• Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    I have an idea that might work for solving climate change. It has no scientific basis but hear me out, I think it’s worth at least trying. We should try sacrificing some oil execs in a volcano. Maybe tie them to a barrel of oil so that the earth understands we are trying to return what we took and make up for it a bit, so please chill out. Probably won’t actually do anything but it wouldn’t hurt to at least try it for a few decades, right?

    • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      I like it. I mean, people won’t go into the lava, as it’s liquid stone, everyone thinks they’ll just dive in but no, it’d be like falling onto solid rock; but you’ve solved that with the oil barrel - well done.

    • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.netM
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      21 days ago

      This comment was reported for advocating violence. I’m chalking it up to venting. I share similar frustrations, but let’s make sure we aren’t pushing the envelope too far.

      I’ve made similar comments, but I’m trying to take my mod duties (and reports associated with them) half seriously.

      Kind regards

      TS

  • beefbot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    22 days ago

    “The poor peons will die before they ever do anything about it, we already control the media & make it all their fault - straws, recycling — & our bunkers will keep us cool while they all boil alive. It doesn’t matter. They’re not profitable. Mankind was mean to profit.”

      • Allonzee@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Nah, just pour concrete down the ventilation shafts and exits.

        Then they can enjoy their tombs in peace.

  • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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    22 days ago

    If entrenched capital hasn’t moved off of oil by now they’re just asking to get their lunch eaten by the green push. Can we move off the doomsday juice already? Nothing but laggards and bored investors hanging on at this point

  • Letsdothis@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    I’ve talked personally to climatologists. My mother minored in meteorology. I’ve read the articles, I’ve watched the documentaries, I’ve seen Bill Nye. The “evidence” can point to many conclusions. Also, from personal experience, I’m not at all convinced we are causing global warming. And I’m not even convinced the earth, on average, is warming rather than cooling.

    What is a fact is that people/politicians (those with power) have agendas, and they will steer beliefs about our climate/atmosphere with all their might to meet these agendas. There are many sheep that will buy into these beliefs and repeat them as if it were an original idea of their own. Don’t be sheep, don’t let them make you into a solder for their agenda. Be careful, be discernful. Stay beautiful.

    • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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      21 days ago

      I’ve talked personally to climatologists. My mother minored in meteorology. I’ve read the articles, I’ve watched the documentaries, I’ve seen Bill Nye.

      Is this satire? It has to be satire.

      • Letsdothis@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        The first paragraph was candid self evaluation and my personal speculation. The second paragraph was commentary on politicians and political agenda. I could have written the 2nd paragraph better. The sheep I meant to represent are those who adopt the narratives of these political agendas without realizing that that is what they have done. They have unknowingly joined a political agenda. And it’s absolutely both sides, left and right.

        The topic of climate change has unfortunately become a tool for politicians, whether it be the right or left. This is bad. It is bad because it muddies the water, it muddies the the real scientific facts, what what those facts suggest. I honestly didn’t mean to only suggest that those who subscribe to global warming were sheep. Rather, it’s both sides pushing a narrative for an agenda. To buy into a narrative because “the experts said so” isn’t always a good idea. Personal exploration, research, and observation are very important. Even “scientific consensus” needs to be weighed and judged soberly. Very much, “Scientific consensus” can, and does change over time.

        There was “scientific consensus” in that 80s that because of the polar ice caps melting, newyork would be underwater by now…

    • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.netOP
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      21 days ago

      The “evidence” can point to many conclusions.

      Not when reviewed objectively.

      Also, from personal experience, I’m not at all convinced we are causing global warming. And I’m not even convinced the earth, on average, is warming rather than cooling.

      Global average surface temperature has been rising since 1850. The ten warmest years in the historical record have all occurred in the past decade.

      The earth is getting hotter. This is an objective fact. Facts don’t care about your feelings.

    • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      Your opinion on climate science (or any science for that matter) can be disregarded out of hand. Your comment history reveals you are a far-right conservative troll who makes far-right conservative statements and then claims to be a centrist who “hates politics” because they are so divisive.

