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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Deer on the road is an edge case that humans cannot handle well.

    If I’m driving at dawn or dusk, when they’re moving around in low light I’m extra careful when driving. I’m scanning the treeline, the sides of the road, the median etc because I know there’s a decent chance I’ll see them and I can slow down in case they make a run across the road. So far I’ve seen several hundred deer and I haven’t hit any of them.

    Tesla makes absolutely no provision in this regard.

    This whole FSD thing is a massive failure of oversight, no car should be doing self driving without using cameras and radar and Tesla should be forced to refund the suckers customers who paid for this feature.










  • You do need a baseload,

    Did you read the link in my post that you’re replying to? It’s from a former Federal Energy Regulatory Commissioner.

    Here’s another article on the subject:

    “The old myth was based on the incorrect assumption that base-load demand can only be supplied by base-load power stations; for example, coal in Australia and nuclear in France. However, the mix of renewable energy technologies in our computer model, which has no base-load power stations, easily supplies base-load demand. Our optimal mix comprises wind 50-60%; solar PV 15-20%; concentrated solar thermal with 15 hours of thermal storage 15-20%; and the small remainder supplied by existing hydro and gas turbines burning renewable gases or liquids.”

    https://theconversation.com/baseload-power-is-a-myth-even-intermittent-renewables-will-work-13210

    I’ll skip over the rest of your comment as it’s not really relevant.

    But nuclear, even with its high initial capital cost and long build time, still does provide energy cheaply

    It literally doesn’t. See the graph I posted.

    and will last for a lot longer than solar panels and wind turbines,

    Nobody is arguing that. We’re talking about cost and base load.

    nuclear can be easily and quickly ramped up or down depending on the load required.

    This is absolutely not true. It’s also worth noting that nuclear needs to operate as close to 24/7/365 to be economically viable. It’s a source of base load power, it’s not dispatchable and can’t be used as a peaker plant.




  • Interesting, can you provide more info? Which country? Link?

    Wouldn’t emitting radiation, even at background levels, lead to an increase in radiation as it’s in addition to background stuff?

    Also, there are strong arguments that we no longer need baseload generation and in fact it’s detrimental:

    "No new nuclear or coal plants may ever be needed in the United States….

    Wellinghoff said renewables like wind, solar and biomass will provide enough energy to meet baseload capacity and future energy demands. Nuclear and coal plants are too expensive, he added.

    “I think baseload capacity is going to become an anachronism,” he said. “Baseload capacity really used to only mean in an economic dispatch, which you dispatch first, what would be the cheapest thing to do. Well, ultimately wind’s going to be the cheapest thing to do, so you’ll dispatch that first.”…

    “What you have to do, is you have to be able to shape it,” he added. “And if you can shape wind and you can effectively get capacity available for you for all your loads.

    “So if you can shape your renewables, you don’t need fossil fuel or nuclear plants to run all the time. And, in fact, most plants running all the time in your system are an impediment because they’re very inflexible. You can’t ramp up and ramp down a nuclear plant. And if you have instead the ability to ramp up and ramp down loads in ways that can shape the entire system, then the old concept of baseload becomes an anachronism.”"

    https://energycentral.com/c/ec/there-really-any-need-baseload-power



  • I’ll be amazed if this ever comes to fruition.

    Generally speaking renewables + storage are the cheapest way of generating non-polluting power. After that there’s nuclear power and it’s much, much more expensive:

    After that, and even more expensive are SMRs. Also, they don’t actually exist yet as a means of generating power.

    From the article, “For example, it has already received the green light from the U.S. Nuclear Registry Commission (the first one to do so) to build its Hermes non-powered demonstrator reactor in Tennessee. Although it still doesn’t have nuclear fuel on-site, this is a major step in its design process, allowing the company to see its system in real life and learn more about its deployment and operation.”