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by Gondolin
2637 days ago
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So still 35% coming from fossil if the remaining nuclear plants are shut down. Again, Germany goals and effort are laudable, but you miss my point, it is not about nuclear vs renewable, but nuclear vs fossils as a complement to renewable. Why didn't Germany close its coal plants first? This would have saved several Metric Tons of CO2 and saved the life of a few thousands people (due to air pollution). When is Germany going to reach no CO2 emissions? (Expanding nuclear along renewable would have meant it could have reached this goal right now). You talk about the costs of EPR (which exploded I agree), but this is nothing compared to the cost of climate change, which Germany contribute three times more than France. This cost is shared across the world, but this is hypocritical to not take it into account. |
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I don't miss your point, I just don't think nuclear is a viable complement to renewable in Germany.
> Why didn't Germany close its coal plants first?
Because it wanted to get rid of nuclear first and as fast as possible. The reasons for that is all known and a little research can explain it to you - beyond the believe that it was 'irrational'. It's not that you need to agree with it, but people here had other priorities than you have.
Still CO2 emissions were reduced by 27% from 1990 to 2016.
The next two decades will bring the end of coal-based electricity.
> When is Germany going to reach no CO2 emissions?
When do you stop going to vacations via airplanes? Stop eating meat? Stop driving a car?
> Expanding nuclear along renewable would have meant it could have reached this goal right now
No, nuclear and renewable are not compatible. Nuclear is centralized monopolistic, mostly state-owned form of energy. I sucks up huge amounts of investments and corrupts everything around it.
> This cost is shared across the world
Germany invested into renewable energy and jump-started the PV business. That's equally important.