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Rod H's avatar

Excellent, as usual, David. There are still way to many who believe VRE are the cheapest form of generation and provide the lightest touch to our planet.

Any why wouldn’t they? Too many powerful and influential people repeat ad nauseum the inexpensive VRE canard, and are rarely challenged.

Until there is a critical mass of people realizing that we cannot completely power our world with non-dispatchable sources, and thermal generation of some type will likely always be needed until a new generator that has not yet been conceptualized comes along.

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The Brush Up's avatar

It seems like no governments here in the West are realising the power that nuclear holds. We're too busy pouring money into solar and wind. The UK government has invested over 1.3 billion pounds into solar and wind compared to the 300 million into nuclear. While the 300 million is the most they've invested in the past 70 years... it's not enough, especially with all that money going to wind and solar.

China recently opened a Thorium Molten Salt reactor and are planning to open 150 more nuclear plants between now and 2035... we're falling so far behind. Add to this industrial powerhouses like Germany closed down their last 3 plants in April 2023 to then rely on gas from Russia.. and we all know what happened there.

It seems to me like there's very little thought process behind anything. Why would anyone want their grid running on something that only generates electricity when the conditions are just right? You'll always be relying on something else, whether that is fossil fuels or nuclear to fill in the gaps in energy.

This is without mentioning how much a large scale electrical grid battery system would cost... only to last a couple of years...

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