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   alt.engineering.electrical      Electrical engineering discussion forum      2,547 messages   

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   Message 1,855 of 2,547   
   BruceS to Alan McKinley   
   Re: To those who think solar panels matc   
   13 Mar 17 09:37:16   
   
   XPost: sci.skeptic, alt.solar.thermal, sac.politics   
   XPost: sci.chem.electrochem.battery   
   From: bruces42@hotmail.com   
      
   On 03/12/2017 06:01 AM, Alan McKinley wrote:   
   > In article    
   > Sylvia Else  wrote:   
   >>   
   >> On 12/03/2017 6:09 AM, BruceS wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> Before all the fracking made natural gas so cheap, coal was the most   
   >>> economical fuel over here.  Many blame Obama's opposition to coal for   
   >>> its decline, but the real cause is simple economics.  At some point,   
   >>> the natural gas supply will start getting more expensive, and coal will   
   >>> be king again.  With Australia having such supplies, I'm surprised it   
   >>> doesn't burn more coal.  Surely with rolling blackouts, there's a   
   >>> market.   
   >>   
   >> Rolling blackouts are caused by a lack of peak supply, for which coal is   
   >> singularly inappropriate. Such supply is traditionally provided by   
   >> either gas or diesel generation. The problem is that with solar and wind   
   >> taking the peak supply when it suits them, the economics of building   
   >> peak generation are seriously undermined. Essentially, the market has   
   >> been broken by government requirements that renewables be allowed to   
   >> supply when they can. So some government intervention is required to fix it.   
   >   
   > Governments get caught up in stupid political red tape and the   
   > end result is something based on methods and technology that is   
   > no longer optimal.   
      
   Yes, it sounds like the usual government screwup.  Solar and wind   
   should never be counted on for supply.  AIUI, here we always have   
   reliable backup to match any claimed production ability of those.  We   
   have some large wind farms in areas that are fairly consistently windy,   
   but still don't count on them.  Things like coal provides a solid,   
   dependable level of power (yes, not quickly adjustable) and things like   
   natural gas easily handle sudden need.   
      
   >>>> Adding to the problem is that to appease the environmentalists, gas is   
   >>>> now being used for base-load, because it has lower CO2 emissions. Even   
   >>>> leaving aside the insufficiency of gas supply, the known gas reserves   
   >>>> are nothing like as big as the coal reserves.   
   >>>   
   >>> That's the same over here, with hundreds of years of coal reserves, but   
   >>> at the moment it's cheaper to burn natural gas.  Of course, the   
   >>> coal-fired plants are still operating, just at lower levels.   
   >>>   
   >>>> We could, of course, process and use our huge uranium reserves in   
   >>>> nuclear plants, rather than shipping the ore overseas. But the NIMBY   
   >>>> effect applies, and in Australia BY seems to mean "within a couple of   
   >>>> thousand kilometres."   
   >>>   
   >>> I'd like to see more nuclear plants, preferably of a better design than   
   >>> is usual for the U.S.  Canada's "CANDU" design seems like a good one.   
   >>> Nuclear power has some serious advantages if treated properly.  I for   
   >>> one would much rather have a nuke nearby than a coal or oil plant.  I   
   >>> just checked, and it looks like we've only ever had one in Colorado,   
   >>> and that's been shut down for years.   
   >>   
   >> Provided they don't leak, nukes actually release less radiation into the   
   >> environment that coal plant does, because there's a small amount of   
   >> uranium in the coal, and it ends up in the ash.   
   >   
   > But when they do leak they can't always be controlled until   
   > substantial harm is done to large geographical regions.   
      
   The biggest nuclear accident in the U.S., Three Mile Island, never did   
   any real harm.  The highest radiation levels released were less than   
   the background radiation levels in places like my state, CO.  The   
   disasters of Chernobyl and Fukushima did release a lot of radiation,   
   but it's hard to make any generalization from such a small sample set.   
      
   > Just a personal observation, but it seems the nuke problems are   
   > always in the larger facilities.   
      
   It seems to me the big problems are from poor designs that aren't   
   updated as we learn more.  There isn't much accountability when a   
   disaster does happen, and the damage easily crosses political   
   boundaries.  Then there's the problem of waste disposal.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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