      Every word uttered by a conservative is deception or manipulation. Every word.

    • PiousAgnostic@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      A person on the internet whose mother minored in meteorology doesn’t agree with scientific consensus! How do we move forward now?

    • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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      21 days ago

      Note, that in writing down this post, you haven’t brought forth any objective argument to justify your skepticism. Your argument that because people have agendas, you should be skeptical could be ok if the goal is to get objective information, not form a reactionary opinions.

      A strong scientific consensus over this topic is not the result of some political agenda but of the scientific method. One of the central parts of it, is that any claim must be falsifiable through experiment. When anyone comes with a claim, others will try to reproduce or falsify it. Depending on the results the claim is either rejected or used in further research. With vasts of experiments explaining the effect or verifying the effect to better explain what was previously known, a consensus is formed. Politicians are only involved when it comes to appropriating public funding for research. That doesn’t corrupt the research itself, but hinders it if research can’t be done. When industry funds it though, then it does degrade the research very often (see tobacco industry in the 1920s-1980s, the food industry until today, or oil&gas industry which have known about the effects for at least the 1970s through their own research and have not published it).

      For some more factual things you can read up on:

      That CO2 gets warmer when subjected to light is known since the 1850s when Eunice Foote did experiments with water vapor and CO2 and made this observation and roughly quantified it.

      John Tyndall did incorporate this effect into a first, very rudimentary, climate model of the atmosphere in 1862. The global temperature projections of that model for 1950 aren’t perfect, but still astonishingly precise.

      Planck in 1900 formulated the Planck Postulate as part of his work concerning black body radiation. Quantization he thought of as a mathematical quirk. Einstein a few years later proposed that the energy of light or photons to be more precise is itself quantized. Einstein got his Nobel Prize in 1923 adopting this to not only explain the Plack Postulate (radiation) but also the photoelectric effect, i.e. that a molecule such as CO2 can absorb energy from the electromagnetic radiation interacting with it.

      The scientific community was not convinced of the anthroposophical nature of the warming of the climate until in 1957 Roger Revelle and Hans Suess use the C14-method to show that the ratio of C-isotopes in the atmosphere is shifting towards those of fossil fuels. Since then more measurements have been done using this method to date things and reconstruct atmospheric composition (e.g. through ice-coring).

      Since then technology such as satellites have improved the overall quality of measurements. And all of them show a clear tendency. With more computational power climate models have become more powerful and the projections are very good. The differences to measurements, when they happen are usually underestimating because the models are conservatively developed. You can refer to the IPCC reports which show you the data pretty clearly. If you want, then look at data from your local weather station, if it existed over 100 years ago, but even if only 50 years and you’ll probably see a difference even locally. Do that for all stations in the world and you can see a clear trend.

      These are only a fraction of topics which anybody can read up on to form an informed decision, rather than opposing something just because it is consensus.

      • Letsdothis@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Yeah, it’s called an opinion. I used to have the opinion that global warming was a serious concern. After learning more and more life experiences, my opinion has changed.

        The only fact I claimed is that politicians have political agendas, and that is a fact. Some politicians promote that the earth is getting warmer, some say that it isn’t, but if it comes from a politician, it comes from an agenda.

        I appreciate that you came with some scientific facts, surely. And you’re right I brought forth no objective argument, it was subjective. Maybe I should have started my comment with “IMO”. I assumed everyone would catch on to that since I was relating my own personal experience with the topic.

    • Firestorm Druid@lemmy.zip
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      21 days ago

      Literally any time I bring up veganism and climate change, I have ten people jumping my neck screaming “but the corporations!”. Like, it’s so easy to eat vegan and it’s cheaper. I don’t get people

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        21 days ago

        thing is that you’re completely ignoring how culturally important meat is to a lot of people, and how much easier it is to cook a very tasty and nutritious meal with meat.

        sure, rice and beans is cheaper, but you need to eat other things too and to most people “rice and beans” sounds like abject misery.

