• SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So why is it the duty of our country to gather all electricity possible for the richest people to waste on burning out GPUs so they can lose money on free chatbots?

    • pdxfed@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      For the same reason housing should be a speculative investment, and healthcare services available only to the highest bidder.

  • nothingcorporate@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    The one state that refuses to connect to the interstate power grid and has Uber-like surge pricing on electricity? Yeah, I’m sure this won’t result in regular people footing the bill for more billionaire profits.

    Texas is a joke, but not a good one.

    • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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      1 year ago

      Uber-like surge pricing on electricity

      We don’t really: that story you heard from a few years ago was the only company that billed like that. The customers made a bet that the pricing averages through the day (lower at night, higher cost during the day) would average out in their favor over fixed-cost billing, and frankly, it did right up until it didn’t.

      They took a risk and got bit by, frankly, not understanding how the system works and basically ate the spikes.

      Everyone else paid $0.09/kwh or so during that whole period, and the electric providers ate the cost because when you’re averaging out spikes across millions of kwh, it won’t lead to bankruptcy.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        They took a risk and got bit by, frankly, not understanding how the system works and basically ate the spikes.

        It’s the exact same idea as insurance. You don’t buy insurance because you think you’ll take the insurance company for a ride, you buy insurance to even out your costs. If someone hits you, you don’t need to fork out tens of thousands of dollars for medical bills and repairs, but you will fork that out over time instead with more manageable payments.

        If you don’t want to see scary bills, then pay a little higher average prices so you end up with a consistent bill.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    One of the windiest, sunniest, emptiest places on earth and they want to waste water building reactors instead of renewables.

    Hell, the geology means you can store energy in the ground using pressurized air.

    • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      What? I’ve grown up around people in the nuclear industry, and nothing I’ve ever learned about the function “wastes” water.

      Some rambling on how I understand water to be used by reactors

      You’ve got some amount of water in the “dirty loop” exposed to the fissile material, and in the spent fuel storage tanks. Contaminated water is stuck for that use, but that isn’t “spending” the water. The water stays contained in those systems. They don’t magically delete water volume and need to be refilled.

      Outside of that you have your clean loop, which is bog standard “use heat to make steam, steam move turbine, moving turbine make electiricity, steam cools back to water”. Again, there’s no part of that which somehow makes the water not exist, or not be usable for other purposes.


      Not saying you’re wrong. Renewables are absolutely preferable, and Texas is prime real estate to maximize their effectiveness. I’m just hung up on the “waste water building reactors” part.

      Guessing it was some sort of research about the building process maybe, that I’ve just missed?

      • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Building them doesn’t waste water, running them does. In a place with a lot of water they make sense but any industrial water usage in a place with limited water supplies - when there are lower usage alternatives - seems wasteful

        • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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          1 year ago

          They literally outlined the whole process… What stage in

          Outside of that you have your clean loop, which is bog standard “use heat to make steam, steam move turbine, moving turbine make electiricity, steam cools back to water”. Again, there’s no part of that which somehow makes the water not exist, or not be usable for other purposes.

          Wastes water?

          • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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            1 year ago

            steam cools back to water

            That one. The most common methods of condensing that steam rely on large bodies of water acting as heat sinks. Water in those large reservoirs is lost to evaporation, which is exacerbated by the additional heat.

            The water in that reservoir must be reserved for the nuclear plant; a drought that drains the reservoir will knock the plant offline.

            Air-cooled condensers are possible, but at significantly reduced efficiency, especially in already hot environments.

          • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            If you send the water through a bunch of pipes it needs treated before it can be put back into the environment. This is true of any industrial process. This takes it out of circulation for a while, and in an arid state like Texas that’s a waste.

            And reactors need a lot of water, which is why they’re built next to the ocean or a lake or something.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, build that many minus 10-20%, and fill in the rest with solar, wind, etc. That way you get a good mix of base level production and burst demand.

  • SkybreakerEngineer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So, exactly one uranium patch with a mk 3 miner stuffed full of slugs? Not including waste reprocessing or alternative recipes?

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    First 0 nuclear reactors will be built anywhere in US before 2035.

