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by synotna2 1399 days ago
Wind and solar aren't baseload
2 comments

They can be made so for similar cost to nuclear in at least two distinct ways.

An aluminium rod with a cross section of a few square metres is enough for global power needs, PV is cheap enough that the resistance loses don't alter that equation even antipodally. Take a while to mine that much aluminium, but it also takes a while to make even one reactor.

The batteries we need to build anyway for the electric cars (or the hydrogen production, storage, and fuel cells if we decide to go back to those) are the same scale we need for grid storage, and it makes sense to repurpose car batteries as grid batteries before full refurbishment. Last I checked the cost for batteries was close to, IIRC slightly better than, equivalent nuclear.

Wind and solar, combined with various kinds of storage, can be used to supply "synthetic baseload", and likely at a cost less than doing so with new nuclear.

https://model.energy/