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#1 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » Today 03:37:20

Kbd512, that is a good analysis.  Polysilicon production consumes a lot of coal already.  According to your reference, carbon is needed to reduce the silicon dioxide into metallurgical silicon, and hydrogen is needed to make the silane for purification into semiconductor grade.  These processes are very difficult to divorce from fossil fuel inputs, unless we source the carbon and hydrogen from biomass.  This means that attempting to substitute PV for other energy sources will only serve to shift fossil fuel consumption from electricity production into PV manufacturing.  The alternative (biomass) places another unsustainable burden on the Earth's forests.

In areas with plenty of direct sunlight, trough solar thermal collectors can be used to raise steam at 300°C.  This is beneath superheat temperatures, but it should be possible to generate power with 30% efficiency.  When heat losses from the collectors is factored in, it turns out that a solar thermal powerplant has about the same power density as a PV plant.  So the obvious question is why are we trying to generate power using slabs of semiconductor grade silicon instead of simple, curved alloy steel reflectors?  The embodied energy in a curved steel mirror is at least an order of magnitude lower than a PV panel.  And the technology is really simple.  Mirrors, coolant pipes, boilers and steam generator sets.  This is close to Victorian levels of technological sophistication.  We can add energy storage using stainless steel tanks containing molten nitrate salts.  We could even co-fire solar thermal plants with biomass or coal.  This means that long duration backup power doesn't need a whole other power station.  Just a seperate boiler, but using the same steam generator set.

I can see areas where PV is useful.  In offgrid small power situations, you want an energy source that requires no attention once installed, uses no fuel and has no moving parts.  In those small power situations, cost and embodied energy are less important because the systems involved are generating only small amounts of energy for important functions.  You wouldn't build a solar thermal plant to power a wrist watch, a traffic light or a calculator.  But given the resource requirements, building a PV plant to power a city looks like the wrong technology choice as well.  All technologies have their specific niches where they make sense.  For some reason, the people in charge have lost sight of that.  They are making decisions based upon what is trendy.

#2 Re: Terraformation » Plutoids and Rogue Planets, Titanformation process, a cold treasure? » Today 02:52:24

Oxygen depletion systems have been around for a while.  They are usualy used as fire preventative measures and have been popular in libraries storing important texts.  They work by reducing the partial pressure of oxygen in a space and replacing it with additional nitrogen.  A reduction in oxygen partial pressure from 210 to 150-180mbar, doesn't sound like much.  But it makes fire ignition less likely and impedes fire growth if one does start.  Human habitation of the space remains possible, assuming one does not wish to engage in high performance exercise.  These solutions are a bit niche on Earth, due to cost, energy consumption and the need for buildings to be well sealed to maintain atmospheric control.

Nitrogen or CO2 drench on the other hand, is a reactive firefighting system.  I have seen it used on ships and submarines.  It can be problematic if a compartment is not sealed because it will displace oxygen leaving trapped crew with nothing to breath.  In a sealed compartment it is quite safe, because oxygen partial pressure does not decrease, but the nitrogen adds heat capacity to the air reducing flame temperature.

Both options are useful in space / lunar / mars habitats.  In these cases, the air volume is fixed and such a system has lower risk of asphyxiation.  Oxygen depletion can be used as well.  But the problem here is that we already plan to use <1bar atmosphere.  So it will be difficult to deplete oxygen without reducing oxygen partial pressure unacceptably.  Putting in a few percent of heavier gas like a fluorocarbon, which has high volumetric heat capacity, may be a better way of suppressing fire.  Cost may turn out to be an issue here.

#3 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » Yesterday 15:13:56

Offtherock, the man is talking about the need for carbon as a reducing agent for silicon dioxide.  Carbon means anthracite or charcoal.  There then needs to be a vapour deposition process to convert metallurgical silicon into semiconductor grade.  That means turning the silicon into silane, which is made by reacting silicon with hydrogen.  In the west, hydrogen is produced by steam reforming methane.  In China, they use coal to produce carburetted water gas, because coal is the resource they have in abundance.  Coal also provides the majority of electricity, especially in western China which is where PV manufacture is concentrated.  China absolutely dominates global polysilicon production.  So coal is what is used to make these panels and everything that goes into them.

