No....there won't be enough electricty. There will be blackouts and brownouts all the time, and even more when all the electric cars being added to the grid.
@marktanska63312 жыл бұрын
Well, look what is happening here in Australia, prices are skyrocketing, more increases forecast, shortage is happening . Solution for politicians is more of the same
@SheeplandGovt11 ай бұрын
We need OTEC power. OTEC is a renewable that is just as reliable as coal, but causes no direct CO2 emissions. It uses the temperature difference between the surface and the depths of the ocean to generate electricity, which stays relatively constant throughout the year.
@buddyblader31834 жыл бұрын
The idea is great, but the execution has left much to be desired. I work in the utility industry within an environmental capacity and it's more bloviating from politicians pandering to potential voters and disconnected energy executives playing into their own public image than anything meaningful for climate change. It's really sad to watch rash decisions get sold as the best option when you're watching it from the inside and in no position to influence a more responsible approach.
@matkurcher94693 жыл бұрын
Its hilarious! Were now at the tipping point. People are starting to be negatively impacted by green energy policy. We need large democrat citys to experience a grid collapse. If that were to happen, the national grid would have no other option but to isolate those areas. If the eastern and western coasts were to collapse they would beg to bring thermal plants back online.
@jmsgrdner23793 жыл бұрын
$2.5 Trillion on the Afghan war. If it costs $600M a plant to outfit all of America's coal plants with technology to control all the pollution, then we could have saved our power grid and the environment 4x over with one spending bill, instead of killing more impoverished villagers in far off countries.
@CB-gi2rx3 жыл бұрын
@@jmsgrdner2379 But where's the personal profit in that? Nation building is far more lucrative for a politician.
@ovpupfish3 жыл бұрын
No mention of nuclear power? Really? That's an enormous oversight. I'm sorry to challenge your journalistic credibility... but I must. Nuclear power has done the least harm per unity of power produced than all other sources, accidents notwithstanding. If this IS truly a crises we are in, excluding nuclear power from your analysis is irresponsible at best and at its worst, this exclusion is complicity in a false narrative that may bring about great harm. Please
@thomasjust26633 жыл бұрын
Nuclear has too much baggage in the public's mind, very few folks want new plants built close to them also nuclear plants are very expensive to make, they take to many years to get approved, constructed and online, also they are not flexible enough, you can't quickly increase production in peak demand or decrease it
@ovpupfish3 жыл бұрын
@@thomasjust2663 Your response assumes that Nuclear power is not evolving like everything else. The BWR and PWR reactors of the 1960=1990 era are build to be baseload power. New reactor designs will allow load following. Expensive is not uneconomic. Nuclear power just has a different investment risk profile. Nuclear reactors make prodigious amounts of energy in their lifetimes. They can last from 60 to 100 years. In that time they become very good investments. The approval / regulation hairball is something that needs to be untangled. It is not resulting in greater safety, just red tape. We should demand the former without the latter. There are powerful lobbies that have used regulation to gum up the works to disadvantage nuclear power. It serves no one. The underlying mistake that everyone seems to be making right now is that there exists an equivalency between all energy inputs to a grid. That's evident in the crazy spot pricing strategies. Of course solar looks cheap at noon on a sunny day.. Where is it at midnight? Wind at midnight? Maybe. Storage? At scale over a reasonable safety margin (like 4 days... Texas) only pumped hydro is economic and (more important) possible. Gigafactory can't make enough Li-Ion this century to properly back up the US. It barely keeps up with cars. We may even have a material supply scaling challenge if every nation got on board to build 1000 Gigafactories. So, between now and 2050, shutting down existing nuclear plants is insanity. Insisting that we build no more because they are out of fashion is innumeracy.
@ovpupfish3 жыл бұрын
@@thomasjust2663 your points about sentiment are valid, but reworking the grid is like performing heart surgery on yourself. The grid IS the beating heart of civilization. First and foremost, we must halt EARLY shutdowns of nuclear plants. They produce 20% of grid power in the US and account for most of the carbon free power. Every time a plant shuts down, even in the name of making way for "renewables", natural gas (methane) fired plants replace the majority of that power. We are marching backwards with early closure. Safety, reliability, emissions of all kinds advocate for nuclear power, if viewed objectively and quantitatively.
