of adapting, because the fundamental change that is needed, is so disrupting, that they fear the unrest of what would be following. So they just keep putting patches everywhere, until everything breaks, and then the unrest will even be bigger.
@GhostySweep4 жыл бұрын
why does this dude look like every hipster from 2010 sitcoms
@phillipnunya67934 жыл бұрын
Stereotypes exist for a reason.
@tgl13994 жыл бұрын
I life in Germany, we have the highest energy costs in all of Europe. Our so called „Energiewende“ is a complete mess. We only hav so much „green“ capacity because the government literally guarantees a profitable price for this energy. Therefore on windy an sunny days we dump more then half of that energy into the ground. While in the winter we import power from Poland(coal).
@friggerx31504 жыл бұрын
No one ever talks about how much renewables actually cost.
@noop9k4 жыл бұрын
And some of the coal secretly comes from Ukrainian territories occupied by Russians.
@Autogenification4 жыл бұрын
@@friggerx3150 incidentally no one ever talks about how this was the case (actually worse) when fossil fuels were just coming about, this happens for any industrial revolution. It'll always been that the top class will have easier access to these newer technologies, then as the market increases with this stuff, it'll get cheaper for everyone If you look at this economically, this revolution actually has the cheapest introduction of new energy due to already existing infrastructure for energy transportation
@GoalOrientedLifting4 жыл бұрын
The Germans own most of the power in Norway, and sell our green energy to Europe. Then buy back dirty energy. They also makes us pay for anything. I still don't get how my government sold our electricity production and thought it would provide more money for the Norwegian government. Looks more like some people God bribed
@beware_the_moose4 жыл бұрын
They literally do? The information is all out there for those who are interested enough to look for it.
@josephstjames66422 жыл бұрын
8:14 the reason why Amazon paid no Federal income tax is because the government asked them to spend money on certain things like green technology, employee empowerment programs, and other such things. It seems really counter productive to get what you paid for then complain about not getting more. Almost like saying, “We want you to be green but not too green to avoid at least paying us a little”.
@keiseja80562 жыл бұрын
Are you serious?? The workers at amazon have to work under such shitty conditions and pay quite bad. Amazon do not pay no tax because they want to change the world for a better, we all have loopholes in our tax laws and Amazon has smarter lawyers then our lawmakers...
@mave27892 жыл бұрын
Hmm, so you dont want to tax the hell out of amazon?
@josephstjames66422 жыл бұрын
@@mave2789 not if they are contributing to fighting climate change and providing employee growth. Their doing exactly what the left asks businesses to do.
@MHG7962 жыл бұрын
@@mave2789 why would he?
@JoshTincher4 жыл бұрын
California is a great example. Brown outs in the summer are tight. “Once again, a big part of the problem is that California regulators have left the state dangerously exposed to buying large amounts of imported electricity on the spot market during peak periods on days when there is extreme energy demand-what Mr. Wolak likened to going to the airport on Thanksgiving and expecting to fly standby.” Only this time, the crunchtime for the state’s grid operator isn’t the actual power demand peak in late afternoon-it is when the sun starts to fall in early evening, and the renewable energy the state is increasingly dependent on begins to wane. On many days, California’s grid operator now has to find 10,000 to 15,000 megawatts of replacement power-sometimes 25% to 50% of what it needs to keep the lights on-during a three-hour period as solar, and to a lesser degree, wind power, falls off. California often relies on imported power from other states to help fill its void. But when a historic heat wave gripped the Western U.S. this month, the state struggled to find a way to replace up to 8,000 megawatts of disappearing renewable energy each evening. It came up short on some days by as much as half that amount and had to call for rolling blackouts on Aug. 14 and 15.” - The Wall Street Journal, Aug 23 2020
@arielsproul88114 жыл бұрын
f r e e c l e a n a n d r e l I a b l e e n e r g y
@jeffreysmith45864 жыл бұрын
We really need energy storage if we want wind and solar to be viable. This storage can take many forms including batteries.
@1ksubwithoutvideo3344 жыл бұрын
Renewable energy is GOOD Or is it (Vsauce Music Intensifies)
@AsapSCIENCE4 жыл бұрын
EL OH EL!!!!
@cosmicjenny45084 жыл бұрын
+INFO ID [20 minutes later] And maybe WE TOO are just lumps of carbon waiting to be turned into oil. And as always... thanks for watching.