Regarding your point about the expense of a composite energy system that includes solar.
https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 10#p233410

Your point seems to be that better storage technology and smart grids will be more available and cheaper in the future.  I will talk some more about that tomorrow.

#4 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » Yesterday 14:13:00

offtherock wrote:

Most of the worlds energy production isnt solar.
Solar is the cheapest form of prodcution, and cleanest and fastest growing.
But its just a few percentages points of the whole.. still.

Offtherock, Solar PV is not the cheapest form of energy production.  It is one of the most expensive.  To deliver a reliable kW of power to the grid using PV, means having a PV powerplant, battery storage for frequency control, extra transmission lines and above all, a gas turbine powerplant that can pick up the load when the sun isn't sufficient.  You need all those things together.  It is this combination of costs that account for high electricity prices in European countries.  A nuclear reactor or coal burning plant doesn't need this extra stuff.

offtherock wrote:

Therefore, to point out that something isnt powered by solar yet, isn't an argument for anything.

We come from a dirty past.
But a dirty past is not an argument for a dirty future.

Not sure what this argument is getting at.  We don't use much solar PV at the moment because it has not been very useful.  It also isn't particularly clean when you add up all the CO2 emissions involved in build a PV powerplant.  It compares badly to wind and nuclear power.  This is a direct result of its poor underlying energy economics.

offtherock wrote:

Here's the chatgpt take on that love-for-coal link.
https://chatgpt.com/share/68a4cec8-7260 … b66f371b52

The author of that book doesn't have connections to the coal industry, he is the coal industry.
A man with huge interests in coal remaining big.
Who also happens to have attitudes aligning with that.
Shocking.
https://chatgpt.com/c/68a4d159-d0e8-832 … 3f15542b29

I don't care where the guy works or where he gets his money from.  What matters is whether what he is saying is true or not.  Are the facts that he puts forward varifiable?

#5 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » Yesterday 06:57:27

An introduction to EROI.
https://euanmearns.com/eroei-for-beginners/

The reason complex societies cannot survive on low EROI energy sources is that large amounts of energy are needed to operate systems and build / repair / replace infrastructure.  We can divide human energy consumption into three categories.

(1) Essentials.  These are the things that keep society running.  They include energy for transportation, food, water, minimal heating, industry, etc.
(2) Luxuries.  These include travel for leisure, luxury goods, abundant heat, relaxation, etc.
(3) Investment.  This includes energy invested to repair or replace infrastructure.  It also includes energy invested into new equipment and new technology investment.
(4) War.

Society must meet the demands of (1) to survive even in the short term.  Some of what is left over will need to be reinvested to sustain the energy sources that society depends upon (3).  Also included in (3) is the energy that must be invested to sustain infrastructure.  When these deductions are accounted for, anything remaining will be used for a combination of luxuries, technology development, investment in new equipment and war.

If EROI falls too low and investments in new energy supply consumes too high a proportion of harvested energy, all other categories of energy use are squeezed.  It becomes difficult to simultaneous meet essential energy needs whilst also having enough left over for luxuries and investment.  Economic growth will tend to decline, because growth requires energy investment in new infrastructure or technological development.  In the past, civilisations have fallen due to maintenance crisis.  This occurs when surplus energy is insufficient to maintain the infrastructure on which the functioning of society depends.

Some general conclusions can be drawn from this.  Firstly, there is a minimum EROI for which any society is sustainable, given the burdens of essential energy use and maintenance of infrastructure.  Secondly, the wealth of a society and its ability to grow and develop technologically depend upon EROI being greater than a certain threshold value.  The 20th century was marked by very rapid technological advancement, industrialisation, urbanisation, population growth and infrastructure development.  This was made possible through the use of high EROI fossil fuels and the surplus energy they provided.  It allowed huge levels of investment above and beyond those required for basic human survival.

#6 Re: Meta New Mars » Calliban Postings including links to notable contributions » Yesterday 03:06:49

Thanks TH.  It has taken a lot more time to build the machine than I initially expected.  But the modified design should be far more versatile than the original.  I will continue to post pictures as the device is assembled.

