Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places that push for more solar and wind have higher energy bills. Maryland, New Jersey, the entire RGGI, California.
Nope not true. Solar and wind cost less and their price increase. Electricity prices have gone up because of surging demand from data centers and rising prices of natural gas. Natural gas year to date is up 21%.
You have been told this before.
No matter how many times you say it, the actual electricity bills tell a different story.
11-15 cents per kilowatt-hour
Idaho. North Dakota, Nebraska, Louisiana, Utah,
Washington, Arkansas, Oklahoma. Montana, Iowa,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, South Dakota, Nevada
Mississippi, Wyoming, North Carolina, Kansas, South Carolina
Florida, Oregon, Virginia, New Mexico, Georgia
15-16 cents West Virginia, Colorado, Arizona, Indiana, Texas, Minnesota
16-17 cents Illinois, Alabama, Ohio, Delaware
17-19 cents Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Maryland, District of Columbia
19-24 cents Michigan, New Jersey, Vermont, New Hampshire, New York
25 Alaska
26.4 Maine
26.6 Massachusetts
28 Rhode Island
30.5 Connecticut
30.6 California
41.8 Hawaii
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places that push for more solar and wind have higher energy bills. Maryland, New Jersey, the entire RGGI, California.
Nope not true. Solar and wind cost less and their price increase. Electricity prices have gone up because of surging demand from data centers and rising prices of natural gas. Natural gas year to date is up 21%.
You have been told this before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-offer-three-hours-free-solar-per-day-millions-2025-11-04/
Australia generates too much electricity during peak times for solar. The huge increase in residential solar installations has created a record drop in demand during peak generation times. They hope this will shift how residential power use during the day.
Unlike here where we have to pay for data centers!
Australian has about the same land mass of America with 10% of the population.
Not gonna happen in the US.
Do you know how much empty land there is in the southwest/nevada/Utah?
It’s not “empty land”. Things live there. Plants and animals that are found nowhere else.
You think we should pave it over with solar panels and kill everything living there so you can charge your EV?
You can install solar over parking lots. If you installed solar over just large parking lot in the US you could generate 1,500 to 4,400 TWh. That would be about a 1/4 of the large parking lot in the US.
Panels made of toxic materials and REM’s mined by slaves and children. That’s the answer? And when they’re worn out in 20-30 years, they’re $$$$$$$$ to safely recycle because of the hazmats.
This is the solution?
Wrong on so many points.
1. Solar panels are not made of exotic toxic cocktails or “slave-mined” rare earth minerals.
Mainstream solar panels (over 95% of global production) are made of sand-derived silicon, aluminum frames, tempered glass, and small amounts of common metals (silver, copper).
Rare earth elements (REEs are different from “rare minerals”) are not used in standard silicon solar panels.
Thin-film panels use trace amounts of materials like cadmium telluride, but they are encapsulated and stable, not freely floating toxins.
The “slaves and children” claim is usually borrowed from cobalt mining narratives, but cobalt is used in some batteries, not in solar panels. The solar panel supply chain is well-documented and far less tied to conflict mining than fossil fuels.
2. Fossil fuel extraction is massively more toxic, destructive, and dangerous than solar manufacturing.
Oil and gas extraction releases benzene, methane, VOCs, radioactive brine, pipeline spills, refinery pollution, and thousands of premature deaths annually.
Coal ash ponds and oil spills dwarf the hazard profile of the solar industry by orders of magnitude.
Solar manufacturing has environmental impact, but fractional compared to the continuous toxic output of burning fossil fuels every single day.
3. Solar panel recycling is improving rapidly, and even today it is not "$$$$$$$$" to recycle.
Solar panels last 30–40+ years in real-world use, not 20.
They are mostly glass and aluminum, which are cheap to recycle.
Advanced recycling facilities (US, EU, Japan) recover:
95%+ of glass
99% of metals
As panel volume grows, recycling becomes even cheaper (just like metals or e-waste did).
Right now, many old panels are actually re-sold on secondary markets, not landfilled.
4. Solar already produces the cheapest power on Earth with the lowest environmental impact per kWh.
Solar has the lowest lifecycle emissions of any energy source, even lower than nuclear and wind.
Panels pay back their manufacturing energy in 1–2 years and then deliver 30–40 years of clean power.
Fossil fuels never pay back; they pollute more the longer you use them.
5. If "toxicity" is your concern, fossil fuels are the last thing you can defend.
Solar panels have:
No combustion
No particulate pollution
No continuous toxic byproducts
No tailpipe emissions
No spills, fracking contamination, or refinery carcinogens
Fossil fuels have all of those, continuously.