@-Stop-it3 жыл бұрын
@@ovpupfish - I’m skeptical. If a utility is going to invest in a nuclear plant, they are going to want to run it as much as possible, 24/7. And equally, no utility is going to build a nuclear plant with the intention of running it at some mid load waiting for the wind to stop blowing. That’s what simple cycle CTs are for. I would bet Georgia power intends to run the new Vogtle at as high a capacity factor as possible. No load following there. I wish this country was investing in nuclear plants and staffing them with high value employees - but it’s not going to happen.
@-Stop-it3 жыл бұрын
Portland GE had a nuclear plant, Trojan, but shut it down after 16 years rather than replacing the steam generators. At least for the Pacific Northwest, the ship has sailed.
@fredgarvinMP2 жыл бұрын
17:25 It is NOT what most customers want. We're going to feel pretty stupid when there's not enough electricity to go around and the electricity that's available, nobody will be able to afford.
@fireprogram4 жыл бұрын
So, we have to look forward to massively higher electricity bills, brown-outs and black-outs, more politicians and environmentalists preach about climate change, higher costs of business, more regulations,.....more chaos.
@rockthevote3984 жыл бұрын
vs more super fires, desertification, storms, extreme temperatures and all the fall-out from those future climate events. Right.
@Jemalacane04 жыл бұрын
@@rockthevote398 More storms and more droughts? That's a tad self-contradictory.
@HepCatJack8 ай бұрын
Nope renewable power is cheaper. In the Province of Quebec it cost 5.77 cents per KWH. The US average is closer to 17 cents per KWH (both are in USD). Cut through the BS, look up at countries that have mostly renewables and what they pay for electricity.
@enriquemelendez4547 Жыл бұрын
No. Costa Rica, Iceland, and Norway already run 100% alternative energy. It's over for coal. The reason the coal plants are closing is that Natural Gas is cheaper. In 2023,Solar and Wind is cheaper to build than Coal Plants.
@Briand-ei1gs Жыл бұрын
Norway was blessed with hydropower. That is where they get their electricity and the country is wealthy from oil and gas exports. Iceland is the same with geothermal but they still use oil for transportation. The world economy will soon crash from all the bad investments in Wind and solar. The silly spit will end then
@enriquemelendez4547 Жыл бұрын
By 2025, Norway won't sell cars running on gasoline.
@Briand-ei1gs Жыл бұрын
@enriquemelendez4547 they will still be selling the oil and gas they getting from the north sea
@webranger19624 жыл бұрын
We don't have aluminum smelters to turn off now. I suggest we cut all power to Salem for two years if it comes up.
@lancediduck6278 Жыл бұрын
What? Nuclear is not an alternative? Neither is hydro? Both are dispatchable and don't pollute..
@ElectricBuckeye2 жыл бұрын
The truth is that there is no 100% attainable green/clean energy solution. The closest would be nuclear, but then the fear kicks in.
@galvinstanley32352 жыл бұрын
For me i'm not against coal,but i think we should invest on new technology on how too use it better and cleaner then we do now.
@cericson3426 Жыл бұрын
The United States coal industry and coal-fired plants are among the cleanest in the world. China, Russia, India parts of Mexico produce far more pollutants and we do
@RussellFineArt4 жыл бұрын
This documentary fails to point out how fast distributed solar is growing, and only looks at centralized utility power plants, which is flawed. The U.S. installs the equivelant of: 3 new nat. gas power plants of solar, every day, in the U.S., reducing the need for power from utilities. I did this myself. I installed 5kW of solar and installed a 2.4kW wind turbine which powers 100% of my house and electric car. When you fly over the U.S., you see hundreds of thousands of homes with no solar panels, leaving all of that space dead.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Same here 🤗
@randacnam73213 жыл бұрын
Where will you store the electricity? Problem with wind and solar is they do not necessarily make electricity when loads need it. Thus you need constantly cycling gas turbines and hydro to make up the difference. Pumped storage only works where topography allows for reservoirs, and batteries are VERY expensive.