#7 Re: Home improvements » Misc. Home Projects » 2025-08-18 15:07:40

I have almost finished the cone clutch and pulley.  Here is a picture.
20250818-215802.jpg
Next weekend, I will hoist the nacelle into the cradle, bolt the pulley and clutch to the table and connect the rope drive.  At this point, the machine will be fully operational.

#8 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Building Solar from scratch » 2025-08-17 15:07:44

We could build solar thermal powerplants on a much simpler resource base than would be possible for PV.  The problems with solar thermal are: (1) It requires active tracking of the sun; (2) It needs direct sunlight to work, diffuse light interupted by clouds isn't useful.  PV will generate some power from diffuse light, solar thermal will not. (3) To generate power from solar thermal requires a heat engine.  That means someone has to operate it and it will have moving parts that require maintenance.  (4) Solar thermal, like PV, means having slender structures covering large areas, making both vulnerable to storm damage.

All that being said, if I had to build a solar powerplant in my home workshop, I could probably build a crude solar thermal power system using LP steam.  Could I build a PV system?  Very unlikely.  How the hell could I produce doped polysilicon in a home foundry?  If I could buy the cells or panels, I coukd do the rest.  But building PV cells?  That is a major industrial effort.  Not possible without a lot of investment in equipment.

#9 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-17 14:48:22

I have great doubts about the sustainability of PV as a bulk energy source.  A lot of people are emotionally attached to it because it seems to them to be an elegant solution - harnessing the power of the sun with no moving parts.    But the materials requirements are huge, as is the embodied energy needed to produce all of the equipment required.  On top of this, it is a technologically difficult product to produce and relies on long supply chains for all of the material inputs and equipment.  PV modules are relatively cheap at present, only because the Chinese are producing them at massive scale, using stranded coal and forced labour.  How long can all of the things that make it possible hold together?  There are just too many things that can go wrong with PV supply chain for it to make any sense pinning our future on it.  It is extremely precarious and resource intensive.  People advocate it more for emotional than practical reasons.  That is about as stupid as it is possible to be when dealing with something as vital to life as energy supply.  We need systems that we can sustain using limited resources that are as close to home as possible.

#10 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-17 14:08:06

This is a picture of a wind powered sawmill that I visited on my holiday in Holland.
20250411-113130.jpg
It uses no copper at all, no aluminium, no rare earths and only small amounts of iron for high stress components.  It is mostly made from wood.  There is no energy storage, aside from the kinetic energy stored within the sails and other rotating components.  There is no backup power.  The whole thing is really very simple.  It is hundreds of years old and has been sawing wood for all of that time.

I think there is a lesson here in how we can sustainably use renewable energy.  If we need tonnes of copper and other rare elements per MW of power, then we are clearly overcomplicating things.  When you use wind and other renewables for electricity production and then add things like transmission, storage, frequency control and backup power, the costs and resource comittments rapidly become untenable.  But in previous times, people relied upon renewable energy without doing anything as crazy as what we are trying to do today.  They used the power at its source.  They avoided unnecessary energy transitions.  And they varied work rate with the weather.  It wouldn't have occured to them to even try and store wind energy and it wouldn't have possible even if it had occured to them.

I think this raises serious questions and deserves serious thought.  We have built a civilisation on the principle of converting chemical energy into rotary motion.  How much of what we need as a society could we adapt to make use of the rotary motion provided by direct mechanical wind power?

#11 Re: Home improvements » Misc. Home Projects » 2025-08-17 13:06:42

It has been a busy weekend.  I decided to modify my windmill to make it more versatile.  After installing the tower, I realised that putting the tumbling pot in the nacelle was a bad idea.  It means having to climb 20' up a ladder every few days to change it.  Do that 100 times per year and the risk of falling off the ladder and killing myself becomes significant.

I decided to modify the design so that the rotating nacelle drives a pulley, which transfers power via a rope drive to the tumbling pot.  This is mounted on a table which is attached to the tower at waist height.  The pulley on the table drives a short shaft through a bearing, with the other end of the shaft driving a cone clutch (male).  The tumbling pot is mounted on its own bearings.  The female coupling of the cone clutch drives the tumbling pot on its bearings.  The tumbling pot can be disconnected by pulling the male and female parts of the cone clutch apart.

