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DonManuel t1_j1de2an wrote

Carbon capture is a stupid end-of-the-pipe solution. The money should only go to roll-out renewable energy technologies replacing any carbon release from happening. Of course the fossil lobby tries to shill for this nonsense.

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Spaceseeds t1_j1dh0zp wrote

Have you ever seen the Ted talk where the guy talks about how hybrids are way better than long range evs? I think you should educate yourself a bit more on the subject. It's not going to be one future or the other and we will benefit from all aspects of energy becoming more efficient and clean over time.

Also if you want to talk about lobbying preventing the next level of humanity complain about nuclear power being so fear mongered.

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Spaceseeds t1_j1djwa4 wrote

Funny how people with no response think they know more than someone who told them to educate themselves on a topic. Sorry you're not intellectual enough to educate yourself in the matters you speak of.

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rjnd2828 t1_j1dl554 wrote

Oh wait, one guy says we should continue to use fossil fuels? Let me rethink my entire world view. Also I'm SURE Exxon Mobil really has our long term interests at heart, despite literally every piece of evidence to the contrary which shows they'll do absolutely anything to keep fossil fuels front and center

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HuntingGreyFace t1_j1do908 wrote

those people who do math discovered its a fucking crap shoot. even if it worked the roll out and deployment scene would make things worse.

wanna know what captures carbon?

trees

wanna know why they dont dive into that space as a solution? because the people who did the math already ran those numbers too.

we cant out plant the problem even if we planted 100x as many trees a year as we do today.

microsoft and google are the biggest investors in oil right now. this is because they can use machine learning on survey data (excessively compiled in the 70s) to extrapolate new oil sites.

in order for current society to maintain its current standard of living (ie gas prices, food prices, electricity prices, etc...) then oil production needs to double in the next ten years to meet the demand we know we will need just to keep this machine of capitalism going for billionaire profits.

carbon capture is an expensive pr stunt made to keep people docile just a little while longer...

how long do you think the big money machine will slow walk us to the edge of unhindered growth?

how many paper clips can you make from a human? Wanna see if capitalism will do the math on that?

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Spaceseeds t1_j1dolkq wrote

You didn't even scratch the surface of the argument. A hybrid is more energy efficient than a long range EV when you account for all the carbon it took to create the batteries in the long range EV.

Lithium is not what you think.

You sound like a child and a fool who won't look at the data presented. For anyone else interested, I have provided a link to the topic on discussion.. I'm sure this other fool will just shart diarrhea out of his mouth, so why don't you all be the judge for yourselves...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=S1E8SQde5rk

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rob801 t1_j1dpfgu wrote

From the description of the exact video you linked to:

>This talk only reflects the speaker's personal views and interpretation. Several claims in this talk lack scientific support. We've flagged this talk because it falls outside the content guidelines TED gives TEDx organizers.

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pantsattack t1_j1drtxy wrote

Moreover, both EVs and hybrids, despite being better for carbon release than conventional ICEs, are not enough to fix the problem. We need to build better public infrastructure and drastically reduce individual car ownership. Switching to more efficient cars is good, but it's effectively just kicking the can down the road. We need to overhaul the entire transportation industry.

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Tearakan t1_j1dsnxx wrote

This is a joke right? Basic physics has carbon capture being effectively impossible as long as we keep emitting carbon from fossil fuels.

It only works once emmisions have stopped completely and even then we need centuries of the current tech to run continuously to fix the climate.

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t-who t1_j1ecma8 wrote

I’m with you on H2 unless it is using green to replace blue/black for things like fertilizer or hard to electrify industries.

But I do think carbon capture has a valid place, we won’t be able to turn off NG power production fast enough.

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skram42 t1_j1edheb wrote

List time they went to make a carbon capture plant, that bitch put out MORE carbon!!!

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fgdfghdhj5yeh t1_j1erl93 wrote

Convert the CO2 to diamonds & oxygen and I'll be impressed.

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fgdfghdhj5yeh t1_j1ervz4 wrote

yea, once we have energy abundance running directly off hydrogen or cups of water lmao. if we get actual fusion lots of stuff will change. Power efficiency won't be a care anymore for most electronics and many other things. Would be very interesting to see

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PleasantAdvertising t1_j1esi2r wrote

Hydrogen should be looked at for high power applications like airplanes/rockets/cargo ships. If we have fusion I can definitely see a future in that.

