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4 votes
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Denmark wants to phase out natural gas entirely and will quadruple the production of solar and onshore wind energy by 2030
13 votes -
Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg has created an energy system that makes it possible to capture and store solar energy for up to eighteen years
6 votes -
Is nuclear power green?
4 votes -
California’s solar market is now a battery market
12 votes -
The wind farms angering renewable energy fans
3 votes -
Tidal kites with a five-metre wingspan move underwater in a figure-of-eight pattern, absorbing energy from the running tide to generate electricity
12 votes -
Norway's supreme court stripped two wind farms of their operating licences in a case that could boost the legal rights of the country's indigenous Sámi people
7 votes -
Why biofuels are terrible
5 votes -
The decreasing cost of renewables unlikely to plateau anytime soon
13 votes -
World's longest undersea power connection was today switched on, allowing Norway and the UK to share renewable energy
14 votes -
Denmark risks falling short of its 2030 climate targets unless it builds far more wind and solar farms and overcomes bureaucracy and local resistance to turbines
5 votes -
Why geothermal isn't ubiquitous and how it might get that way
5 votes -
Joe Biden administration bars US imports of solar panels linked to forced labor in China’s Xinjiang region
12 votes -
Giant solar project proposed in south Butte, landowners concerned
4 votes -
Solar power's decade of falling costs is thrown into reverse
5 votes -
End of wind power waste? Vestas unveils blade recycling technology.
4 votes -
IKEA plans to accelerate its investment in renewable energy by spending an extra €4bn by the end of the decade to build wind and solar farms
5 votes -
LAVO hydrogen battery system
6 votes -
Arctic island finds green power can be a curse – Greenland's rare-earth elements are attracting superpowers riding a green revolution
11 votes -
The battery invented 120 years before its time
8 votes -
Why wind turbines in New York keep working in bitter cold weather unlike the ones in Texas
10 votes -
Denmark's government has agreed to take a majority stake in a £25bn artificial 'energy island' which is to be built 80km offshore
9 votes -
The missing link in renewables
4 votes -
Sámi reindeer herders file lawsuit against Norway windfarm – indigenous communities say planned Øyfjellet turbines will interfere with migration paths
8 votes -
A monster wind turbine is upending an industry
30 votes -
US consumes more green energy than coal for first time since 1885
15 votes -
Iceland's innovations to reach net-zero – in pictures
16 votes -
Boris Johnson announces ten-point green plan, including investments in nuclear and wind, and new combustion vehicle ban from 2030
30 votes -
Geothermal energy is poised for a breakout
14 votes -
How to make biomass energy sustainable again: Coppicing, pollarding, and hedgerows
14 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 -
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 -
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 -
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 -
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 -
Thermoelectric stoves: Ditch the solar panels?
9 votes -
2020 looks like the year US renewables first out-produce coal
10 votes -
Solar’s future is insanely cheap
11 votes -
Rays of hope—Arab states are embracing solar power
8 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 -
This simple crib cost $28,885 to make—because it was made with zero fossil fuels
13 votes -
Wind turbine blades can’t be recycled, so they’re piling up in landfills - Companies are searching for ways to deal with the tens of thousands of blades that have reached the end of their lives
26 votes