The modification has added a lot of time to the build process.  But in addition to the improved safety of having the tumbling pot close to the ground, I should be able to use the windmill to drive other tools.  Once it is up and running, practically any rotating tool can be driven by the windmill by fitting it with a female cone clutch and clamping it to the table.  An obvious addition would be a small wood lathe.  A disc saw is another possibility, as is a grinder.  I have a flexible coupling that I can use to drive a drill as well.

My intention is for the stone tumbling to function as a sort of dump load.  When I need mechanical power for some other tool, the tumbling pot will be disconnected and then reconnected when the job is finished.  This allows the windmill to power multiple applications, without any energy being wasted.

The power produced by the windmill depends upon windspeed, air density, swept area and efficiency.  The blade diameter is 2m.  Assuming efficiency of 33% (2/3rd the Betz limit), a 10mph wind would produce 58W of power.  I do not know what the efficiency of the device is.  A low end of 25%, would give a power 42W in a 10mph wind.  A 35% efficiency would give 60W.  Since I don't know what the efficiency is, I can only estimate power to be 40-60W in a 10mph wind.  A mini wood lathe draws about 100W of power, which equates to a 12.6mph wind speed for my machine.  A bench grinder consumes anywhere between 150 - 400W.  Of course tools will still work at lower power.  But work rate will be correspondingly reduced.

#12 Re: Terraformation » Electrostatic atmospheric confinement » 2025-08-14 13:30:45

It turns out that magnetic fields have little effect on the atmospheric loss rate for terrestrial planets.
https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_ … 34-18.html

Magnetic fields trap charged particles and may reduce the rate of escape close to the equator.  But the open field lines close to the poles can have the opposite effect.  So magnetic confinement of an atmosphere is unlikely to be successful.

#13 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-13 04:10:03

Spaniard, I searched the internet and found a copy of Hall and Pietro's EROI analysis free to download here.
https://libgen.li/edition.php?id=136738520

Maybe you can find holes in their analysis?

#14 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-11 15:15:20

Spaniard, It would take me hours to answer every detail in this ridiculous word salad.  I don't have it to spare.  It is a mixture of denial, wishful thinking and ignorance of physics and engineering.

Hall and Pietro estimated the EROI of Spain's solar PV industry to be 2.45:1.  An EROI of 10:1 is about the minimum that an industrial society can work with.  Without that level of surplus energy, there just isn't enough left over for an economy to function.  It was only possible to build these plants in the first place because fossil fuels are available to manufacture, transport and install every part of it.  And the wealth to pay for it is generated by a fossil fuel powered economy.  Since Hall & Pietro published their work, most of the solar supply chain has shifted to the western provinces of China.  This will push EROI down further.  But the cheapness of coal and forced labour, have allowed modules to be produced and sold at attractive prices.  It just isn't a practice that can continue for much longer.  A low system EROI tells us that this energy source is not sustainable when cheap fossil fuels are removed from its manufacture.

You talk about using various different types of storage to manage the problem of intermittency.  Energy storage has significant embodied energy of its own.  There are also losses in storage.  And adding storage means adding complexity.  All of this degrades the EROI of the energy source, increases cost and adds vulnerability.  Without a complete analysis, you really aren't in a position to be able to tell us that these problems can be overcome.

You mention hydrogen as an energy storage technology.  In principle, it all sounds very simple.  Use electrolysis when power is abundant and store hydrogen in a gasometer tank.  A combined cycle gas turbine can then convert the hydrogen back into electric power at 60% efficiency.  But electrolysis stacks are very expensive.  Using them only intermittently results in a high marginal capital cost for each kWh stored in H2.  And of course the cost of the hydrogen depends on the cost of electricity needed to produce it.  Hydrogen has low density and a low energy density, unless it is either liquefied or compressed to very high pressures.  Even with generous assumptions, less than half of the input electricity into such a system can be recovered.  Collectively, these problems have resulted in most hydrogen projects being abandoned.  It just isn't a good option for storing electrical energy to turn back into electrical energy.