    Texas is actually a renewables leader because, believe it or not, it has the least corrupt grid/utility sector, and renewables are the best market solution.

    Even with 24/7 datacenter needs, near site solar + 4 hour batteries is quicker to build than fossil fuel plants and long transmission, and it also allows an eventual small grid connection to both provide overnight resilience from low transmission utilization fossil fuel as peakers anywhere in the state as well as export clean energy on sunnier days.

    Market solutions, despite hostile governments, can reduce fossil fuel electricity even with massive demand surge. One of the more important market effects is that reliance of mass fossil fuel electricity expansion and expensive long high capacity transmission, would ensure a high captive cost at high fuel costs because of mass use, in addtion to extorting all regular electricity consumers. Solar locks in costs forever, including potentially reducing normal consumer electricity costs.

    • cibco@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      “The least corrupt/utility sector” I must be thinking of the wrong Texas, which one are you referring too?

      • throwback3090@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        I think they mean “the same forces that led to the grid collapsing every few years – prioritizing profit above all else, and the government giving zero fucks-- are the same forces which trigger new development to be in renewables with zero regulation or oversight”

        Conservatives always write about their broken-clock-right-twice successes in a similar way.

      • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Compared to California, where everything is done to increase customer rates, or most other states where long wait lines to connect power occur, you can measure effective corruption by how much energy additions are made, including home solar. You can be critical of their exposure to power system failures, but that doesn’t make the system corrupt.

        • throwback3090@lemmy.nz
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          1 year ago

          Your measure of corruption is what now? How many new things are built regardless of their need or what impacts they may have?

          Very…unique standpoint.

          • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Just that the lack of cheap energy built/connected is a function of all of the obstacles put in the way of those projects. They get done in Texas more than other places that “put out a better virtue vibe”, but behind the scenes put up obstacles.

            • cibco@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Its interesting how you can only talk positively about Texas by comparing it to others.

              Can you answer this question without comparing Texas to any other state or entity: How is charging hundreds of dollars per kWh during storms in the best interests of the “regular electricity consumers”?

              • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                I recognize that failing, but afaiu, it applied to a limited number of customers who “gambled on variable rates”. The political leadership there also shit talks renewables, putting false blame on them for grid failures, but the actual operational environment still permits a lot of renewable expansion: The basis for calling their system the least corrupt.

                • throwback3090@lemmy.nz
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                  1 year ago

                  Do you genuinely think the folks who “gambled” really understood the implications? How many random mailers have you gotten asking to switch to a random third party provider because “it’s better for the env” or will “save money”?

                  I mean I’ll grant you California is a shitshow but it’s been a shitshow since republicans got on their knees for Enron in the 90s and literally hasn’t recovered. How about Florida, which has been a red state for 80% of the last 30 years, low regulation, but instead of building new power they are keeping nukes going well past their service life? Abundant sun. Abundant wave power. They have the fucking entire European heating system right off the coast.

                • cibco@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  So their renewable expansion is so good that it out ways the fact Texas never joined the east or west interconnect?

                  That is the biggest corruption, and it is the whole reason their grid is so unreliable. But iteruptions in sevice can be good for the people making money from the sales if these goods. It’s like racketeering.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      near site solar + 4 hour batteries is quicker to build

      But is it quicker at scale? Can solar and battery production keep up with expanding demand? Can it continue to do so over 10+ years? Can it outpace demand and start replacing fossil fuels?

      Usually the proper solution is a mix of technologies. It shouldn’t be solar vs nuclear vs wind, but a mixture.

      Nuclear does a great job at providing a large amount of energy consistently. It’s really bad at fluctuations in demand, and it’s also really bad at quick rollout. I think it makes a lot of sense to build nuclear in Texas over the long term because it can start filling in demand as efficiency of older panels and batteries drop off, which extends the useful life of those installations and reduces reliance on battery backups.

      I also think hydrogen is an interesting option as well, since it’s sort of an alternative to batteries, which can be hard to get at scale. Use excess generation for electrolysis and use those for mobile energy use (e.g. trucks, forklifts, etc) or electricity generation. It’s also not ideal, but it could make sense as part of a broader grid setup.

