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105   New Renter   2012 Sep 27, 2:39am  

EBGuy says

How about this for some new math. In CA, 39% of plug-in EV owners have solar panels. In urban environments, I also think there is a case to be made for pollution elsewhere with EVs.

Sounds great! Now how well do those panels work for overnight/rainy day charging?

Ohhh right...

106   Raw   2012 Sep 27, 2:45am  

New Renter says

Why would the Sierra Club lie? Why?

Oil companies can lie because they want to maintain fat, ridiculous and illegal profits, but the non profits have no stake in this.

Are you F#$%^ kidding me? That's like saying politicians have no stake in fat, ridiculous profits because they can't accept bribes and have to look out for the public interest.

When did I say or imply that?
Many politicians are in the pockets of big oil. They will do anything the oil companies ask them to do. eg. Bush.
The oil companies have too much money, too much power, and too many politicians in their pockets. This undermines democracy and we have to stop it.
I have always believed the best solution is to slap an additional $5.00 per gallon tax on gasoline. Watch how fast alternative fuels become available.

107   New Renter   2012 Sep 27, 3:59am  

Raw says

When did I say or imply that?

Right here:

Raw says

The Sierra Club does not make money from us, they have no financial interest at stake, and all they want to do is reduce pollution to make our lives, and the lives of our future generations better.

And here:
Raw says

Why would the Sierra Club lie? Why?

108   freak80   2012 Sep 27, 4:07am  

Raw,

You're another "data point" that supports my (growing) belief that the far-left is just as unhinged as the far-right.

Oil company profits are illegal? Really? Yes, oil companies have been caught doing all sorts of shady things, but that doesn't mean that ALL of their profits are unethical, much less illegal.

If you want to call something as illegal, see OPEC. OPEC is an *actual* cartel. If US anti-trust laws had jurisdiction, OPEC would probably be considered a "trust."

No, I don't work for an oil company or have investments in said companies (other than indirectly via an index fund).

109   New Renter   2012 Sep 27, 4:13am  

Raw says

I have always believed the best solution is to slap an additional $5.00 per gallon tax on gasoline. Watch how fast alternative fuels become available.

Europe already does that. How's that working out?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/17/europe-biofuel-policy_n_1889992.html

http://www.forbes.com/sites/eco-nomics/2012/05/04/ultra-green-europe-slow-to-buy-electric-vehicles/

The European response to high gas prices (mostly from tax) has been to go diesel. I am all for this. I love diesels. Our response would likely to shift to NGV though as it is cheap and abundant. I wouldn't be surprised if Europe follows suit as their NG market picks up.

110   EBGuy   2012 Sep 27, 4:18am  

Now how well do those panels work for overnight/rainy day charging?
Ohhh right...

Plenty of spinning reserves for overnight charging. AC loads are lower on rainy days.

111   freak80   2012 Sep 27, 5:19am  

EBGuy says

Plenty of spinning reserves for overnight charging.

I've heard of that too. Perhaps we wouldn't need that many more power plants if car charging was done at off-peak times.

Are there any studies out there on the issue?

112   New Renter   2012 Sep 27, 6:55am  

EBGuy says

Now how well do those panels work for overnight/rainy day charging?

Ohhh right...

Plenty of spinning reserves for overnight charging. AC loads are lower on rainy days.

Which is my point. Home solar systems tend not to be as useful for EV use as most home charging of commuter vehicles will likely be done overnight. Plugging to a solar system at work would be better. Ideally ALL such charging would be done at work.

113   rohk   2012 Sep 27, 4:18pm  

justme says

You would rather drive a car that COULD in THEORY be CO2 clean (but isn't)

than

Drive a car that _IS_ more CO2 clean than the "could-theoretically-be-clean" car that just is not, and will not be in the forseeable future.

I live in California, so actually, according to the Federal Government (http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/Find.do?action=bt2), the Leaf (120 g/mile) *is* more CO2 clean than the new Plug-in Prius (190 g/mile), or the regular Prius (222 g/mile).

114   rohk   2012 Sep 27, 4:29pm  

New Renter says

Home solar systems tend not to be as useful for EV use as most home charging of commuter vehicles will likely be done overnight. Plugging to a solar system at work would be better. Ideally ALL such charging would be done at work.

Home solar systems generate power for the electric grid during peak-load daytime hours, thereby reducing the need to build additional power plants. Then, EV charging done at night draws power from the grid when it has excess capacity, effectively using the grid as a great big battery. So, home daytime solar generation and home night-time EV charging complement each other pretty well.

115   freak80   2012 Sep 28, 12:20am  

rohk says

I live in California, so actually, according to the Federal Government (http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/Find.do?action=bt2), the Leaf (120 g/mile) *is* more CO2 clean than the new Plug-in Prius (190 g/mile), or the regular Prius (222 g/mile).

I'm assuming the fueleconomy.gov site takes local/regional electrical plants into account? If you live in an area with mainly carbon-free electrical plants, EV's *are* eco-friendly.

116   New Renter   2012 Sep 28, 2:26am  

rohk says

Home solar systems generate power for the electric grid during peak-load daytime hours, thereby reducing the need to build additional power plants. Then, EV charging done at night draws power from the grid when it has excess capacity, effectively using the grid as a great big battery. So, home daytime solar generation and home night-time EV charging complement each other pretty well.

