Volt ist wohl auch kernkraftaffin: ...
Ich frage mich bei solchen Leuten immer ob die absichtlich Propaganda betreiben oder einfach dumm sind...und ich meine es garnicht beleidigend, ich würde wirklich gerne verstehen warum die sowas denken/sagen/verbreiten.
Verstehen die alle nicht den technischen Hintergrund?
Verstehen die nicht das Atomkraftwerke mit ihrem total unflexiblen Grundlastbetrieb die Stromnetze verstopfen und damit ein früheres abschalten der EE erzwingen und damit auch insgesamt einen schnelleren Ausbau verhindern?
Ich habe dazu erst vor ein paar Tagen einen Text von einem Franzosen gelesen, der hat es halbwegs verstanden, Stichwort "The end of baseload is coming"...
The real lesson about the end of nuclear in Germany
The end of baseload is coming
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Lignite will be phased out in the next 10 years, and Germany will thus soon become a baseload-free system, dominated by renewables (which will then be well above 50% penetration, probably close to 60%).And do you hear about how German is a larger exporter of power than France? And, even more significantly, that its exports are at a higher price than France’s...?And that it is imports from Germany that allow France to go through peaks of high demand, because baseload cannot produce more than what it usually produces (that’s the whole point of baseload)?
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...und der Einsatz von Gaskraftwerken oder Kohlekraftwerken ist bei steigendem Anteil der EE kein so großes Problem wie es immer von den Pro-Atom Idioten dargestellt wird, im Gegensatz zu den Atomkraftwerken blockiert Gas und Kohle wenigstens nicht das Netz und ermöglicht so einen flexiblen Betrieb und eine immer kleiner werdende Betriebszeit dieser fossilen Kraftwerke...
...Upward flexibility can only come from flexible plants that are switched off a lot of the time, and turned on only in times of need. So yes, Germany has a lot of gas-fired plants, and a lot of coal-fired plants, but they are actually used very little - only when demand (including from France) is very high and renewables supply is very low - which does happen, but not that often anymore. Fossil fuel power plants are relatively cheap (and made in Europe), and if they are used rarely they don’t emit a lot of carbon dioxide.
...und daher ist es - wie er dort schreibt - in der Umbau bzw EE Ausbauzeit einfach "cheaper and smarter" einfach die flexibel nutzbaren fossilen Kraftwerke für immer kürzere Zeiträume als Backup zu nutzen.
The future is not baseload, whether coal-fired or nuclear. The future is renewables and a mixture of smarter demand and flexible generation, whether hydro, new forms of storage, and a little bit of fossil fuel use (again, a lot of power plants does not equal to a lot of fossil fuels being burned - it makes sense to keep those plants available and use them only in case of extreme demand peaks compared to available supply).
Europe has paid a lot for early projects to make renewables cheap on a per MWh basis. Now, it is proving that it is possible to build a full system that is no longer dominated by baseload. That model will very soon prevail everywhere, because it’s cheaper and smarter. The only obstacles are permitting, and incumbents fighting tooth and nail to prevent it from happening. They will waste more years, but will be swept away.
And Europe, and in particular Germany, will have shown the way.
Die Preise für den nächsten Winter zeigen den Atomkraft Irrsinn der Franzosen ja auch sehr deutlich, nur verblödete Trottel verteidigen sowas und setzen noch auf Atomkraft.
French Winter Power Twice as Pricey as Germany’s on Nuclear Woes
France’s weakened nuclear power output means the cost of its electricity for next winter is more than twice as expensive as Germany’s, as concerns over the health of the country’s reactors persist.
The “massive” gap of nearly €250 ($273) per megawatt-hour between French and German prices is because traders are pricing in more risk as they await updates on Electricite de France SA’s struggles with its aging atomic fleet, according to analysts...
French power for the first quarter of 2024 is trading at €416 per megawatt-hour, more than double Germany’s rate of €169.
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