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WHO WROTE THIS!?!?! Oh right, it's a link to where it was posted so that I can find out...
Every country in this list is less dependent on energy imports if it gets on track for a net-zero world, including the US. Though US gains are the least! From BNEF's New Energy Outlook for 2026.
4h
1d
Spain’s electricity bills have decreased due to its commitment to renewable energy, reducing the influence of fossil fuels on electricity prices.
Sigge K
MFF, energi, historia, klimatet, tjatter, politik, och allt möjligt mer därtill... ...och kom ihåg att vi är bäst när vi gör saker tillsammans, på rätt nivå.
6h
Archivist
Why Spain’s electricity bills have fallen during an energy crisis
Homes and business are benefitting from Spain's commitment to clean energy.
www.euronews.com
Akshat Rathi
David Ho
This might be one of the funniest chart about energy scenarios I’ve seen. You can hardly see “actual” for gas
2h
Störtskönt skrivet! (Och allt för sant)
3h
Kate Mackenzie
Framtiden är förnybar - och det blir ständigt billigare, snabbare och bättre. Och hur tror ni det kommer se ut om 10-15 år?
Sigge K
Metanen har en allt mindre framtid
Lite som att hålla fast vid ett kommunalt veto, avskaffa uppkopplingsavgifter mot havsbaserad vind, ta bort 60-öringen... ...eller?
5h
Och baslast? Nej, vi klarar oss utan ny sån. "their findings indicate that a secure, net-zero European electricity system is technically robust and economically viable when based on VRE paired with extensive flexibility, storage, and grid interconnections, without requiring new baseload capacity."
5h
4h
4h
Sigge K
Sigge K
Sigge K
Sigge K
"Ben owns a farm. He employs 100 workers. His total payroll is $10 million/year. One day, he buys a mule, which provides the worker who uses it with a modest 10% productivity gain. Ben fires 99 of his workers and purchases 99 mules, expecting a 1,000% productivity gain..."
2d
“Xavier owns an apartment that he rents out at a loss of $1 billion/month. Seeing this success, he decides to make financial commitments to construct $850 bi...
buff.ly
AI Economics for Dummies
McSweeney's
The transition to decarbonized energy systems has fueled a controversial debate over the necessity of traditional “baseload” power. Skepticism remains…
www.sciencedirect.com
Baseload power plants are not essential for future power systems
2d
"Ben owns a farm. He employs 100 workers. His total payroll is $10 million/year. One day, he buys a mule, which provides the worker who uses it with a modest 10% productivity gain. Ben fires 99 of his workers and purchases 99 mules, expecting a 1,000% productivity gain..."
buff.ly
“Xavier owns an apartment that he rents out at a loss of $1 billion/month. Seeing this success, he decides to make financial commitments to construct $850 bi...
McSweeney's
AI Economics for Dummies
"The only case I can see for gas in Asia now is that governments effectively make it illegal to build renewables." Voters better choose better governments.
5h
Renewables-plus-storage is so cheap that in large parts of the world it is cheaper to build a whole new clean power plant than just pay for the fuel and maintenance for a fully-depreciated gas generator. Renewables aren’t just threatening new-build gas — they are undermining existing plants.
People are still underestimating how much the prospects of LNG growth in Asia are totally busted. Even setting aside the Hormuz factor, the economics are just brutal: 🧵 www.bloomberg.com/opinion/arti...
5h
5h
Justin Mikulka
David Fickling
David Fickling
The only case I can see for gas in Asia now is that governments effectively make it illegal to build renewables. That’s not a totally outlandish scenario. It’s what Trump has tried to do, with limited success, and what the likes of Taiwan, Thailand and Indonesia have done more effectively.
5h
David Fickling