DBT85
Established Member
Which energy sources are not subsidised?Renewable energy remains a subsidised commodity.
Which energy sources are not subsidised?Renewable energy remains a subsidised commodity.
Fossil. As far as I am aware, there is no direct subsidy for electricity generated using fossil fuels.Which energy sources are not subsidised?
I read it twice, billion. They must have run up some very big debts.
I have looked at some articles but am unconvinced.Carbon capture is a pipe dream and is unlikely ever to be practicalSurely you should read a few of these articles first before dismissing them!Read a few of the articlesAgree.
https://www.google.com/search?q=is+...0l2j0i390l2.4785j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8https://www.climate2020.org.uk/how-clean-is-biomass/
Basically the earth needs more trees and fewer people, but that is hard to achieveI have looked at some articles but am unconvinced.
Here is what the Canadian pellet industry says
https://www.canadianbiomassmagazine.ca/canadas-wood-pellets-a-responsible-source-of-clean-energy/
Here is an extract
“Canada’s forest sector harvests less than one per cent of Canada’s commercial forests each year. The wood pellet sector uses only a tiny fraction of the harvest, totally less than 0.04 per cent of Canada’s annual forest harvest. However, pellet producers are using the portion of the forest – sawdust, shavings, harvest residues and low-quality logs – that has been rejected by the other traditional forest sectors – sawmills, pulp mills, and panel-board plants.“
So the pellets are made from wood sawdust and shavings plus other wood not suitable for lumber, paper or boards. When the wood grew it took carbon out of the atmosphere, burning puts it back.
What would you do with this material. Compost it and produce methane which apparently is a worse greenhouse gas than co2. Stop cutting down the trees and do without wood, paper or boards. Replace all wood products and paper with plastic! That question needs to be answered by the critics of biomass.
So we should give up trying? No, I still think the ideal is well regulated government run systems, we simply need to try harder.it should be possible for state-run utilities to be well run ...
They never, ever were - that's why why they were privatised in the first place. They were run for the benefit of the people working in them not their customers.
They've got ~1.7 million customers; so 1.7 billion is only a "cover" of £1000 per customer. Given the rise in the gas wholesale price that does seem like a realistic figure to cover the shortfall for a few months.Yep, just read that the Treasury has set aside 1.7 billion to cover costs to keep it going over winter.
I read it twice, billion. They must have run up some very big debts.
That may well be the case and I am not condoning it, but that is implementation. I cannot see anything wrong with the scenario claimed by the Canadians, namely that “the pellets are made from wood sawdust and shavings plus other wood not suitable for lumber, paper or boards. When the wood grew it took carbon out of the atmosphere, burning puts it back”.There are huge plantations in the U.S. purpose grown for turning into pellets. They have stripped the places of natural undergrowth and native trees to do this, creating areas with next to no undergrowth so next to no birds and other wildlife. Drax apparently creates more pollution burning its twenty five million trees per annum than it did burning coal - I should have kept those articles but didn't.
For someone to make the old comment about "green electron" filters on the householders electricity meter is basically a statement as to their (probably deliberate) inability to grasp larger concepts.
If you add up all the electricity used on...
For someone to make the old comment about "green electron" filters on the householders electricity meter is basically a statement as to their (probably deliberate) inability to grasp larger concepts.
Several quite large companies advertise(d) 100% renewable, and on a windless night the amount of renewable electricity drops to a few percent. Where else does the electricity come from?Could we see your workings, please, so as we can look into this in more detail?
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