I’m sorry, but once you devolved to name calling, I really stopped caring about what you said.
No, I cited sources, you did not because you can’t and now you’re taking your ball home. Pretty much every interaction with a pro-nuclear fanboy ends this way because you have no argument, just feels.
I didn’t downvote any of your posts, but I’m happy to return the favor.
I’m sorry you feel this way, but it’s pretty clear my facts can’t compete with your feelings. You haven’t provided an argument; you’ve provided drive-by link dropping without actually quoting or understanding the data.
Since you dropped the Lazard LCOE+ report, you should probably read its explicit caveats: Lazard openly states that standard Levelized Cost of Energy does not include grid integration, transmission, or the exponential system costs of full-scale energy storage. When you look at their actual “Firming” metrics (adding storage to intermittent renewables), the cost advantage begins to shrink significantly.
If you decide to push a all-renewable future, please don’t try to stand in the way of those of us who want a diversified, realistic mix to curtail CO2 emissions in the short term. I have consistently agreed that the continued transition to renewables is needed, something you seem to ignore, but that persuing 100% renewable isn’t feasible in the short term.
No, I cited sources, you did not because you can’t and now you’re taking your ball home. Pretty much every interaction with a pro-nuclear fanboy ends this way because you have no argument, just feels.
I didn’t downvote any of your posts, but I’m happy to return the favor.
I’m sorry you feel this way, but it’s pretty clear my facts can’t compete with your feelings. You haven’t provided an argument; you’ve provided drive-by link dropping without actually quoting or understanding the data.
Since you dropped the Lazard LCOE+ report, you should probably read its explicit caveats: Lazard openly states that standard Levelized Cost of Energy does not include grid integration, transmission, or the exponential system costs of full-scale energy storage. When you look at their actual “Firming” metrics (adding storage to intermittent renewables), the cost advantage begins to shrink significantly.
I’ve consistently argued about the system engineering reality: the bottleneck to mine the massive amounts of copper, aluminum, and materials required to scale that storage to 100% makes the transition to renewables, without a nuclear backbone, a slower prospect, and often more expensive.
If you decide to push a all-renewable future, please don’t try to stand in the way of those of us who want a diversified, realistic mix to curtail CO2 emissions in the short term. I have consistently agreed that the continued transition to renewables is needed, something you seem to ignore, but that persuing 100% renewable isn’t feasible in the short term.