They like the bury the details...
Blackouts in Spain, the cause of which is still unknown but which may have been linked to the way wind and solar farms work, also underline the value of having multiple sources of energy to rely on.
Archive: https://archive.today/JcAES
From the post:
>In the end, it took Denmark just minutes to scrap a ban on nuclear power that had stood for 40 years.
The totemic change – rammed through in a parliamentary vote – passed with only a few murmurs from the country’s MPs, two thirds of whom supported it.
“It was so fast I thought I’d missed it,” says Mark Nelson, an energy consultant who was invited to watch the vote on Thursday.
“I was texting a parliamentarian, and I’m like, ‘Was that it? Did it pass?’”
The historic nature of the vote should be in no doubt. Denmark’s ban has been in place since 1985 and was so draconian that it forbade the government from even considering atomic energy as an option.
They like the bury the details...
**Blackouts in Spain, the cause of which is still unknown but which may have been linked to the way wind and solar farms work, also underline the value of having multiple sources of energy to rely on.**
Archive: https://archive.today/JcAES
From the post:
>>In the end, it took Denmark just minutes to scrap a ban on nuclear power that had stood for 40 years.
The totemic change – rammed through in a parliamentary vote – passed with only a few murmurs from the country’s MPs, two thirds of whom supported it.
“It was so fast I thought I’d missed it,” says Mark Nelson, an energy consultant who was invited to watch the vote on Thursday.
“I was texting a parliamentarian, and I’m like, ‘Was that it? Did it pass?’”
The historic nature of the vote should be in no doubt. Denmark’s ban has been in place since 1985 and was so draconian that it forbade the government from even considering atomic energy as an option.
(post is archived)