#15 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-11 02:25:22

Positions don't change for two reasons.  Either one of the positions is wrong, or the people holding them don't listen.  Usually, both are true at once.

Spaniard wrote: 'And about "renewables need fossil fuels". That's wrong. The right statement is, renewables needs storage. Fuel has advantages and disadvantages, as well as batteries.'

Intermittent renewables have short term and long term variability.  Batteries are expensive and have high embodied energy, meaning a lot of energy is needed to make them.  What this means in practical terms, is that batteries can be used for smoothing short term variability.  A battery big enough to power your house for weeks, would be as big as your house.  And it would cost as much as your house.  And most of the batteries would only be used a few times per year.  What would that do to the marginal cost of storage?  Would the system ever return the energy needed to build it?

This is why in real grids, batteries are used for frequency control.  They are there to meet demand for as long as it takes to bring backup fossil power online.  That is usually gas turbines burning LNG.  LNG isn't cheap by historical standards.  But it is a bulk commodity that can sit in an underground tank.  The marginal cost of storage is very small.  Do you understand what is being said here?

Spaniard wrote: 'Renewable reduce the fossil fuel usage today per $ more than nuclear. Invest on renewable today helps more on reduce our fossil fuel dependency than nuclear.'

That is unlikely.  A renewable system feeding a grid needs a fossil fuel power station as backup.  It will be very difficult and expensive to build enough storage to obviate the need for backup.  And remember that 'storage' is really just another powerplant that sucks in electricity at one end and spits out less electricity as output.  Backup means building two power plants and paying for the capital and operating costs of both.  You also have to invest in additional transmission infrastructure and frequency control, because intermittent renewables have no inertia.  Levelised cost of energy does not account for these things.  At the end of that process, you achieve a modest reduction in fossil fuel consumption.  But the added cost is huge.  And all of that extra infrastructure has a lot of embodied energy, most of which comes from coal, natural gas and diesel.

The cost of new nuclear power depends primarily on build times.  These have stretched from just a few years back in the 70s, to about two decades today.  Part of this is due to regulatory burden and part is due to the loss of all scale economies and supporting industries over the past forty years.  The French built nuclear powerplants cheaply, because they were able to build quickly and in large volume.  They established a national industry that met all parts of the nuclear supply chain.  No one has this now.  But it was a policy choice to shut that down.  It isn't an inherent problem.  And we could, with political will, rebuild it.

Spaniard wrote: 'Insist in making linear projections of copper. But as offtherock commented (and I did in the past), copper usage per unit power is not fixed.'

Yes it is.  The cross sectional area of a copper conductor is directly proportional to the power transmitted.  That is basic physics.  So the more power produced, the more copper needed.  It is possible to use other conductors in particular situations.  Aluminium alloys have always been used in high voltage transmission lines.  We could use aluminium in more applications.  But there will be penalties in terms of power density, corrosion protection and fatigue.  Iron can be used to transmit DC power (though not AC).  Here again, there are penalties in terms of power density, weight and the need for corrosion protection.  As Void noted, carbon nanotube conductors may become practical at some point.  But all alternatives come with cost or performance burdens at present technology sets.  We would already be using them otherwise.

The other alternative for intermittent renewables, is to accept the fact that power will fluctuate and plan your activities around that.  If that is possible, then the energy could indeed be quite cheap, because backup and storage are no longer needed.  But how much of society could work that way?  Could grids function with continuous rolling blackouts?  I don't know.  I would guess that an intermittent energy supply would burden society with a lot of other costs.  But it is the only way I can see this working.

The old fashioned windmills did not try to store wind energy to cover periods when wind was not blowing.  They just varied work rate to match supply.  And they harnessed mechanical energy from the wind to drive mechanical processes with only basic, short range mechanical power transmission.  Those were cheap and simple systems.  But the people involved had to work with intermittent power.  Can we adjust our society to do the same?  Again, I think this is the only way this can work.

