Germany’s solar panels produce more power than Japan’s entire Fukushima complexhttp://www.grist.org/article/2011-03-22-germanys-solar-panels-produce-more-power-than-japans-entire-fuku
3/24/2011 12:00:29 PM
i.e. spent billions and billions more than they needed to, instead of perhaps building some natural gas plants.
3/24/2011 12:13:43 PM
^Yeah...and maybe some fracking for good measure.[Edited on March 24, 2011 at 12:17 PM. Reason : ..............]
3/24/2011 12:16:43 PM
3/24/2011 12:21:30 PM
Next question, can anyone tell me what this calculation is? I'll give you a hint, it's for 2010.(12 000 * 1 000) / (365 * 24 * 16 914) = 0.081Let's see some participation!
3/24/2011 12:23:49 PM
^^^you're welcome to stop using electricity whenever you want.^^without putting much thought into it I'd say that the nuclear plants produce 10 GW all the time, whereas the solar panels hit 12.1 GW briefly (probably just a few seconds) and produce well under that most of the time. Also, they produce nothing at night. So at the least if you average the daily and nightly output you're looking at 6.05...yay.
3/24/2011 12:51:26 PM
mrfrog, what about the carbon footprint of the production of solar panels vs nuclear or coal plants?
3/24/2011 12:52:39 PM
3/24/2011 1:07:18 PM
3/24/2011 1:31:00 PM
^^yeah I knew it was way too high, but I hope it was evident that I was over simplifying Enough with the "carbon footprint"...useless statistic unless you're trying to grow more plants.[Edited on March 24, 2011 at 1:32 PM. Reason : ^]
3/24/2011 1:31:59 PM
3/24/2011 1:38:31 PM
this is like when you reset the MPG meter in your car and then coast down the hill and it says 100mpg.
3/24/2011 1:45:52 PM
3/24/2011 1:47:53 PM
its not a pointless article if it gets clicks and sells ads
3/24/2011 2:06:06 PM
So the gist of the opinion piece is that 'every solar panel in the entire country of Germany is infrequently capable of producing more energy conversion than a single plant in Japan'?
3/24/2011 2:12:23 PM
Fukushima Daiichi generation (2009, GWh), units 1-6 2637.414 4903.293 4037.601 5462.108 5720.079 7130.99Germany's total solar production (GWh):2009: 6,5782010: 12,000That includes solar thermal plants. But most of the capacity is PV, reflecting the fact that Germany is a terrible place to put solar power plants.[Edited on March 24, 2011 at 2:32 PM. Reason : revision: I think i was wrong, this is all PV, i can't even find much mention of S.T. in Germany]
3/24/2011 2:29:23 PM
I'm happy for the Germans and all, but all this says is that had Japan blanketed their nation's roofs with solar PV panels, they would need 49 nuclear power reactors instead of 55 assuming ideal, perpetual sunlight; this reduces the risk a bit but is far from removing the problem. Even with the tremendous investment Germany made, it isn't enough to completely replace nuclear power in Japan let alone the myriad of coal, gas, and oil plants that make up the other 2/3 of Japanese energy production. I'm all for reducing dependency, but solar panels and even wind aren't going to do it alone...
3/24/2011 3:19:15 PM
Yo Japan, I'mma let you finish but Germany has the best power generation scheme of all time. OF ALL TIME.
3/24/2011 3:56:18 PM
OF ALL TIME [during the middle of the day [sorta]]
3/25/2011 8:35:15 PM
I applaud Germany. I don't think it's the final solution but it's certainly a step in the Reich direction.
3/26/2011 6:36:58 AM
12.1 GW?!That's like TEN bolts of lightning!!!
3/26/2011 8:29:55 AM
Well done.
3/26/2011 9:16:49 AM
I don’t see why some posters ITT are assuming solar power and nuke are mut-ex.Solar is clean, sustainable, resilient, and safe. Nuke is clean and sustainable. You can still use both, and even push for both at the same time.And especially in a place like NC, where we get tons of sunlight, a moderate set of solar panels on your house could easily handle 90% of your requirements, never go out if a hurricane comes crippling the power grid (assuming they aren’t blown away), while nuclear plants give you the extra power you’ll need for other things or when you get an electric car.Nuclear’s “enemy” is fossil-fuel based energy sources, not green energy sources.Nuclear/green is a false dichotomy.I want more nuke plants to be built, but I would love it, when solar panels become a bit more efficient, to see these on houses/businesses to supplement energy uses.
