*Sigh* Irbis again showing his "great" knowledge of the energy market and industry...
Still doesn't understand that renewables isn't limited to solar and wind. How many times do we need to rehash this?
Irbis wrote:the fact that renewables can't power our civilization now,
If this statement had been on its own and from someone reasonable I would agree. But with you I have had to repeatedly point out the exceptions which you usually ignore to make such statements generally viable. You have to be very lucky with the geographic and political lottery for such a utopitan scenario even to be viable. Iceland would be an extreme example. So since most states are not in such a scenario then you are rambling against an outlier which isn't even an option for most of the world. So you are missing that most countries are not even aiming for a scenario with only renewables, instead they are aiming for MORE renewables. This because a mix with MORE renewables makes economic and political sense. Grids with distributed energy sources are a bitch to build but are the most reliable out there. Reliability is good for business.
Irbis wrote:the pesky fact that extra load at off peak would kill the renewable grid and pee on its corpse
Source please, because this is so backwards its funny. Why would a renewable grid be more vulnerable to extra load during off peak?
Irbis wrote:What with sun not shining at night and winds being much weaker.
This would be a valid criticism only in the vapid strawman of a grid with all of its sources being wind and solar. Since such a utopia/dystopia doesn't exist and isn't planned it is totally ignorant of reality. All grids are mixes.
Irbis wrote:Electric cars are perfect for nuclear grid, not wind/solar one.
Source please, because this is also built on misconceptions not based in reality. Neither is 'perfect' if you are talking about some utopia with a majority of cars being electric, since you would have a load station at work as well. So the peaks would be after rush hour in the morning and after rush hour in the evening. (You do know that the energy industry has made plans how to make money if elecric cars take off, right?)
To handle that on nuclear alone you would have to turn on and then off reactors during these peaks, something which we can do but don't like to because it really strains the grid. Wind and solar would be great for the morning peak but crap for the evening peak. etc
What we do in reality is using mixed sources - like we have done for centuries now - only by using the local conditions to your advantage through a pragmatic mix could you get something 'good enough' for such peaks. Perfect is off the table since the market is changing all the time.
Irbis wrote:It would create huge demand for batteries for cars, if you add to try to add batteries for renewables to the mix you will end up raising prices of both and further reducing renewable viability.
The second doesn't follow from the first.
Batteries for cars and solar grids and wind grids are not done using the same specifications since their purpose are different. So they are using different techs and resources. Your argument is as flawed as if the rapid development of the market for cell phone batteries would be increasing the price of AAA batteries.
Irbis wrote:Yes, there are schemes to use batteries in cars as a sort of balancing element for renewable grid
This is based on journalists misunderstanding tech papers. There are no such concrete plans that I've seen in the industry.
Instead the energy industry is making all kinds of research into possible markets, if there pops up common largish household batteries (like car batteries) then there is a potential market for loading those. One way of using two trends to make more money would be to sell surplus peak energies at a discount to the loading of such common largish household batteries. Lots of different such scenarios has been looked upon, one of which is of course using a local surplus of solar and wind to load such using municipal stations where politically viable. But you are missing that pragmatism wins, so if we can fill that loading station with any type of energy from any source and then sell it as if it is only from renewable sources then that makes a lot of PR and marketing sense.
The energy industry would be insane not to look into such scenarios and make such calculations and if only 1 in 10 actually plays out we will still make a lot of profit.
Irbis wrote:but it would require massive investing into electrical grid, cars being plugged in 100% of time they are not driving, and drivers not minding plugging car in can discharge, not load battery.
Source please, because to me none of those are true. If there is a mass-market for loading batteries we'd be happy to make investments to get that market and we would make a killer profit on it. If you are running an electric car you'd want it to be plugged in always when parked so that it is fully charged when you come back and the energy industry would love using that most cars would be plugged in most of the day to fill with discount peak energy, trying to claim the opposite is plain weird. Car batteries discharging doesn't come from the energy industry but rather universities trying to get political grants and is not required to make the rest of the scenario potentially profitable.
Irbis wrote:I'd even expect extra guards to be much cheaper than land close to the cities that renewable energy would need to devour to provide 1/10 of power nuclear can.
Source please because this is pure insanity. With the exception of Germany renewables is not supposed to replace nuclear, it is supposed to complement it. The market demand trend is so huge we can easilty sell them all sorts at a profit. Then you are really comparing apples and pumpkins, security for nuclear plants is an annual cost with large geopolitical implications making it non-viable option in large regions of the world, while land investments is an up front one-time cost at the same time that you are making your ROI calculations, they are really not comparable, if we can make the choice between costs with unknown variability over time and depending on politics versus easy to calculate one-time up front costs - then we'd easily go for the second type every time. Then we have the whole problem where the cost of guards is the cheapest you usually have the biggest security problems with the guards. At the same time the places where security is the cheapest is usually also where land is cheap as well. The company I work for build huge installations worldwide and we can almost never hire security personnel locally and expect high efficiency. Now in the history of nuclear and hydro this cost has normally been taken off the books by the state using their military and police budgets, but nowadays that is not the case in most markets, the biggest and most notable exception being china.
