- Joined
- Apr 26, 2015
- Messages
- 2,618
Cheapest power to make is now solar. So that will continue to grow, and it will continue to get cheaper and better. But it has it's limits, luckily my area is all hydro. So solar during the days, then hydro at night? Each house having solar or cities having solar is my guess for the future, until we figure out cold fusion and or hydrogen. The fact they can stabilize cold fusion is revolutionary, but who knows if we will see that in our life times.While I agree that eventually someone will figure it out as far as power needs and power consumption, storage etc. The interim may be quite long until that figured out. Too, most people in the US cannot afford the EV vehicles and if you extrapolate that out to other countries it certainly isn't going to happen as a lot of them barely have power at all. Most people don't realize that vast parts of the US are critically low on electrical power, that includes the midwest states that have previously been flush with electrical power. The most important being critically needed power when the temps go way up or way down and then everyone start cranking their heat or AC.
If you couple that with what the government would like, which is everyone immediately make a jump to EV's only. Well it likely isn't an option as most states would either brown or blackout in short order, with the exceptions with those having nuclear power still available.
What kind of car is your brother charging with a small solar panel?
I have a hard time seeing anyone wanting a smaller power station in their respective town, anymore its a bunch of NIMBY types who just want free power that doesn't impact their lives. They would run on trash? What do you do with the leftover ash? Not to mention the CO2 connection.
Natural gas? Already happening on larger scale but the liberal left doesn't like the CO2 either.
Hydrogen? Maybe but then you have the explosive side to worry about..
Small Nukes? Probably not, to much concern over melt downs and waste.
Wind continues to grow but really doesn't make sense when you factor in upkeep and cost structure, not to mention it needs well wind..
Solar only works when the suns out and frankly is a waste of land IMO.
Currently, I am at a loss to see how this arrives and plays out well for anyone but the truly wealthy.
Virtual power stations would fix the grid virtually overnight. But again, the current battery technology sucks and I am not putting it in my house. But every single house having .5 to 1-2 days worth of stored power (from solar or the grid), then buffer they could buffer demand would fix it. At least that's what I read and what makes sense.
Left or right, co2 added to the carbon cycle will affect the planet. The amount and how quickly is the only science that is not fully sound.
I never see news on blackouts for cold days, seems to be the extreme hot days when the news cycle pumps the "black outs". Maybe Texas did during those cold snaps?
Solid idea, make people with EV cars have solar panels to charge them? Tax that panel power highly to help with road taxes? Road taxes disappearing from EV is an absolute problem, we have to fix.
My brother in law has some lame Honda EV car. Nothing fancy like a tesla, just a commuter car for work. He drives like 20 miles each way. Charges it when he gets home and on weekends, that's it. He also gets a credit on his power bill as he dumps power onto the grid.