@RussellFineArt3 жыл бұрын
@@randacnam7321 Good questions. Where do we store water and food as food isn't harvested all of the time and it doesn't rain and snow every day, but we need food and water, every day. We've had millennia to perfect storing food and water, we'll become masters at storing energy over the coming decades. I'm in favor of SMR's (small modular [nuclear] reactors) for metropolitan areas when we go long periods of low sun and no wind but in the future, all energy will come from solar, wind and hydro.
@randacnam73213 жыл бұрын
@@RussellFineArt Food is physical. Electricity is not. There is a reason that the latter is much harder to store. Solar and wind have their place in systems small enough where the batteries can be economical and where the system can handle kW/sec generation fluctuations, but grid scale systems cannot handle proportional generation fluctuations of MW/sec or tens of MW/sec that can last for minutes anywhere near as well. On a grid scale, coal, gas, oil, nuclear and hydro win out. Then there is the lie of CO2 being bad, which it is not. If you want to do something about global pollution, go after China, India and Africa. The West is not the problem.
@RussellFineArt3 жыл бұрын
@@randacnam7321 True, food is physical and food spoils quickly, making it much harder to store than electrons. Unfortunately, it sounds like you're a novice to this topic. I've worked in grid-scale solar and wind power generation for the past 15 years and have worked closely with grid managers and know that although coal and gas have been relatively good to us, over the past ~200 years, their resources are rapidly depleting and costing more and more to mine, frack and transport, allowing solar and wind to win out on pricing and rapid pace of new capacity generation. Nuclear is so incredibly expensive, it's not really in the conversation any more. Virtually every grid in the U.S., and many around the world, already use mW-pack battery storage on a daily basis and more is being installed every day. Tesla is currently installing a multi-mW battery pack in Texas and much more will be installed over the coming years, just watch.
@grwleblanc Жыл бұрын
Why does he keep saying nobody knows for sure if we will have enough electricity when everybody he interviewed basically said no there will not be enough?
@Briand-ei1gs Жыл бұрын
People have known for years. Anyone can do a quick financial analysis on this crap and understand it will not wo
@brianmcgill12904 жыл бұрын
Coal plants should shut off the power for a month from 6pm to 6am just to see if they really want to go green.
@littlewhitepetals87904 жыл бұрын
Maybe just for those people who want to go green. Remind them no doing laundry at Mom's house ;) !!
@markwathne31654 жыл бұрын
You can't just shut off a coal plant for 12 hours a day. Startup times for a coal plant are anywhere from 5 hours to more than a day depending on the temperatures of the turbines and boiler.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
It would actually work, wind makes most of nighttime energy
@matkurcher94693 жыл бұрын
If you were to take all coal plants offline at once, the entire grid would collapse. Once that happens it would be a monumental task to get it all going again. I would assume months to bring it all back.
@Jemalacane03 жыл бұрын
@@Nicholas-f5 No it doesn't. Wind doesn't make shit anytime.
@ricardodsavant29654 жыл бұрын
All will be powered by flatulence from the state house.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
That does sound mature
@ricardodsavant29653 жыл бұрын
@@Nicholas-f5 -yes it's mature gas, enough to power a house.
@jrraven32304 жыл бұрын
😊 thank you Pat Doris😊
@melvindoo6433 жыл бұрын
Go ask all those people in Texas how fun it was having no power for weeks after those big ice storms
@melvindoo6433 жыл бұрын
Solar is a joke let’s be honest
@beboboymann38232 жыл бұрын
Oh goody……let’s demand that millions of people buy electric vehicles then people can decide to drive a car or have hot water and lights.
@billh38609 ай бұрын
We as a society will adjust and office buildings will not be totally lit up overnight. Also the charging up of electric cars will be off hours with some actually feeding back to the Grid
@acmefixer13 жыл бұрын
The solutions to the problem of unreliability is getting the utilities to do the Right Thing. This was overwhelmingly shown by the frozen Texas power grid in mid February and the outages caused by Texas utilities not following the commission's recommendations, trying to save money. What the utilities must do is install enough wind and solar to meet peak demand. The excess generation must be used to generate hydrogen. The gas fired plants must be able to run on up to 25% hydrogen and later 100% hydrogen. The hydrogen should be sold as fuel for transportation. There must be *no* curtailment. The only issue that this system has is the lack of the backbone by the utilities and regulators to commit to spending the money to do the job fully and expeditiously. That's all! There is no struggle. The problem is with the decisionmakers.
