No. Price is artificially a lot low.Price ... [is] ... a little high.
No. Price is artificially a lot low.Price ... [is] ... a little high.
Ah. Sarcasm....anything they can do, we can do better.
You are not making any sense I think because you are misinterpreting my replies.No. Price is artificially a lot low.
But much lower than they should be due to subsidies paid for by people who will never be able to afford an EV, even at subsidized prices.Price on EV's is fairly high.
Look at @nsaspook's comments. According to him, the current EV market crash is a boon to battery consumers. I am not an expert on this...ask him.The battery prices are crazy high.
Well not in my lifetime. An EV is one thing but what about planes and boats and trains? How about sea going freighters? Making an EV automobile is one thing but even making an electric semi tractor-trailer is a whole new adventure and how about cost involved? I see Fossil Fuels being around for a long time.Fossil fuels may be phased out in the same time frame, although probably not. Eventually they will be gone.
Hi Ron,Well not in my lifetime. An EV is one thing but what about planes and boats and trains? How about sea going freighters? Making an EV automobile is one thing but even making an electric semi tractor-trailer is a whole new adventure and how about cost involved? I see Fossil Fuels being around for a long time.
Ron
The solution is easy, pay people to use electricity.Sunny days in Germany mean gray clouds for solar profitability as the nation's dive into renewables has left it with too much energy.
According to a note from SEB Research, in the past 10 days, solar producers have had to take an 87% price cut during production hours. In fact, when production peaks, prices have slid well below zero.
The solution is easy, pay people to use electricity.The problem has hit several regions that were heavy adopters of distributed solar, which made up 42% of the national solar fleet last year, but is especially acute in provinces such as Shandong in the north.
State broadcaster CCTV said up to 50-70% of distributed solar generation is being curtailed in Shandong, which means grid managers have had to stop that amount of supply coming into the grid in order to maintain balances with demand.
China has tried to limit curtailment of renewable energy to 5%, in line with rates of 1.5-4% in most big markets, according to the International Energy Agency.
But in a survey of six provinces' ability to absorb distributed solar, China's energy regulator last year found five expected to have to impose restrictions on new projects in 2024.
Hebei and Henan provinces - two of the "three big drivers" of distributed solar along with Shandong - have already seen an "absolute collapse" in installations, Ries said. "These two provinces are very worrying."
That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard anyone say about industry.Surplus electricity is never a problem, industry is always willing to use more than its share.
I'm still looking for those 100 ways to waste energy in industry emails to arrive instead of the 100 ways to save energy in industry ones we normally get.That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard anyone say about industry.
I've been doing it wrong all these years, obviously.I'm still looking for those 100 ways to waste energy in industry emails to arrive instead of the 100 ways to save energy in industry ones we normally get.
And you were exactly right.To get anything like a car engine I figured it would require a big motor and a giant battery. I never thought that anyone would be crazy enough to install a giant battery in a car. It takes up a lot of room and weighs a ton, and rechargeable batteries (at least back then) would not last forever so the entire bulk would have to be replaced at significant cost.
Ha haaa, yeah now that you mention it, and the most significant: "crazy inventors"And you were exactly right.

Researchers from the Washington University in St. Louis and Massachusetts Institute of Technology stumbled on the new structure by accident — a happy accident, as it turned out. The new technology can deliver energy density up to 19 times higher than current capacitors. They published their findings in the journal Science.