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Baseload generation is simply not flexible, meaning we cannot react to demand changes and consumers are forced to pay higher prices. SEIA's Kevin Lucas explains⤵️
15,357 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce •via X (Twitter)
11 Yorum

@EnergyWonk And solar isn't dispatchable. batteries are only sized for 4 hours of output. You should rename your org to "Solar and Gas Association"

@EnergyWonk This is retarded on so many levels...

This completely false. Nuclear is more than capable of load following. France has been doing it for decades. But it’s only needed when you have so much that it’s needs to load follow. Right now we just need more baseload and nothing is worse than solar and battery. Expensive and unreliable. We have spent a trillion on it and it is making the grid worse. A trillion dollar nuclear investment would have been a massive improvement to the grid.

@EnergyWonk Solar is not dispatchable.

Scan any documents, convert images into text, PDF files, etc. 👍

@EnergyWonk Utter nonsense. Brought to us by the group whose product is so uncompetitive that they can ony survive without massive taxpayer subsidies. Their grift cannot end soon enough.

@EnergyWonk ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

@EnergyWonk Gaslighters in more ways than one.

@EnergyWonk You do not even understand what Base Load is! Read about it here:

@EnergyWonk this is completely nuts. Baseload energy is crucial for grid stability, ensuring that essential services and infrastructure always have power. It is the foundation required before you can even begin to talk about dispatchable power.

@EnergyWonk U R really cute does the #disinfo still work?