        You can’t just say “go vegan” as if that’s just a switch you flip, the easy vegan alternatives are expensive and the cheap ones aren’t easy.
        If you want people to go vegan, start producing cheap and easy vegan food that is indistinguishable from non-vegan stuff, we have a small amount of such products here and it’s helped me eat less meat.

      • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        So the thing people miss about this one is people who live out of the reduced/sale section. While at full price a vegan diet is cheaper (though requires a bit more prep time, not much more though microwave steamers are a miracle) Meat is much more calorie dense and can end up being as much as 80-90% off just before it turns, vegetables on the other hand never go on sale. In this circumstance meat is cheaper.

        More regionally some of the foods in a vegan diet that make up for protein can be more expensive than you might be used to. Sure beans are universally cheap and there’s some nice varieties (I like kidney and butter beans a lot) but chickpeas, nuts and really all of the non-bean alternatives are actually pretty expensive in some places (e.g. where I live).

        That said I admit to being one of these people who could maybe drop meat (I only get it when its on sale/reduction at this point) but couldn’t live without cheese and eggs. iirc chickens are the lowest carbon livestock but I await a good cheese alternative or non-dairy cheese.

    • Bread@sh.itjust.works
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      21 days ago

      Give up cheese… Or die…

      Sometimes sacrifices must be made. It is a shame though, this planet is pretty.

      • blindbunny@lemmy.ml
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        21 days ago

        After even 100+ hours in no mans sky. Earth is the most beautiful planet I’ve ever been to.

      • blindbunny@lemmy.ml
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        21 days ago

        The first part is a harder structural issue. The second is an action everyone can take now and have a greater impact towards sustaining the planet. With the side benefits of better health and less animal suffering.

        If veganism was welded as a solidarity against capitalism greater market structures would be forced to bend to working class demands.

        • DudeImMacGyver@sh.itjust.works
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          21 days ago

          Speak for yourself, my bike has become my primary means of transportation and I’m saving up for a solar array for my house. That change can and should happen now on every level.

          Speaking of structural issues: There are massive, pervasive systems in place both practically and politically surrounding the meat industry. They even get huge tax funded subsidies from the government! Using your logic, should people just give up because of it? What’s the difference?

          Veganism and vegetarianism are a hard sell to many people too, encouraging people to eat more plants instead of chastising them for eating meat would probably be more effective in convincing them.

          • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            Your comment even leaves out one of the most persuasive reasons the public, at large, are hard to sway to eat less, let alone no, animal products. Our bodies are wired to have strong responses to things like the smell of cooking meat. The way grease affects the tastes of food, etc. Our bodies have long recognized indicators of edible things, that are calorie dense, as that was critical to survival for most of human existence.

            • rekorse@lemmy.world
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              21 days ago

              I’m not sure theres reason to promote adhering to your base instincts. Do you also try to mount every woman you find attractive?

              Surely you can comprehend the idea of choosing to abstain from something you have the urge to do?

              • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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                21 days ago

                I am not promoting it. I am recognizing it as barrier to moving people away from using animals as food. If saying something is a reason that it is hard to convert the larger public, is the same as promoting it, I am not sure how you go about discussing the hurdles to achieving this goal. The old saying “it is an explanation, not an excuse”.

                • rekorse@lemmy.world
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                  18 days ago

                  Well if I take it as a serious point, I dont see still how its useful to bring it up. We can’t change our natural impulses, only how we react to them. Following a vegan diet is no more challenging physically or mentally than managing a regular diet if you have the same goals.

                  Its akin to saying that a mans nature makes it difficult not to sexually assault women. While technically true, it has nothing to do with identifying problems and creating solutions.

                  I’m struggling to find any good reason to bring up natural instinct besides as an excuse.

            • DudeImMacGyver@sh.itjust.works
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              21 days ago

              Yep, cooked meat was a game changer for our species but now it’s become a health and environmental hazard because we eat so much of it.

              • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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                21 days ago

                Yeah, all that extra protein was a big deal to our development. It has played a critical role in our species for nearly a million years, it won’t be dropped easily.

              • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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                21 days ago

                I am not arguing that it is good, better, etc because it is natural though. I am saying we , over ~750k years, evolved to have a strong natural reaction to indicators of things that are calorie dense, and maybe protein/nutrient dense. This makes it harder to persuade people to the better option of veganism. It isn’t the only factor, but it is definitely one.

                • blindbunny@lemmy.ml
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                  21 days ago

                  Just because humanity has done something for a long time doesn’t mean we should continue doing it. If this isn’t an appeal to nature then look beyond it and and realize there’s plenty of other ways to to get nutrients besides supporting mass murder of other sentient beings.

                  If you can over come that then radicalize and realize a unified boycott of the animal agriculture industry would cripple the owning class.

          • blindbunny@lemmy.ml
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            21 days ago

            That’s cool I’m glad you have the means to get a house to put solar panels on. I’m also glad your able-bodied enough to get across town. Those are what’s called material conditions. People that have to use a car to get to work can easily take up a vegan diet and be more efficient at fighting climate change.

            This second paragraph reads like you didn’t even read the second link.

            I wondered how many flights Elon would have to do to undo your bike rides.

        • commie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          21 days ago

          being vegan hasn’t decreased the size of the animal agriculture industry or even stopped it’s growth. what reason. do you think it would have any impact on the planet or animal suffering?

  • ssm@lemmy.sdf.org
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    21 days ago

    we’re approximately three inches right of fuck

    I zoomed in the image as much as I could so 3 inches to the right is not that bad. I’m glad I could pull my weight to save the climate.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    21 days ago

    Even if someone isn’t convinced climate change is caused by humans, pretty much all of the shit that causes climate change is some form of pollution.

    Can we make an effort to pollute our environment a little less, at least?

    Stop burning finite resources like coal and oil, just because?

  • orcrist@lemm.ee
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    21 days ago

    Oh no no no, we are already in the holy f$ck stage. Massive storm is the devastate coastal communities, massive droughts that lead to widespread death, wildfires that are bigger than any on record, those things are all connected with climate change.

    For some reason people really want it to be polar. They really want to say that if we don’t take action this month then the world will end. The reality is that things have gotten bad in some ways and will continue to get bad in some ways no matter what we do, but every action that we start taking now helps. Politicians and corporations hate that because it means the problem is one they have to keep on dealing with.

  • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    “Hydrogen is the Future” - sponsored by Shell

    After years of denialism and fucking up our planet these cunts want to sell us the solution to the problem they caused so that we stay dependent on their supply chain and pipelines.

    • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      The one case I have seen for hydrogen, that might be useful, is that when things like solar energy generation, create and overload of power, it can be used to create hydrogen, then the hydrogen can be stored, and used for a variety of ways to power things, in a largely eco-friendly, way. Otherwise… yeah.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Hydrogen storage is very expensive and difficult, which makes personal storage difficult. Industrial storage is easier, but still… sketchy. Just look at how many times a year Texas City has an explosion at their gas plant network.

        There are better ways to store energy. Hydrogen is just cheap to acquire, which makes it an attractive substance for the existing industry.

        • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          Most of what I have read are discussing this possibility is industrial storage, for industrial scale fuel use. Then they usually come in with asides if the car industry, or whom ever, ever creates a good fuel cell. Though I know there are a lot of BS articles about hydrogen fuel cells powering everything, especially cars. Largely pushed by the oil, and auto, industries.