      Solar is awesome and we need more of it. I just want to encourage consideration of other options so we can attack energy production from multiple angles.

      • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Can solar and battery production keep up with expanding demand?

        China is expanding so fast that they are accused of overproducing, and so supply capacity is not only there, it can increase further.

        Usually the proper solution is a mix of technologies. It shouldn’t be solar vs nuclear vs wind, but a mixture.

        The main benefit of wind is in battery reduction. A capacity equal to lowest night demand. Wind often produces longer hours than solar per day. The predictability of solar allows clear power forecasts, and then enough solar for needs with a small grid connection allowing both monetizing surpluses, and having resilience in shortfalls. Nuclear has no economic or climate roles, for being both too expensive and of too long a delay.

        I also think hydrogen is an interesting option as well, since it’s sort of an alternative to batteries,

        Hydrogen is the solution for having unlimited renewables and being able to monetize all of their surpluses. It is a bonus to be able to provide emergency/peak power, including renting a vehicle to have bonus value of powering a building. For today, backup fossil fuel generators can still provide resilience value to solar.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          For today, backup fossil fuel generators can still provide resilience value to solar.

          And that’s the issue. Nuclear is an effective alternative to fossil fuels and can make sense in many areas. What you need is:

          • lots of space for waste disposal
          • prevent disruption from activist opponents (delays drive up costs)
          • enough projects that you get economies of scale for construction (e.g. specialized crews can move from site to site)
          • high enough base load demand to fully utilize nuclear

          France has a ton of nuclear and it is on the cheaper end for electricity rates in Europe, and they’re not particularly well-suited for it.

          It’s not a panacea, but it should absolutely be considered as a replacement for fossil fuels if energy demand is high enough.

          • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Using existing infrastructure for backup/resilience as renewables are ramped up is the ideal. Was German last government’s approach. Cheaper (free) than even maintaining/refurbishing aging nuclear, allowing for private sector to expand renewables (also free). Standby payments to stay open and ready is cheap, and permits rapdid renewables to decrease their peaker use.

            “Baseload” nuclear has the inverse problem of renewables. It needs to sell all of its very expensive power near 24/7. Costs being dominated by its initial building, means that half capacity is double the breakeven power revenue. Nuclear needs to suppress cheaper energy to be viable, and in the ultra optimistic (Vogtle took 20 years) 10 year buildout period, renewables must be suppressed so that when the ON switch is set, full power sales occur.

            France has a ton of nuclear and it is on the cheaper end for electricity rates in Europe

            France has understood that building new nuclear should wait until 2060s, when possible construction technology is advanced enough. The heyday of nuclear came when electricity demand was growing fast, and fears of available reserves and geopolitics affecting alternatives. Coal is also excessively polluting and dirty, in a locally displeasing way. The environment of alternatives is much different today.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              “Baseload” nuclear has the inverse problem of renewables. It needs to sell all of its very expensive power near 24/7.

              Excess nuclear production at night recharges batteries for daytime use, reducing the need for battery and solar rollout. Excess solar production during the day recharges batteries for nighttime use, reducing the need for baseload supply. Daytime use is higher than night time use, so this is pretty close to the ideal setup, no?

              Use each non-polluting source for what it’s best at. You don’t need any one source to be the primary supplier of electricity, you want a diverse enough set that you get an optimal mix to keep costs and pollution low and reliability high. Mix in some wind and others for opportunistic, cheap generation.

              • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                Yes, both can charge batteries. Solar charges then at 10x less cost, and combined solar+batteries provides the same total “baseload function” at 2x-4x less cost, and can be up and running in 1 year instead of 10, and expanded the year after that. It’s even a myth that nuclear uses less land. You can use the land under solar, and you don’t need exclusion zones around reactors and uranium mines

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  It’s lower initial cost, sure, but what about longer term? Surely battery costs add up long term as they need to be expanded and replaced, making nuclear more attractive after 10-20 years.

                  I’m not an expert here though, I’m merely saying a lot of people would be fine with a higher initial investment if the long term benefits justify it.