3/26/2011 11:29:42 AM
no one is saying solar cant be ok in certain places maybe some time in the future when its cost effective.the argument in the op is that solar can replace nuclear which is a total joke
3/26/2011 5:39:41 PM
3/26/2011 7:10:52 PM
3/26/2011 8:17:30 PM
Well then you don't comprehend energy production.
3/26/2011 8:23:17 PM
^^See ^and did you even read anything that mrfrog posted, or is that beyond your ability to grasp?
3/26/2011 8:53:45 PM
I've read the whole thread. A country that is not abundant in solar energy has set up a system that at optimal conditions rivals a large nuclear power facility.If implemented correctly, solar can produce a significant source of energy. What if we set something like this up in Nevada or Arizona? It would produce a pretty consistent and significant source of power. Fuck you guys.
3/26/2011 9:09:49 PM
^ In 2008, Japan had 280.53 GW of generating capacity.12.1/280.53 = 4.3%On the best day (moment) ever, Germany's PV output would only offset 4% of Japan's installed electric generating capacity.For some more perspective, the largest operating solar plant in the world has a maximum generating capacity of 354 MW (0.354 GW). It operates at a capacity factor of 21%, meaning its actual output averages out to about 75 MW (0.075 GW) continuous (obviously the plant doesn't operate on solar at night).The largest planned solar plant is the $6 billion, 968 MW Blythe Solar Power Project. This is comparable in maximum capacity to a single nuclear unit, though the capacity factors would be completely different (90+% for nuclear versus 20-30% for solar).As others have said, none of this means solar doesn't have its place. Solar simply isn't a viable replacement at this point.http://www.eia.gov/countries/country-data.cfm?fips=JA#datahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SEGShttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blythe_Solar_Power_ProjectIncidentally, I believe Fukushima Daiichi's capacity is closer to 5 GW than 10 GW.[Edited on March 26, 2011 at 9:19 PM. Reason : ]
3/26/2011 9:16:58 PM
I never said it was a replacement. I said it was possible to get a significant amount of power from them. It might be expensive at this point in time to install, but I imagine it would have fairly low maintenance costs as opposed to a nuclear facility that would require 24/7 maintenance, security and also dispose of costly nuclear waste. Over a long period of time the cost of operating the nuclear will add up a lot. You're still getting more bang for your buck with nuclear but with the possible environmental damage you could cause as opposed to solar it would balance out more.Don't mistake my position on solar for being anti-nuclear. I'm basically pro-anything-but-fossil-fuels. We're not going to get off them anytime soon, but every nuclear reactor or solar panel or windmill or offshore wave energy means less oil and coal we have to burn.
3/26/2011 9:27:42 PM
^^ The article considered the combined capacity of Fukushima I and Fukushima II
3/26/2011 9:36:27 PM
3/26/2011 9:40:33 PM
fuck all that "anything-but-fossil-fuels" noise. I'm about as anti-coal as anyone on this board, but there's nothing wrong with this country making a major shift to natural gas as our primary energy source. We've still got some work to do with getting our hydraulic fracturing techniques perfected, but natural gas will make our current infrastructure much more capable of handling a major shift to integrating intermittent renewable generation. For those of you in here claimining that nuclear and renwables aren't mutually exclusive, you should do some more research on the subject. those two do not play nice with each other from a grid stability standpoint, since we can't vary load on nuke plants under current operating regulations and renewables are intermittent. Even if we could, I don't think we can alter load on a nuke as fast as you can with natural gas or hydro units. maybe you can with some of the newer designs; a nuclear engineer in here might be able to chime in on that issue.
3/27/2011 12:32:34 AM
You can't vary the load on a nuke plant very quickly at all, and coal is more or less the same way. They basically just run all the time, and combined cycle/gas turbines fill in the demand spikes.
3/27/2011 8:56:46 AM
Can you guys describe what is physically happening in these plants as the load goes up and down? Like, if a nuke/coal plant is delivering 50MW and 25MW of it suddenly stops being needed, what happens?