@DadsCigaretteRun4 жыл бұрын
Evan Blenkinsopp *cries in the corner because the sun is a bomb apparently*
@cosmicjenny45084 жыл бұрын
@@DadsCigaretteRun "The heat death of the universe will occur sometime in about 10^100 years." Me, knowing full-well I'll be dead by then: "AHHH"
@SinHurr4 жыл бұрын
@@DadsCigaretteRun The sun is a deadly lazer
@phillB3 жыл бұрын
As a power engineer who specializes in software development, I can tell you that this is one of the most inaccurate pieces of information I have ever seen. What universe are the folks living in. My suggestion take everything that you just heard with a grain of salt.
@jordi953 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the first sign for me was when they said that television was a new way of communication through 1870 to 1900 , what ??
@987werther3 жыл бұрын
Where is your argument?
@jordi953 жыл бұрын
@@987werther The Tv wasn't invented until 1927 and it wasn't used comercially until the end of the 40s / beggining of the 50s , so if anything, it should be grouped in the "revolution" of the 50/60 he described
@brucewilson773 жыл бұрын
When it said wind and solar was cheaper -- I knew it was all wrong . Wind is a monument to human stupidity and solar is not workable . The worst aspect of solar and wind is they distract from the only solution which is nuclear.
@alx85713 жыл бұрын
@@brucewilson77 Until you run out of Uranium and Thorium…then what? Sometimes it’s like you nuclear shills are chewing on toxic waste.
@ericlord17962 жыл бұрын
The trouble with voting for the “right politicians who follow the Science” is that both “politics”and “science” have gotten a severe credibility gap during the C-19 pandemic
@pododododoehoh35502 жыл бұрын
Its not science that has a credibility gap, science is always just science. Its the fact ehat science gets pushed as facts and what science gets pushed out the limelight is controlled by big money corporations same as everything else. Ejuts hear the word science now and immediately turn off their brain and ears and assume what they're being told is undisputable fact with almost religious dogma ironically.
@harrydavey98842 жыл бұрын
Science has become entirely subjective and politicised.
@J4Zonian2 жыл бұрын
@@harrydavey9884 No, the lunatics on the far right, especially but not exclusively Republicans, have tried to destroy truth by discrediting & faking science. In the process, they've politicized everything.
@NidusFormicarum2 жыл бұрын
@@harrydavey9884 Exactly! ... because the politicians don't ask the experts first. No, they implement the changes and then find studies and scentists to support their politics. The solutions from the most outspoken green parites are often the most detrimental for our climate and environment. ... becuase their panic ideology and to make a difference at any price is more important to them than to be pragmatic and for look for the least bad solutions and to listen to the experts BEFORE they make up their minds.
@Itried20takennames Жыл бұрын
How was science damaged on the pandemic….apart from Trump’s bizarre push for useless (for COVID) hydroxychloroquine as “one of the biggest game changers in the history of medicine.” As a physician, every physician I knew was furious about Trump doing this (especially at a time prevention was key), and agreed the “study” Trump liked was too small and had too many limitations to promote it. And science is good at figuring how things work….but is about as good at anything else at predicting the future….we are all terrible at predictions.
@growtopiatwins194 жыл бұрын
when you learn more watching AsapSCIENCE than in school...
@juangal75694 жыл бұрын
Gotta get that knowledge somehow😂
@AsapSCIENCE4 жыл бұрын
Aw, we are glad you like this! Show it to your teachers! :):)
@willpotter224 жыл бұрын
thewanderandhiscomp some don’t remember learning history. Or don’t pay attention. I certainly remember the historical parts of the video. Granted i had a wonderful u.s historical teacher.
@Person-rz1ur4 жыл бұрын
I watch this instead of school. I’m literally in history class right now
@growtopiatwins194 жыл бұрын
@@AsapSCIENCEsure
@skyeplays17724 жыл бұрын
2:26 Time for DYSON SPHERE
@IamJustaSimpleMan4 жыл бұрын
I wonder if I'll ever see the day where humanity at least starts to construct something like this....
@oompa32684 жыл бұрын
@thewanderandhiscomp no, dyson sphere
@Person-rz1ur4 жыл бұрын
Time to jump to kuzikut (that was botched severely)
@meh32774 жыл бұрын
@@IamJustaSimpleMan You planning on living til your 600 years old or somethin?? (Seriously tho it would be quite the achievement, the greatest achievement)
@IamJustaSimpleMan4 жыл бұрын
@@meh3277 planning: yes, but my plans rarely ever work 😅🤣 But maybe I'll live to see people at least making serious plans for it 😊🤗❤ I never give up hope that humanity can overcome it's issues. We have to ability for true greatness in us, if we are just willing to work hard on ourselves ❤
@chapter4travels3 жыл бұрын
"Oil companies lied to you about nuclear energy and it's time to fix it!" There, I fixed it for you.
