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8 votes
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A single-step approach to nuclear reprocessing
8 votes -
On the seventh day after the blackout, electricity rotation still does not work in all regions of Amapá (Brazilian state)
6 votes -
Batteries, fuel cells powered by spinach
6 votes -
Geothermal energy is poised for a breakout
14 votes -
Can we save energy, jobs, and growth at the same time?
5 votes -
The undying appeal of Nikola Tesla’s “death ray”
7 votes -
How to make biomass energy sustainable again: Coppicing, pollarding, and hedgerows
14 votes -
Colonial life and the burning of wood
6 votes -
13MW GE-built Haliade-X turbines confirmed for the world's largest wind farms off the UK coast—the 3.6GW Dogger Bank project
6 votes -
Inside the Icelandic facility where Bitcoin is mined—cryptocurrency mining now uses more of the Nordic island nation's electricity than its homes
7 votes -
The country’s most important climate election is happening in Texas
8 votes -
At Iceland's Blue Lagoon you can swim in power plant wastewater – here's a story about geothermal energy, cheap heat, and how to keep some ducks warm
9 votes -
US gives first-ever OK for small commercial nuclear reactor
19 votes -
Solar energy and mechanical triggers power the Engage, a console at the cutting edge of computer engineering
4 votes -
The economics of a nuclear reactor
7 votes -
Norway plans to drill for oil in untouched Arctic areas – critics say plan for fields off Svalbard threatens ecosystem and relations with Russia
6 votes -
How a plan to save the power system disappeared: A federal lab found a way to modernize the grid, reduce reliance on coal, and save consumers billions. Then Trump appointees blocked it
24 votes -
UAE starts operations at Arab world's first nuclear power plant
4 votes -
Exponential adoption of solar power by opium-growers in Afghanistan
7 votes -
Help me understand the significance of EROI?
According to this guy, societal collapse is imminent because a. entropy and b. the high EROI (energy return on investment) afforded to society by the use of energy dense hydrocarbons such as coal...
According to this guy, societal collapse is imminent because a. entropy and b. the high EROI (energy return on investment) afforded to society by the use of energy dense hydrocarbons such as coal and petroleum will decline dramatically in the near future due to the decreasing economic viability of acquiring them and the lack of a similarly high return alternative (barring nuclear fission, which is VeRy DaNgErOuS (and also practically infeasible politically in most countries that can achieve it), and nuclear fusion, which is, of course, perpetually 20 years away) and because this EROI is (according to him) what makes the complexity of modern civilization possible, it is inevitable that we will soon see a corresponding decline in said complexity (collapse). Now there is a section in the wikipedia article that touches on some of these points (Economic influence) so it's not totally junk science (if you trust Wikipedia, that is). However, I'm still struggling to grasp the significance of this figure. As long as our means of acquiring energy is scalable, why does it matter what the EROI is as long as it is greater than 1? if we need to spend one fifth of the energy we get from solar panels on making more, fixing existing ones, and installation, can't we just make a bunch of them to match our energy needs, even if they're growing? What am I missing here?
7 votes -
Work has begun on Viking Link, the world's longest electricity interconnector which will allow power to travel between the UK and Denmark
5 votes -
What we need to know about the pace of decarbonization -- Energy transitions have been among the key defining processes of human evolution
4 votes -
ThorCon's thorium converter reactor
9 votes -
Construction begins on world’s biggest liquid air battery
10 votes -
BP data reveals newly-installed clean electricity generation matched coal for the first time in 2019
4 votes -
Britain about to pass a significant landmark—two months of coal-free electricity generation—as renewables edge out fossil fuels
18 votes -
The economics of nuclear energy
7 votes -
Denmark should end all future oil and gas exploration in the North Sea – it hurts Denmark's ambition as a front-runner in the fight against climate change
6 votes -
Thermoelectric stoves: Ditch the solar panels?
9 votes -
Scientists unravel challenge in improving fusion performance
7 votes -
Why carbon pricing is not sufficient to mitigate climate change—and how “sustainability transition policy” can help
7 votes -
Coal industry will never recover after coronavirus pandemic, say experts
24 votes -
2020 looks like the year US renewables first out-produce coal
10 votes -
Solar’s future is insanely cheap
11 votes -
X-37B space plane's microwave power beam experiment is a way bigger deal than it seems
13 votes -
Rays of hope—Arab states are embracing solar power
8 votes -
A major project to transport natural gas from the North Sea to Denmark and Poland has taken a significant step forward
5 votes -
Sweden closes last coal-fired power station two years ahead of schedule – country becomes third in Europe to exit coal, ahead of mass withdrawal from polluting fossil fuel
18 votes -
First wooden wind power tower erected in Sweden – as early as 2022, the wooden towers will be built on a commercial scale
8 votes -
Michael Moore’s environment film a slap in the face on Earth Day
17 votes -
Scientists set new solar power efficiency record at almost fifty per cent
8 votes -
Planet of the Humans
4 votes -
Google's data centers now work harder when the sun shines and wind blows
8 votes -
Nearly half of global coal plants will be unprofitable this year
10 votes -
Finland's center-left government gave its blessing to majority state-owned Fortum's strategy to cut emissions, but promised to push the company further
4 votes -
Norway is postponing a decision on whether to allow companies to construct a new subsea power cable between it and Scotland
4 votes -
PepsiCo to acquire energy drink maker Rockstar Energy in a $3.85 billion deal
9 votes -
Moss Landing battery storage project approved
5 votes -
Greenpeace asks Norway's supreme court to rule on Arctic oil – a case that could block the petroleum industry's expansion plans
5 votes