Irbis wrote:nuclear has vastly better environmental and safety record than all other forms of energy generation combined
source for the safety record please. Without having any numbers in front of me I'd guesstimate that both waste-to-energy and geothermal would beat most others. Then you have the whole factor of comparing effects, societies have a lower threshold for big effect type of disasters than a continous but smaller effects even if the sum is greater. Typical comparison would be aviation versus car safety. Since big installations like nuclear and hydro have huge effect when disasters happen so they are heavily regulated for a reason. Also when big effect disasters happen its usually the state that takes the biggest costs for clean-up etc, if such costs are not easily budgeted for (like car accidents are) then the state will of course take a lot of interest.
Then the only reason why nuclear has such a good safety record is due to the regulations that you have repeatedly advocated against, there is some sort of hypocracy using that then as an argument for your views don't you think?
Irbis wrote:Had we used half of that in other power plants they would all be out of business.
Not really. You are reacting emotionally not thinking that through. For instance if the regulation of waste-to-energy would triple it wouldn't even make a dent since the cost for regulation-related issues is miniscule part of the total running cost.
Irbis wrote:France and Russia as far as I am aware don't have that problem.
France (EDF) definately do have those problems and they are pro-nuclear with a large % of all power being nuclear, Russia is hard to get accurate stats from but any large project should be over budget due to how politics work over there regardless of which industry we are talking about.
Irbis wrote:Failure at nuclear plant has less impact than normal function of coal plant. Even if we include radioactivity, radioactive elements are naturally present in fossil fuels, with each coal plant emitting hundreds of kilograms of uranium into atmosphere each year. Just no one cares as it is invisible and doesn't produce nice sounds in pocket detectors.
Here you could almost score a point but fail due to more journo exagguration. A failure of a nuclear plant definately have a larger impact than a normally operating coal plant, especially since the loss of the energy made usually means that you indeed have to start up stuff like an extra coal plant to compensate. What you forgot to say due to wanting to hyperbole is that most nuclear plants don't fail so the average impact of running nuclear is less than the average impact of running coal, so the sum of radioactivity over time is less from nuclear than coal. But you didn't...
Also since you know diddly except propaganda articles you missed thorium, potassium, radium and the rest of the NORM or TENORM in the coal ash.
Then source please on the "hundreds of kilograms of uranium" per plant and year because depending on origin its about 1-2ppm of uranium in coal. US total consumption for energy is almost 1 giga tons of coal per year, divided on something like 600 largish plants. So if we round up its tops about three tons of uranium per plant and year, your claim would have about 10% of that into the atmosphere. It just doesn't add up. I'd guesstimate that its much more uranium in the coal ash used for cement/concrete production than goes into the atmosphere.
And the arsenic and air pollution from coal is killing loads more than the radiation ever will.
But really you are grasping for straws when you compare your favorite to the dirtiest plant in the class.
Irbis wrote:Just no one cares as it is invisible and doesn't produce nice sounds in pocket detectors.
It does produce sound in pocket detectors... We use them all the time when inspecting coal plants and their vicinity. Sorry to spoil your soundbites.
Irbis wrote:No, but unless you apply a lot of incompetency and greed to it, it's pretty much 99% safe.
99% WTF nuclear is orders of magnitudes safer than 99% you idiot. And in which world would you get a nuclear company without incompetence and greed?
http://www.iaea.org/About/Policy/GC/GC5 ... f-3_en.pdf
88. However, despite the increased awareness of the significance of a strong safety culture as well as the ongoing reinforcement of safety culture by the IAEA through meetings and OSART missions, the IAEA has observed, based upon support missions and technical meetings, that regulators and licensees often lack a systematic, long-term and committed approach to continuously improving safety culture and that nuclear organizations tend to take an inadequate, ad hoc approach to safety culture in their nuclear operations.
Its exactly due to the prevalence of incompetence and greed that regulations are needed and improved upon continously.
You are the worst kind of fanboy - your arguments are hurting your own cause more than the opposition. If our profit from nuclear relied on fanboys like you I'd be really worried about my next paycheck, but fortunately I think I will be fine.
tl;dr
Irbis knows diddly about the energy industry and market. Which he repeatedly shows.