@5353Jumper3 жыл бұрын
Also the government and power industry lied to you about nuclear energy. They pushed large dangerous plants because they had weapons grade byproducts instead of smaller and safer nuclear tech that would provide the same power cheaper with a lot fewer risks.
@dasmilyshelf69993 жыл бұрын
Have FUSION! Have THORIUM! Have SPACE SOLAR POWER PLANTS! Let’s make the world BETTER! Hooray to the FUTURE, hooray to DREAMS! Eat DUN…OIL BIG OIL COMPANIES!!!!!
@ronb61823 жыл бұрын
@@dasmilyshelf6999 yeah then make bombs out of the waste yeah that's really good for the environment. No wonder why the sun will be darkened and the moon won't give it's light when the terrible day of the lord comes.
@stratsboneless62703 жыл бұрын
69 likes
@chapter4travels3 жыл бұрын
Like it or not, big oil will be around and still big for a VERY long time, and they need to be. The transition to advanced fission will take a VERY long time.
@mohamed_is_him2 ай бұрын
I didn’t see this mentioned but why do we need electric cars? Investing in public transport will not only be more efficient, we won’t need lithium batteries for every single car on the road
@J4ZonianАй бұрын
@mo Absolutely right. Including high speed rail. But we do need EVs, for where extremely low population density makes transit less efficient than EVs, & including mining, logging, farm, service, emergency Vs. And numerous other battery chemistries are in production or imminent.
@johnstanton6442Ай бұрын
@@J4Zonian Not enough colbolt and lithium in the world to replace the curent number of cars genius.
@johnstanton6442Ай бұрын
@@J4Zonian You nuts and your unreliables. Just use nuclear and have all gas stations make hydrogen on site from the electricity from the nuclear plants and people can fill their cars with hydrogen and have hydrogen electric cars. THERE, I SOLVED YOUR DENSE PROBLEM. They aren't doing this because warming is a hoax, they want control.
@gabrielf80944 жыл бұрын
Mitchel: Educates on important topics with a professional and serious manner Gregory: 5:18, 7:03, 7:57
@hopegold8834 жыл бұрын
And we stan them both!!!
@skollskollskoll4 жыл бұрын
Profile Settings and also 10:56
@rodribrito4 жыл бұрын
Oh, dear. You are just a homophobe.
@gabrielf80944 жыл бұрын
All with love ofc ❤️
@ИринаШ-обч4 жыл бұрын
You guys started out subtle, which is also kind of a lie
@joatmon89544 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@tomcruze81533 жыл бұрын
What
@giantleprechaun7774 жыл бұрын
"The Biggest Lie About Renewable Energy." What was the lie? Did I miss something?
@zamirab69524 жыл бұрын
I thought it's just me 😂
@shrin2104 жыл бұрын
Just a narrative to vote for Democrats. Didn't even mentioned the Thorium Nuclear Energy. Capitalists will build the business around Solar which will be more destructive.
@EsIsJaNichtsMehrFrei4 жыл бұрын
@@shrin210 calm down. Taxing the rich isn't even one of Bidens plans. And if theres not a single republican candidate, who is considering climate change that is a different problem all together. I am not from the US, but i don't get, why you guys seemingly don't accept valid points, when they are voiced by the "other side". And about the Thorium reactor. It isn't a thing right now. You can't currently build it. With solar and wind energy you can. And they even mentioned nuclear energy in thd beginning
@EsIsJaNichtsMehrFrei4 жыл бұрын
The lie is telling us all the time, that renewables won't be feasable or will cost too much money and jobs. Or even that climate change isn't real
@1queijocas4 жыл бұрын
This renewable transition is being spearheaded by the private sector (a.k.a Tesla, Elon Musk, etc). Taking their wealth and profit away will only slow us down. The best thing government can do is not to get in their way
@mere_cat Жыл бұрын
I’m all for taxing the rich, but the economics of renewable energy are more complex than that. There is currently a 3 year backlog on transformers which are essential to delivering the green transition and “smart grids” you speak of. That is due to a lack of raw materials, which has been driven by lower production and opposition to mining. Also carbon taxes are a Reagan era free market solution, a tax on the working class, and will lead to political backlash. Saying “vote for science” is a total political dead end.