ndsvw,
@ndsvw@feddit.de avatar

Im case someone asks: Increasing nuclear power generation in Germany means buying fuel rods from Putin, who invests the money in war not that far away from Germany…

Spzi,

Technically true, but I’m unsure how big this is. Would the annual revenue even compensate for half a day of Russian losses?

datelmd5sum,

That’s might be true, but also some S-tier retconning. Germany decided to fuck our planet 40 years ago.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Germany decided to fuck our planet 40 years ago.

I know time flies but that more like 80 years ago.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Industrial countries emit more CO2 than those that outsourced production to China (where the same amount of CO2 is then emitted). News at 11.

UraniumBlazer,

Germany:

9.4% WASSERKRAFT

18.3% BRAUN K O H L E

8.9% STEINNNN K O H L E

10.4% erdgas

SaakoPaahtaa,

deleted_by_moderator

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  • UraniumBlazer,

    Huh? What r u going on abt lol

    d3m0nr4v3r,

    Wtf

    ndsvw,
    @ndsvw@feddit.de avatar

    Ok, Karen…

    ndsvw,
    @ndsvw@feddit.de avatar

    Yeah, but we have a Bremsklotz called FDP in the Regierung

    UltraMagnus0001,

    Merica, we gonna plunder Guyana for oil

    No_Eponym,
    @No_Eponym@lemmy.ca avatar

    Canada, we’re gonna spend $36 billion building a $5 billion dollar pipeline that will ship heavy bitumen at a loss. Sorry.

    JohnDClay,

    The Germany image is wrapping off the screen on my device, so I’ll post it here

    Germany energy mix

    moosetwin,
    @moosetwin@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    reading over that has renewed my joy over the word ‘photovoltaic’

    Carighan,
    @Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

    Getting there, slowly but steadily.

    DrVerlocher,

    I call greenwashing on those “statistics”. According to IRENA, Sweden had around a quarter of their electricity from fossil fuels. The document is from 2020, but I don’t think it changed this much in three years. A very good step in the right direction, but we have to keep it real. Creating 100% renewable energy is awesome, but having to import a lot of dirty energy from abroad isn’t really helping much on the global scale.

    I’d be glad, if any Swede could debunk me, if I interpreted this document falsely. The document on my home country Switzerland was pretty spot on, so I assume it is correct for other nations as well.

    www.irena.org/-/media/…/Sweden_Europe_RE_SP.pdf

    Carighan,
    @Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

    Creating 100% renewable energy is awesome, but having to import a lot of dirty energy from abroad isn’t really helping much on the global scale.

    If the power networks are connected, you sometimes have surprisingly little control over it, tbh.

    Plus “We need to be self-sustaining in our power production” is a very different thing than getting all the energy you produce to be green. It’s not as simple as “Well just build more wind/solar/tide generators!”, it requires a complete rethinking of how you route and balance your network as even the most energy-producing countries regularly import power depending on current load and network state.

    That is to say, don’t belittle an achievement of producing 100% green energy. The other part, no longer consuming any non-green imported energy, is a nearly unrelated problem.

    DrVerlocher,

    If the power networks are connected, you sometimes have surprisingly little control over it, tbh.

    That’s true. I wonder how those statistics are made, where they say how many % of imports are from what resource, that I have seen floating around. Could be estimates, I guess?

    There are hurdles with going 100% green, no doubt about that. Like you said, the infrastructure has to accommodate for changing output and all that. Sweden does it right and the Swedes can be proud of themselves.

    Other nations still have to follow Swedens lead. Quite a few countries just took down their nuclear reactors without having a plan how to compensate the lost energy. Switzerland itself could claim a respectable renewable electricity mix with all our water pumping plants. But we still import like 70% from abroad, a lot from France and Germany. The latter beeing quite the “smoker”.

    I hope you see my point a bit. I’ m just fed up with that “Look, we are so green!” narrative, because they only show the statistics in their national borders. Sweden was just a poorly chosen example on my part.

    Carighan,
    @Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s true. I wonder how those statistics are made, where they say how many % of imports are from what resource, that I have seen floating around. Could be estimates, I guess?

    Yeah I guess based on the power production percentages of the countries and companies they paid for imported power.

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    Sweden does it right and the Swedes can be proud of themselves.

    Reading this as a Swede is kind of funny because we have a lot of criticism internally in this subject. Our electric prices have been wild these past few years, like, bankrupting businesses and people wild.

    I remember reading an article about a bakery shutting down because they got an electric bill on like 70k, in addition to all the other operating costs.

    bioemerl,

    Sweden had around a quarter of their electricity from fossil fuels.

