I gave my reasoning. Natural gas has the potential to become an oil substitute, whose energy price right now is far higher than natural gas. Or if liquified gas export is allowed, as the current european price is over four times the U.S. price. That the gas futures market disagrees with me is not proof I am wrong, merely that I am a hypocrite for not buying nat. gas futures contracts with every cent I have.[Edited on January 26, 2012 at 10:37 AM. Reason : .,.]
1/26/2012 10:32:24 AM
1/26/2012 10:50:01 AM
1/26/2012 11:16:37 AM
1/26/2012 12:35:11 PM
the energy trading industry is a lot smarter than you seem to think.
1/26/2012 1:20:50 PM
And a lot smarter than you seem to think, if you don't think they can handle a few nuclear plants unwilling to load follow.
1/26/2012 3:25:49 PM
Don't light a match, because there is an army of strawmen ITT!
1/26/2012 3:45:31 PM
1/27/2012 9:53:11 AM
Norway has the right idea. They're basically saving most of their oil, either in reserves or in the ground, until after peak oil hits and the price of it goes way up, and importing in the meantime. When things get hairy oil-wise, they'll have their choice of either using up their reserves internally or selling them at exorbitant prices.
1/27/2012 10:15:16 AM
1/27/2012 10:47:42 AM
n/m[Edited on January 27, 2012 at 11:32 AM. Reason : .,.]
1/27/2012 11:09:20 AM
2/1/2012 2:54:50 AM
As the EU cap on carbon tightens there will be less and less incentive for Germany to give extra subsidies to solar, as it will become competitive without them. Seems like the program was a success, it jumpstarted the countries capacity and helped make Germany one of the largest exporters of the technology, which atleast played some part in making them one of the best performing economies in Europe.
2/1/2012 6:38:09 AM
^ I doubt it:
2/1/2012 1:13:13 PM
^ But to continue that point...What would it ever take to make individuals, on their own, invest in the energy efficiency measures we need to accomplish what we're talking about? Even if these measures are above break-even at current electricity prices in most of Europe (not sure about the US, but the US has less efficient homes anyway), then what prices will it take to get the majority of homes to do this?Plus, air and vehicle travel have a resource problem much more imminent than electricity production does. Electricity, at least, is flex fuel. And we can't make airplanes or cars much more efficient unless we actually address the weight of the vehicles and reduce personal space.There is a finite set of efficiency gains that can be had without lifestyle change, and we should take those, absolutely. But the price mechanisms have got a long way to go before they allow us to address our Carbon goals, and individuals will feel the hurt.
2/1/2012 2:27:56 PM
every day:86000 Terawatts of energy hit the earth in the form of solar energy870 Terawatts of wind is blowing around32 Terawatts pop up through geothermal sourceshumans consume 16 TW of energy per day. pwnt. (car fuels,electricity, everything)2TW of those 16TW come from renewables...we have about 30 years of coal and oil left. (at this current rate we possibly have longer but the rate is going to keep increasing for a little bit b/c of china and europeans affording more cars)in conclusion, in less than 30 years, you better have an electric car, and some solar panels on your house or you're fucked... unless we get to clean hydrogen fusion first [Edited on February 9, 2012 at 10:09 PM. Reason : ,]
2/9/2012 9:45:28 PM
The Iter first D-T plasma is planned for 2026.But that date is before the 2011 delays. The earlier dates have now been pushed back, but we don't know how far yet. The only reason they can say 2026 is because they haven't (and can't) update it in response to the recent delays.So let me be generous, I'll give them 2030, they'll have D-T plasma in 2030. Again, generous. This is a test plasma to see if the sustained confinement with the fusion energy input is a workable idea. It could give a negative result! The spectrum of possibilities goes from really expensive to unworkable entirely.So best case scenario is that by 2030 we'll have a well-founded approach to produce expensive but clean energy. Then come the engineering issues for commercializing it.Did I mention this is funded mostly by the EU? Yeah, that EU. The one on the verge of a financial crisis.I want fusion energy just as bad as the next person. No, more. In fact, I want it enough to admit that we'll never have it from these tokomaks.
