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Comment Re:In other news... (Score 1) 484

Sorry, all wrong.
The wrongest part is the claim that german "utilties" would fund the polish new plants. Especially it is a dumb ass claim as you can google who funds them, (*facepalm*)

I'd be shocked if you're getting less than half your power from coal.
Why would you be shocked? What actually do you want to say with that? Getting 50% power from coal is better than getting 80% from coal.
Germany is right now producing 34% of its energy with renewables, and 15% with nuclear power, so obviously coal is pretty exactly 50%

Tell you what. Physically cut the cord between Germany and the rest of the grid and german's grid will be able to claim whatever it likes internally. If it is connected to the european grid then there is no such thing as german power. It is european power. Period.
What would be the benefit of that?
Power produced in Germany obviously is german power, regardless to where it is shipped and consumed. You have pretty nonsense ideas.

Comment Re:In other news... (Score 1) 484

If you want to talk about energy, then you have to look at the whole grid
That is actually how it is done. Why do you believe other wise?

The amount of power supplied by coal is vastly under estimated because it has become politically incorrect to source your power from coal.
That is complete nonsense. For every MWh power produced we exactly know from which power plant in Europe it came. Hence we know exactly where which coal from where how efficient was turned into CO2. Your are completely delusioned how power production and grids work.

Comment Re:3%? Where did you get that from? (Score 1) 484

In much of the world, a mix of anti-nuclear lobby and anti-proliferation lobby declare this 96% spent fuel "waste". In France, they recycle it into fuel.

The only place on the world where spent fuel is called waste is the states. And they do that to distract from the true waste problem.

The actual waste is all the stuff that came in contact with the fuel or other stuff that came into contact with contaminated other stuff and so on.

Also your 96% idea makes no sense ... you seem not to know how nuclear fuel works. Especially: no, it is not fissionable. It is the wrong isotope. To reprocess it you need to enrich it again. And for that you have to reduce that 96% "left over" to half of it, and refill the gap with highly enriched fuel (uranium). So even during reprocessing "half of the spent fuel" is left over as waste. Actually a no brainer.

Comment Re:In other news... (Score 1) 484

hmmm... I can only speak to what I've heard of the US grid. And what they say is that you can't really fire a coal plant up that fast or shut it down. You have to use oil if you do that. Those are the only power plants that can shut down and ramp up again to compensate for the wind/solar problem.

That is nonsense. You balance the grid with pumped storage and gas turbines. Not with "oil" plants. On top of that a oil plant works more or less like a coal plant. The reaction time is similar.

You never should have gotten rid of the nuclear. That was silly. Nuclear is great.

At your place perhaps but not in Germany. No one wants it. That is enough to get rid of it. We don't know where to place the waste. 50% of the reactors are still running by the way, so you are again shouting out your ignorance. On top of that most nuclear plants are build at geological dangerous places.

Remove power imports from eastern europe and the decarbonization program in Germany would collapse.
No it would not, as you got told now dozen times. Your first mistake is to think we had any significant CO2 based energy imports from east europe, which we don't have.
On top of that you completely forget that Germany is a net energy exporter. So bottom line europe wide the CO2 production definitely shrunk.

Start to understand that import and export in a europe spanning grid is usually a monetary decision at two points, and not a by politicians orchestrated grand spiel.

That means import and export varies over daytime and simply makes it for the plant operators cheaper to utilize their plants. E.g. a load following plant, mainly used during peak time, can be brought online earlier in the morning and and can ramp up its power output quicker by exporting power to Germany (which is geographically one hour behind Poland). The same in reverse: when evening starts in Poland and the peakers are no longer needed, they can be shut down quicker and some power is imported from Germany.

Comment Re:In other news... (Score 1) 484

US coal exports to Germany have more than doubled.
Germany imports coal from all over the world. That the US could increase their export to us, even double it, says noting about the coal consumption in germany ... a pretty silly argument.

Poland is massively expanding their power generation capabilities and are looking to to shift to nuclear because demand is so high. High in Poland!!!

The problem with your renewables is that they're not reliable. Wrong, they are not dispatch able that has nothing to do with reliability.

They need reliable back ups. And you buy those at a premium from eastern europe mostly. Both wrong. Premium prices on the spot markets don't happen because of "unreliable wind/solar" but sudden problems in the grid and unexpected demand.

Long term power contracts at set rates are much cheaper than drawing from Peaker plant contracts. No, they are not. As long term contracts also rely on peakers or how exactly do you think the contract is fullfilled during peak time? [...]

The shift to green power is premature. We should have doubled down on nuclear and waited until we had economical power storage sufficient to store several days worth of power per generator. That would smooth the power out and negate the need for the coal and gas peakers. But people wanted it now before it was ready and so... the clusterfuck continues
I suggest to draw a simple grid on paper, perhaps with 4 plants only and one storage. Then you figure quickly that the idea of storage the general public has, and especially you have, is completely wrong.

Also I suggest to let experts work on restructuring the grid, instead of your simplified imagination ... which is unfortunately in nearly every regard simply wrong.

Comment Re:In other news... (Score 1) 484

Yeah you claim that now a dozen times. However: it is wrong.
Poland is phasing out its old brown coal plants till ~2020. They get partly replaced by more modern more efficient plants. Also Poland is still a "developing country" and not a first world industrial nation.

All that has nothing to with Germanys change in the energy world

Comment Re:They could just export the electricity (Score 1) 484

and now has problems bridging windless times.
There are no windless times.
Germany is about 1000km long in north - south direction and roughly 700km wide east to west.
Care to explain how on such a land mass possibly could be zero wind? It is physically impossible!
As most new wind plants are off shore plants those always will have wind.

without destroying civilization some winter week in Europe when the wind doesn't blow,
And this is completely retarded. When does the wind blow strongest? Most continious? Hm? Any idea?
It is winter.

Comment Re: Not downsizing nuclear (Score 1) 484

The option to export has nothing to do with capacity factors or overproduction.

People should grasp that exports are not done by "countries" but by "companies".

They produce power and export power or import power when it makes economical sense.

Comparing the "earinings" makes no sense at all as you don't know the production price.

Comment Re:What are they going to replace with? (Score 1) 484

Electric heating is 100% efficient Something that was produced with a loss of 60% hardly can be considered 100% efficient.

Especially that those numbers are complete meaningless. Interesting how much kW/h you need to heat a certain volume. Regardless how "efficient".

So bottom line you would realize: a heat pump running on electricity uses less electricity than an electric heater ... wow, that was a no brainer.

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