EppyGA
Touchdown! Greaser!
Is it possible to reach 100% renewable energy on ten years? Yes, No and why do you think that.
You have #2 wrong. There is no loss of energy. It's just in a useless (for a given purpose) form.NO
There are three laws of thermodynamics:
1. You can't win-energy cannot be created from nothing;
2. You can't break even-every action results in a loss of energy
3. You can't quit-no device can produce absolute zero temperature
Not the way we use energy. If you mean solar and wind they will never supply all our energy needs. Nuclear is probably the closest to unlimited power but we haven't figured out how to run our cars and airplanes with it.
The best solution for now is to continue aggressively pursuing fossil fuels because the more markets aggressively pursue them, the better the technology for extracting them which lowers pollution cost and environmental impact and the cheaper they become as we see in the U.S.
Yes...the perpetual engine is in development.
You have #2 wrong. There is no loss of energy. It's just in a useless (for a given purpose) form.
Dun know....at least faster than a Mooney.How fast do you think a V-tail will fly with one of those?
You forgot the part about energy can't be destroyed.NO
There are three laws of thermodynamics:
1. You can't win-energy cannot be created from nothing;
. . . There is a breakthrough out there somewhere.
.......... Fusion is still years away.
Is it possible to reach 100% renewable energy on ten years? Yes, No and why do you think that.
I've been considering putting solar panels on my roof since buying my first house in PA over 12 years ago. To date, the only time it's made sense was to put solar heaters for the pool on our roof in Ohio. That worked very well for the task at hand, but I don't really count it. The incentives mostly work for businesses, not for individuals enough to make it matter.
Despite Kent's love of Tesla, electric cars aren't practical.
Big hurtle for renewables currently is the lack of adequate battery type storage to even out the production fall offs and demand peaks during the 24 hour cycle.
Nothin’ uglier than wind power.
Dun know....at least faster than a Mooney.
Yep, an eye sore at night to with all the red beacons lit on them. I’ve never been close enough to hear, but I’ve heard they’re quite annoying to listen to if they’re in your backyard.
If you've been to Maui they got them all over the West Maui Mountains...definitely an eye sore, but whatever floats your boat I guess. According to Hawaiian Electric, 80% of their energy still comes from fossil fuels.
No, not in 10 years. Probably not ever. People want to use what's easiest and cheapest to access. Places that have a geographical advantage will do it faster. Water and elevation change are necessary for hydro, wind power needs a breeze, and it can't be too cloudy if for solar. I agree with a poster above that energy storage is the key.Is it possible to reach 100% renewable energy on ten years? Yes, No and why do you think that.
And Ted, my electric car is very, very practical.
I know of a couple of people who have managed to effectively use various incentives and some creativity and sweat to put in solar arrays at prices low enough to have a payback time in the 5-year range. That certainly wouldn't be the norm for most people like me, though, who are more likely to call up a solar company and say "I want you to install this for me."
Most likely the only incentive for me would be the 30 percent tax credit, which drops to 26 percent in 2020 and 22 percent in 2021 before going away entirely (solar is predicted to cost little enough at that point that it's worthwhile without the tax credit).
Not for 100% of uses. Give it a few years, and most non-commercial uses will probably be covered. The Tesla pickup is likely going to fill a big gap, and there are a lot of electric models coming out from other manufacturers to fill various other niches as well. Tesla, Freightliner, and I'm pretty sure International and Paccar (Kenworth/Peterbilt) are all working on electric semi trucks. One of the bidders to replace the US Mail delivery truck fleet is electric. Things could look vastly different within 10 years, again, given sufficient investment.
I won't get into the practicality of the current Teslas here, we've been over this already. And don't tell me it's not practical until you've actually tried it.
No, not in 10 years. Probably not ever. People want to use what's easiest and cheapest to access. Places that have a geographical advantage will do it faster. Water and elevation change are necessary for hydro, wind power needs a breeze, and it can't be too cloudy if for solar. I agree with a poster above that energy storage is the key.
For those who have the opinion that fossil fuels are renewable, yes they are, but the easily accessible sources are renewing at a much slower pace than they are being used.
This (easiest and cheapest). But you cannot count it if you are subsidizing it. It might seem cheaper when government subsidizes wind or solar but it isn't because the cost still exists in the system somewhere.
There are always unintended consequences with new developments. Windmills cause headaches and other health issues for some people. They kills millions of birds and bats. Harnessing ocean power is likely to upset organism lifecycles in some ways, maybe seriously. Besides all that, the energy required and the pollution resulting from the manufacture of things like windmills and solar panels and the like can outweigh any savings of environmental impacts. Windmills are also so feeble and expensive that they require huge inputs of taxpayer money to convince companies to build and operate them.
In BC where I grew up, there's a hydroelectric dam not far from my hometown that generates around 2500 MW. A big windmill generates about 1.5 MW, so it would take nearly 1700 windmills to replace that dam. They would need an area far larger than the dam's reservoir. Thousands of acres of forest would need to be cut down and thousands of miles of roads and powerlines built for them. And if the wind doesn't blow, or blows too hard, you're without power anyway. Battery banks can't store that much energy.
A BC Hydro exec was heard to say that if everyone in BC bought an electric car, they'd need 15 more dams (BC has 28 now). "Which valleys would you like flooded?" he asked.
Market forces will drive any changes in energy development. Sucking taxpayers dry to force the changes, and then having to charge as much as five times for the electricity to pay for their grand experiments (as in Ontario) is not the way to get it done. You just end up with the current inadequate technology.