#16 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-10 15:26:41

Additional: A mechanical windmill could be used to produce heat, cold and mechanical power.  It can do this by compressing air.  As air compresses, it gets hot as internal energy is added to it.  A single stage compressor could be used to generate compressed, hot air at say 200°C.  The air could then pass through tubes in an oven, heating it.  The still hot air could then pass through a counterflow heat exchanger, producing hot water.  This would cool the air to roughly 20°C, but it would still be at pressure.  The air would then expand through a turbine, generating mechanical power.  The exhausted air from the turbine would be cold enough to freeze water.  This cold air could be used to keep a large freezer cold.  By combining outputs in this way, we can get far more out of a mechanical wind turbine.

#17 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-10 14:57:55

Another option that has received surprisingly little attention, is that we escape our pointless addiction to electricity.  I have said this many times before, I know.  We don't anywhere near as much electricity as we use.

Both wind and solar thermal power systems can be used to provide direct mechanical power for many applications.  That power doesn't have to be transmitted using electricity.  Hydraulics, compressed air and mechanical power transmission would all work.  Before the invention of the electric motor, line shafts were used to transfer power from a central waterwheel or steam engine, to multiple machines on a machine shop floor.  There are still factories in the US that use this solution today.  Hydraulics could do this even more efficiently.  Wind turbines or solar thermal plants equipped with hydraulic pumps, can generate and transmit power without need for copper, cobalt or rare earths.  Just steel, concrete and synthetic rubber.

Stationary mechanical power sources can also transport goods.  This can be done by pumping water down a pipeline, carrying floating capsules.  An old fashioned windmill could do that.  In fact, the inland freight transport of entire nations could be done in this way.  No need for electricity.  Just mechanical wind pumps raising water through a head of a few metres.

The sun can also provide direct heat.  This is useful for a huge range of things, from cooking, to iron reduction to brick making.  Crude iron powder can be produced by heating a retort containing iron oxide to 800°C and passing hydrogen or methane through it.  The reduced iron powder can then be seperated from silicate slag by crushing, followed by magnetic seperation.  It can then be converted into steel using an electric arc furnace.  A town could have a centralised oven that cooks food using solar heat.  A laundrette could wash all of the clothing for a town using a mixture of mechanical wind energy to run machines and solar hot water.

To summarise, we don't need high tech solutions to build a society that works with far less consumption of fossil fuels.  It is our slavish addiction to electricity that stands in the way of doing these things.  Also, the fact that we don't seem to be able to conceive solutions that might require a different way of life.  For example, using the town laundrette instead of a home washing machine.  Using a public bathing faciluty instead of a home bathroom.  Eating out at a town restaurant fitted with a large solar cooker with hot rock thermal storage.  Changing energy sources means changing our way of life.   There is surprisingly little thinking about this.

#18 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-10 12:13:06

World electricity consumption in 2022 was 24,398TWh.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electri … onsumption

According to the DOE, a PWR needs roughly 3 tons of copper for each TWh of electricity it produces over its life cycle.
https://www.energy.gov/quadrennial-tech … eview-2015

Replacing present electricity production with nuclear power, would require 73,194 tons of copper per year, assuming that we don't recycle.  That is 0.37% of the present day copper production of 20 million tonnes per year.

In the 1970s, light water reactors were being constructed for $1000/kWe in modern money.  How do we get back to that?  Why is it that we cannot do now what we could do 50 years ago?

#19 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-10 11:17:29

Solar thermal power has some very significant advantages.  It doesn't really offer better power density than PV.  But the materials needed to build it out are steel and concrete.  It is thermal concentrators, boilers and steam generating sets.  Things that we have been building since the end of the Victorian age.  The materials involved are abundant and recyclable.  Energy storage can be added to it with a tank of molten salt.  And we don't need to depend on a Chinese economic system that will soon be gone.

#20 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-10 10:25:56

The average grade of mined copper ore has been declining steadily for many decades.
2022102751658_7.jpg
Taken from this report.
https://www.streetwisereports.com/artic … rt-of.html

Whether it is possible to reduce copper intensity for solar PV, electric cars and the myriad other electronic products of modernity, I do not know.  Aluminium alloys could be substituted for some applications.  If it were easy and advantageous to do that, it would have happened already.

