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Alberta government announces new rules aimed at lowering utility bills

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    #46
    Thats not the same as LCOE and new capacity. There are many factors why prices are rising and generation is only one part of electricity pricing

    And you have never proved that renewables are the only cause of high pries in Alberta. The main cause is deregulation and with holding supply. Overcharging in other words.

    Comment


      #47
      Here’s a report for you chuck
      look it up , 131 pages

      Comment


        #48
        Conclusions are much different than what you have been proclaiming , but not surprising to most .

        Comment


          #49
          Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
          Thats not the same as LCOE and new capacity. There are many factors why prices are rising and generation is only one part of electricity pricing

          And you have never proved that renewables are the only cause of high pries in Alberta. The main cause is deregulation and with holding supply. Overcharging in other words.
          Do I understand your argument correctly that you are justifying the fact that you are unable to find even a single real world example of cheaper electricity from wind and solar, because there are "many factors"?
          So every jurisdiction in the world who installs wind and solar results in higher prices, contrary to Lazard's conclusions, and you conclude that the common factor is "many factors", not the single common factor?

          Comment


            #50
            Another way to look at this is to pretend you know of a hypothetical poster on a hypothetical agricultural forum who has difficulty getting along with other posters.
            If this poster was only having difficulties getting along with one or two equally difficult posters, but plays well with everyone else, one might conclude that the other posters are the problem.

            But if virtually everyone on the hypothetical forum, left, right, centrist or indifferent, has the same problem communicating with this hypothetical poster, perhaps rational conclusion is that the poster himself may be the problem, not every other member of the forum.
            With apologies to agstar and forage, in case they mistakenly conclude that this hypothetical example bears any semblance to any real world forum, and feel left out.

            Comment


              #51
              What are you going on about there A5?

              You seem to be losing your way.

              For every dollar invested in fossil fuels, about 1.7 dollars are now going into clean energy" . Five years ago, this ratio was one-to-one.​ IEA

              You keep ignoring the LCOE analysis on new capacity.

              [url]https://energyinnovation.org/publication/coal-cost-crossover-3-0-local-renewables-plus-storage-create-new-opportunities-for-customer-savings-and-community-reinvestment/[/url]

              "This report finds 99 percent of the existing U.S. coal fleet is more expensive to run compared to replacement by new solar or wind. Replacing coal plants with local wind and solar would also save enough to finance nearly 150 gigawatts of four-hour battery storage, over 60 percent of the coal fleet’s capacity, and generate $589 billion in new investment across the U.S. Our report provides policy recommendations to facilitate a just transition through the Coal Cost Crossover."
              Last edited by chuckChuck; Mar 23, 2024, 08:46.

              Comment


                #52
                Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                What are you going on about there A5?

                You seem to be losing your way.

                For every dollar invested in fossil fuels, about 1.7 dollars are now going into clean energy" . Five years ago, this ratio was one-to-one.​ IEA

                You keep ignoring the LCOE analysis on new capacity.

                [url]https://energyinnovation.org/publication/coal-cost-crossover-3-0-local-renewables-plus-storage-create-new-opportunities-for-customer-savings-and-community-reinvestment/[/url]

                "This report finds 99 percent of the existing U.S. coal fleet is more expensive to run compared to replacement by new solar or wind. Replacing coal plants with local wind and solar would also save enough to finance nearly 150 gigawatts of four-hour battery storage, over 60 percent of the coal fleet’s capacity, and generate $589 billion in new investment across the U.S. Our report provides policy recommendations to facilitate a just transition through the Coal Cost Crossover."
                “Of 4-hour battery storage.” What is fascinating here, is first let’s pretend solar could provide 12 hours of dependable electricity(certainly not at full capacity), now you add 4 hours of battery storage. Wow now we are up to 16 hours. Where does the power come from for the remaining 8 hours?! Out of the $589 billion how much goes to China?!

                Comment


                  #53
                  Originally posted by Hamloc View Post

                  “Of 4-hour battery storage.” What is fascinating here, is first let’s pretend solar could provide 12 hours of dependable electricity(certainly not at full capacity), now you add 4 hours of battery storage. Wow now we are up to 16 hours. Where does the power come from for the remaining 8 hours?! Out of the $589 billion how much goes to China?!
                  Socialist math

                  Comment


                    #54
                    The electricity is going to come from many sources and storage will be part of the supply.

                    Alberta gets almost 20% of its electricity supply from renewables and is also installing some storage for grid stabilization.

                    It was Alberta gas plants that failed unexpectedly in the winter cold snap that caused a shortage. The AESO knew that renewables were not going to produce as much during the cold snap because that is predictable. And the system is designed for that predictable situation. New gas plants will come on line this year. Along with a lot more renewables.
                    Last edited by chuckChuck; Mar 24, 2024, 09:18.

                    Comment


                      #55
                      Originally posted by WiltonRanch View Post

                      Socialist math
                      Isn't that an oxymoron?

                      Comment


                        #56
                        More backup for the lower cost lower carbon renewables. Because gas plants aren't quite as reliable as some think.

                        Who knows maybe some of the idiots decided to reduce the supply to increase the price which is what they have been doing frequently!
                        Last edited by chuckChuck; Mar 24, 2024, 09:21.

                        Comment


                          #57
                          Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post

                          Isn't that an oxymoron?
                          When their math doesn’t quite work out the way they intend people suffer until it does. Ask uncle Joe.

                          Comment


                            #58
                            You suffering Wilton? Life is tough in Alberta with all that oil wealth flowing to the little guys?

                            Comment


                              #59
                              I don’t live that far from you cc. Definitely in Saskatchewan. Chirp at me all you want. It is funny how when I showed some emotion you went all bully started taunting. For being a Mensa member you sure act like a child.

                              Comment


                                #60
                                You gotta a thin skin too?

                                If you don't like the heat get out of the kitchen so the old saying goes.

                                Comment

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