12-18-2022, 05:00 PM | #991 | |
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According to the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA), 7,000 new electricians join the workforce each year, but 10,000 retire from it, leaving contracting firms and their customers struggling to manage a net deficit of skilled labor. This will get worse before it gets better. I'm getting rich off of this (raises and retention bonus's) but it's "falling off a cliff" right now. |
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12-18-2022, 05:01 PM | #992 | |
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12-18-2022, 05:34 PM | #993 |
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If 100% of cars in the US were to convert to electric, the grid usage would only go up 25%. If we look at a car like an Aptera, then the increase is even less.
The part that I like the most though, 100% of the electricity I use comes from the US... Wether coal, nuclear, natural gas, wind, hydro, or solar. Or grid is not international. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/29/c...ower-grid.html I'm keeping my E90 as a weekend toy, but I've converted my wifr to an ID4 and reserved an Aptera for myself. My referral link if you're interested: https://lz953.isrefer.com/go/preorder/a39482 Carbon fiber body, 0-60 in 3.5 seconds, built in the US, up to 1000 mile range, starts at $28k |
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12-18-2022, 05:43 PM | #994 | |
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12-18-2022, 05:52 PM | #995 | |
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We can never go 100% "clean", anybody who says we can is a fool. Some pollution will happen to get raw materials, at least until we're mining space. The goal is to reduce pollution to the bare minimum. The whole world is going that direction, why lose out on good American jobs in the process? |
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12-18-2022, 05:58 PM | #996 | |
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I'm in a family with 2 cars, so double that to 816 KWh. In 2021, the average annual electricity consumption for a U.S. residential utility customer was 10,632 kilowatthours (kWh), an average of about 886 kWh per month. https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.p...%20per%20month. When my kid starts driving, it will be another car... My EV electric load will likely exceed that of all my other power consumption. It will be like adding a whole 'nother house of load to the grid, times every other home in the neighborhood that has to do the same thing. Industrial corridors are scaled and designed for large changes in load. Residential and rural districts are not. If we convert to 100% EV's, our neighborhood infrastructure needs to double it's capacity, and the supply side (generation) needs substantially increased too. These are the areas of concern. |
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12-18-2022, 06:11 PM | #997 | |
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https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-conten...m-Strategy.pdf |
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12-18-2022, 06:48 PM | #998 | |
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Capitalism works for both new/disruptive technologies as it does for the status quo. Today's invested assets in combustion technology will adapt (improve) in response to competitive forces from non-combustion. The dominant technology 15 years from now will be the one that meets society's needs fastest and with the least amount of capital deployed. Capital comes from the private sector, make no mistake. Electricians will be trained and hired and grid expansion will happen, if this is needed to support the dominant technology described above. |
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12-18-2022, 06:55 PM | #999 | ||
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Electricians are in short supply because not many are suited to it. It's one of the highest paid crafts, and we still can't get enough to do it. It's not for lack of need or compensation. |
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12-18-2022, 07:35 PM | #1000 | ||
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Edit: https://energycentral.com/c/ec/how-i...ds-reliability Quote:
Edit, page 18: "5. SCALE UP CO2 REMOVAL. In the three decades to 2050, our emissions from energy production can be brought close to zero but certain emissions such as non-CO2 from agriculture will be difficult to decarbonize completely by mid-century. Reaching net-zero emissions will therefore require removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, using processes and technologies that are rigorously evaluated and validated. This requires scaling up land carbon sinks as well as engineered strategies." Last edited by ianoob; 12-18-2022 at 08:09 PM.. |
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12-18-2022, 07:50 PM | #1001 | |
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Society's needs, plus capital, will create, find, train and otherwise procure the means necessary to do what needs done. Innovation is possible here also. Improvements in safety and working conditions may be needed to employ a larger cadre of people operating nuclear reactors and servicing high voltage transmission towers. No challenge is insurmountable with time and capital. |
