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by h0l0cube
753 days ago
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> Anyone thinking those are transitional investments that will be written off in the next 20 years is deluding themselves. I absolutely do not. Whether it’s nuclear or gas, transitional plants will either need to be subsidized or guaranteed by governments. As batteries come online, gas and nuclear will be dead. > It’s not something being produced anywhere close to utility scale to be topical over the next 20 years. I’m not sure that’s true, even for LFP. But flow batteries, pumped hydro, sodium ion are already there in terms of scale and economics, and don’t remove from storage where volumetric/gravimetric density matters, as with mobility. Multitudes of other solutions like hydrogen production and more experimental energy storage are being actively researched, and I’d wager we’ll see more technologies in the mix in the next 1-2 decades that makes the nuclear discussion moot |
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This isn’t some hypothetical, this is current investment being made under known terms.
Europe (nor America) can’t afford a trillion-dollar bail-out of its brand new gas terminals and pipelines. When demand starts being saturated, the existing infrastructure will take priority: every gas turbine, terminal and pipeline being built today will crowd out renewables down the line.
> As batteries come online, gas and nuclear will be dead
Possibly. Everyone seems to like a monoculture. The pro-nukes want only nukes. The pro-batteries want only renewables + batteries. Given that divide, it makes sense we’re betting on gas for the long term.
> I’d wager we’ll see more technologies in the mix in the next 1-2 decades that makes the nuclear discussion moot
Barring antimatter weapons, no.