How difficult is it to get a home solar system tied to the grid? I see some kits online for this but I've been told utility companies don't like these systems. On-Grid home power generators can be a safety issue when performing maintenance on the local grid. There is also the issue of matching the AC profile of the solar output to the grid.

117   freak80   2012 Sep 28, 3:07am  

Oh no, another duck! : )

118   New Renter   2012 Sep 28, 3:23am  

FYI Duck goes quite well with Yam.

119   zzyzzx   2012 Sep 28, 4:44am  

New Renter says

I've been told utility companies don't like these systems. On-Grid home power generators can be a safety issue when performing maintenance on the local grid.

A problem easily solvable with an automatic switch. I.E. - during a power outage situation, you want your home grid to disconnect from the utility so that you aren't potentially backfeeding then.

120   justme   2012 Sep 28, 9:49am  

freak80 says

rohk says

I live in California, so actually, according to the Federal Government (http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/Find.do?action=bt2), the Leaf (120 g/mile) *is* more CO2 clean than the new Plug-in Prius (190 g/mile), or the regular Prius (222 g/mile).

I'm assuming the fueleconomy.gov site takes local/regional electrical plants into account? If you live in an area with mainly carbon-free electrical plants, EV's *are* eco-friendly.

Sorry, but using "local" grid numbers is not correct. The grid is widely interconnected, and soon will be completely interconnected across ALL of North America(*). It is faulty to think that one can use the argument that "my locally generated power is greener than the average grid mix".

(*) The final tie in the North American grid is described here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tres_Amigas_SuperStation

So rohk, this is another case of you imagining that your electric car is cleaner than it is. Our government is unfortunately in on the scam, trying to rig the numbers to make things look better than they are.

121   Raw   2012 Sep 28, 9:58am  

freak80 says

Raw,

You're another "data point" that supports my (growing) belief that the far-left is just as unhinged as the far-right.

Oil company profits are illegal? Really? Yes, oil companies have been caught doing all sorts of shady things, but that doesn't mean that ALL of their profits are unethical, much less illegal.

If you want to call something as illegal, see OPEC. OPEC is an *actual* cartel. If US anti-trust laws had jurisdiction, OPEC would probably be considered a "trust."

No, I don't work for an oil company or have investments in said companies (other than indirectly via an index fund).

I just don't like oil companies
They pollute...lie...cheat....control our politicians....influence the voters....collude with other oil companies....take government subsidies....make enormous profits and pay little or no tax.
And most of all...Rape mother earth.

122   New Renter   2012 Sep 28, 10:08am  

Be that may but any kind of a modern lifestyle is much harder to impossible to achieve without them.

123   Raw   2012 Sep 28, 10:14am  

New Renter says

Be that may but any kind of a modern lifestyle is much harder to impossible to achieve without them.

For now.
The future holds a clean and pollution free world.

124   New Renter   2012 Sep 28, 10:45am  

Raw says

New Renter says

Be that may but any kind of a modern lifestyle is much harder to impossible to achieve without them.

For now.

The future holds a clean and pollution free world.

Or an overheated hellhole where the rising sea levels have put all coastal communites literally underwater.

125   freak80   2012 Sep 30, 11:44pm  

New Renter says

Or an overheated hellhole where the rising sea levels have put all coastal communites literally underwater.

That's the scenario I'm betting on.

Our endless "one-upmanship" will ultimately bring about our extinction.

Seems fair.

126   freak80   2012 Sep 30, 11:47pm  

justme says

It is faulty to think that one can use the argument that "my locally generated power is greener than the average grid mix".

I admit, the workings of "the grid" are totally beyond my circle of competence.

With alternating current, a lot of the "common sense" goes out the window.

127   EBGuy   2012 Oct 1, 8:56am  

justme,
Sure, we're all interconnected now, but note that one benefit of Tres Amigas is to make it easier to ramp up production of renewable electricity.
@freak80 -- Tres Amigas is actually a high voltage DC interconnection (as the three amigas that it connects are AC islands that aren't synchronized with each other).

128   freak80   2012 Oct 2, 2:58am  

EBGuy says

Tres Amigas is actually a high voltage DC interconnection (as the three amigas that it connects are AC islands that aren't synchronized with each other).

Those guys were *never* synchronized with each other.

129   justme   2012 Oct 2, 4:34am  

EBGuy says

justme,
Sure, we're all interconnected now, but note that one benefit of Tres Amigas is to make it easier to ramp up production of renewable electricity.

I'm not disagreeing. I'm all in favor of full connectivity, as I think should be obvious.

But note that the Tres Amigas interconnection can be used in detrimental ways as well.

For example, whenever east-cost coal-fired electricity is cheaper than west-coast natgas-fired electricity, Tres Amigas can be used to INCREASE the gCO2/kWh by purchasing and transferring electricity from the east cost and transferring to the west coast, all the while reducing output from west coast natgas plants. Basically the grid mix can be made WORSE if someone has economic incentive to do it. For sure, grid mix can be regulated by law, but who knows whether and how that might happen in practice.

Only one thing is certain: Tres Amigas creates a truly national market for electricity, and it will no longer be possible for anyone to claim that "the electricity *I* use is greener than what other people use".

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