That said it's wholly unrealistic to think about today. It's just not efficient or viable.

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fgdfghdhj5yeh t1_j1etzh3 wrote

Yea there's better stuff to look at, like desalting ocean water with the abundance of extra solar energy during the day... but... it'll be a while until they give a shit about that. Can't wait for the ridiculous pipe from the mississippi to the west before they realize there's an ocean next to cali LOL. You know they're gonna do it

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i_am_bromega t1_j1exue6 wrote

It’s actually not as terrible an idea as everyone in this thread is making it out to be. Transitioning away from fossil fuels will not be immediate, and these changes will curb the growth emissions of these absolutely necessary functions of society. The secondary benefit of carbon capture, especially if it were enforced to be a requirement for refineries, chemical plants, coal/LNG power plants, is that it would drive the cost of them up, making renewables cheaper by comparison and drive more investment there.

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dontpet t1_j1f15bk wrote

That video didn't show what you claimed. You said "the biggest investors in oil right now".

It does say that Google and Amazon are applying their technology toward better oil extraction in partnership with oil companies. Not something most of us celebrate, but not what you believed was there.

It also mentioned that they have shifted their own energy consumption toward being 100% renewable energy over the last 5 years. I note that Google is also committed to being fully renewable 24 hours per day, which is going next level on the effort.

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coltburgh410 t1_j1f8gmz wrote

There is a wicked good podcast called “cleaning up” that recently had an episode on carbon Capture with Julio Friedmann. Worth a listen because this guy has researched everything.

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phantomranch t1_j1f8o8v wrote

Exxon is a deeply unscrupulous entity.

It’s runaway malicious code at this point.

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-A_A_A_A_A_A- t1_j1f8q5w wrote

CCS doesn’t work. 

There’s not a single CCS plant that is operating according to its design requirements, and there never will be. Because CCS doesn’t work.

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Lurk3rAtTheThreshold t1_j1fgkfc wrote

Because hydrogen made through electrolysis takes a huge amount more energy than you get out of the resulting hydrogen. This makes it quite expensive.

Also the fact that they always say hydrogen can be green (which is true), but 95% of the hydrogen we have is made from natural gas which releases all the carbon.

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MyPacman t1_j1fm0fs wrote

Except sometimes the timing for the renewable energy isn't ideal. Being able to siphon that energy into storage would be one solution.
Another is pumping the water back up into the reservoir. But that only works if it isn't already full.

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MyPacman t1_j1fnt1v wrote

> hybrids are way better than long range evs

Not in a country that sources its electricity from over 80% renewable energy. And not when it is more efficient to generate your electricity at a power station instead of a few thousand ICE engines.

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flannelback t1_j1g7l4h wrote

lying about the recyclability of plastic finished any oil industry solutions for me.

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Plzbanmebrony t1_j1gjwms wrote

Carbon capture may still need to happen. We both know that nothing needed is going to happen when it needs too. This problem will get worse and worse unless we start chipping away at any way we can.

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seven_tech t1_j1gxnlj wrote

Yeah, nah mate. Sorry, this line has been parroted by the fossil fuel industry since the 90s. We're still waiting for a broad scale fossil fuel carbon capture plant to achieve its emissions capture targets. None have gotten anywhere near even half let alone full capture goals.

We have the resources, money, tools and labour to go to 100% renewable, with battery and other storage backing, within 15 years if we wanted. But while ideas like this continue to be pushed, we never will.

Carbon Capture for fossil fuels is just another way of sweating assets and getting governments to pay for it. Direct air/water Carbon Capture is what we need. There is a successful one in Iceland running at capacity day in day out right now.

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i_am_bromega t1_j1h1cne wrote

Let’s see the breakdown of how that works. Show me any source that says we can go 100% in 15 years that wouldn’t absolutely wreck the global economy. I am hugely invested in renewables and going net negative carbon, but you’re talking fantasy land. Fossil fuels will be a huge part of the global energy profile for decades simply because there’s not enough money or resources to replace it in 15 years even if it were half the cost it is now. I encourage you to look at the math involved in replacing even half of what we use today.

