UK Will Stop Using Coal Power In Just Three Years (scientificamerican.com) 90
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Scientific American: The United Kingdom will end its use of coal-fired power by October 2024, a year earlier than scheduled, as it pushes other countries toward greater climate ambition ahead of a global warming summit it's hosting in November. "Coal powered the industrial revolution 200 years ago, but now is the time for radical action to completely eliminate this dirty fuel from our energy system," Energy and Climate Change Minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said in a statement yesterday. It won't have far to go. Coal accounted for just 1.8% of the U.K.'s electricity mix last year, with roughly 43% coming from renewable sources such as wind and solar, according to the U.K. Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. The government plans to introduce legislation on the coal phaseout "at the earliest opportunity," it said. It will only apply to coal used in electricity generation, not other sectors such as the steel industry.
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Just because a thing has been good in the past, or a necessary stepping stone, does not make it good forever.
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So how are you Mr. Atheists any better than one of those crazy "Evangelicals". You are just thumping a different book/ideology.
I am not saying that there is or isn't a God/gods, but going onto a rant insulting a person for bringing up God, without actually trying to answer the question with actual science and reason, isn't any better than someone saying a Scientific fact isn't real, because it wasn't in the bible, and that you are the Devil for bringing it up.
We as a human are Animal's limited by evolutio
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No, the entire point of science is, that you do not have to believe. You can check.
And the resulting point is, that you get verifiably reliable predictions for reality.
That is clearly superior to ignoring observed reality and beliefs based on circular reasoning.
I'm not an "atheist". That's like saying "You aschizophrenic!". We just call that... being sane. :) Living in the real world.
So you don't get science at all. You don't get that it's not your enemy. Show me god, in a reliably useful way, and then god
Correction: (Score:1)
... *as* you're hurting them ...
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So how are you Mr. Atheists any better than one of those crazy "Evangelicals". You are just thumping a different book/ideology.
Atheists don't have "a book". If they had, they wouldn't be atheists.
Re: Not a troll (Score:2)
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God also made a Tree with a very appealing fruit, and told us not to eat it.
Grain and Wheat have been the cornerstones of civilization for thousands of years. Now today we are being told to eat less of it, because it is making us Fat and unhealthy. What has chained, is the Grain and Wheat so much different now (not as much as we think), but where it was a product designed to last the off seasons of farming, it has became common for every meal, and often chosen over fresher alternatives, which thanks to n
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Let's not forget salt. Excessive quantities of salt in everything. For an example related to grains, have you ever looked at the sodium content in breakfast cereals? It's alarming. Large amounts of salt get added to virtually everything.
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Wind power is even more abundant, easier to collect and infinitely renewable.
The UK has exceptionally good wind resources, especially in Scotland and their part of the North Sea.
Not a solution (Re:Not a troll) (Score:1)
A scientist hired by the UK government, working in their office on energy and climate, told the government that they will need nuclear fission and fossil fuels with carbon capture to meet their energy needs and their goals on CO2 emissions. He pointed out that wind power may actually be a bad idea because when the wind blows energy demand is low, when energy demand is high the winds tend to be calm. There simply is not enough wind, water, and sun to meet the energy needs of the UK. His name was Dr. David
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ROTFLMAO!!!
"When wind blows, energy demand is low"?
Really? So, for thousands of years, sailing ships didn't work?
You really need to let go of those buggy whip factory shares, along with your oil company shares.
Not profitable is distinct from not working (Score:2)
Who should I listen to on energy policy? Someone with a doctorate and knighted by the queen of England, or some rando on the Internet?
There is a distinction between not able to make electricity and not able to make a profit.
You laugh about buggy whips while bringing up sailing ships? I'm pretty sure that for thousands of years the most feared warships were powered by wind but today they are powered by nuclear power. Now, tell me again what is so funny about saying windmills are not likely to make a profi
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Now, tell me again what is so funny about saying windmills are not likely to make a profit when a nation has a fleet of nuclear fission power plants?
Because the fleet of wind plants is 100 times cheaper than the nuclear fission plants.
And there are plenty of places where building so many nuclear fission plants that you can cover the whole nations power: is impossible, due to geological (availability of water e.g.) constrains.
You are just an idiot. If you would get paid for your stupid trolling I would forgi
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Citation needed.
Facts don't care about your feelings. (Score:2)
An appeal to authority is only a logical fallacy if the person referenced is not an authority on the topic.
https://www.logical-fallacy.co... [logical-fallacy.com]
If I referenced Algore as the authority then that would be a logical fallacy because Algore is not a scientist. Dr. MacKay is not only a scientist but also someone that studied this subject extensively and the appeal is not to just his authority but also his data. His data can be found here: http://www.withouthotair.com/ [withouthotair.com]
Another authority on this that brings data to ba
Made you look (Score:2)
You cared enough to reply.
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On which day did he create the coal?
