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6 votes
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Japan to invest in nuclear energy in major policy shift
8 votes -
In Sweden reindeer herders say their animals are being affected by wind farms and other industry
4 votes -
US to announce fusion energy ‘breakthrough’
13 votes -
The story of solar-grade silicon
2 votes -
Cheap, renewable, clean energy. There's just one problem.
5 votes -
How long would society last during a total grid collapse?
4 votes -
Helsinki is tapping an unexpected source of energy to heat its homes – cold water extracted from deep in the Baltic Sea
6 votes -
Sweden finds explosive traces at Nord Stream blast sites, confirms sabotage
7 votes -
A new way of storing renewable energy is providing clean heat – the Vatajankoski power plant is home to the world's first commercial-scale sand battery
5 votes -
Baltic Pipe pipeline between Norway and Poland received its first direct deliveries of Norwegian gas – Danish terminal started operations following delays
6 votes -
Norway-style windfall tax on energy companies could raise £33.3bn extra by 2027, plugging a hole in UK government finances, analysis has found
4 votes -
Inside Viktor Orbán’s response to the war in Ukraine
7 votes -
Ulf Kristersson, the leader of the conservative Moderaterna, was elected on Monday as Sweden's prime minister with the support of the anti-immigration Sverigedemokraterna
2 votes -
Finland hopes new nuclear reactor eases energy crunch – Olkiluoto 3 will be able to produce about one-fifth of the electricity the country consumes
7 votes -
How to deal with rolling blackouts?
Given how the 2020s have gone so far, I'm feeling some meaningful concern about the news that we might be getting rolling blackouts if European fuel supplies get too low. I'm not at all sure...
Given how the 2020s have gone so far, I'm feeling some meaningful concern about the news that we might be getting rolling blackouts if European fuel supplies get too low. I'm not at all sure whether they're overplaying the risk to prepare people, or dramatically underplaying it as they did with the first COVID lockdowns.
I'd be interested to know what, if anything, people recommend as preparation? I don't want to go overkill on something that may not even happen, but it also seems reasonable to consider the issue before everyone starts panic buying supplies.
I'm in the middle of a city, which has definite advantages in terms of walking access to shops and public buildings, but everything I own (including gas boiler and gas stove) needs electricity to run. It seems like a 500Wh LiFePO battery might be a good middle ground in terms of keeping creature comforts up and running, but they aren't exactly cheap so I'd be interested in any opinions and recommendations there?
More broadly it'd be great to hear what people think about the general risks, good preparations to make, and useful supplies that are easy to overlook?
16 votes -
Operator of Nord Stream 2 confirmed that a leak in the pipeline has been detected southeast of the Danish island Bornholm in the Baltic Sea
18 votes -
After Ukraine – The great clean energy acceleration
3 votes -
Why did we wait so long for wind power? Part II
5 votes -
This 100% solar community endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage
12 votes -
Russia's war in Ukraine has forever changed Europe's energy landscape – Norway finds itself at the forefront of an energy crisis
4 votes -
Norway-Poland gas pipeline opens in key move to cut dependency on Russia – could be at full capacity a month early due to good progress on work in Denmark
13 votes -
Doel 3: Shutdown confirmed for Friday despite politicians' pleas
7 votes -
"Brick toaster" aims to cut global CO2 output by 15% in fifteen years
11 votes -
Finnish utility Fortum plans to add 560 megawatt capacity by reactivating an idle coal-fired power plant on Finland's west coast
7 votes -
Norway says ‘no’ to a gas price cap – Oslo's gas payday is equivalent to about £350 for each Norwegian man, woman and child
7 votes -
Energy crisis fuels rush for firewood sending prices skyrocketing
10 votes -
Lebanon’s forced conversion to solar
7 votes -
The race to build an LNG terminal in north Germany
6 votes -
Heat pumps take off in coal-loving Poland amid Ukraine war
5 votes -
How a Swedish company's technology is powering electric ferries – Echandia is manufacturing heavy duty energy storage systems
5 votes -
Norway is extending the life of its last Arctic coal mine – will now operate until 2025 amid Europe's energy crisis
7 votes -
World's highest jumping robot
3 votes -
UK looks to Sweden for a solution to nuclear waste – repeated attempts to find a suitable location have been stymied by political intransigence and environmentalists
4 votes -
Why no Roman industrial revolution?
10 votes -
China's worst heat wave on record is crippling power supplies
9 votes -
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock signed a deal with Denmark to boost investment in hydro and wind power
3 votes -
UK inflation to hit 18.6% next year according to Citi
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2 From the article: UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices,...
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2
From the article:
UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices, according to a new forecast from Citigroup based on the latest market prices.
The investment bank predicted that the retail energy price cap would be raised to £4,567 in January and then £5,816 in April, compared with the current level of £1,971 a year — shifts it said would lead to inflation “entering the stratosphere”.
[...]
UK and European wholesale natural gas prices are already trading at close to 10 times normal levels and other forecasters have also raised their inflation predictions.
Goldman Sachs and EY said they expected an inflation rate of at least 15 per cent around the start of next year and the Bank of England said this month that inflation would exceed 13 per cent towards the end of the year.
The energy regulator Ofgem will on Friday announce the energy price cap for the period between October and January, which most analysts expect to rise to more than £3,500 for a household with average usage of energy — an increase of 75 per cent on current levels.
12 votes -
How many fossils to go an inch? An animated essay
9 votes -
Norway's exports reached a record in July, driven mainly by natural gas prices that have soared – higher fish and metals exports also contributed
4 votes -
Finland is building the world's first permanent disposal site for nuclear waste, with no shortage of people wanting to be its neighbours
13 votes -
British consumers could face even higher bills and potential energy shortages as Norway threatens electricity export cut
9 votes -
We can’t save the planet and make ExxonMobil happy
6 votes -
Leaked: US power companies secretly spending millions to protect profits and fight clean energy
21 votes -
Solar power is bailing Texas out this summer
10 votes -
Belgium and energy provider Engie agree to extend nuclear power plants
7 votes -
Limits to economic growth
6 votes -
Climate change: 'Sand battery' could solve green energy's big problem
11 votes -
€2 billion underground ‘water battery’ turns on in Switzerland
15 votes -
Swedish power utility Vattenfall considering building at least two new small nuclear reactors to deal with a projected rise in electricity consumption over the coming decades
5 votes