RE:RE:Stay Long and Prosper IMHO !Europe has no chance to get green electricity except for Norway and Sweeden, Switzerland, and eventually Holland and Denmark (wind power) . Their real option is nuclear power. Germany voted against it. They will need to change their mind since they cannot be independant of russion NG for energy.
The race for independant power source is on in Europe. Sufficient power can only come from nuclear. And that is 6 to 10 years away. Will Hydrogen be the life saving solution?
Imagine Liquefied Hydrogen reservoirs floating from the St-Laurent Estuary to Europe.
A solution that will bring pocket change to NL&L.
No solution in sight from Bernard, he is too slow.
Casavantsghost wrote: So this charge to netzero is dissingenuous because the bottleneck that will kick it in the azz is copper. So until we can get there in MEASURED way, can we have the religious cult green nutbags stop throwing the baby out with the bathwater with regards to natural resources?
We are in this geo-political morass because the fruitcakes CONTROLLING the guy at the seniour living center think the world runs on lollipops and gummy bears.
Getting to greeen is good but can we not be stupid about it. It is beyond ponderous at this stage.
Hopefully people don't have to send their son's and daughters east to die for another lie.
Oden6570 wrote:
The clean energy transition needed under the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) landmark Net Zero by 2050 Roadmap would see the share of power generated by solar, wind and hydropower rise to 60%, from 10% today. This requires a rapid scaleup of renewable energy capacity over the next decade. To give a sense of magnitude, for solar alone, the IEA estimates that this would mean adding the equivalent of the world’s largest solar park roughly every day for the next 10 years. As the electrification of the economy takes hold, downstream applications would also need to adjust. Electric vehicles (EV), for instance, would go from around 9% of global car sales to more than 30% over that period.
This would lead to a surge in demand for copper, silicon, silver, zinc, iron ore and aluminum. Add to that the demand for lithium, nickel, manganese and cobalt required in EV batteries; to say nothing of the metals needed for transmission and distribution grids, charging stations and other infrastructure adaptations. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), metals demand could surge by as much as three billion tons in the coming decades, as a result. Under a 1.5 C scenario, Wood Mackenzie, a leading consultancy company for the global energy, chemicals, metals and mining industries, expects copper and aluminum demand to increase by more than 60% by 2040, nickel demand to more than double, and cobalt and lithium demand to surge by four and 12 times, respectively.
Cleantech: Opportunity rocks | EDC