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by pthreadses
2348 days ago
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1.) of course there was a choice. That’s what all of this was, a concrete plan, none of this was organic. A choice was made to be nuclear-free, and not coal free. This is what set the stage for larger reductions of nuclear than coal as renewables grew. This was absolutely a choice. 2.) this absolutely may be what’s underpinning the preference. I’ve never really made a claim about why the choice was made, only pointed out it was the wrong choice from an environmental perspective. But let’s not pretend this was some nefarious lobbyists, the German people were behind prioritization of closing nuclear as well. 3.) Sure, although we both know this doesn’t justify the decision as it’s not a big enough issue to really matter. 4.) Right but we aren’t talking about plans to build new nuclear plants, we are talking about what that already exists gets decommissioned, coal or nuclear. So this is irrelevant. 5.) Again, not relevant to which of existing power generation capabilities you phase out. You really seem unwilling to engage on the point being made here. |
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> You really seem unwilling to engage on the point being made here.
Same. You are trying to rewrite history.
2) + 4) + 5) are not irrelevant: these were jobs, industry, tradition, political influence, etc.
You seem to think that decisions on energy politics exists in a vacuum, independent of reality and historic context.
The political discussion to exit coal in Germany only started to get traction a few years after 2010.
It's like asking why the US didn't fly to the more interesting Mars instead of the Moon. There simply was no choice when that decision was made. Constructing a choice in hindsight is just rewriting history.