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If you generate your own electricity, it would be less expensive, e. g. 0 p per mile.
Quote from: alancalverd on 15/04/2021 10:31:15. It has to carry 330,000 amps. That's a very fat wire.It may make more sense to use a collection of wires- preferable with interconnections between them.What some people would call... a "grid".Why are you so resistant to this idea?
. It has to carry 330,000 amps. That's a very fat wire.
jealous neighbors
Our electricity crossing their land.
The age when internal combustion cars rule is over. Tesla and other BEV (battery electric vehicle) manufacturers are creating a phase transition where we will go from gas (or ICE) cars to battery electric vehicles extremely rapidly. Tony Seba and I agree: don't get caught with an ICE car once the transition happens. Internal combustion engine cars will be worthless in 2025 or 2030 at the latest. Legacy auto manufacturers, auto dealerships, banks that do auto loans, and even consumers will feel some pain as this massive transition happens.
The gas grid presently holds and distributes 35% of the UK's total energy. Until 1963, 50% of the gas was hydrogen. It has been economically feasible and indeed profitable since 1790.
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Quote from: alancalverd on 15/04/2021 10:07:29The gas grid presently holds and distributes 35% of the UK's total energy. Until 1963, 50% of the gas was hydrogen. It has been economically feasible and indeed profitable since 1790. Why did they stop distributing hydrogen?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 15/04/2021 03:29:46Let's say that a self sufficient system in The Sahara requires 10 kW solar panel and 100 kWh battery.You could say that, but a static 10 kW panel will only produce ~ 2.5 kW average during clear daylight and nothing at night so you need to install about 30 kW of generating capacity to charge the battery during the day.
Let's say that a self sufficient system in The Sahara requires 10 kW solar panel and 100 kWh battery.
But if you are also using power during the day, you need to install 60 kW of peak generating capacity to supply 8.3 kW continuously.
UK energy consumption is about 5 kW per capita, so to supply the UK alone, from a hot desert location, you need to install 40,000,000 x 60 kW solar panels, each with a 100 kWh battery. At 50 sq ft per kW, that's about 500 square miles of panel: just feasible, perhaps, but it's not a happy environment for batteries and you have to find some way of preventing the whole thing getting covered with sand.Now let's get that power to the UK. Say we install a 1,000,000 V DC cable (the reactive losses over 3000 miles would be very expensive with an AC supply). It has to carry 330,000 amps. That's a very fat wire.
Yes. Which is why I worry. AFAIK the sun doesn't shine at night in the Sahara, so if a panel makes 2.5 kW/day averaged over a year, it must be making 2.5 kW during daylight hours. The power output over time is pretty close to a half sine curve, and a little arithmetic will show you that the area under a half sine of amplitude 10 is ~ 6.2 so the average power over 24 hours is 3.1 kW at midsummer, assuming no cloud or dust, and 2.5 kW over a year is optimistic.
Not that it matters to the UK consumer, because nobody has suggested how to transfer 300 GW from the Sahara to the UK.
This is the 7th successive day with UK wind power below 15% of installed capacity. Gas and nuclear have been running at around 60% of installed capacity most of the week. If the UK is to go 100% renewable we need to install at least 10,000 GWh of storage capacity and 5 times the present wind generating capacity just to meet present electrical demand reliably. If you want to recharge enough electric cars to replace present fleet useage you will need to double the wind and storage capacity again. Who will pay?
so if a panel makes 2.5 kW/day
because nobody has suggested how to transfer 300 GW from the Sahara to the UK.
Say we install a 1,000,000 V DC cable (the reactive losses over 3000 miles would be very expensive with an AC supply). It has to carry 330,000 amps. That's a very fat wire.
and should be honored to allow your power to pass over their land without charge
find some way of persuading everyone over whose land you want to route your cables that they don't need electric cars
and estimate the cost of crossing say 3000 miles of land and 200 miles of sea
It would be an expensive project.
Wayleaves have to be negotiated (I've done it) and paid for (I've received it).
If electric cars are good for the UK, then they must be good for every other country, surely?
Do you not think your argument is good enough to stand on its own without making up tosh to support it?
Next time I'm talking to bankers and shareholders about a capital project, I'll present them with a one word budget : "expensive".