claybro wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 2:44 pm
rev wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 8:32 am
SBD wrote: ↑Sun Mar 26, 2023 9:57 pm
The chart shows the actual amount of electricity generated from each fuel. It tells us very little about the new generators being commissioned, which was the original assertion. We would expect coal-fueled generation to increase if there are coal power stations being unwrapped from mothballs, especially if others that were due to be retired are being stretched further to meet a temporary disruption.
If we could be bothered, we could probably calculate the generation capacity from each fuel in Australia over the last 20 years by counting up the capacity of each generator and when it was active. I can't be bothered, it is clear that coal-fueled electricity generation in Australia will be a thing of the past by 2040, the same as (direct) coal-fueled transport is now extinct.
For there to be an uptick in coal use, or a steady and continual growth in coal use since the mid 1980's, that means that there are either new coal fired power plants being built, or old ones brought back online, as claybro said.
The drops in coal use have occurred this century, but the sharpest increases have also been this century.
It would be interesting to see this graph as it stands today. The sharp drop in coal, coincides with covid lockdowns worldwide, while industry in China and India suffered major closures. Since then, as economies have re opened it has shot up again. As fast as renewables are added worldwide, so also coal and gas increases as the world electrifies more. If we are to all go to electric homes, transport and manufacturing, this will only increase. It would appear many decades off if ever we are to be “net zero” unless we shut down our economy, and even then, the world would barely notice so long as we don’t stop exporting coal, gas and iron ore.
Could be wrong but I don't think its covid related. The last drop off was 2018-2020 on that graph, the following uptick is 2020-2021 and puts it higher then it previously was which was in 2018.
Even when it dropped, it didn't drop below 2015 levels.
Solar is at about 1000 TWh, wind just under 2000. Let's say 3,000 TWh combined, for the two most invested in renewables. And they're still not close to what coal was in 1985.
Hydro dropped off for the first time since the year 2000.
Nuclear is as high as it's ever been since 1985.
The graph shows at least 18-19,000 TWh generated from fossil fuels, and increasing as opposed to probably around 8,000 TWh of renewables, with one renewable source (hydro) seeing a decrease at the start of this decade.
I wonder how many major ship yard facilities around the world that build submarines and surface vessels, are powered by renewables.