Between dreams and realities in Germany

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sicetaitsimple
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by sicetaitsimple » 02/09/20, 19:11

You can write it even bigger, no problem.

Go explain it to the Germans, the French, whoever you want.
I have no problem with the immediate end of all PV assistance in France (for the Germans, it's still their problem).
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Christophe
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by Christophe » 03/09/20, 00:22

1.5 € / Wp

Does it suit you? : Cheesy:
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izentrop
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by izentrop » 14/01/21, 01:55

The safety margins were limited with a mini cold snap at - 4.5 °, what it would have been if it had been -10 °.
Despite the closure of Fessenheim, we are still in the lowest carbon countries.
WOW! Germany. : Shock:

Electricity and CO2: the European report for 2020 https://www.lemonde.fr/blog/huet/2021/0 ... n-de-2020/
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by izentrop » 19/07/21, 00:00

Well represents the German utopia
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Christophe
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by Christophe » 19/07/21, 02:03

Izy is a particularly villainous post given the news ...
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by izentrop » 23/11/21, 22:50

How Angela Merkel missed Germany's ecological transition

Climate change threatens the future of humanity: Angela Merkel has repeated this throughout her terms of office. The leader of Germany even inherited a nickname: Klima-Kanzlerin, “the climate chancellor”. However, the results of its measures in terms of ecology are far from exemplary.
During her sixteen years in power, she largely developed renewable energies (in particular, wind turbines), which now represent half of the country's electricity production. At the same time, it has decided to rid the latter of nuclear power by 2022 and close coal-fired power stations there by 2038. But, in the end, this energy transition is now far from suffice: Germany remains the leading emitter of CO2 in Europe. On the occasion of the German elections, Angela Merkel announced her withdrawal, leaving at the same time to her successors an imposing list of additional efforts to provide.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/transit ... 789240782/
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by GuyGadeboisTheBack » 23/11/21, 22:54

It was a press release from Le Monde, sucker from Macron, a major nuclear lobbyist, sponsored by the marketing department of EDF, ORANO, ANDRA and relayed by valet Izy. : roll: :( : Evil:
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by moinsdewatt » 11/12/21, 15:27

L'Germany dreams of being a renewable champion, how do you get there?

Posted on: 07/12/2021 Pauline Gleize RFI

Germany is turning the page on the Merkel era. The Bundestag will elect Olaf Scholz as Chancellor on Wednesday. The Social Democrat will lead a tripartite government. A coalition which has adopted an ambitious climate program and which anticipates the end of coal-fired power stations.


The exit of coal is planned "ideally" for 2030 and no longer 2038. Germany will therefore have half the time to get rid of this fuel, which represented 23% of its electricity mix last year.

It will not rely on nuclear power to decorate its energy. Berlin has been committed since the early 2000s to the release of the atom. Its last plants are due to be disconnected by the end of next year.

The objective is therefore "very ambitious", fulfilling it will be "difficult", but it is "doable" in the eyes of Thomas Pellerin-Carlin, director of the energy center of the Jacques-Delors Institute.

The first lever available to Germany is to massively develop renewable energies. The coalition agreement set a target of 80% of renewable energies in the country's electricity mix by the end of the decade; by comparison, last year they accounted for 45% of the total, according to data. of the Jacques-Delors Institute and the AGEB.

This will require significant investments to expand the photovoltaic park; investments and regulatory obligations. New commercial properties will, for example, have to accommodate solar installations. The future government also intends to reserve 2% of the territory for wind power and the capacity of offshore wind power.

Another lever will be to offset part of the production of coal-fired power stations with gas. Experts do not all make the same analysis. Thomas Pellerin-Carlin believes that gas is only a “plan B”. Moreover, during the discussions, an exit from gas by 2040 would have been mentioned, according to Reuters. The idea of ​​an exit from gas, now presented as a transitional solution, leaves on the contrary perplexed, Maxence Cordiez, an engineer in the energy sector, who hardly sees hydrogen take its place. "If they do not succeed, he warns, the Germans will remain dependent on gas."

This delicate task of energy transition must be led by Green Robert Habeck, who will be both Minister of the Economy and Climate Protection.

https://www.rfi.fr/fr/podcasts/chroniqu ... y-parvenir
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by sicetaitsimple » 31/12/21, 15:25

Purely factual: Germany is now shutting down 3 of the 6 reactors still in operation, for a power of around 4000MW.
The last 3 (also 4000MW) will be closed by the end of 2022.

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/2 ... rgy-crisis
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Re: Between dreams and realities in Germany




by izentrop » 26/01/22, 11:46

14 days without wind, in the middle of a very cold period.
Buy mittens!!

it is obvious that over this same period, we depend on German imports. https://www.rte-france.com/eco2mix/synt ... sommation#
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Wind is in the cabbage, solar let's not talk about it, it's German coal and Russian gas that supplies us : Mrgreen: https://app.electricitymap.org/zone/DE? ... cOUppo1Ido

Intermittent renewables represent 27 GW of installed production. If they produced 80% like nuclear at the moment, they would provide 21 GW and France would export low-carbon electricity to its neighbours.
Conclusion: with the 121 billion € that the state has given to the green wheeler-dealers, we could have provided EDF with 10 1300 MW nuclear reactors for free, of which only 80% of them would enable us to produce 10,4 GW, we do without importing, exporting some to our neighbours.
The state and EDF would each have saved €8 billion in 2022 and earned foreign currency while having 20% ​​of our reactors undergoing overhaul.
The fight against nuclear power has brought us straight into the wall.
Putin can calmly parade his tanks in Ukraine then elsewhere, Europe manipulated by Germany, the future unavoidable European gas hub, will say nothing. Here we are dependent on gas for a few more decades.
In 2025, a Belgian story will immerse us a little more.
In 2035, Macron's PPE will totally drown us in it.
Let's not even talk about global warming. Business is business.
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