2/9/2012 9:59:24 PM
2/9/2012 9:59:41 PM
^the problem is we don't know. existing 'known' gas is only a few dozen years. we are simply 'hoping' we continue to find new places to mine at the current rate so that we can keep up that trend and have '100 years' possibly. huge gamble.either way natural gas fracking is so horrible it shouldn't even be considered. go watch 'gas land' if you want to be sickened about the bastards pretending there is a thing called 'clean natural gas'.... such bullshiti mean in the end no matter how you slice it, we are running out of resources incredibly fast. and it's growing every year. it just can't stay like that long. plus co2 is proven to warm the atmosphere and we know how that turns out...[Edited on February 9, 2012 at 10:06 PM. Reason : ,]
2/9/2012 10:05:05 PM
Oh sheesh I was just out of date, I didn't realize they dropped the exploration moratorium in the Barents Sea in 2005. Doesn't really affect the debate in the US anyway as our reserves are paltry and even the most wild estimates of the total reserves under Alaska, California, and the Gulf wouldn't sustain our consumption for a year. Conservatives are slowly realizing this and rushing to support NG, I suspect because admitting that prioritizing a non-fossil-fuel energy source might imply liberals have been right about something.[Edited on February 10, 2012 at 1:50 PM. Reason : .]
2/10/2012 1:49:35 PM
U.S. oil production is rising and oil consumption is falling. A reality which has had nothing to do with the government.
2/10/2012 4:18:58 PM
^ obama will take full credit for that to get his share of votesand romney needs to jab the shit out of obama on the GM fuck-up. 50 billion to sell about 600 chevy volts, when tesla, toyota, and nissan are around the corner pwning the fuck out of them in the only sustainable future possible.50 billion in Ford F450's. As opposed to say 0.5 billion given to Tesla and Nissan as a fucking loan. The difference is some of those companies made money during that shit storm, and other didn't for damn good reasons.motherfucker. pisses me off to no end. investing in shitty companies. and don't come at me with a bullshit stat that last week GM finally made some profits.
2/10/2012 5:01:20 PM
3/4/2012 8:19:59 AM
Click link.See author Bjørn Lomborg.Close window.
3/4/2012 12:30:45 PM
"Global warming is real – it is man-made and it is an important problem. But it is not the end of the world."What a crazy, crazy man.
3/4/2012 3:06:14 PM
I can't imagine it can be that controversial to point out Germany is planning to reduce subsidies for solar power. http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,809439,00.htmlhttp://news.businessweek.com/article.asp?documentKey=1376-LZUHHX0UQVI901-0IPDJT384IGPFALA0VNK4P7FKFhttp://www.bna.com/solar-subsidies-germany-n12884908022/I don't know why you would dislike some college professor from Copenhagen. Did he forge a document or something I don't know about?
3/4/2012 3:12:34 PM
^ the reasoning for the cuts according to those links is vastly different than the reasoning for the cuts from your initial post.
3/4/2012 3:42:46 PM
buddy of mine works at a solar panel manufacturer here in the statesall he said was china is buying literally 100% of their products.usa pwnt.
3/4/2012 5:40:58 PM
^^ In what way? Bjorn says it was very expensive and the government can no longer afford it. Der Spiegel says "But now even members of her own staff are calling it a massive money pit." BNA didn't say why Germany was reducing the subsidy. And businessweek says the purpose is to dramatically slow the growth of capacity, without saying why the government would want to do that. What reason did you get out of them?
3/4/2012 6:46:20 PM
http://cleantechnica.com/2013/02/03/thin-film-solar-power-to-be-sold-for-less-than-coal/
2/4/2013 10:50:41 PM
This is the follow up to Gasland called "The Sky Is Pink"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXL1jpIBskIIt is a response to the Nat. Gas industry propaganda
2/5/2013 12:14:24 PM