@randacnam73213 жыл бұрын
Where will you get the hydrogen? And what are you going to do about things like hydrogen embrittlement? And Texas had a similar cold snap 10 years ago where there were no blackouts on this scale. The difference? Wind was 6% of ERCOT capacity in 2011 and is now 25% in 2021. This means that when a big cold system drops wind speeds below the 7mi/hr for the turbines to do anything, wind generation craters. As it did, going from 8GW 24hr before the storm to 600MW during it. Then there is the failure of the natural gas pipeline system, which was due to *drumroll* electric compressor stations. These compressor stations used to run on natural gas engines running off the pipelines, but that wasn't green enough.
@JT-zl8yp2 жыл бұрын
@@randacnam7321 wind turbines should have been winterized
@randacnam73212 жыл бұрын
@@JT-zl8yp Cost. Everything with utilities is a cost benefit analysis.
@Briand-ei1gs Жыл бұрын
@JT-zl8yp you people are not in reality. You think people can snap their fingers and everything is done. The first commenter talking about more wind and solar has no idea the trillions of dollars he is talking about. Even then you have to have traditional power on standby fir every watt of wind and solar. The worst thing is wind and solar do not produce a return. This is going to cause massage economic destruction and many people will actually lose their lives because of this madness. Europe will probably have blackouts this winter. They got lucky last winter. This is madness
@judymcalpine58694 жыл бұрын
So maybe we stop selling our power from our dam`s and keep it for us!
@PaulRentz4 жыл бұрын
But Oregon and Washington want four of those breached and removed.
@Jemalacane04 жыл бұрын
@@PaulRentz That is pretty stupid.
@peterdorn57994 жыл бұрын
renewable power is the future, that's why dam economics are failing, need to be investing in renewable storage facilities, ie... CAES or tesla battery farms
@Jemalacane04 жыл бұрын
@@peterdorn5799 Economical grid-level battery storage is a pipe dream. Nuclear, hydro, geothermal, and natural gas for the win. Dams can generate electricity for less than 1¢/kwh and nuclear can generate for about 1¢/kwh, but a Tesla powerpack costs about $455/kwh. Battery packs are therefore 45,500x as expensive per kwh. Wind and solar are outdated, dead ends.
@-Stop-it3 жыл бұрын
I’m reminded of the old joke - a dozen Indians ambush the Lone Ranger and Tonto. The Lone Ranger says - Tonto tell them we are the good guys. Tonto says - what do you mean “we”, white man. In other words - they aren’t your dams & the power company is going to do whatever reaps their execs the most money.
@swampfox44892 жыл бұрын
Lower demand? How’re you going to do that with millions of electric vehicles on the power grid!
@billh38609 ай бұрын
I see a definite lack in dating these reports that linger for years online. Please; I ask that you date your commentaries as you talk! Thanks
Coal Plants could still burn iron Powder to generate electricity. It doesn't emit co2 and the iron-oxide that is produced as a result of the chemical reaction can be turned back into iron power using excess renewable energy.
@vaportrail63152 жыл бұрын
Do we need coal powered power plants? Well lets close all the CPP down for 2 months right now. Solar and wind turbines won't cut it
@bradwiebelhaus70656 ай бұрын
Where is the replacement power coming from?
@blacknwhitehound4 жыл бұрын
The answer is no
@marissadower-morgan33134 жыл бұрын
Farm Solar in Arizona and Nevada . There are lots of unrealized ways to work this out . We will be figuring it out, sooner than later . COAL is not the answer .
@millertime88353 жыл бұрын
Coal is part of the answer along with nuclear
@wearesolarfarmers11 ай бұрын
And now they speak of removing the bonniville dam, for it is aging.. KGW, I bet you have no Idea what is coming. You should renew a new documentary.
