The closest I have got is looking at the electric bikes in a local bike shop, and they were too expensive, and seeing them (bikes) used on the road.
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Originally posted by VectraMan View PostWhy not fit a sail? After all before there was the internal combustion engine, man kind managed to travel to every corner of the globe without burning a single fossil.How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't thinkComment
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What was Jones butchers van running on in Dads Army - looked like a barrage balloon strapped to its roofHow fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't thinkComment
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Originally posted by Troll View PostWhat was Jones butchers van running on in Dads Army - looked like a barrage balloon strapped to its roofComment
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Originally posted by Pondlife View PostThis is what places like Dinorwig are for. It's essentially storing energy for peak times.
The power station makes a profit (to pay for the remaining capital cost of construction and operation) by the difference in buying cheaper electricity from the National Grid during the night (to pump the water up the reservoir) and providing more profitable peak power during the adverts in the early evening or morning.
Dinorwig CAN guarantee a source of peak demand power for the National Grid, unlike wind farms such as Thanet.
The only way wind farms can give the same high value guarantee for this source for the retail electrical spot market, is to construct an accompanying gas turbine power station that will be on at least 80% of the time for when the wind doesn't blow. In Denmark, they call this gas powered wind balancing i.e. fossil fuels are consumed more expensively and more inefficiently than base load nuclear or coal power stations (due to the rapidly changing load) to compensate for the lack of the right amount of wind (80% of the time on average).
Yes, that's right. Wind farms do not replace fossil fueled power stations. Ergo, CO2 output doesn't diminish, but by god, your take home pay does!
Dinorwig is NOT a net provider of electrical power to the National Grid.
So there we go. We build an expensive, taxpayer subsidised wind farm, and our monies go to a foreign company, such as Vattenfall in Sweden, who build these follies for £1,200,000,000 for the sake of 20 local UK jobs. We then have to build a gas turbine power station to back this up if the output from this windfarm is of any significance. If it isn't, then why build it? What exactly is it saving? Spiking random power surges into the National Grid will simply cause operational balance problems and realistically when wind farms are producing power when they are not needed, they will simply be disconnected from the National Grid or sold at well below spot market prices.
The irony being of course, why build the expensive wind farm in the first place when you could simply leave a cheaper gas powered station there to start with?
So, to all you AGW zealots out there: engage your brain, not your Marxist, knee-jerk, Chicken Licken, world's-not-fair rhetoric.
Think about the scale of debt that you are subjecting your children and your grand-children to.
Think of the number of businesses that will not be able to compete with countries that laugh at the paradigm of AGW due to our increased costs and needs of buying in more expensive electricity to compensate for the lack of coal and nuclear power stations.
Think about the effects of the inevitable power cuts that are coming our way on the sick and needy.
Wind farms will never work with the respect to the fluctuating demand of the National Grid.
Never.
Oh yes, and suddenly Vattenfall have decided to cancel an extension to the Thanet windfarm. I wonder why...If you think my attitude stinks, you should smell my fingers.Comment
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Originally posted by hyperD View Post...Good, but a bit long to quote...
Wind farms were only to make up a small fraction of our electrical energy supply needs. A lot of oil will still need to be imported to power industry, transport, agriculture and our electrical energy needs. The current system also has overcapacity is built in, to handle demand swings from day to night and from season to season.
I thought it was stupid not going ahead with the Severn Barrage. It's a gift from heaven. Not only could it supply energy predictably, it could have been used for load balancing too. Mind you, having been shocked at the planned lifetime of 30 years, we were better off not going there. It should be a 10,000 year structure, a wonder of the world.
The short lifespan of wind turbines (20 years) does worry me.
I'm all for nuclear too.Comment
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostI thought it was stupid not going ahead with the Severn Barrage. It's a gift from heaven.How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't thinkComment
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Originally posted by Troll View Posta bloody expensive gift!!Comment
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostBut, we can't keep burning oil and our own coal supplies are essentially exhausted, so fossil fuels are going to get expensive for us and we'll need to import them from, possibly, unreliable sources.
Wind farms were only to make up a small fraction of our electrical energy supply needs. A lot of oil will still need to be imported to power industry, transport, agriculture and our electrical energy needs. The current system also has overcapacity is built in, to handle demand swings from day to night and from season to season.
I thought it was stupid not going ahead with the Severn Barrage. It's a gift from heaven. Not only could it supply energy predictably, it could have been used for load balancing too. Mind you, having been shocked at the planned lifetime of 30 years, we were better off not going there. It should be a 10,000 year structure, a wonder of the world.
The short lifespan of wind turbines (20 years) does worry me.
I'm all for nuclear too.
Unfortunately TW, there is no escaping the economic reality that we have to either build more nuclear power stations or import more gas and electricity. Until other forms of realistic base load power are available then that simply is it.
We cannot start changing our geography to support hydro power - too expensive.
We have supplies of coal but to start processing this - too expensive.
Tidal is too expensive but at least has the potential for load balancing.
Wind and solar are too expensive and due to their intermittency can only be used as peaking power sources. In order to be effective they also require fossil fuelled power stations for when the wind isn't blowing or the sun isn't shining. Solar panels also need to be kept clean in order to work efficiently.
China has coal reserves around estimated at current consumption of 400 years (without taking into account of technological improvements in extraction - applies to oil and gas reserves too). They are not going to stop consuming coal when it is so abundant.
There is absolutely no reason to build a single wind turbine as it does not provide any meaningful reduction in fossil fuel dependency - it's simply a waste of taxpayer's money that could more usefully be spent on other power sources such as nuclear or gas or even helping the domestic front such as insulation and new efficient boilers.
Why people can't get their head around this simple economic fact rather than this wistful, romantic notion of saving penguins, teddy bears and aardvarks, simply defies belief (esteemed CUK members excluded of course!).If you think my attitude stinks, you should smell my fingers.Comment
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostNot spread over 10,000 years?
I love how hyperD is so objective and unbiasedOriginally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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