jonescg
100 MW
Always maintained the best thing you can do by the environment is walk places.
I believe most people do exactly that for most practical journeys, but once the journey time becomes impractical, then some form of mechanised transport is necessary.jonescg said:Always maintained the best thing you can do by the environment is walk places.
Punx0r said:I have a feeling (but cannot check right now) that cycling is more efficient/lower lifetime impact over walking... Walking burns around 100kcal/mile and food production is a big deal for climate change. Of course, that's further complicated by what food you eat :wink:
TheBeastie said:even kids digging up cobalt
jonescg said:"How will we ever pay for all this?"
From taxes. The same way we pay for everything of public significance. Like the military.
In fact if you took money out of military spending and put it towards securing low emission, import-free energy (solar, wind, hydro, nuclear) you won't have as many enemies, and therefore wont need the bomb budget anyway.
And don't forget the birds! Solar is a MAGNET DEATHRAY for BARBEQUING THE CRAP out of the poor, poor birds! Why do you want MAGNET DEATHRAY BARBECUED BIRDS, you commie green socialist liberal loonie? (Unless you get them from Chick-Fil-A or Koo Koo Roo, then it's OK.)cricketo said:Think of the children! And puppies! Suffering because of all those wind turbines and solar panels!TheBeastie said:even kids digging up cobalt
Dauntless said:https://www.ozy.com/rising-stars/hes-creating-a-new-fuel-out-of-thin-air-for-85-cents-per-gallon/92686
Agreed. Of all places, Hawaii could use a few SMR's, say in Hawaii, Honolulu and Maui. With each generating around 100MW, that would cover most of their baseline usage. Build them in the US (or South Korea, or Japan) ship them to Hawaii by sea, put them in the containment building, and then when their fuel is used up, haul them out and ship them back for refurbishing. No fuel handling in Hawaii and no waste to figure out what to do with.sendler2112 said:Why is a rich tropical area like Hawaii still 70% diesel fuel?
billvon said:That takes care of your baseline usage, and the waste heat is usable for things like desalination. Then solar/wind for peaking and sheddable loads. (And geothermal, of course.)
Hillhater said:They should worry more about where the drinking water comes from or where their waste goes
cricketo said:Hillhater said:They should worry more about where the drinking water comes from or where their waste goes
Meanwhile... how is your solar system doing ?![]()
Hillhater said:You tell me...
12 panels, facing north (Southern hemiphere) 25/30 deg angle.
Nominal (nameplate) capacity 3.1 kW
Output 6.5-7.0 kWh per day max,..mid summer, clear bright 100% sun exposure.
Max power at noon, 1.4 kW
8)
jonescg said:Hillhater said:You tell me...
12 panels, facing north (Southern hemiphere) 25/30 deg angle.
Nominal (nameplate) capacity 3.1 kW
Output 6.5-7.0 kWh per day max,..mid summer, clear bright 100% sun exposure.
Max power at noon, 1.4 kW
8)
Sounds about right - the 25/30 degree angle is ideal for winter production. I have 12 panels of 195 Wp each - so a theoretical nameplate power of 2340 W. At midday they put out about 1900 W on a hot day, 2100 W on a cool day. And in October when light rain clears to reveal a bright midday sun, it cracks 2900 W![]()
7 kWh sounds about right for this time of year. I can get as high as 13 kWh in December.
Get your system fixed - or get your money back from the shyster who sold you a cruddy system and took you to the cleaners.Hillhater said:12 panels, facing north (Southern hemiphere) 25/30 deg angle.
Nominal (nameplate) capacity 3.1 kW
Output 6.5-7.0 kWh per day max,..mid summer, clear bright 100% sun exposure.
Max power at noon, 1.4 kW