Re:Not a troll (Score:5, Funny)
Same reason he put all those dinosaur bones in the ground and made you feel funny in the pants sometimes. You're being tested.
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Yes, now put the dinosaur bones back where you found them, they are not toys.
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But then, He put it where it was hard to get at, where solar and wind are everywhere and have been used for thousands of years in the form of solar heating and wind propulsion:
Behold also the ships, which though they be so great, and are driven of fierce winds, yet are they turned about with a very small helm, whithersoever the governor listeth.
James 3:4
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If coal was put in the ground by God for us to use and coal is so harmful to people and the environment, why is God so mean to His creation?
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If God didn't mean for us to use coal power, then why did he make coal so abundant?
Obvious from your Subject that you were in on the joke, but I can't tell if you're being censored by a troll moderator (and hence should be quoted) or if someone was just obliging you with a meta-joke mod.
FWiiW, I'd give you a funny mod, but I never get a mod to give.
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You have to "meta mod" to get mod points ...
Dark secrets of moderation? (Score:2)
Pretty sure the explanation is more complicated than that. For one thing, I doubt I ever meta-moderated in the ancient days of yore when I sometimes did get mod points. For another, I have tried meta-moderating for periods of time and never got any mod points. But mostly I think they are trying to hide the rules of the moderation game the same way the google tries to hide the internals of Page Rank.
But I have two current theories:
(1) Reversions. Perhaps cancelling too many of my own mods by adding later com
R.i.P. Newcastle (Score:1)
GB Grid status (Score:5, Informative)
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About 13% of that "renewable" figure includes biomass (wood) burning as well, which is part of how the UK is maintaining grid stability and still pumping the numbers for "renewable" penetration. I'm not convinced burning wood is all that much better than coal on the net, at least the way pulpwood is being produced now explicitly for burning, but opinions vary.
One thing to keep in mind is statistics for the amount of renewables on any given grid are... squirrely. Usually when you see a number like 43% rene
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If you're cutting down trees without replanting to produce biomass for burning, then it's a problem. If it's being replaced as it's cut down in a sustainable way then it's carbon neutral, so better than coal. Like any other managed forestry, it's something of a compromise as far as ecological concerns go since you have the standard concerns with cyclical habitat destruction, monoculture, etc. Done right though, it's certainly better than some alternatives.
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The nifty thing is that wind tends to blow more in winter in colder climates, where it is useful for heating. Solar tends to provide most of its output in summer and in warmer climates, where it is useful for cooling.
Right now the UK does not have a huge difference between summer and winter electricity consumption, because houses are generally heated with natural gas. Once houses switch to heat pumps, this will change a lot, and offshore wind will be a goldmine in winter. Conveniently, houses lose more heat
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where say Germany imports Scottish wind and counts those imports in their renewable share.
Why do idiots claim such bullshit?
Imported energy is not "in any share". It is imported ...
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frankly it's not super impressive or useful if wind farms on a system generate 200% of needed power for a couple months a year and 10% the rest of the time. That might average out to 30% wind production on paper but it's leaning pretty hard on existing non-renewable grid resources to fill the gaps.
That is not how it works.
Energy is only counted when it is consumed inland
Those of us modeling and managing these power grids are more interested
You are not only an idiot but a lier. You never worked in anything
This is great (Score:1)
Only electrical use, not all uses.... (Score:1)
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Yes you do, no industrial scale coal-less steel making has ever been done. Cute little experiments don't count.
If that Swedish company ever gets their hydrogen thing working it will make steel at 30% more cost. Right now, they can't do at scale anyway so file under investor hype for now.
Re: Only electrical use, not all uses.... (Score:2)
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It is actually binding with the oxide not the iron that is the problem.
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Sure, then show us such a process and you farm in a Nobel Prize. As long as you have not done that: we need coal to make steel from raw ore.
However most steal is recycled steel.
Re:Only electrical use, not all uses.... (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes incremental improvements, such as banning in one area where it's possible to do so but retaining in others where it's currently impossible to do, are massively preferable to just sitting and doing nothing because perfection has not yet been achieved.
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hahaha, aluminum takes over nine times the energy per ton to make than steel, and 84 percent of our global energy comes from fossil fuel. For the love of God, no let's not go to aluminum as primary metal.
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84 percent of our global energy comes from fossil fuel
Why would it matter what the global energy sources are? The article is about Britain and "roughly 43% coming from renewable sources". And I don't see any indications that this percentage is going to fall anytime soon.
aluminum takes over nine times the energy per ton to make than steel
And steel is around three times denser. I would assume other material properties matter too.
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The topic of this thread wasn't Britain, pay attention. The topic was using aluminum as primary metal rather than steel, and I give two reasons that's a dumb idea. The fearsome energy requirements compared to steel means more pollution if it were done now or anytime in next few decades.
