Mutant hamsters fart too much, thus negating any benefit to the environment.
And their feed would likely need to be supplemented with corn and corn is needed for mandated ethanol blend use.
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Mutant hamsters fart too much, thus negating any benefit to the environment.
You may want to check some updated data. Tests and documentation, per NRCS and DNR tests and science, shows our farms are building topsoil.
The ethanol subsidies ended in 2012 correct?
I'll give you a hoax to chew on: AOC and her absolutely ludicrous "green initiative" suggesting that it is possible to have a carbon free energy footprint in the near future that doesn't involve nuclear power.
Nuclear power is something that would have been a great idea to be building more of 20 years ago, but we're unlikely to be seeing any more of it anytime soon.
Nuclear is a massive capital investment, taking a decade+ to build and enough cost that for most companies it is putting a large amount (if not all) of their eggs in one basket, at a time where alternatives such as wind and solar, as well as energy storage technologies are getting cheaper and cheaper by the day (to the point it is highly likely battery storage for wind\solar will be more than viable by the time any nuclear project would complete). Very few investors are going to want to sink $10bil into a project that will take a decade or more to complete and by the time it gets up and running may not even be cost-competitive with the alternatives that exist when it is finished.
In all, about 150 power reactors with a total gross capacity of about 160,000 MWe are on order or planned, and about 300 more are proposed. Most reactors currently planned are in the Asian region, with fast-growing economies and rapidly-rising electricity demand.
Link please?
As of 10 years ago, we we’re still losing topsoil and farming methods haven’t changed since then at all
I'm not sure on total costs of shipping, construction, large-corrective repairs etc. Would have to think there is a massive savings per turbine when you build 100 turbines vs 1 turbine. Ive always been told the goal is to make money back after 10 years.
We are almost 100 posts into this thread and every one of them miss the most important thing about wind project economics and wind's role in utility planning --
Wind is most active at night and in the winter.
Demand at night is slack, while most demand is during the day (and increasingly in the evening when people come home, turn on electronics, and turn on the oven).
Demand is also highest in the summer. Wind is almost exactly counter-cyclical to demand.
That is on top of the generally intermittent nature of renewable power, requiring your typical backup from a dispatchable thermal, nuclear, or hydroelectric unit.
Solar at least has the good sense to be most active when demand is at its highest during the day and in the summer, though it misses that evening spike most of the time.
Wind is just not that "useful" and, as you will see below, it is badly placed relative to demand.
Wind might be very useful in some hypothetical future where people are charging electric vehicles overnight, where mass, utility-scale storage (either chemical, mechanical, or just pumped hydro) is available and needs be "charged" overnight before it is needed the next day. These would "smooth" load on the system out between the hours of the day and make the night owl wind plants more useful than they are right now to charge stuff up rather cheaply.
Wind is always going to have a geography problem, though.
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There is just not a lot of population or demand in that "wind alley" from the Texas Panhandle up through the Dakotas. Some high demand nexuses -- data centers, particular types of rather energy-intensive manufacturing plants, etc. -- are moving there, but those are not that much compared to Chicago or New York. Transmitting power from western Nebraska to a load center in Atlanta is not technically feasible. It is going to stay a niche product.
There are some excellent offshore resources, but those are heinously expensive compared to the land-based variety. And if a small population of Iowans does not like looking at them (and I have no idea why, not like cornfields look like the natural tall grass prairie that came before them, just another human modification to the land for economic purposes) in what are mostly deserted rural areas, just imagine what tens of millions of people on the East Coast and West Coast think about it near beaches and over the ocean. They take some exception.
You have the same problems with the Great Lakes, which are really just inland seas.
Reality seems to have some disagreement with your assessment.
https://world-nuclear.org/informati...eration/plans-for-new-reactors-worldwide.aspx
Go to courthouses and ask to see manure management and fertilizer plans. Very few people can do them themselves now. R factors and soil disturbance for each pass factor in.
