[Archive! - page 59

 
 
Nibbler:

Your priorities have shifted. Not people for ideas but ideas for people.

try to understand the law of supply and demand...

It's your fault too! Don't point fingers...

 

Solar power plant. 900 W. Price 250 t.r.

 
Integer:
A daisy-chain hydroelectric power station


A WIRLEND HEPPP

Radio 1960 No.1

It is possible to supply small power to rural radio stations, schools, hospitals and libraries in non-electrified areas from a simple hydroelectric power plant which is cheaper to build than all the existing power plants per kilowatt of power. The hydroelectric power stations described in this article do not need a dam and can be installed on rivers that are more than 25 cm deep and with a flow velocity of more than 1 m/sec.

It's a marvellous thing. It's been 50 years...

 
Nibbler:

PIRRELAND HEPP

...

A marvellous thing. It's been 50 years...

It's still there. There are small wind turbines and solar ones on the market, but there is silence about these.

 

...and to round off the review, a pedal power station:

With the enchanting name of Power Plus Gazelle.

 
rustein:

try to understand the law of supply and demand...

It's your fault too! Don't point fingers...


Look at "The Spirit of the Times" there about "supply and demand", how it is formed for what and by whom.
 
Integer:

...and to round off the review, a pedal power station:

With the enchanting name of Power Plus Gazelle.

Cool! )
 
moskitman:

Now on the merits of the question: hydrocarbons as a source of energy are alien to the ecosystem of planet Earth, both the substance itself and the products of its combustion. I hope no one will argue. The crux of the ecological problem is the tight integration of oil and its derivatives into the global economy. The top powers-that-be will not tolerate an alternative for a long time to come.

Unfortunately Russian was not taught at school.

The discussion is not about hydrocarbons, but about electricity.

 
Производство электроэнергии На 2000 г.
Thermal power plants (TPPs)67%; 582.4 billion kWh
Hydro power plants (Hydroelectric plants)19%; 164.4 billion kWh
Nuclear power plants (NPPs)15%; 128.9 billion kWh