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And steel is around three times denser. I would assume other material properties matter too.
Yes, but "denseness" certainly does not.
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Why do you think that a large number of AL smelting is done at locations close to large hydro systems?
Then... a lot more AL is recycled than steels. Some of the carmakers who use AL Alloy try to use material that contains a large percentage of recycled material.
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Not relevant to this topic, since going to aluminum as a "primary metal" tosses recycling right out the windows, we'd need immense amount new production which is a massive energy sink compared to steel. Not happening.
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Basically all steel is recycled.
Same for Aluminium.
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Yes, making steel burns coal. Quite a lot of it.
Yes, but the long term cost of any coal is massively less than energy production. Steel still retains it's properties of usefulness lot after the "burn" is over, once we use that kilowatt of power, that's it, there's no more usefulness.
Realistically, we're not going to dispense with burning coal until we dispense with steel (aluminum doesn't need coal, just electricity, so maybe go to aluminum as our primary metal)
Zero people who actually matter in the conversation are looking for zero coal, they are looking for zero coal in domestic energy production. We will always use coal for steel production and that's fine because the long term cost is incredibly minimal. The vast majority of
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steel making is eight percent of carbon released, so making big dent in that (by some process that doesn't exist at present, no the swedes with their hydrogen process can't do at scale) would be huge win.
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You can refine iron the same way you refine aluminum. It's just easier to do it thermally, and extremely difficult to do so for aluminum. You can get that heat anywhere you want though, it doesn't have to be coal.
Aluminum also uses quite a bit of carbon in conventional plants, for sacrificial electrodes. It also doesn't have to, and plants are being built now that don't.
If you mean the little bit of steel that is carbon, that's sequestering the carbon, and again, you could get it from wherever.
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Awesome, thanks! I collect downmods from cowards who prefer to abuse the moderation system instead of engage in discussion.
You might want to go back and read my post again. What you posted is how it's done, and why, and is *exactly the same* as what I said. I *also* said that you *could* decompose aluminum thermally but it's totally impractical to do so, and you *can* decompose iron ore using electrolysis but it's not currently done much because it's harder. There is interest in doing it though. If you have
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Awesome, thanks! I collect downmods from cowards who prefer to abuse the moderation system instead of engage in discussion.
You can either only mod or discuss. I guess you know that,
But I agree that "disagreement" with a post is no reason for a down mod.
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Particularly when "disagreement" is just repeating what I said practically word for word then chastising me for not knowing what I'm talking about.
I'm well aware you can't mod and post, and I stand by my characterization of the AC's actions. The "overrated" mod has always been an invitation to abuse. If you've been modding and disagree with something enough to want to do something about it, you need to forfeit your moderation on that particular story and post.
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You can extract iron using the same process as aluminum*, it's just that process is absurdly energy inefficient.
No you can't.
As Aluminium ore is conducting current and can be reduced by simple electricity and basically every Iron ore: does not conduct current.
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So get rid of the easy thing to get rid of.
This will buy time to get rid of the hard things?
Piecemeal aproach is not going to work. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Correct. The right choice now is to bomb those "developing" countries back to the stone age so they don't cause all that pollution. Also China. Problem solved.
UK, so what? (Score:2)
UK contributes approximately 0% to global CO_2. (Ok, 1%, BFD.)
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The UK? Why not reduce that to your village, your house, or even yourself? That would make you only 0.0000001% of global emissions. Surely, it doesn't matter how much you emit, isn't it?
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so What indeed.
It shows what can be done even with a right of centre government in charge since 2010. The thing is that all the main political parties are generally behind this move. The only difference seems to be the timescales.
Our almost totally incompetent Prime Minister has got very little in the plus column but bringing forward the end of ICE sales and the rapid phasing out of Coal (which is imported) fired electricity generation are there along with getting on with offshore wind power otherwise, he i
Not a big difference (Score:2)
Right now (02 June 2021 @ 16:35) coal is providing 2.8% of electricity*. This may sound good but gas is providing 42.8%. Apparently we are building wind turbines enthusiastically so that missing 2.8% will not be filled by something only a bit less bad.
* Yes. There's an app for that...
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That 2.8% comes from just three power stations, all of which are already in the process of being decommissioned, so not really a major announcement, more "we're doing what we said we would do in the already declared timeline".
This is in no way as big a story as Scientific American seems to think it is.
Listen to Dr. David J.C. MacKay (Score:2)
The UK Department on Energy and Climate Change hired Dr. David J.C. MacKay to study a solution on lowering CO2 emissions. In his last interview before his death he was quite clear on what the UK, and the world, would have to do to lower CO2 emissions. He said the UK would need nuclear fission and carbon capture and sequestration. He wrote many articles, made many speeches (including a TED Talk), and sat for many interviews on this topic. His book is available for free online here: http://www.withouthota [withouthotair.com]
Cheers all around! (Score:2)