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seven_tech t1_j1h7rpb wrote

Ok there's 3 reasons this is simply not true, and is regularly used as an argument as to 'crashing the economy' :

1- Renewable energy creates jobs, while being cheaper to produce electricity AND cheaper to build than building out more fossil fuels

2- The more renewables there are, the more expensive mining new fossil fuel is, while conversely being less likely to get investment because renewable energy puts downward pressure on energy prices. This in turn makes building new or maintaining existing fossil fuel plants bad investments and therefore, more expensive

2- The world disagrees with you regardless: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandatory_renewable_energy_target

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i_am_bromega t1_j1i2qx4 wrote

Your link doesn’t really say anything that disagrees with me. We can set all kinds of targets, but that doesn’t mean we will hit them, or that it’ll be cheap to do it. The EU went from 14% renewable in 2012 to 21% in 2021, so 7% in 9 years.

At this pace, in 15 years we will not be anywhere near 100%.

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seven_tech t1_j1jwo8c wrote

Australia went from 5% to 20% in 15 years. South Australia had blackouts during the 2016 summer due to fossil fuel (particularly gas) companies poor maintenance shutting them down during high heat scenarios. Their state government decided enough was enough and poured money into renewables. They got the very first Tesla grid scale battery from Musk in 2017, which saved their grid $48m last year. In October this year, their grid ran 100% renewable for 6 days. They are officially planning a regular 100% renewable grid in 2025.

Australia changed national government this year and altered their targets substantially. They injected $25b into renewable sources directly and received $85b on top in private investment as a result. Their energy regulator is now planning (not predicting, actively planning pole and wire infrastructure requirements, new regulation to control Rooftop solar and forcing fossil fuel, particularly coal, to stay idle) for 80% renewables in 2030.

It's attitudes like yours which are holding us back. Labour and private investment are waiting for strong targets.

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i_am_bromega t1_j1kh2u1 wrote

You’re highlighting my point. 100% isn’t happening in 15 years. Australia isn’t going from 20 to 100% in that timeframe. 25 billion isn’t enough to cover most, if any US states to go renewable. You’re also not factoring in the economics or supply chain of switching. Lithium demand and other rare earth metals are already projected to skyrocket without coming close to getting net zero. Without new extraction technologies, we simply can’t produce enough materials to go 100% renewable in the timeframe you’re suggesting.

LNG/coal plants will be around in 20 years. That much is guaranteed. It’s better to force carbon capture, which will make those plants more expensive to operate, while reducing emissions as the transition happens.

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seven_tech t1_j1kn3ts wrote

The last coal plant in Australia is due to close in 2038. It's moved forward closure an entire decade in the last 3 years and they're talking about moving it forward again. LNG has shot themselves in the foot here, as they tried to game the federal electrical system during a lack of 'gas availability' (they chose to export it for higher prices) in June. They've just had their prices capped and a super profits tax is on the cards in early '23. LNG will be summer peaking only by mid-2030s. They'll be lucky if they're being used more than a month year.

I'm afraid you don't seem to see what's happening in the renewable space. Regulation globally is decimating fossil fuels because people are sick of them determining prices based on their profits. This isn't the 2000s anymore. The world is moving quickly and inexorablly to renewables. The war in Ukraine has galvanised Europe on it even more. Yes, in the short term (2-4 years) they will be more dependant. But they are spending hundreds of billions to get off it now because they're no longer prepared to have it used as a weapon a la Russia. America is the only major Western country now lagging in their ambition.

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11fingerfreak t1_j1p04f1 wrote

The global economy only exists so long as humans exist. Climate change will eventually result in a planet where nearly every life form we know of today is extinct… including us. The global economy is unimportant compared to extinction.

But I get it. You may feel differently about it. Maybe you’re hoping that it’s all a hoax or it won’t be as bad as scientists have been saying. Or maybe you’re hoping some other species will come along and they’ll maintain the global economy and Capitalism in our absence. We’d hate to ruin it all for the lizards from Alpha Centuri or the hyper intelligent cockroaches by making decisions that don’t ensure profits for shareholders. Either way, I strongly suggest you not put your faith in the markets or hope that the scientists are wrong. Your call, though.

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