Yeah, you were rightfully downvoted. You came in here, posted a video with a provocative question and expected other people to spend their time on it. Thats pretty entitled. Also you were combative all around, so most peoples initial opinion was negative. Your try for more appeal to the video just fell flat. If you want to spread this, include a tldr and don't use phrases like blue q anon or whatever it was
But you always have a combination of several renewable sources which can power these countries.
this is not uncontested, plenty of people disagree
Yeah, i know. Time will tell.
we have been saying this for decades and I guarantee you we will still be saying in in another decade. Also, renewables aren't fast to connect to the grid either. The more we spin up the bigger the backlog will be connecting new installations to the grid.
Sorry but that is just not true. The growth of solar has almost been logarithmic and the installed capacity was almost non-existent two decades ago. That just doesn't compare to the snails pace of nuclear.
Also, it's not about people, but money. Every euro spent on some tech bro nuclear startup could be used to install real capacity instead.
longer power lines means more efficiency losses, and the more you plan to roll out renewables to 100% the more inefficiencies there will be. as previously stated, connecting large brand new renewable installations to the grid is expensive and also takes a long time.
Yeah, theoretically true, but what distances are we talking about? To get electricity from the suburbs in the city center should be trivial. It gets more difficult if we have to cross countries, but high voltage DC solves that issue pretty well. We could power europe from solar installed in the Sahara ^^
And it became really relevant only recently with the takeover of the us by trump, the couchfucker, musk and peter thiel. Before that it was mainly just wet libertarian dreams.
Don't forget hydro, look at Norway, it's pretty far away from the equator but has almost 100% renewables. Island as well. There are suboptimal locations, but in the end there is no country which can't use renewables for all electricity needs.
Supplying the current global electricity consumption with solar PV would imply covering 0.3% of the land area of the world (source)
All rooftops should be enough but parking lots and agrarsolar would be also solutions. So even if we only use solar (which we don't ) it should be possible.
Renewables create a base load, the problem are demand peaks following overcast days. And there npps don't help.
so would nuclear if we actually did it and improved regulatory inefficiencies
Maybe, but not fast enough. We need the power immediately and battery are already in the steep part of their growth phase. We can't spend several decades learning how to do it right. Then we could also just wait for fusion.
land use isn't an issue in rural places, but it absolutely is in more densely populated places near cities and datacenter hubs. The world is not homogenous.
Then we use power lines like we do already. Most power plants right now are also not in cities, so I don't understand the argument. Would you also want to build the npps in/near cities?
But the technology requires this amount of bureaucracy, else you get big problems. I trust physics, but i don't trust humans. Especially if they can get money by skimping on security. The risks with renawables (except dams) are way smaller.
Where do renewables not work? I'd say they work at even more places, because you don't need such a developed infrastructure to set it up. Everyone can wire up a small solar farm after a few hours of YouTube, i wouldn't trust myself with reactor maintenance.
Nuclear also needs storage for peaks. You don't want to have to build enough nuclear for peak production which then gets shut down all the time, driving up your LCOE. You want your expensive plant to run all the time. Also you need storage if you have an unplanned maintenance, because then you lose a relevant percentage of production with little to no warning.
And storage is getting cheaper and better every year. The bigger issue would be a grid that can shovel power from one end of a continent to the other in case of adverse weather.
We need less space for solar to power the world than we use for golf courses right now, so I'd say landuse is a non issue. Because you can use roofs and such even less.
It also was covered recently in the podcast "behind the bastards".
Don't forget that most newspapers are owned by the capitalist class and journalists can't always write about what they want. Should be absolutely more, but eh, what can we do? It's a complex thema and most people aren't going to be interested. Just radicalize your friends and over time maybe we see a shift in the public reception
France auditors recently put out a report in which they criticized the high cost of their nuclear program and requested a moratorium for new projects in other countries.
they haven't been caught with anything openly anti-constitutional.
The federal party is suspected to be anti constitutional and several state level partys have been declared as anti constitutional by the Verfassungsschutz, so that's not completely true.
Except for the csgo gambling I have no complaints about Gabe and he really does a lot of good stuff with valve, so he really might be one of the better billionaires.
Risk (People feared it since Three Mile Island and Tschernobyl)
nuclear Trash, Germanys states still cant say where there should be storage, except not in their state.
That were the main reasons around the 2000s when it was decided for the first time and that was generally consensus in the population.
And they don't work well with renewables, where did you get that from? NPPs want to continually run, cause most of their cost is in construction, so you don't want to shut them down. And they are limited in the flexibility of power ramping by thermal loads and stresses, which causes cracks in pipes if you power them up and down all the time.
We did cut coal usage in half anyway since 1990, but by using renewables.
And before you say we could be coalfree then, nuclear and renewables don't work well together, because a built nuclear power plant has no economic motivation to shut down if there's a lot of renewables active. The best solution to get carbon emissions down (if a state doesn't have nukes) is and will be until fusion works, renewables and storage.
Should have, but thats just not possible with the political support for coal and miners at the time. The greens wanted to phase out coal too, but with social democrats & conservatives there was never a chance.
And also nuclear was never as big as coal and gas in Germany, so it was realistically never an option. Even at the peak the generation was only half of what coal produced.
Yeah, you were rightfully downvoted. You came in here, posted a video with a provocative question and expected other people to spend their time on it. Thats pretty entitled. Also you were combative all around, so most peoples initial opinion was negative. Your try for more appeal to the video just fell flat. If you want to spread this, include a tldr and don't use phrases like blue q anon or whatever it was