California: Green Energy Meets Demand

Discussion in 'Economics' started by VicBee, Jun 2, 2024.

  1. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    LOL Utility won't bury powerlines because of .......... Unions wanting middle class wages. The nerve of them. :confused:
     
    #11     Jun 4, 2024
  2. ironchef

    ironchef

    It is a great idea if you and 500,000 others live within 50 miles of one and it sits on an earthquake fault line.
     
    #12     Jun 4, 2024
  3. ironchef

    ironchef

    After that, we can sell our excess wind and solar generated electricity to red states like Texas.
     
    #13     Jun 4, 2024
    murray t turtle likes this.
  4. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    At the rate red-state Texas is going with renewables they won't need anything else not too many years from now. Well ok maybe 10 or 15.

    Big Hat, No Oil soon. :D

    Blasphemous I say, blasphemous.
     
    #14     Jun 4, 2024
  5. VicBee

    VicBee

    It's like paying burger flippers $30/hr. Why not?
     
    #15     Jun 4, 2024
  6. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Why not if that guy from Hell's Kitchen makes what he does.

    Anyway its a job, shouldn't someone earn a livable wage doing it or would you rather they spit it in before handing it to the cashier, show up when they feel like or take their sweet ass time doing it?

    They are not farm workers per se but shouldn't we value farm workers and restaurant workers, who are providing nourishment (yea I know you'll say you don't eat burgers and fries) to sustain us, just a little bit better than we do?

    Also some companies already were paying, in some locations, $20/hour, because that is what the marketplace called for. Should it be mandatory state-wise prolly not, but can't satisfy all the people all the time.
     
    #16     Jun 5, 2024
  7. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Had never occurred to me - what's to stop someone from changing out, decent batteries of a late-model EV, for tired old ones before they sell or trade-in their vehicle?

    Then again, wonder what "user history" entails below?

    (SEMAFOR)
    Volvo to issue EV battery passport


    [​IMG]
    TT News Agency via Reuters

    Volvo will issue the world’s first “passport” for electric vehicle batteries.
    All EVs sold in the European Union from 2027 will need to report the origins of their constituent parts, their carbon footprint, and their user history. The move addresses some concerns over the sourcing of raw materials, much like a “conflict-free” diamond certificate — lithium and other minerals used in batteries often come from unsafe or ecologically damaging mines. And it’s also to ease secondhand purchases of EVs: One engineering academic told Electrek that mileage doesn’t fully reflect battery health, and that tracking a battery’s life will help customers “learn much more about the vehicle they’re buying.” The passports will be based on the blockchain and in theory unfalsifiable.
     
    #17     Jun 5, 2024
    VicBee likes this.
  8. %%
    Lady in the news\ bought an EV in CO with $7000 CO electric rebate for less that $777:D:D
    WOW, great buy , 80 miles range i think she said:caution::caution:d Dont know if she goes to MCD.
     
    #18     Jun 5, 2024
    ironchef likes this.
  9. VicBee

    VicBee

    I was watching a Munro breakdown of the Cybertruck battery pack a few days ago. The hard sealant used to protect the packs are an sob to remove and I can't see how bad batteries can be swapped at all. Certainly there needs to be some sort of mandatory quality certification on these batteries, traceable to a point of manufacturing. We hear of the spontaneous combustion of poor battery quality products and, with time, it is likely that some 3rd grade manufacturers will try to sell swappable packs of dubious quality for half the price. As laptops register batteries in the system, the same could/should be done on vehicles?
    The issue is not uncommon with ICE vehicles, as engine parts are swapped for better or worse quality than manufacturers parts.
     
    #19     Jun 5, 2024
    murray t turtle likes this.
  10. VicBee

    VicBee

    That's a no end discussion about cost of labor versus living wage. The US in particular has always had these low paid jobs for skill less labor, like kids in school or new migrants. They weren't meant to be living wage jobs, more like pocket money or subsistence wages that one climbed out of with experience. Both employers and employees recognized these were temp jobs that have been key to the fluid American employment landscape.
    Europe struggles with unemployment precisely because these jobs are difficult to create within rigid employment regulations. As a consequence, while jobs there come with all the protections of social safety coverage, wages are low and permanent employment is hard to find for those entering the job market.

    I'll admit to my biais because I've experienced both. Those employment protections and guarantees are double edged. They are a selection and job barrier where there should be none when the jobs can be learned in days. In Europe every little job becomes a profession requiring a specific diploma. Out of college kids dream of minimum wage secured full time employment, and it's depressing.
     
    #20     Jun 5, 2024