@adamhauskins64074 жыл бұрын
I'm just gonna say it why are not building nuclear plants
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
3 Reasons. Cost. Cost and Cost. Nuclear is 4x more per MWh and 15x more per MW compared to solar or wind.
@nobodyimportant86954 жыл бұрын
We had a Nuclear Plant in St Helens, OR and we know why it shut down and got decommissioned.
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
@@nobodyimportant8695 .... I'm guessing cost? ;)
@jamiesoncollie68674 жыл бұрын
adam hauskins watch the Chernobyl series on Hulu
@adamhauskins64074 жыл бұрын
@@jamiesoncollie6867 a drama based on rushed and unsound Soviet tech American nuclear power has a outstanding record including 3 mile island
@ScreamingSVTcobra036 ай бұрын
We are f-ing idiots in this country. We are our own worst enemy
@oohwha4 жыл бұрын
Picture this: The entire world is surrounded in a sphere of electrical grids and battery backups, all interconnected between *ALL* countries of the earth. No more poverty as expensive *ENERGY* is now completely *FREE* (as costs to maintain the network are built into taxes at a small fraction of the cost of big ticket items like defense and social programs). People have access to heating and cooling based on electricity provided by a global network of solar panels, wind generators, and hydroelectric plants. Roads are capable of wirelessly charging cars as they drive over them, etc. What are the first steps to making this world of free energy and no poverty a reality? Is it to continue to drill for oil and mine coal and then sell the products of those resource plundering operations to those whom can afford it? Or is it to start embracing limitless forms of energy supplied to us by the rotation of the earth, its gravity, and the sun itself? Seems like a no-brainer for anyone that can think big and see the possibilities for the future. But then, there's not much profit in giving energy to the poor when you can find a way to sell it to the rich instead :)
@oohwha4 жыл бұрын
@Eugene Stoner , sorry, Thomas Edison didn't ever actually *DO* anything... he just owned a bunch of people that did the work for him. As for the design... it's already done. Just a matter of connecting it all now. For reference, please see: Global Project - Internet. Lots of PhD's involved in that as well...
@oohwha4 жыл бұрын
@Eugene Stoner, this isn't 1908 and I'm not talking about trying to find a "gas station" (whatever that is) to fuel your "horseless carriage" (whatever that is). I'm talking about simply adding to the already existing network of the worldwide electrical grid. Between hydroelectric (essentially gravity) power, wind power, and solar power - all 100% free so long as the damn earth keeps spinning and revolving in the same path at proper speeds - we have enough energy to supply every human on the planet with heat, cooling, fuel to travel, etc. Provided, of course, they have electric heating, electric cooling, electric cars, and anything else powered by the electricity we capture, convert, and store. This is not science fiction... and we're not starting from scratch like they did back at the turn of the 20th century when gas stations didn't even exist yet! Hell, I have a ChargePoint 240v outlet in my damn garage right the hell now... I wonder how many middle class Americans had an oil refinery in their back yard in 1910? I'm guessing none? How did the fantasy of a horseless carriage EVER survive, I wonder?
@iareid82554 жыл бұрын
Randy, You cannot run a grid that is mostly solar and wind. For a few reasons. There is insufficient hydro or sites for hydro to make it work, and as for batteries, they are a joke on this scale. It's fine to com eup with an idea but it's better to have basic technical knowledge of the thing you want to build. Fossil fuel generation will be with us for decades more.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Agreed, Tesla was working on this
@acmefixer13 жыл бұрын
@@iareid8255 What cave have you been hiding in? You're a decade behind today's reality. The grid in California has at times more than 50% renewables and that's continuing to grow. You can go to caiso.com any time and click on the green and see how much of the grid load is renewables. Pull your head out of the sand and get up to date on your out-of-date 'facts'. The US just needs to follow California's lead and convert to renewables plus storage as fast as possible.
@rockthevote3984 жыл бұрын
The cost is irrelevant: going green is not optional. We pay now or we pay much more later in a lot more than just money.
