It was challenging to figure out where to put this. It’s also environment, and it turns sharply political for Act III.

If you’re already familiar with renewables, there’s not a lot to learn here but the comparisons with fossil fuels and ethanol. Given that I’ve been on solar since 2023, I appreciated what he was saying to the uninitiated.

Get yourself some Act II if you plan on making it all the way through … it’s an hour and a half.

        • UntouchedWagons@lemmy.ca
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          24 days ago

          I’d be glad to be wrong. I remember following him on Mastadon and I think he was complaining about either poor moderation tools on the platform or toxicity.

          • HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth
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            24 days ago

            Well… I can’t say his complaints were unfounded! Maybe he swapped to a different instance, maybe Mastodon tools got better since then, who knows.

          • James R Kirk@startrek.website
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            24 days ago

            He seems to be active in replies to his own posts. I recall him being frustrated by a lack of tools available for high follower accounts like they apparently offer on Twitter.

    • Shadow@lemmy.ca
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      24 days ago

      Honestly if you’re up on renewables and support them you can skip most of the video, just watch the last 20 mins where he gets angry about politics

    • Powderhorn@beehaw.orgOP
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      24 days ago

      That’s certainly something you could look into. I provide original sources.

    • dadarobot@lemmy.ml
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      24 days ago

      this is youtube’s ai summary:


      The video discusses the advantages of renewable energy technologies, primarily focusing on solar and wind power, compared to traditional fossil fuels like oil and natural gas (0:00).

      Here’s a breakdown of the key points:

      Disposable vs. Durable Energy (1:19): The video highlights that petroleum is a “disposable” energy source, meaning it’s burned once and gone. In contrast, renewable energy infrastructure like solar panels and wind turbines are durable, one-time investments that generate free energy for decades.

      Cost Comparison: Cars (10:14): The speaker compares the lifetime fuel cost of a gasoline-powered car (Nissan Cube) to the cost of installing solar panels to power an electric car (Hyundai Ioniq 5). He demonstrates that the money spent on gasoline for one car could purchase enough solar panels to power several homes for decades, or completely cover an electric car’s lifetime energy costs (18:59).

      Solar Farms and Economics (22:33): The video explains that solar farms have virtually no operating costs (OPEX) once built, making them highly profitable. They can sell electricity at a lower price than natural gas plants and still generate healthy profits, which can be reinvested to build more solar farms.

      Land Use for Solar (30:35): Addressing concerns about the land area required for solar farms, the video points out that a significant portion of agricultural land in the US is used to grow corn for ethanol, which is a far less efficient energy source than solar power. Converting just a quarter of this corn-for-ethanol land to solar farms could generate more electricity than the entire US grid currently produces annually (35:56).

      Wind Power (38:29): Wind turbines are presented as another effective renewable energy source, capable of generating substantial power even on cloudy days and at night. The video likens their energy output to continuously “spitting out gasoline” (39:56).

      Materials in Solar Panels (41:17): The video details that solar panels are primarily made of abundant materials like aluminum, glass, and adhesives, with the actual silicon cells being extremely thin. This contrasts with the constant extraction of raw materials for disposable fossil fuels.

      Battery Technology (50:52): The video addresses concerns about batteries used with renewable energy, emphasizing their longevity (up to 5,000 charge cycles) and the ongoing advancements in battery chemistry that are extending lifespans, lowering costs, and reducing the need for rare materials.

      Conclusion (1:02:41): The speaker concludes that based on economic realities and long-term thinking, renewable energy paired with energy storage is the most sensible and cost-effective path forward, and that misinformation surrounding it often comes from those protecting vested interests.

          • ɔiƚoxɘup@beehaw.org
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            23 days ago

            I dunno, I did going in but what I got from it was his method of explaining it to people that truly don’t understand.

            • Powderhorn@beehaw.orgOP
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              23 days ago

              When you’ve bolted the panels to your roof, wired everything up, charged the batteries off the mains and flipped the breaker on the solar ahead of turning the master switch, there’s more apprehension than waiting in your own wedding processional.

                • Powderhorn@beehaw.orgOP
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                  22 days ago

                  Basically, there are three possible outcomes. The preferred one when you flip that master switch is that everything works.

                  The second is that nothing happens, and now you have to figure out what the fuck has gone wrong.

                  The third is an electrical fire.