3/27/2011 11:17:48 AM
It almost never gets that far. In terms of a nuclear plant, operating at anything but full power is wasted energy, as the fuel is going to be replaced on schedule regardless of whether you used it or not. Almost always, the grid operators have planned ahead and either have fossil or hydro plants in use that can be usefully throttled or have arranged for time based consumers to be on standby, such as water management entities which use excess power to pump water either into towers or uphill reservoirs. But, accidents happen, such as a storm knocking down power lines to much of a plant's demand. In such circumstances, a nuclear plant can be throttled in several ways to maintain a 60hz average. To reduce production over the long haul, they can move the control rods to reduce reaction and lower the temperature of the core and therefore steam production and turbine pressure over the span of tens of minutes. Over the short run, they control output by allowing steam to bypass the turbines, reducing the pressure directly. But such behavior is risky without rapidly throttling outside power backup, such as an idling natural gas plant, because if demand shot back up too quickly and the plant operators were operating too close to the margin then a brown-out might occur. As line frequency drops transformers operate less efficiently, causing load to grow unnaturally until the whole system crashes to a stop, causing the turbines to trip and forcing a full shutdown of the reactor, which cannot be restarted for perhaps days.
3/27/2011 12:09:00 PM
^^utilities hire load forecasters that are constantly using historical data, weather reports, present load, and a slew of other factors to make an accurate guess at future load (load forecasting). They use this forecast to try to generate exactly what will be needed.At the plant, sudden drops in demand will be seen at the generator, and the generator will either try to speed up or the excitation curve will creep up (increased voltage/torque). The steam turbine sees this shift and is electronically controlled to throttle back the amount of steam going through the turbine. If this drop is expected to be prolonged, such as from a loss of a major transmission line or a storm, then the plant operator for a coal or natural gas facility will throttle back on the fuel going into the boiler to account for the reduced generation. When the load gets thrown back online, the generator will try to bog down and drop voltage. The steam turbine throttles the steam valves back open and more coal/natural gas is thrown to the boiler.If the generating plant is huge and supplying most of the load in the area, the frequency change will be more noticeable. In the case of something like a backup generator running a house or commercial plant, you can notice the lights get brighter and the sound of electric motors increase in pitch every time a major device gets turned off. Conversely, you'll see the lights dim and the motor tune drop when a major load gets thrown back on.Our grid handles disturbances like these with very little problems due to how massive the grid is. There's enough rotating inertia at our numerous generation facilities to ride through large load shedding events without you even seeing a 0.1Hz shift in operating frequency. This will not always be the case if start relying heavily on intermittent renewables. The Scandinavian countries are already have grid stability issues due to the large percentage of wind energy they have, and wind complicates matters even more because it generates the best at night when we have the least demand. Having nukes as the primary generation backup to renewables is only going to make matters worse, as you can't throttle the fuel at the boiler back on those as easily as you can at a coal or natural gas facility.It's my understanding that there are nuke designs where you can throttle back steam output, but our current regulations won't allow us to do that because it makes refueling cycles vary and varying fuel transport and refueling cycles are seen as a threat to national security. I'd like to get some imput on how true that is from one of the nuclear engineers in here.[Edited on March 27, 2011 at 2:40 PM. Reason : this wasn't based around your 50MW to 25MW scenario.]
3/27/2011 2:39:39 PM
3/27/2011 3:57:28 PM
3/28/2011 1:20:24 AM
3/28/2011 6:47:21 AM
3/28/2011 9:29:17 AM
3/28/2011 10:21:02 AM
3/28/2011 11:07:07 AM
I thought it was kind of central to the point of fracking that you use an incompressible fluid.
3/28/2011 11:30:25 AM
I think they have some techniques now where they can bring a gas turbine onsite, run the turbine for electricity to the pumps, and then use the exhaust gas and nitrogen for the fracking. I don't even think a liquid drilling mud is a requirement for cooling some of the new drill rigs.
3/28/2011 1:33:36 PM
i'm working on project now that involves fracking and in the specs for allowable fluids air is included, thats the extent of what i know about it though
3/28/2011 1:57:28 PM
Germany's power costs are now almost directly connected with the price of coal due to closing of some nuclear power plants.http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/tre7342z9-us-energy-coal-power/
4/5/2011 10:31:57 AM
serves those dumbfucks right.
4/5/2011 11:07:47 AM
Glad they are so concerned with global warming. I'm sure this will only further increase their CO2 output.
4/5/2011 11:29:57 AM