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12-18-2022, 08:22 PM | #1002 | |||
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If we design around peak load, and the load beyond peak occurs, is that ever OK? You ever trip a breaker in your house? Quote:
It's like looking at the freeway at 2AM and thinking we can add more cars to the commute and not have traffic problems. That the freeway is vacant at 2Am says nothing about the gridlock at 7:30AM and 5:30 PM. You have to design around the max load, and like traffic, there is a max load that plays out every single day. Those empty lanes on the highway at 2AM aren't wasted. Looking at averages obscures the peaks, and the peaks are the problems. Do you know when people charge their EV's? It's not when there is solar power in the grid. Timing the supply to the demand is far more complex than most realize, and we are about to upset that balance profoundly. Texas and California have both had to ask EV's to not charge this year so their grids won't collapse. It's not a future problem, it's a today problem. Quote:
Also, Where will those watts from from - faries or pixie dust? It's probably going to come mostly from natural gas. Hydro is actively being removed from the grid supply mix due to environmental issues, and curtailed due to droughts. Nobody want's Nuclear in their back yard, and coal is being retired too. SOlar and wind doesn't always work, and we can't decide when or where to make it work. 38.9% of the total US electrical load is residential : https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/...lectricity.php There is also a push to use electric Semi's, and to recharge a tesla Semi is more watts (1 megawatt) in a 30 minute charge cycle than the average US home consumes in an entire month. How many times will it charge in a month ? 15 ? 20?. There are ~2 million semi's in the US. You ever see what a 1 mega watt load demand does to neighboring electrical customers? On a 480V commercial service that's a couple thousand amps. Last edited by chad86tsi; 12-18-2022 at 08:34 PM.. |
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12-18-2022, 09:03 PM | #1003 | |
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You are arguing the same thing horse sellers said 100yrs ago, or street lamp lighters 150yrs so, or lechers 200yrs ago. As previously said by chassis, with demand will come solutions. |
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12-18-2022, 09:04 PM | #1004 | |
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straman? It's a published fact. https://insights.ieci.org/shortage-o...21-and-beyond/ There has been a shortage of qualified electrical workers my entire 30 year career. It's getting worse, and at a faster rate. It's a quantifiable fact. If you know the solution, be my guest. It's a national problem, and well known. If you know how to solve it and can produce results, you could be an instant multi-millionaire. Linemen and substation wiremen wages start at over $100K a year, and we can't find any. We are offering a $15K hiring bonus, and still can't find enough. And this is before we add to the demand for their services. the top 2 causes for delays in getting capital improvements completed, and repairing/ruggedizing the grid are :
Work already isn't getting done. Work that has already been funded, the need identified, and the regulatory approvals ironed out. |
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12-18-2022, 09:08 PM | #1005 | |
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12-18-2022, 09:08 PM | #1006 | |
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There has already been demand, and we are already in crisis. The demand = solution formula has clearly failed. And you want to double down on that bet? |
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12-18-2022, 09:15 PM | #1007 | |
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If you're talking demand of electricity, I fall to see your point. We have a solution and a path for future growth. As far as solar on roofs, you are correct. However, we have more than enough space as a whole. Especially when you factor in wind and fire improvements. A current PV panel is only ~20% efficient, but they have lab tested up to 30%. Wind and batteries keep improving too. Again, you are comparing current to future... not future to future |
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12-18-2022, 09:18 PM | #1008 |
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does pointing out that fact that help us get it done any faster?
Thanks for bringing that up, because the 3rd worst contributor to delay in getting our grid built and repaired is supply chain shortages, which goes to your point. yes, it sucks everywhere. Just another reason to rethink the timing and pace of this plan. |
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12-18-2022, 09:22 PM | #1009 | |
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12-18-2022, 09:48 PM | #1010 | |
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Let's break it, then we can re-think our plan. I'm more of a mind to say "Woah, let's talk about this. I see some problems with the plan", and nobody seems to want to listen. < Fuck that guy, he's an EV hater... |
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12-18-2022, 09:54 PM | #1011 | |
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12-18-2022, 09:57 PM | #1012 | |
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