How many households can afford solar & battery setups though. I've asked this before and been met with abuse (not by you) and told it's peoples own fault for not being able to afford it and the high power bills they get is their own fault.mattblack wrote: ↑Fri Jul 12, 2024 10:30 amSeriously??rev wrote: ↑Fri Jul 12, 2024 10:16 amSo there'll be enough electricity stored, to power every home in Australia, every business, every manufacturer, every mine, every ship/sub builder, etc, on a cloudy sun-free day? Of which we have plenty of those lately, as does that rather large population centre known as Melbourne to our south east...SouthAussie94 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 11, 2024 7:16 pmBefore you can get to 24/7 Renewables, you first need to get to Net 100% Renewable.
This is simply a step in the journey to Renewables being the source of power 24/7.
The argument hasn't been that renewables don't work, the argument is what happens when the suns not out and the winds not blowing to generate electricity or enough electricity.
The battery farms are going to be big enough and have enough continually stored electricity to keep everyone's lights on as normal?
This is all about the environment and climate right?
How much of our natural landscape is going to be bulldozed and turned into wind/solar farms and battery farms?
Just how big are these battery farms in particular to store the necessary energy to power the entire country, going to have to be?
Seems to be very hypocritical.
- We have to save the planet, but we can only do it our way because we said so and we're the loudest.
- We have to save the environment and climate, but lets ignore the destruction being caused to reduce carbon emissions.
- While we want you to ignore the destruction caused and waste by our way, we'll tell you all about how unsafe and bad the other guys methods are.
In the foreseeable future when every house is a energy producer and battery, every business with roof space will be a energy generator and battery, when every car is a battery, when we can store vast amounts of energy in the form of hydrogen to be dispatched when required all you can focus on is batteries covering the entire landscape.
Battery storage is in it's infancy and yet how much of SA is really covered in renewable tech. I doubt you have ever driven past say Pt Augusta and thought of the natural landscape that has apparently been devastated.
Another overblown argument
A proper solar and battery setup is not cheap.
The unfortunate reality is that the majority of Australian's are living week to week, most don't have any significant savings for an emergency let alone for solar & battery setups. On the worst end of the scale I believe it is 1 in 4 or 1 in 5 people don't even have $500 in savings in their accounts.
Call me a pessimist but I just don't see in any realistic foreseeable future scenario where every household has a battery and solar setup.
Really can't see any government paying for it all either.
Actually I have driven past Port Augusta on many occasions.
I've also seen the multitude of wind farms that dot the landscape like a cancer in various regions of the state.
I'm not anti-renewables, but let's also not pretend like renewables are this totally green and non-destructive alternative to what we have now.
I also don't think renewables alone is going to cut it for an entire country. It might work for a small village or town, but an entire country is something entirely different.
The royal commission says it's going to be expensive, but it doesn't say it wouldn't work.
High costs are what we have to pay because of government inaction and policies.
We're trying to fix South Road, the remainder is going to cost $15 billion. That's an insanely huge cost for a stretch of road that short. Perhaps we shouldn't build the tunnels and trenches, we should revert to something else like a horse drawn cart. It's cheaper and quicker then waiting until the 2030's for that stretch to be completed.
One of the anti-nuclear arguments is it hasn't been done before, or SMR hasn't been done on a large scale (even though there's plenty of examples of SMR's being built and nearing completion). Has any country gone 100% renewables before? Like I said, the arguments are all very hypocritical and people picking points of convenience and ignoring what's inconvenient.
So we need a system of large scale solar & wind, but also need to convert our houses and businesses in mini power stations and storage sites, and that's going to cover the loss of large scale coal etc?
This plan wouldn't seem as crazy as it does, if it wasn't for those who are leading the charge and their politics. Because we know it's driven purely by their politics.
And if people need that explained as to why that's a bad idea and receipt for disaster, then no wonder we're in this situation.