    That's really damn impressive

    logicbomb,

    One thing that has changed since 2020 is that Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine has placed an emphasis on stopping dependence on Russia, which has also put a focus on renewables.

    Poem_for_your_sprog,

    It’s too late anyways

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    having to import a lot of dirty energy from abroad isn’t really helping much on the global scale.

    Neither is outsourcing industry to Asia and then padding oneself on the back how few domestic emissions there are.

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    I interpreted “right now” in the message as “today”, or “when the post was made.”

    Some days are purely renewable. Others aren’t. In the winter when electricity usage goes up it’s not uncommon for us to import fossil fuel electricity from other countries. The green party also suggested powering up natural gas plants as we were shutting down nuclear. Ngas obviously isn’t renewable.

    Svenska Kraftnät has a “control room” with graphs and timelines on exports/imports and energy sources.

    “Värmekraft” is power produced by burning things, it can be coal, oil, wood fuels, garbage, etc.

    “Ospecifierat” (unspecified) includes power produced in facilities with more than one type of source, where you cannot separate what produces what.

    Spzi,

    I interpreted “right now” in the message as “today”, or “when the post was made.”

    Some days are purely renewable. Others aren’t.

    Oooh, I guess you’re right! Good spotting. I overlooked it :(

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    That happens. Feels like most climate related things that aren’t disasters is greenwashing so it’s not an infeasible conclusion to jump to.

    kungen,

    It’s also common that we export our renewable electricity whilst still needing to import non-renewable energy.

    TheEighthDoctor,

    This is probably wrong, or was just one day of the year because Portugal in 2023 was:

    • 26% Fossil
    • 67% Renewable
    • 7% Pumped Hydro

    Source

    Spzi,

    just one day

    Yes, I guess that’s what the “right now” refers to.

    At first (when I posted) I assumed the stats were for a whole year. Comments like yours tought me better. Thanks for that!

    mjpc13,
    @mjpc13@programming.dev avatar

    The past few days in Portugal were very windy, might explain the high renewal percentage.

    It is a very misleading number/information.

    NeoNachtwaechter,

    Only since a few years we are stupid enough to define nuclear energy as green 🤮

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s because nuclear energy is green. It doesn’t produce any greenhouse gas emissions. You having bought into the fearmongering about nuclear doesn’t change reality.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    So you’re storing nuclear waste in your basement because it’s so green and not contaminating the environment at all?

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    Given that my inextant basement wouldn’t be a facility equipped to store or process nuclear waste had it existed, I’d obviously have some reservations. Having lived near such a facility however, and having been involved politically with it, I have no big qualms about it no. Why do you?

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Having lived near such a facility

    There is no permanent nuclear waste facility.

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    I never claimed it was. It’s a waste processing and storage facility. Waste comes in, waste goes out.

    ndsvw,
    @ndsvw@feddit.de avatar

    That’s not what I’d call green. Yes, pretty much no CO2, but the waste problem is still not solved.

    Furthermore, increasing nuclear power generation in Germany means buying fuel rods from Putin, who will use it to murder Ukrainians.

    genfood,
    @genfood@feddit.de avatar

    It doesn’t produce any greenhouse gas emissions.

    That’s simply wrong. All energy sources produce emissions! Some produce more, some less.

    While nuclear energy is better than coal, gas or oil, it is by far worse than wind or hydro energy.

    chart

    There are several studies estimating the greenhouse gas emissions for the whole lifecycle of a nuclear power plant between 68 and 180 grams of CO2/kWh. source: Nuclear energy - The solution to climate change?

    source: An analysis of nuclear greenhouse gas emissions

    Nuclear power is often assumed to be greenhouse gas neutral because it is indeed nearly neutral if it comes to the process of generating energy. But resources like uranium has to be gathered, plants has to be built, and it needs a solution for the final disposal.

    While I don’t think we should close existing power plants, but there are much better solutions. Better in terms of economy and pollution.

    There are also numerous studies about the costs of a nuclear power plant…

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s fair. The CO2 emissions involved in production and building anything shouldn’t be disregarded.

    genfood,
    @genfood@feddit.de avatar

    That makes absolutely no sense 😅

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    Me saying that you’re right doesn’t make sense? A house built using cement isn’t CO2 neutral. A house built using wood uses less CO2, but it isn’t neutral either. A nuclear reactor won’t be CO2 neutral, even if the fission process or the turbines don’t generate any CO2. A wind turbine by comparison, while it won’t have the same output capacity as a nuclear reactor, would use a lot less CO2 to manufacture and assemble.

    SimonSaysStuff,

    You sound like every oil and gas exec out there. Nuclear bad. Oil good. Do some research and educate yourself.

    redballooon,

    Do some research and educate yourself.

