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Hybrid Electric Vehicles

Solar and battery storage for DND bases makes great sense as you harden the base from energy failures. Places that have gone heavily into solar power are finding that you can't have all the houses in an area feed back into the grid as it causes a lot of issues, meaning that the revenue they were promised is not forthcoming. Also with the loss of customers, feeder lines into areas will become unprofitable and will not be maintained or expanded. Forcing people to go solar whether they can afford it or not.
 
Solar and battery storage for DND bases makes great sense as you harden the base from energy failures. Places that have gone heavily into solar power are finding that you can't have all the houses in an area feed back into the grid as it causes a lot of issues, meaning that the revenue they were promised is not forthcoming. Also with the loss of customers, feeder lines into areas will become unprofitable and will not be maintained or expanded. Forcing people to go solar whether they can afford it or not.
Like Albertans
 
There's a lot of factors at play. Per-unit cost of solar (and probably wind) have no doubt come down, but reduced mass storage costs will be the big game changer. Our entire grid was designed on the basis of a few large sources feeding multiple loads, often at significant distance. Consumer generation, feed-in tariffs, etc. were accommodated by so-called 'smart grid' technology, but to do that across an entire interconnect or a nation will be a significant cost. When it is cloudy or calm, it is typically cloudy or calm for a large area and energy has to move in from further away. Even at the local level, some utilities had to throttle their consumer-generation capacity simply because their distribution network couldn't handle anymore.

Beyond the fact of papering productive farmland with panels or turbines, increasing urban density will see fewer single family detached homes and more multi-residence buildings like condos or apartments, and they only have so much roof space, and the remaining SFHs have to deal with shading from tree canopy and those encroaching tall buildings. In Canada, winter energy demands are high, and the solar energy is low, and the higher in latitude, the lower it gets.
 
There's a lot of factors at play. Per-unit cost of solar (and probably wind) have no doubt come down, but reduced mass storage costs will be the big game changer. Our entire grid was designed on the basis of a few large sources feeding multiple loads, often at significant distance. Consumer generation, feed-in tariffs, etc. were accommodated by so-called 'smart grid' technology, but to do that across an entire interconnect or a nation will be a significant cost. When it is cloudy or calm, it is typically cloudy or calm for a large area and energy has to move in from further away. Even at the local level, some utilities had to throttle their consumer-generation capacity simply because their distribution network couldn't handle anymore.

Beyond the fact of papering productive farmland with panels or turbines, increasing urban density will see fewer single family detached homes and more multi-residence buildings like condos or apartments, and they only have so much roof space, and the remaining SFHs have to deal with shading from tree canopy and those encroaching tall buildings. In Canada, winter energy demands are high, and the solar energy is low, and the higher in latitude, the lower it gets.
both solar and storage are coming down so fast over the last 5 yrs that is difficult to know how far to extrapolate into the future. ive never seen an overestimate yet though depends how long you can bet on wrights law

at least in Ontario productive farmland is off limits in most cases. Class 3,2, 1 are a no go. Class 4 or 5 land is marginal pasture. could graze animals with panels or windmills. My land is class 4 but i think if tile drained it would be 1 or 2 easily close to 2 feet of clay based soil. March was in the past one of the best months for solar. That might not be true with newer more efficient panels though
 
Any source's claim to "clean tech" must include all of its inputs and outputs over its life cycle.

US sources of electricity for 2023. Still got a ways to go.

Don’t worry, in 24 months, solar will move from 3.9% to surpassing natural gas’ 43% to be the cheapest most plentiful energy source in America - a 1000% increase in two years or an annualized 500% increase. Well achievable by all reasonable assessments of the renewable energy sector.
 
Don’t worry, in 24 months, solar will move from 3.9% to surpassing natural gas’ 43% to be the cheapest most plentiful energy source in America - a 1000% increase in two years or an annualized 500% increase. Well achievable by all reasonable assessments of the renewable energy sector.
i dont think thats what it says just that it will be cheaper including storage note that onshore wind already is the cheapestand i think already including storage

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Don’t worry, in 24 months, solar will move from 3.9% to surpassing natural gas’ 43% to be the cheapest most plentiful energy source in America - a 1000% increase in two years or an annualized 500% increase. Well achievable by all reasonable assessments of the renewable energy sector.
where is the land for these panel fields and what happens at night? I really don't see the practicality of spending the money for power twice
 
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