          I looked up Texas City explosions, there aren’t actually a whole lot. Though they do have one devastating one (1947), and one really bad one (2005). Most of them seem to have less to do with the stores of hydrogen, and more to do with mishandling of other aspects of the fuel refinement, and fertilizer, manufacture/storage. Large scale hydrogen storage is not as dangerous as it would seem. When punctures in LH tanks happen, even though they are now mixing with oxygen, it proves to be very difficult to actually get it to light. With most attempts to create a hydrogen leak explosion showing it lights briefly, before the pressure of the expanding gas puts it back out, because it actually displaces all the oxygen. The biggest dangers actually seem to be burns from the extreme temperature of it, and suffocation as leaks rapidly fill areas, displacing all the oxygen. Most of the storage explosions of hydrogen are due to how rapidly it expands, which, when improperly stored, can cause a run away pressure build up, and pressure explosion, rather than an ignition one. Though there are exceptions, such as the Muskingum River power plant explosion. Though we still don’t know what managed to ignite the hydrogen leaking from the truck. This means hydrogen isn’t any more dangerous than the storage of other fuels, and materials, that can explode. It is more dangerous to store large amounts of grain.

          https://hydrogen.wsu.edu/2017/03/17/so-just-how-dangerous-is-hydrogen-fuel/

          https://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-efficiency/alternative-fuels/hydrogen-vehicle-danger1.htm

          https://www.nrdc.org/bio/christian-tae/hydrogen-safety-lets-clear-air

          https://courses.grainger.illinois.edu/npre470/sp2019/web/readings/Hydrogen safety issues.pdf

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            I looked up Texas City explosions, there aren’t actually a whole lot.

            Interactions continued long after the 2005 explosion. OSHA leveed an ($87M fine on facilities in 2009)[https://www.ogj.com/refining-processing/refining/article/17222138/osha-fines-bp-874-million-in-texas-city-aftermath].

            There were a series of leaks and minor explosions leading up to a fire as recently as last December.

            The '05 was a big one, but problems at the site are routine enough that shelter orders and shutdowns are regularly on the local news.

            • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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              21 days ago

              Oh, I wasn’t saying those two were the only ones. Just that over nearly a century of them being a big producer of refined fuel, and synthetic fertilizer, there really haven’t been enough explosions to warrant the “times per year” comment. This is also only one, out of many, places like this, and none of them, at least that there is public record for, have a whole lot of bad things happening. Unfortunately, the occasional leak of toxic chemicals, explosions due to mishandling of fuels, etc. is something that can’t be avoided if the modern world is to continue working. This is why regulatory bodies, and enforcement of safety, and procedural, laws are important. In the big picture though, hydrogen isn’t particularly dangerous.

              • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                21 days ago

                nearly a century of them being a big producer of refined fuel, and synthetic fertilizer, there really haven’t been enough explosions to warrant the “times per year” comment.

                Idk what the “minimum number of catastrophic accidents” would qualify. But more minor accidents in Texas City are routine. You just found the two historic ones.

                Like saying you Googled Biggest Hurricanes In Texas and only came back with Harvey and The Great Galveston Hurricane, so why is everyone complaining? That’s just two in a century.

                • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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                  21 days ago

                  I am not just talking about catastrophic incidents, in that I mean to say the ones that killed people, and devastated the facility it was in. I looked up data with the BSEE, FERC, and PHMSA. There are little leaks of hydrogen that are considered the most minor hazard a several times a year yes. But the amount of incidents when it goes from potential, to actual, are not frequent enough to be rated in times per year. I was considering situations like where it just lit then went out, or created an environment that could suffocate someone, etc. Beyond that, most of these hazards are not from hydrogen, but other materials.

                  What it boils down to, is that hydrogen is no more dangerous than other chemicals, we commonly use, that can be explosive.

      • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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        21 days ago

        The main problem with Hydrogen is the efficiency. If we want to get off fossil fuels, we need to talk about primary energy, not only the electricity consumed today. That alone means that we need multiple of the electric production (the physicist in me shudders at that word) of what we have today.