    That’s what the conspiracy theorists say.

    HikingVet,

    So, because some people with bad info say this every time this is said it’s because they are trying to recruit you into one?

    Or is it something else?

    redballooon,

    It’s a heuristic.

    NeoNachtwaechter,

    Oil good

    I have not said anything like that. You want to do something about your reading skills.

    Carighan,
    @Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

    Only since a few years we are stupid enough to constantly conflate climate impact with risk assessment.

    HikingVet,

    Go back to the 1960’s nitwit.

    bioemerl,

    And convince them to build more nuclear plants.

    gbuttersnaps,

    Nuclear power is extremely green when compared to fossil fuel and can act as an excellent stopgap while ramping up renewable energy sources. You’re right that it isn’t a long term solution, but even replacing a few coal fired plants with nuclear ones for the next 30 years would be better than running the coal plants for 20 years until you can displace them with renewables.

    Piemanding,

    Don’t forget that coal power plants produce more radiation per watt hour than nuclear plants do.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s a lie. The statistic you’re skewing is about radiation near nuclear power plants under normal operation. It’s not about the radiation nuclear waste for many thousands of years. Exhaust gases from coal plants are very slightly more radiating than natural background radiation but the amount is so tiny, it doesn’t matter. (The CO2 is bad, though.)

    Merwyn,

    And it’s much more green than solar if you consider only greenhouse gas emission over the whole lifetime, including construction. But there are other problems for sure.

    TheEighthDoctor,

    Wrong, I wish the Reddit Nuclear circlejerk won’t come to Lemmy. Over multiple studies the mean value is more like 66g of CO2 but it still produces more emissions than solar per kwh. source

    https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2f4fd950-f60f-46a7-aca3-760e7ef327b8.png

    Merwyn,

    Ok I knew my data were old but I wasn’t expecting such a change. I based my answer on the latest “complete” report I knew and it was from 2011. I was expecting the solar to reduce emission as the technology improved obviously, but I found it very strange that the nuclear emission was higher in your source than in the one from 2011. After reading carefully it turns out that the change in safety and regulations for building new nuclear powerplants changed and lead to a big increase of the co2 emission during building. I thought that most of the co2 emission from nuclear was from uranium/plutonium extraction and enrichment but apparently the building itself is a major part of it.

    bioemerl,

    Does it still produce more emissions than solar when your have spin up the natural gas plant every winter because people need heat and the sun isn't out?

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Does it still produce more emissions than solar when your have spin up the natural gas plant every winter because people need heat and the sun isn’t out?

    Wind blows regardless of season. Geothermal is active around the clock. Hydropower works best in rainy seasons.

    bioemerl,

    Wind is just as unreliable as support and hydro/geothermal are very niche forms of power that don't really work at the scales needed to run large scale civilization.

    All green energy is intermittent. We need storage and/or we need nuclear. Storage isn't technologically feasible yet. Nuclear is. We need to reduce emotions soon. Build nuclear plants. Keep trying to figure out storage so we can decommission them later

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Wind is just as unreliable as support and hydro/geothermal are very niche forms of power that don’t really work at the scales needed to run large scale civilization.

    Geothermal literally works everywhere where you can dig a deep hole and claiming that hydropower is niche is just an insane lie.

    All green energy is intermittent.

    I thought nuclear is green? Now you’re just saying the opposite of what you said before just to fit your agenda.

    How come of all the countries mentioned in the Tweet screenshot all except France manage just fine with renewable energies? Funny…

    Storage isn’t technologically feasible yet.

    en.wikipedia.org/…/Pumped-storage_hydroelectricit…

    Keep trying to figure out storage so we can decommission them later

    After all those decades of trying to figuring out where to store the highly toxic waste and so far nobody figured it out.

    bioemerl,

    everywhere where you can dig a deep hole

    You will need a lot of really deep holes to make significant power in most places. Of course you can get to the mantle from anywhere on earth. That doesn't make it practical.

    Now you’re just saying the opposite of what you said before just to fit your agenda.

    Don't be a pedantic shit.

    pumped storage

    Works when you have a lake on a mountain and a lake below the mountain. 90 percent of places? No such luck.

    After all those decades of trying to figuring out where to store the highly toxic waste and so far nobody figured it out.

    Literally just in a mountain or deep underground. It's been figured out

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    You will need a lot of really deep holes to make significant power in most places. Of course you can get to the mantle from anywhere on earth. That doesn’t make it practical.

    Each hole needs to be only dug once and then generates heat for easily a billion of years.

    Don’t be a pedantic shit.

    How uplifting of a statement you made there. I guess I hit a nerve there.