BTW, when NRCS ran my data 15 years ago, I was building then AND you are so wrong when you say methods haven’t changed.
I don't agree with this part...wind is driven by the sun so the windiest part of the day is typically after the most intense sun...so late afternoon.
After being around a wind farm project this past year I can tell you there is a lot more that does into it than at first glance. You have to move soil to put these up. You have to build road after road after road to get them to the site. You have to rebuild county roads to get them to site. You have to build more roads to drive the cranes down. You have to have paths for the cranes helpers to go down. There is another path the lines are buried in. The best part of this all that exposed soil has washed like crazy the past year and it wont be right for years to come if ever. There is cement that has to manufactured and hauled to site. There is rock that is mined, put on trains, unloaded, put on trucks and taken to the site. There are turbine parts that are made in China, hauled to a port there, put on ships, boated to the West Coast, put on trains, unloaded in DSM, put on trucks, and hauled to the site. There is no little environmental footprint to putting these up. To top that off the crews working on them seem to have no regard for others property or the environment. Someone must be making major money putting these up because there seems to be no shortage of cash being spent.
You mean just like every other construction project ever completed?
Lower temps = denser airI don't agree with this part...wind is driven by the sun so the windiest part of the day is typically after the most intense sun...so late afternoon.
This is also why I try to ride my bike early in the morning because there is little to no wind. If I wait until 5pm that is usually when the wind is most intense.
And in the big picture it does.The difference is this one is suppose to help save the environment.
I haven’t filled out a manure management plan since 2008. So if that’s the only method of analysis, I’m not doing that.
And seeing fall tillage every where with brown dirt covering snow drifts in the ditch, tells me all I need to know
Electricity can be “efficiently” transferred great distances via HVDC, HVAC, and uHVAC lines. Problem is the infrastructure isn’t there.We are almost 100 posts into this thread and every one of them miss the most important thing about wind project economics and wind's role in utility planning --
Wind is most active at night and in the winter.
Demand at night is slack, while most demand is during the day (and increasingly in the evening when people come home, turn on electronics, and turn on the oven).
Demand is also highest in the summer. Wind is almost exactly counter-cyclical to demand.
That is on top of the generally intermittent nature of renewable power, requiring your typical backup from a dispatchable thermal, nuclear, or hydroelectric unit.
Solar at least has the good sense to be most active when demand is at its highest during the day and in the summer, though it misses that evening spike most of the time.
Wind is just not that "useful" and, as you will see below, it is badly placed relative to demand.
Wind might be very useful in some hypothetical future where people are charging electric vehicles overnight, where mass, utility-scale storage (either chemical, mechanical, or just pumped hydro) is available and needs be "charged" overnight before it is needed the next day. These would "smooth" load on the system out between the hours of the day and make the night owl wind plants more useful than they are right now to charge stuff up rather cheaply.
Wind is always going to have a geography problem, though.
![]()
There is just not a lot of population or demand in that "wind alley" from the Texas Panhandle up through the Dakotas. Some high demand nexuses -- data centers, particular types of rather energy-intensive manufacturing plants, etc. -- are moving there, but those are not that much compared to Chicago or New York. Transmitting power from western Nebraska to a load center in Atlanta is not technically feasible. It is going to stay a niche product.
There are some excellent offshore resources, but those are heinously expensive compared to the land-based variety. And if a small population of Iowans does not like looking at them (and I have no idea why, not like cornfields look like the natural tall grass prairie that came before them, just another human modification to the land for economic purposes) in what are mostly deserted rural areas, just imagine what tens of millions of people on the East Coast and West Coast think about it near beaches and over the ocean. They take some exception.
You have the same problems with the Great Lakes, which are really just inland seas.
And in the big picture it does.
Electricity can be “efficiently” transferred great distances via HVDC, HVAC, and uHVAC lines. Problem is the infrastructure isn’t there.