        So instead of the finite resource of oil or gas, there’s a bottleneck in energy production and its infrastructure, which means that we need to be efficient with the energy we have. With Hydrogen, you first need energy for Hydrolysis, then cool it down and pressurize it which uses a lot of energy. And then converting it back in the fuel cell to usable electric energy is again lossy. On a good day that’s an overall efficiency of about 30% (which is around the peak efficiency of the combustion itself in modern ICEs). A good LiPo Battery (which comes with its own problems, and for industrial applications energy density is less of a problem) has a roundtrip efficiency of 98%. So you’d need triple the production infrastructure (PV, wind mills, geothermal, etc.) for your storage, if you’d do everything with H2 compared to everything with batteries.

        Which means, that if there aren’t major breakthroughs, like a totally different technology (e.g. photosensitive bacteria) to produce H2 at a multiple of the efficiency of today’s tech, then H2 and E-Fuels in general have to be reserved for the applications, where energy and power density are un-negotionable (like airplanes, some construction equipment, or for some agricultural applications).

        • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          This is correct, however the idea, at least the one not being pushing by industry, is not that hydrogen will be the primary source of power, nor is it considered efficient. It is just one way that we can, right now, capture some of the excess power generation, as opposed to losing it, or other problems is can create. This is all being considered precisely because we can’t really create batteries at the scale needed to accomplish this, yet. Hydrogen is also something that can be broken down into units that can be transported via numerous different means, such as trucks, rather than needing it to just be grid attached. It is also not being proposed as THE solution here. Most, reasonable, sources discussing this, that I have found, see this as one of many methods to need accomplish this. All working together, with different strengths, for different uses. This one lacks in efficiency, but is highly portable, and not grid dependent, which makes it attractive to a number of different use cases.

          • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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            21 days ago

            Yes these are all good and valid arguments as a bridge technology used when we can’t meet demands through other, already availabe, often better suited technologies. With the power structures today though, it often gets pushed as the ONLY future. Which is what I’m pushing back against. We should use it where it makes sense, not where it serves some particular interest group to consolidate power to the detriment of us all. I mean H2-cars? Really?

      • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Losses stack up for hydrogen. It’s kinda of a bad battery and storage is dangerous. Fuel cells are bulky and fragile.

        Right now, it’s relatively viable because we get it as a petrolium byproduct. But that version doesn’t burn very clean.

        Once we’re using solar at home, it’s green, but you’re chewing through freshwater which isn’t ideal.

        Something like sodium ion batteries would be better is most ways. (Other than refilling cars in a gas station)

        • Scribbd@feddit.nl
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          21 days ago

          They aim for the same production -opoly (I forgot the real name and I am too tired to look it up) they have now. In the market where demand and supply are what set prices, the one who makes the supply AND sells it is king.

          Hydrogen ‘is the future’ not because it is, but because it fits their current business model the best.

          • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            Oh yeah, and we don’t have to change our own model. You pull up to a gas station pop out I spent canister pop a new canister in and drive off. You get to keep your internal combustion engine, No shake up in any market segment.

    • moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      21 days ago

      Not only this, H₂ is also a green gas, and we can’t afford the leaks of H₂ due to the used as an energy supply.

  • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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    21 days ago

    I’d add an overlapping step sponsored by BP in 2004: “Climate Change is real, and here’s a calculator to show you, that we have nothing to do with it.”

    For the uninitiated: The Carbon Footprint Calculator was introduced by BP in 2004 as what can only be described as a successful attempt to shift attention and blame to the general public.

    • HottieAutie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      21 days ago

      Like…why would anyone believe a company whose interest is enmeshed with their claims?? A company isn’t a person with morals. It’s a Machiavellian machine with the sole purpose of maximizing profits. They will never ever intentionally make a claim that hurts their profits. It would make absolutely no sense for a company to reduce demand of its product. That would be soooooo counterintuitive. If you sold lemonade, would you publish a study that showed that lemonade harms people? If yes, then your company would stop selling lemonade and disband while every other lemonade seller would flood the market with the benefits of consuming lemonade.

      • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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        21 days ago

        no dispute there. The thing is, it wasn’t advertised like that. It was advertised as: Here’s this scientifically sound tool to measure your impact and judge what you can do. Which in and of itself wouldn’t be a bad thing if it wasn’t burying the lead.