    Works when you have a lake on a mountain and a lake below the mountain. 90 percent of places? No such luck.

    “The lake on the mountain is built upon a flat surface, requiring a dam around the entire perimeter.”

    Building a roughly circular dam sounds not so hard.

    Literally just in a mountain or deep underground. It’s been figured out

    Funny how nobody does this then. The concerns by scientists about potentially contaminating ground water is just fearmongering then…

    bioemerl,

    Really I think your entire attitude here stems from a really big underestimation of how difficult large scale projects line geothermal boreholes and dams are, and how large these projects would have to actually be.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Really I think your entire attitude here stems from a really big underestimation of how difficult large scale projects line geothermal boreholes and dams are, and how large these projects would have to actually be.

    OTOH building nuclear reactors, keeping them safe enough not to blow up, and then handling nuclear waste: Piece of (yellow) cake! Digging a hole to pump some water in: So difficult. Digging a hole to definitively totally safely store nuclear waste: Sooo easy.

    bioemerl,

    Yeah, you're just hilariously out of touch with the scale of these projects.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Yeah, you’re just hilariously out of touch with the scale of these projects.

    Absolutely. I obviously vastly overestimate what’s involved with nuclear power: building a nuclear power plant, maintaining that plant, mining uranium, shipping it, processing nuclear waste, storing nuclear waste, etc. when in reality all one needs to do is to dig a shallow hole in the ground, dump the fuel rods there and it’s all done. 🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯

    Carighan,
    @Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

    Yep, this usually eshews the nuclear parts of building construction and fuel transports. That being said, older solar panels and wind farms are a problem as far as I remember from local news, as they’re tricky~impossible to recycle and die pretty quickly. Newer generations replacing them of course no longer have that problem, but if anything that shows that the comparison is a bit senseless in the first place.

    theKalash,

    I wish the nuclear fearmongers wouldn’t come to lemmy.

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    If nuclear waste is so harmless, how come since decades nobody on the planet has ever figured out how to get rid of the waste? Or are you the fist one, offering your basement for that harmless stuff?

    burningmatches,

    I mean, it takes like 30 years to build a nuclear plant so it’s definitely not a stopgap.

    dontcarebear, (edited )
    @dontcarebear@lemmy.world avatar

    Just checked, in Sweden a single kWh costs 65 ore, or 0.09 Euros.

    Hot diggity damn that’s cheap!

    Edit: kWh and not kw/h as it is the amount of power generated across time. Thank you @xigoi!

    dzaffaires,

    In Quebec, it’s 0.06$ (CAD) per kWh (or about 0.04€).

    SpeakinTelnet,
    @SpeakinTelnet@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Now imagine if we’d nationalize stuff like internet like we did with Hydro-Quebec (Electricity). Maybe then we’d stop paying ludicrous prices for the bare minimum.

    dojan,
    @dojan@lemmy.world avatar

    I just paid my electricity bill and got really surprised that it was sub 400SEK. It’s consistently been above 800, sometimes upwards of 2000 since the pandemic. Our kw/h price for September was 46,61 öre. https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/fe64b9b2-3504-47d5-a8eb-5aed2f292da1.png

    DaMonsterKnees,

    I realize this is a little ugly American, but I have to giggle at the use of ore here.

    RootBeerGuy,
    @RootBeerGuy@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    It is actually öre but I know people have difficulties remembering those characters.

    dontcarebear,
    @dontcarebear@lemmy.world avatar

    I saw it has O with the umlaut(? Those two dots…) But I couldn’t be bothered to get it on my keyboard. Also why I converted to Euros. :)

    Swedneck,
    @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    well which region is that? because the north can often be cheap while the south makes you want to weep

    dontcarebear,
    @dontcarebear@lemmy.world avatar

    Took it from here which appears to be a median, but it is also paywalled after a single visit or something.

    statista.com/…/sweden-monthly-wholesale-electrici…

    Swedneck, (edited )
    @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    found historic spot prices on vattenfall.se, the national swedish power company:

    Northern sweden
    https://i.imgur.com/SWgJ9iJ.png

    Southern sweden
    https://i.imgur.com/n6sTOAN.png

    (might need to open the images in a new tab to see the whole width)

    bstix,

    The renewable energy has some wild fluctuations

    This was in Denmark in July

    It’s not always this extreme, but there’s usually a few hours every week where the price is negative. I’ve heard that the reason is that the Dutch wind turbines keep running when it’s not profitable, so they crash the prices for everyone. Anyway, timing the car charger makes a lot of sense. I haven’t paid for driving in several months.

    xigoi,
    @xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    Just to be pedantic, it’s kWh, not kW/h. Energy is power multiplied with time.

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