@ThoughtsOnNews4 жыл бұрын
Rock theVote Ridiculous uneducated or overly propagandize do perspective here. You’re 100% wrong but certain of your rightness. I love it
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
@@ThoughtsOnNews ..... how is he wrong? Do you reject physics or math? The thing about science is it's true whether you accept it or not.
@fridayjoefriday4 жыл бұрын
@@Chris-ie9os With all due respect, if the powers that be can not get a five day weather forecast correct, what chance do they have with a fifty to one hundred year forecast correct? Then that big bright orb in our sky, plays a much bigger role then the powers that be have let on. Watch for articles in publications on natural climate change, leading up to UNIPCC 2022 report. Finally, what was the temperature of earth 2,000 years ago? What about 1,500 or 1,000 or 500 or even 100 years ago?
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
@@fridayjoefriday Because climate isn't weather. A recent study determined that climate models accurately predicted warming to within 0.05C. Because climate change is simply an energy balance problem. It's mostly basic math. agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1029/2019GL085378?referrer_access_token=1ubHvT5_TzgM0lNQrzhcyMOuACxIJX3yJRZRu4P4erveSGydNoNbpSTNSZ5Z1aDAU1Xs2rIU3Le9v9UWpLY537Rl4_4NUuN3NIo1jJM3ut_fnDt270Q0hYXiXODmoFSccoy_7YUcuhYgRKaAbOXozA%3D%3D
@webranger19624 жыл бұрын
@@Chris-ie9os Democrats can't even cure imaginary problems they made up.
@ddyodaman55154 жыл бұрын
Coal power is still the major hitter when it comes to power generation! Stupid idea to think about cutting it out! Wind turbines kill birds like crazy!
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
Coal kills more. What does coal do that gas turbines can't do cleaner and cheaper?
@palmshoot4 жыл бұрын
Chris is right about the birds.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Housecats harm more birds.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
@@palmshoot *wrong about the birds
@palmshoot3 жыл бұрын
@@Nicholas-f5 We have the US Federal Wildlife Service to back our claim (Source: www.fws.gov/birds/bird-enthusiasts/threats-to-birds.php.). What's the source for your claim? We'll wait.
@peterdorn57994 жыл бұрын
are we building rewable energy storage, I certainly hope so to be ahead of the curve
@billcichoke25344 жыл бұрын
Why? Renewables don't make enough power for the grid AND charging batteries. You STILL need BASELINE, and we're taking it all offline. Part of the reason we have no more aluminum production here, is because we closed down Trojan and started with the Columbia Gorge pinwheels. You think we'd have learned our lesson. But I guess KATE gets a pass because SHE/IT says so.
@Deterrent-xz5zz3 жыл бұрын
@@billcichoke2534 it’s called nuclear power coal is obsolete
@billcichoke25343 жыл бұрын
@@Deterrent-xz5zz Look up what the Trojan plant was...
@justindickinson26844 жыл бұрын
Carbon-dioxide is plant food.
@Jemalacane04 жыл бұрын
It is, but there are many more problems for coal than CO2.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
That's misleading and you know it
@terakata24282 жыл бұрын
Let them bloviate because thus thing is gonna crash and burn. Keep playing games yall.
@millertime88353 жыл бұрын
No way. Impossible
@7gramgram4104 жыл бұрын
Google smelting. Windmills are made of steel. Will you have enough heat to MAKE your windmills? You might want to look into what resources will be exploited to make the big batteries. Or just wait until the Congo is destroyed, then protest the companies that you are propping up today. A little self education goes a long way.
@MrTBoneMalone4 жыл бұрын
I've heard that a windmill can actually cost more in energy to make then what it will ever produce. If it's true, then it's a sobering thought.
@timm-ru9ii4 жыл бұрын
@@MrTBoneMalone It takes 35 years to produce what it took to create, but I think it takes longer if you take maintenance into account, also the inconsistency of the wind may radically affect that estimate.
@fridayjoefriday4 жыл бұрын
@@timm-ru9ii Life span of of these bird killers is 25 years. Even with maintenance, few make it to 20 years, before they fail. Also lubricants for these bird killers comes from petroleum.
