Posted on Feb 16, 2021
Hello Clean Energy Advocates, What Do We Do When the Wind Turbines are All Frozen?
3.38K
76
26
8
8
0
Edited 4 y ago
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 7
Clean energy can be stored. Problem solved.
Fossil fuels have a limited supply. That can't be solved.
Fossil fuels have a limited supply. That can't be solved.
(6)
(0)
LTC Kevin B.
SSG Samuel Kermon - The big issue I see with this debate is that it has evolved into an either/or argument. Either we fully embrace new technology and abandon fossil fuels, or we suppress the development of clean and renewable sources, while continuing to focus only on using fossil fuels. We can't do a complete changeover instantly, and we shouldn't suppress attempts at finding newer, cleaner, renewable sources. It's a shift over time, not a shift at one point in time (or even a refusal to consider shifting).
(4)
(0)
LTC David Brown
All electrical energy can be stored for a period and at what cost and for how long? There are tremendous ecological costs to producing storage batteries.
(0)
(0)
Maj John Bell
LTC Kevin B. - Thanks for the correction.
I personally believe "capacity constraints" equates to we aren't there yet. I'm hopeful we'll get there soon. But, I'm not betting the farm. If some entrepreneur can make a major break through in battery technology, he/she will be the next tech Billionaire. I think it will more than likely be decades, but the way thing go, it could be a couple years. I also doubt that chemical battery storage will be the long-term solutiion. chemical batteries have their own set of environmental problems.
There was a documentary series on Netflix a few years ago that looked at alternatives to chemical batteries. The 2nd in the series covered one of the Canary Islands, El Hiero. The Island was 100% dependent on diesel power generation. They came up with a clever "solution." The majority of the day wind energy provides more energy than they can use. So the excess energy was used to pump sea water to a series of reservoirs high in the mountains. When The wind was not adequate to meet the need, the reservoirs were opened and the sea water coursed through high velocity pipelines, to hydro electric turbines.
Theoretically it should have been more than adequate. However it turned out that geology was not on their side and a reservoir system that would have met the demand would also cause significant other environmental concerns, including major land slides into populated areas. It doesn't mean such a system can't work, just not there. Or not there UNTIL they solve the geology problem. But they are still able to meet about 40% of their demand shortfall during periods where the wind power is not generating a single KW.
I absolutely agree with your comment about it being a transitional process. But I believe market forces will produce better solutions faster than government mandated solutions. And I'm definitely not in favor of the government creating "artificial" scarcity of fossil fuels like it did with coal.
I personally believe "capacity constraints" equates to we aren't there yet. I'm hopeful we'll get there soon. But, I'm not betting the farm. If some entrepreneur can make a major break through in battery technology, he/she will be the next tech Billionaire. I think it will more than likely be decades, but the way thing go, it could be a couple years. I also doubt that chemical battery storage will be the long-term solutiion. chemical batteries have their own set of environmental problems.
There was a documentary series on Netflix a few years ago that looked at alternatives to chemical batteries. The 2nd in the series covered one of the Canary Islands, El Hiero. The Island was 100% dependent on diesel power generation. They came up with a clever "solution." The majority of the day wind energy provides more energy than they can use. So the excess energy was used to pump sea water to a series of reservoirs high in the mountains. When The wind was not adequate to meet the need, the reservoirs were opened and the sea water coursed through high velocity pipelines, to hydro electric turbines.
Theoretically it should have been more than adequate. However it turned out that geology was not on their side and a reservoir system that would have met the demand would also cause significant other environmental concerns, including major land slides into populated areas. It doesn't mean such a system can't work, just not there. Or not there UNTIL they solve the geology problem. But they are still able to meet about 40% of their demand shortfall during periods where the wind power is not generating a single KW.
I absolutely agree with your comment about it being a transitional process. But I believe market forces will produce better solutions faster than government mandated solutions. And I'm definitely not in favor of the government creating "artificial" scarcity of fossil fuels like it did with coal.
(2)
(0)
(0)
(0)
Its called Nuclear or hydro powered or even geothermal. Green doesn't have to be solar or wind. Nuclear fission cores are coming online that can be put underground. We will have a green economy an energy sector. It should have started decades ago but the boomers gave into big oil. You know if you acted sooner the vast majority of the us wouldn't be frozen. Those who say climate change isn't real after this week are either deniers or plain stupid at this point.
(4)
(0)
Maj John Bell
One week, one year, one decade, one century doesn't prove or disprove man-made climate change. The macro-cycles span hundreds of millennia, and this weeks weather is well within normal ranges for even a few decades.
But, if man can change the climate unintentionally, it is a short time before we can change the climate intentionally, and with beneficial purpose.
But, if man can change the climate unintentionally, it is a short time before we can change the climate intentionally, and with beneficial purpose.
(2)
(0)
LTC David Brown
You do know that nuclear and hydroelectric power are not accepted as “green energy” by many in the green energy movement? It is impossible to build a nuclear reactor in America today. One being built in South Carolina was shuttered and the two being built at Plant Vogel have had major cost overruns. The main core for the two new Plant Vogel reactors are made in China. https://www.onio.com/article/environmental-cost-of-batteries.html
The massive environmental cost of batteries - ONiO
Lithium-ion batteries are not quite the “green solution” that they are made out to be. Many governments and local bodies around the world are loudly touting lithium-ion batteries as the future. However, the dangers associated with lithium production are manifold and not in the least, trivial.
(0)
(0)
The reality is we are pushing green energy to hard before the technology is really there, failing, and then falling back on what they hate even harder. If you are gutting the earth to burn coal to power your electric car, you really are not achieving much. We absolutely need to live cleaner but need to get there intelligently.
(4)
(0)
Read This Next