wyx087
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 3,209
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Certainly food for thought.....
I would:
In this winter, expensive fossil fuel would certainly be required to keep the lights on. It is the failing of last couple of decades.
In the near future, build up a lot more wind power is prudent. They are unpredictable but it should no longer be about installing just enough, we need more than enough for once in ten year windless days (as example). The key is to be able to produce enough when conditions are unfavourable. So that cheap energy can be offered to masses of storage that is can be automated (eg. from EV's, home batteries, to grid scale storage)
In the long term, built up a good mix of nuclear, renewable and storage devices to remove expensive peaker plants. Enough nuclear capability to cover once in 50 or 100 year windless days, while storage devices (big and small) are to cover day to day, hour to hour demand variations.
As I always said, it's about getting flexible demand to meet unpredictable supply. Living off the land but use modern solutions to get through harsh times. Whereas today's mentality comes from industrial revolution, aka the start of human induced climate change, it is to adjust (expensive, finite, polluting) supply to meet uncontrolled demand.
I would:
In this winter, expensive fossil fuel would certainly be required to keep the lights on. It is the failing of last couple of decades.
In the near future, build up a lot more wind power is prudent. They are unpredictable but it should no longer be about installing just enough, we need more than enough for once in ten year windless days (as example). The key is to be able to produce enough when conditions are unfavourable. So that cheap energy can be offered to masses of storage that is can be automated (eg. from EV's, home batteries, to grid scale storage)
In the long term, built up a good mix of nuclear, renewable and storage devices to remove expensive peaker plants. Enough nuclear capability to cover once in 50 or 100 year windless days, while storage devices (big and small) are to cover day to day, hour to hour demand variations.
As I always said, it's about getting flexible demand to meet unpredictable supply. Living off the land but use modern solutions to get through harsh times. Whereas today's mentality comes from industrial revolution, aka the start of human induced climate change, it is to adjust (expensive, finite, polluting) supply to meet uncontrolled demand.