@jodyyoohoo4 жыл бұрын
Windmills, solar panels, electric cars including all batteries will be an enviro travesty. These things don't last forever, and can't be recycled. They're currently burying turbine parts in landfills in Wyo. They're banning straws but aren't concerned about this future nightmare! It's time to give them what they're demanding and watch SHTF. I look forward to it!
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
@@jodyyoohoo Better than burning fools fuel. You just gonna sit quietly in the dark?
@OregonEdProject4 жыл бұрын
Bad report. Biased. No mention of nuclear.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is most costly to taxpayers and most toxic
@Spacedog793 жыл бұрын
@@Nicholas-f5 Over the long term nuclear is the cheapest of any energy source. The EU just completed a study on the dangers posed by nuclear for their taxonomy and they failed to find *any* scientific evidence of harm. Nuclear is the cleanest, safest and most reliable energy source there is.
@SherriP3 жыл бұрын
Jesus controls the weather, the wind, rain, sun, cold, warmth, and the seasons. Every aspect of weather is controlled by God and God alone❗ Praise God thank you Jesus for being You and all You do for everyone and bringing about the change we all need, want and believe You for. In Jesus name Sometimes God uses weather as consequences for sin. Like a nation having drought causes difficulty and He does it for that reason, consequences. So repent, and pray and seek His face, believe in Him..ask him for anything in His name and He will do it. Everyone's has sinned and there are consequences for those actions. God uses curses and you need to be forgiven and Him being a Holy merciful God having sent Jesus for everyone will forgive you and come be taught by Him in Jesus name 🙏
@wildbill12ivy493 жыл бұрын
windmills destroy more of the environment than any coal plant or mine!
@420allday253 жыл бұрын
eye sores on the horizon not to mention effects on bird migrations
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
@@420allday25 that's a myth, cats eat more birds
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Source please? You're spreading myths
@melvindoo6433 жыл бұрын
Windmills are also dangerous if there’s to much wind they literally have to use breaks to slow it down and every years 100s of wind mills fall catch on fire and constantly need work
@JT-zl8yp2 жыл бұрын
wrong
@nobodyimportant86954 жыл бұрын
Will there be enough power? Yes, there will be. If it doesn't, it will create jobs to build the clean renewable energy technology. The cleanest of them all is too look into "Fusion Technology"
@Chris-ie9os4 жыл бұрын
@Eugene Stoner ??? I've been generating >2x as much as I use from fusion. It's called Solar PV :)
@Jemalacane04 жыл бұрын
Build 4 AP1000s. No absofuckinglutely not! Nuclear power is not terribly dangerous nor is it terribly expensive.
@Nicholas-f53 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is the most costly to taxpayers
@Jemalacane03 жыл бұрын
@@Nicholas-f5 No it isn't. You're the troll here. And unreliable horseshit renewables are the costliest to ratepayers.
@acmefixer13 жыл бұрын
@@Jemalacane0 Renewables plus storage will take the place of thermal power plants because it's cheaper and takes only a year or two to bring online. New nuclear power plants are too expensive due to cost overruns and they take more than a decade to bring online. Utilities are the ones who make the decisions, not you, not me. And they're deciding against thermal power and installing renewables.
@Jemalacane03 жыл бұрын
@@acmefixer1 Not even close to being true at all. You can't store your way of unreliability or dilute energy sources. That's why solar power plants with storage can't break 24% capacity factor. Not to mention you need 4,000-5,000 megawatts of solar to equal 1,000 megawatts of thermal power and 3,000-4,000 megawatts of wind to equal 1,000 megawatts of thermal power. Also, thermal power plants last longer. Wind and solar's lifespans are about 30 years. There is a nuclear power plant which has gone 50 years (that's as long as nuclear power has been around).
@Jemalacane03 жыл бұрын
@@acmefixer1 Utilities are going with renewables because of tax incentives and to satisfy greentards.
@Humza_3.144 жыл бұрын
Nuclear Power is the solution!
@heidiroy85224 жыл бұрын
ALL DEMS..
@vorpalinferno97112 жыл бұрын
Nuclear.Solar.Wind.
@halffast7799 Жыл бұрын
The answer to the question is NO. It is that simple.