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hunter

(40,195 posts)
5. It's not cheaper.
Fri Nov 14, 2025, 12:12 PM
Yesterday

Places with aggressive renewable energy programs, such as California, Germany, and Denmark, have some of the most expensive electricity in the developed world.

The infrastructure required to keep an electric grid with large renewable energy inputs stable is not cheap.

The costs of renewable energy are the same at any scale. I challenge anyone to build an off-grid solar powered home with all the modern conveniences that's "cheap," especially one that doesn't rely on fossil fueled backup power.

Once again, I refer people to this chart:

https://app.electricitymaps.com/map/zone/DE/12mo/monthly

The cost of electricity in "green" nuclear powered France is almost half what it is in brown Germany.

The only reason Denmark's electric grids are green and yellow is that their neighboring nations act as buffers when Denmark's renewable electricity supply exceeds their demand. When Denmark's renewable electricity demand exceeds their supply they import supposedly "green" electricity from neighboring states. Mostly this is all an accounting trick.

Electricity in Denmark cost even more than it does in Germany.

There is no energy "transition." So called renewable energy will only prolong our dependence on fossil fuels, thus doing nothing in the long run to reduce the total amount of greenhouse gasses humans dump into earth's atmosphere.

I'll say it once again, the only energy resource capable of displacing fossil fuels entirely is nuclear power.

Nuclear power is, of course, capable of displacing large scale renewable energy projects too, which forces the renewable energy industry into an awkward alliance with the fossil fuel industry, most especially the filthy natural gas industry.



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