DIY-HP-LED
Well-Known Member
We are at the beginning of an energy evolution/revolution and recent studies have shown we can do it with renewables and in particular solar PV along with battery storage. These international and academic studies are what governments base policy and projections on and going green is now a matter of economics and geopolitics. The fight is on over solar panels, EVs and batteries with China in the lead and North America playing catch up with Biden's policy moves. Mexico could be China's back door into America and both American and Chinese manufacturing are migrating there, they are part of free trade and Uncle Sam is concerned. The rest of the world are buying Chinese solar panels, but we have tariffs of over 250% on them or soon will, but the prices of solar panels are expected to drop even further in the next couple of years. Solar is the cheapest form of energy production even for Canada and it will simply out compete fossil fuels on costs.
Here is Tony Seba, a guy who makes me look like a pessimist, but it is his business to study such things and he has been right in his projections several times before. The next decade or two will be transformative in several ways and he outlines how change happens and the time frames involved. There is a confluence of new technologies that is disrupting the old value chains of power generation and fossil fuels. When was the last time you as a consumer or small business owner could compete with a utility for power or kiss the oil company's goodbye for transportation? This is decentralizing and individually empowering, and the benefits go to more than the one percent. It's about money and power folks, green is good, but now green means money and geopolitics! As he says cost curves are like gravity and new technology follows an S curve and we are on bottom of the steep part of one now.
I posted this to the climate change thread before, but figure how we are dealing with climate change should have its own thread, the economic and geopolitical implications are enormous, and it will be in our faces soon enough. There is also technical and political news breaking in this area constantly as companies and countries vie for a piece of the future.
"The Great Transformation" - TAQA 20th Anniversary Celebration / Dhahran, Saudi Arabia [16 Oct 2023]
Here is Tony Seba, a guy who makes me look like a pessimist, but it is his business to study such things and he has been right in his projections several times before. The next decade or two will be transformative in several ways and he outlines how change happens and the time frames involved. There is a confluence of new technologies that is disrupting the old value chains of power generation and fossil fuels. When was the last time you as a consumer or small business owner could compete with a utility for power or kiss the oil company's goodbye for transportation? This is decentralizing and individually empowering, and the benefits go to more than the one percent. It's about money and power folks, green is good, but now green means money and geopolitics! As he says cost curves are like gravity and new technology follows an S curve and we are on bottom of the steep part of one now.
I posted this to the climate change thread before, but figure how we are dealing with climate change should have its own thread, the economic and geopolitical implications are enormous, and it will be in our faces soon enough. There is also technical and political news breaking in this area constantly as companies and countries vie for a piece of the future.
"The Great Transformation" - TAQA 20th Anniversary Celebration / Dhahran, Saudi Arabia [16 Oct 2023]
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