Bottom Line:
Solar panels aren’t made of rare earths, aren’t dependent on child labor, aren’t toxic time bombs, and aren’t hard to recycle. They’re mostly glass, aluminum, and silicon, and they replace the most harmful industrial system humans have ever created.
The “solar panels are toxic and un-recyclable” meme is simply fossil fuel propaganda, not based in science or fact.
Anonymous wrote:Places that push for more solar and wind have higher energy bills. Maryland, New Jersey, the entire RGGI, California.
Anonymous wrote:If solar is so cheap, stop the subsidies and mandates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-offer-three-hours-free-solar-per-day-millions-2025-11-04/
Australia generates too much electricity during peak times for solar. The huge increase in residential solar installations has created a record drop in demand during peak generation times. They hope this will shift how residential power use during the day.
Unlike here where we have to pay for data centers!
Australian has about the same land mass of America with 10% of the population.
Not gonna happen in the US.
Do you know how much empty land there is in the southwest/nevada/Utah?
Empty? Lots of animals call it home. It’s beauty. It’s nature. It’s pure. You see beauty and want to dumb billions of dollars worth of Chinese toxic solar panels on it? What is wrong with you?
President Donald Trump said his administration will not approve solar and wind projects.
Renewable executives say blocking solar and wind projects will worsen a power supply shortage, harming the grid and leading to higher prices.
The industry is facing difficulty getting permits, rising costs due to tariffs and the end of key tax credits.
President Donald Trump’s attack on solar and wind projects threatens to raise energy prices for consumers and undermine a stretched electric grid that’s already straining to meet rapidly growing demand, renewable energy executives warn.
Trump has long said wind power turbines are unattractive and endanger birds, and that solar installations take up too much land. This week, he said his administration will not approve solar and wind projects, the latest salvo in a campaign the president has waged against the renewable energy industry since taking office.
“We will not approve wind or farmer destroying Solar,” Trump posted on Truth Social Wednesday. “The days of stupidity are over in the USA!!!”
…
Choking off renewables will worsen a looming power supply shortage, harm the electric grid and lead to higher electricity prices for consumers
Anonymous wrote:If solar is so cheap, stop the subsidies and mandates.
Solar cost of electricity beats lowest-cost fossil fuel – even without tax credits
Lazard’s analysis of levelized cost of electricity across fuel types finds that new-build utility-scale solar, even without subsidy, is less costly than new build natural gas, and competes with already-operating gas plants.
Wind and Solar Energy Are Cheaper Than Electricity from Fossil-Fuel Plants
Even without subsidies, renewable energy is staying competitive with power from gas and coal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-offer-three-hours-free-solar-per-day-millions-2025-11-04/
Australia generates too much electricity during peak times for solar. The huge increase in residential solar installations has created a record drop in demand during peak generation times. They hope this will shift how residential power use during the day.
Unlike here where we have to pay for data centers!
Australian has about the same land mass of America with 10% of the population.
Not gonna happen in the US.
Do you know how much empty land there is in the southwest/nevada/Utah?
It’s not “empty land”. Things live there. Plants and animals that are found nowhere else.
You think we should pave it over with solar panels and kill everything living there so you can charge your EV?
You can install solar over parking lots. If you installed solar over just large parking lot in the US you could generate 1,500 to 4,400 TWh. That would be about a 1/4 of the large parking lot in the US.
Panels made of toxic materials and REM’s mined by slaves and children. That’s the answer? And when they’re worn out in 20-30 years, they’re $$$$$$$$ to safely recycle because of the hazmats.
This is the solution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-offer-three-hours-free-solar-per-day-millions-2025-11-04/
Australia generates too much electricity during peak times for solar. The huge increase in residential solar installations has created a record drop in demand during peak generation times. They hope this will shift how residential power use during the day.
Unlike here where we have to pay for data centers!
Australian has about the same land mass of America with 10% of the population.
Not gonna happen in the US.
Do you know how much empty land there is in the southwest/nevada/Utah?
It’s not “empty land”. Things live there. Plants and animals that are found nowhere else.
You think we should pave it over with solar panels and kill everything living there so you can charge your EV?
You can install solar over parking lots. If you installed solar over just large parking lot in the US you could generate 1,500 to 4,400 TWh. That would be about a 1/4 of the large parking lot in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even more wonderful than banning Candace. Two stars for Australia.
+1. They also had one mass shooting in the 1980s and had a huge gun buyback that worked well so that shootings there are now rare.
Not just a gun buy back but a conservative prime minister soon enacted stronger gun safety laws.