Re: [VO]:Sobering Energy Stats

2021-02-10 Thread Jed Rothwell
U.S. wind generation sets new daily and hourly records at end of 2020

https://www.renewableenergyworld.com/wind-power/u-s-wind-generation-sets-new-daily-and-hourly-records-at-end-of-2020/

QUOTE:

On April 10, 2019, daily electricity generation from wind turbines in the
United States (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) reached a high of 1.42 million
megawatthours (MWh). That record stood for a year and a half before it was
surpassed on several days in November and December 2020. Wind electricity
generation reached 1.76 million MWh on December 23, or about 17% of total
electricity generation on that day. On average, EIA estimates that wind
accounted for 9% of U.S. electricity generation in 2020.


This compares to 20% of total electricity generated by nuclear plants:

https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/nuclear/us-nuclear-industry.php


[VO]:Sobering Energy Stats

2021-02-01 Thread Michael Foster
As an early cold fusion enthusiast and experimenter, I was hoping CF would be 
the answer to inexpensive clean personal distributed energy production. So far, 
nothing much has come of it, although it seems obvious to me that the effect is 
real and much more needs to be done with it. Can major research funding of 
CF/LENR save us? I think serious funding is going to be prevented by the 
scientific establishment for the foreseeable future. I'm hoping this latest 
"Lattice Confinement" endeavor which in my opinion is just cold fusion 
relabeled might open the window.

Here are some stats from "Watts Up With That" that really lay it all out for 
energy production. Having done some rough estimates myself, I don't think they 
are far off the mark.

To get the world to zero emissions by 2050, our options are to build, 
commission, and bring on-line either:

• Two 2.1 gigawatt nuclear power plants each and every day until 2050, OR

• 6000 two-megawatt wind turbines each and every day until 2050 plus a 3 GW 
nuclear power plant every day until 2050, assuming there’s not one turbine 
failure for any reason, OR

• 200 square miles (500 square kilometres) of solar panels each and every day 
until 2050 plus a 3 GW nuclear power plant every day and a half until 2050, 
assuming not one of the panels fails or is destroyed by hail or wind.

Sobering indeed.