Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

Y'all know this, right?

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Comments

  • 2001400ex
    2001400ex Member Posts: 29,457
    So lets just do nothing then.
  • doogie
    doogie Member Posts: 15,072
  • CuntWaffle
    CuntWaffle Member Posts: 22,500
    2001400ex said:

    So lets just do nothing then.

    What are YOU doing Hondo? You like to dodge this question.
  • doogie
    doogie Member Posts: 15,072
    advancing propaganda, of course
  • RedRocket
    RedRocket Member Posts: 1,527
    This article actually does a good job of framing the issue in a nonpartisan way. This shit always gets boiled down to some binary argument that renewables are either good or bad and you have to pick a side based on your political affiliation.

    In some places wind and solar make economic and physical sense (Hawaii) and in other places they don't (Seattle). Technology could change this if large scale economic battery storage gets figured out or if the cost of small scale residential PV + storage comes down or becomes more efficient. Until that happens you need natural gas to make up the differnece when the sun isn't shinning or the wind isn't blowing.
  • Mosster47
    Mosster47 Member Posts: 6,246
    Hydroelectric is 1 cent per KW to generate. Nuclear is slightly more and completely safe with the correct reactor.

    Why any option besides these two are ever talked about is crazy.
  • RedRocket
    RedRocket Member Posts: 1,527
    Mosster47 said:

    Hydroelectric is 1 cent per KW to generate. Nuclear is slightly more and completely safe with the correct reactor.

    Why any option besides these two are ever talked about is crazy.

    There isn't very much untapped conventional hydro potential in the US. It's also more expensive than 1 cent per kWh to generate hydro. BPA sells wholesale for like $35/MWh ~ 3.5 cents/kWh and they own huge dams, that were built decades ago and are mostly depreciated.

    Nuclear isn't cheap either because of all the regulation and NIMBY surrounding it. Read up on WPPSS if you want to know why people don't build more nuclear. Nukes generate a shit load of electricity but they cost a fortune to build and if the load growth isn't there to support it then it turns into a massive boondoggle. Also Obama screwed th pooch by shutting down Yucca.
  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 49,129 Standard Supporter
    Mosster47 said:

    Hydroelectric is 1 cent per KW to generate. Nuclear is slightly more and completely safe with the correct reactor.

    Why any option besides these two are ever talked about is crazy.

    Nukes should be a viable alternative offered to the lefties when they want to blow up dams so the salmon and Sherman Alexie are happy.
  • dflea
    dflea Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 7,287 Swaye's Wigwam
    Nuclear power is a no-brainer by almost any measure.

    Therefore, we won't go that route.


    We do shit like that.
  • UWhuskytskeet
    UWhuskytskeet Member Posts: 7,113
    RedRocket said:

    Mosster47 said:

    Hydroelectric is 1 cent per KW to generate. Nuclear is slightly more and completely safe with the correct reactor.

    Why any option besides these two are ever talked about is crazy.

    There isn't very much untapped conventional hydro potential in the US. It's also more expensive than 1 cent per kWh to generate hydro. BPA sells wholesale for like $35/MWh ~ 3.5 cents/kWh and they own huge dams, that were built decades ago and are mostly depreciated.

    Nuclear isn't cheap either because of all the regulation and NIMBY surrounding it. Read up on WPPSS if you want to know why people don't build more nuclear. Nukes generate a shit load of electricity but they cost a fortune to build and if the load growth isn't there to support it then it turns into a massive boondoggle. Also Obama screwed th pooch by shutting down Yucca.
    Mid-C doesn't trade at $35/Mwh in futures, it hardly reaches $30, and drops to $17 in spring. With California adding more and more solar, there is less demand served by expensive fuels, and in turn less of a demand for NW electricity, though plenty still heads south.