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by lazide 83 days ago
It means some other infrastructure (fossil fuels?) needs to take up the slack, and people underestimate actual costs at larger scales.

It’s the big issue in Germany for instance - it’s all fun and games until Winter.

3 comments

Which is fine, since you're still reducing your reliance on the grid.

However, when you're off grid, underestimating capacity means your SOL and need to buy a generator and burn fuel on-site.

Germany has more wind in winter, so traditionally has more production of renewables in winter months.
It has dramatically higher thermal heat demands in winter - far higher than is compensated for by that. Even if everyone switched to heat pumps.
True, but higher demand for heating in winter is not specific to Germany. In the end, Germany will likely need to import energy anyway - just as it does today. But this means this question may not be the most relevant.
Huh? It highlights the relevance. It’s easy to handwave ‘imports’ away - but import from whom, and how do they make the energy?
One could import it as ammonia from locations that can produce a lot of it via solar.
And? Any coal not used in summer is coal not dug up.