azjohn
Well-known member
- First Name
- john
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2019
- Messages
- 326
- Reaction score
- 349
- Location
- North Carolina
- Vehicles
- Toyota Tundra
- Thread starter
- #1
This is something I have always thought about, thank you Jason for doing the math
Yes.If autonomous vehicles break out in numbers that ARK Invest and Tesla are predicting, there will be far fewer vehicles on the road, but being used for far longer periods. There is a huge amount of energy needed to produce gas, diesel and the making of ICE vehicles. Solar will be far more used in the near future, also with far more homes having their own power plants. It will all work out well.
Solar Electricity became the cheapest electricity in human history last year. In 2008 it would have taken 20,000 sq miles of panels to power the entire usa. That number has come down dramatically as panel efficiency went up. Just to put it in perspective.... coal mining took up 13,000 Sq miles.No, it can’t. Politics aside, We can’t push EV adoption en masse AND ban natural gas fracking, coal power, nuclear power etc. Two things are necessary for mass EV adoption, improved fast chargers available as frequently and cost effectively for the user as gas stations are now, and cheap, plentiful electricity. It’s fools gold to think you can build enough windmills or solar panels to support our entire grid AND the entire transportation sector.
Not if local utilities have anything to say about it. Our utility won't let us install more than 5kW. Not even enough to cover our daily use most of the year.Solar will be far more used in the near future, also with far more homes having their own power plants. It will all work out well.
Fool's gold?It’s fools gold to think you can build enough windmills or solar panels to support our entire grid AND the entire transportation sector.
If you covered Texas in solar power and could distribute that energy without loss, those panels could power the entire world - so yes having enough infrastructure could support the entire grid and transportation.No, it can’t. Politics aside, We can’t push EV adoption en masse AND ban natural gas fracking, coal power, nuclear power etc. Two things are necessary for mass EV adoption, improved fast chargers available as frequently and cost effectively for the user as gas stations are now, and cheap, plentiful electricity. It’s fools gold to think you can build enough windmills or solar panels to support our entire grid AND the entire transportation sector.
You would think that with all the power issues you have in SoCal the power companies would welcome all the help they can getNot if local utilities have anything to say about it. Our utility won't let us install more than 5kW. Not even enough to cover our daily use most of the year.
They're fighting solar on homes tooth and nail. Mostly with forcing of EV rates that are higher.
Eventually I expect them to lose. But not for many years.
Systemically, we'd need more peaker plants (usually NG or hydro) and/or lots of batteries to keep the grid balanced.Fool's gold?
Putting solar (150watt per square meter) on every suitable roof (8billion square meters) would get us 6 terawatt hours of power ever day, on average, or over two trillion kilowatt hours per year.
And that's without wind, without using our natural gas generation (which doesn't need fracking), without solar farms...
-Crissa
EVs mostly charge non-peak hours. Very little charging is during peak hours. Instead of a peaker plant, we would make sure every EV comes with a timer in its charging system. Which would both make the battery last longer and shift the load to when we have capacity.Systemically, we'd need more peaker plants (usually NG or hydro) and/or lots of batteries to keep the grid balanced.