Sunday, February 20, 2022

Potential for renewables is big in Texas

While many are worried about the intermittency of solar and wind power, this article (based on this research) contends that it's actually better at coping with shutdowns. The researchers note that mid range batteries, built to provide energy for lots of folks for just a few hours, are pretty good at coping with short term outages. And long-term outages are best avoided by having lots of sources around, and importing energy where possible. I do notice that there is some geothermal or hydroelectric in the background, though.

Of course the potential for renewables to improve human health and clean up the environment are huge. Seven million people die a year because of air pollution, and many asthma cases are tied to that as well. 

One curiosity: "Transitioning to all clean, renewable energy could also decrease energy demand in California by 60 percent." Apparently a lot of energy actually goes into producing more energy, and once we get through the transition to renewables (which will not be easy) overall demand should drop. Interesting...

Thursday, February 17, 2022

US is (in some sense) energy independent

Wow, I didn't see this one coming. As of 2020, the USA is exporting more petroleum products than it imports. From Axios using the EIA's information.

I have to say, I do wish that translated to a decreased reliance on countries that are less than stellar global citizens (i.e. Saudi Arabia & Russia) but in today's news (Feb. 17th) it seems like we aren't really there yet. Surely what's imported and what's exported are not the same products, so the figure is somewhat misleading, but it still shows a promising trend. Maybe someday we won't be quite as reliant on those countries!

Saturday, February 5, 2022

It's not you

 Today, in "it's not you," courtesy of NPR:

What's so special about this ice?

Beijing organizers switched from using ammonia to carbon dioxide refrigerants for the new venue's surface. The change is the same as planting upwards of 1.2 million trees, according to organizers.

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Nordhagen on Bittman (and MLK)

 Nice Twitter thread on the book, "Animal, Vegetable, Junk" by Bittman. She writes that food workers are quite underpaid, to the benefit of folks higher up the "food chain" as it were. Gratuitous picture:

  • 8 of the 10 worst-paying jobs in the US involve food. Of 20 million food system jobs, almost all earn near-poverty-line wages.
  • Over 1/3 of US farmworkers earn less than the official poverty wage (20K USD / yr / family).
  • Food workers use food stamps at > 1.5 times the rate of the rest of the US workforce

Addressing these issues require the market price of food to be much closer to the true cost of food, including a fair price for the labor that brings it to farm to fork (and beyond) -- while ensuring low-income households can still afford nutritious foods.

Update: yes, I'm back on Twitter, but check this out: Martin Luther King Junior on government spending on agricultural workers.



Food for thought

Not gonna lie, I wrote off vegans for a long time. I am not a big beef eater (motivated in part by graphs like this, showing the massive impacts of cattle on climate change) but when looking for protein I've mostly eaten fish, dairy, and eggs. However, graphics like this show just how large the impact of even dairy and eggs are.