Regarding the present relatively low cost of PV modules.  This is largely a product of the Chinese industrial system.  Back in the early 2000s, the Chinese communist party made the decision that PV was one of the industries that they wished to dominate globally.  They built polysilicon factories in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia.  Polysilicon is one of the most energy intensive materials known to man.  These places contain a lot of otherwise stranded coal, too far from the Chinese heartlands to be useful.  They built coal burning powerplants close to the mineheads.  These produced some of the cheapest electricity on Earth.  They used forced islamic labour to mine the coal and man the factories making the polysilicon and modules.  They set all of this up with zero interest loans.  The result was extremely cheap PV modules.  These were used in China and shipped all over the world.

Why would the Chinese do this?  There is one overriding reason.  Coal production in core Chinese provinces has stagnated, but electricity demand has kept growing.  By building PV into grid, coal powerplant capacity factor can fall, allowing more electricity to be generated using less coal.  It makes sense for the Chinese to do this, as Xinjiang coal cannot be transported to demand centres in eastern China, but PV modules can.  If they can export them to the rest of the world as well, that is a bonus.  At the same time, China is building nuclear powerplants morerapidly than the entire rest of the world combined.  But this will take time.  They need to stretch out their coal reserves until they have enough nuclear reactors to replace coal outright.

For the rest of the world, PV modules produced using stranded coal and slave labour, are a short term thing.  If tge Chinese industrial system breaks down, they disappear overnight.  If by some miracle that doesn't happen, PV will disappear when the Chinese build enough nukes not to need it anymore.  Either way, this is ashort term phenomena, propped up by factors that are unsustainable.

#21 Re: Home improvements » Misc. Home Projects » 2025-08-10 08:45:29

I have installed the cradle for the wind turbine.
20250810-153513.jpg

The next step is to hoist the nacelle and blades into the cradle.  That is going to take some creative thinking.  The nacelle is as finished as I can get it.
20250810-153440.jpg

#22 Re: Home improvements » Misc. Home Projects » 2025-08-09 15:38:32

I have put up a scaffold tower around the windmill tower.  Tomorrow is the day of final assembly.  It has been a long road getting to this point.  I will post pictures on here.

#23 Re: Not So Free Chat » Oil, Peak Oil, etc. » 2025-08-09 15:29:00

A good place to start if you wish to understand the resource intensity of different energy sources, in the US DOE Quadrennial technology review.  Specifically, chapter 10.
https://www.energy.gov/quadrennial-tech … eview-2015

The DOE have already done the work in estimating the amount of materials of different types needed per TWh of electricity generated.  Solar power especially, is a horrendous resource hog.  Wind power is better, but the material needs are still an order of magnitude greater than nuclear or natural gas.  It was this realisation that awakened my interest in direct mechanical power from the wind.

The economics of intermittent renewables are a strong function of where they are being built.  Location matters for RE in a way that it doesn't for other energy sources.  If the world economy ran on wind and solar energy, there would be huge geographic disparities in wealth, given that the resource is very geographically dependant.  In an RE world, your wealth would depend very much on the location of your birth.

But there is a simple reason why RE will never provide cheaper grid based electricity than nuclear power or fossil fuels.  The reason is that wind and solar cannot replace fossil powerplants.  Those power plants have to be there in standby, waiting for windspeed to drop or the sun to be obscured by cloud or night.  The only thing the RE plant can do is reduce the fuel consumption of the fossil plant.  The fossil plant still has to be built, it has operating cost and maintenance cost.  This is in addition to whatever the RE capacity costs.  All of these costs end up on your power bill.  RE and fossil economics cannot be looked at seperately because they are both needed to ensure a reliable power supply.

#24 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Invelox Wind Turbine » 2025-08-08 13:16:42

In the UK, the wind predominantly blows from the west.  The majority of wind energy comes from this direction as well.  If the funnel is angled towards to the west, it would gather almost as much energy as the multidirectional funnel over a year.

#25 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2025-08-07 02:27:17

Turns out that the Russia collusion scandal was a hoax invented by Obama on behalf of Clinton.  Most people suspected this at the time, there is now solid evidence.
https://youtu.be/tJbsz3sbVz4

Presumably, Obama will face criminal charges now.  I doubt that Trump will see him executed.  But one thing is for sure.  Both Obama and Clinton are finished as political players now.  There is clear evidence that they misled the public with false information.

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