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Clear Sky America's avatar

I get the feeling the climate alarmists don't think at all about the downstream impacts of the radical changes they are trying to force upon us. I am in transportation and wonder what those impacts will be when they ban the diesel engine. What do you do with 3 million diesel trucks that can no longer be used? Where do you put thousands of rail locomotives if they can no longer be operated? Perhaps just build a rail line out to the desert and build a new "iron mountain" out of all this obsolete equipment. But who knows? With cloud seeding maybe you could turn the mountain into a ski resort.

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carbonates's avatar

There is another factor that at least the climate alarmists are missing. Single family homes and businesses have begun adopting and installing home generators. These are rarely if ever "renewable power" but instead are diesel, gasoline, and propane powered. At this point I have 15 kW of my own, plus a truck with a 75 gallon fuel tank that can power the house if need be. When the power goes out now, after Uri, I hear a small fleet of generators kicking on and the lights barely flicker. That cost should probably be factored into your calculations. The real losers in this are apartment dwellers and low income families that can't afford all these extra modifications. Small businesses in commercial strip centers or malls likely don't have the facilities to put in generators, so again the higher density areas are the ones unable to cope. Blackouts are probably racist and should be stopped just for that reason, right?

There are some other costs/effects that I observed during a 24 hour power outage in San Diego. When the traffic lights quit working (within a few hours) there were accidents all over town, some fatal. Also, the same businesses watching their food spoil, discovered that almost none of their customers used cash, so without credit cards, no one was able to do any sales transactions. Of course, most people don't seem to realize that you can't buy gasoline when the power is out, so everyone ran out of gas too. But possibly the worst was when the water in the public water system lost pressure due to inability to pump, and no one had any water supply. That took less than a day to deplete the water in the public system. No flush for you! Solar and wind did nothing because the grid was down. Myself, I had a portable generator, gasoline and water reserves but I was the only place on my block with lights as I grilled steak and drank cold beer on the patio that night. This is what happens when you get accustomed to hurricanes.

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