Lou_tribal
Guru
For your reading pleasure my TFers fellows
https://electrek.co/2018/01/12/large-tesla-ships-all-electric-barges/
L
https://electrek.co/2018/01/12/large-tesla-ships-all-electric-barges/
L
Or solar, wind, nuclear, tide turbine, waste burning, methanization of organic waste, various fuelcells, dams, and so on.Where is the electric power coming from to charge the battery packs? could it be fron fossil fuel powered electric plants?
Where is the electric power coming from to charge the battery packs? could it be fron fossil fuel powered electric plants?
It could be, although fossil fuel power stations are becoming a more of a rare commodity all the time in developed countries. The US may be the exception.
For your reading pleasure my TFers fellows
https://electrek.co/2018/01/12/large-tesla-ships-all-electric-barges/
L
Tom, your numbers are old, but your point is still valid.About 85% of Australia's power is generated by fossil fuels. Coal provides 73 and oil/natural gas 12%. Coal is the base load with natural gas used for peaking.
Hydro power provides about the same % as wind and solar combined in Australia. The coal fired plants could slowly be converted to natural gas, a move that requires combatting "NIMBY" types, expensive pipelines and/or LNG plants and transportation depots.
There is unfortunately much resistance to building or modifying power plants and infrastructure that could replace coal. The world's coal supplies are cheap and long lived. Australia is a major coal producer for worldwide power generation. China, India, Europe and Russia rely heavily on coal. This will not change soon.
In the world today, electric generation of hydro and PV combined, to the nearest whole number percentage is 0.
I live in BC.? Oodles of hydro too.Here it is 99%
L
Tom, your numbers are old, but your point is still valid.
In Australia in 2015, power generation was 32% coal, 38% oil, 24% gas, and 5.8% renewables. .
I got mine from the Australian government.Mike:
Good points, one thing to get sorted out though is % coal. My trade journal although a few years old "closely" match current data.
According to originenergy.com.au the breakdown for AU electrical generation is:
According to the AER government website there are similar numbers:
- Coal --- ----73%
- Gas ---- ----13%
- Hydro -- ----7%
- Wind---- ----4%
- Roof Solar --2%
- Other -------1%
It would be interesting to assess the numbers. Possibly yours reflect
- Black Coal ---- 55%
- Brown Coal --- 22%
- Gas ------------ 9%
- Hydro ---------- 8%
- Wind ------------5%
- Other ------------!%
cars, trucks, buses ships etc.
In the US most Rail Roads are diesel electric,
I got mine from the Australian government.
https://www.industry.gov.au/Office-...nts/aes/2016-australian-energy-statistics.pdf
By far, the biggest generator of electricity in South Australia is rooftop solar. This is is owned by individual homeowners and businesses, and now accounts for 48% of south Australia power generation.
I know nothing when it comes to propulsion, but isn’t one of the advantages of a diesel/electric system is the high torque available in an electric engine? I would think that would be one reason the railroads use them. For our boats, torque really isn’t much of an issue.
The power generation landscape is changing rapidly. The state of South Australia was almost completely dependent on coal fired power stations 20 years ago. They are now all shut down. It is unlikely there will ever be another coal fired power station built in the state.
There are now 17 wind farms with a total capacity of 1789 MW. Another 26 wind farms are under construction or on the drawing board. This will increase the generation capacity by another 2554 MW.
The total capacity of gas fired generation is 2027 MW.
There is currently only one major solar power station operating with a capacity of 100 MW.
By far, the biggest generator of electricity in South Australia is rooftop solar. This is is owned by individual homeowners and businesses, and now accounts for 48% of south Australia power generation.
Is it all a fad? It's not looking that way. Perhaps fossils fuels were a fad, and they've now gone out of style.
I don't think there is any chance to see this happening in my lifetime.High torque or low they can lose the diesel part and power the electric traction motors with battery and solar when the $$ and technology are reasonable. They could have battery RR cars that are changed out at regular stops, but at this time diesel electric is the best cost solution. My point is that we are getting closer all the time but not quite there yet.
Sounds like a good plan. I note a gas (fossil fuel) fired power plant is part of the battery storage development. With SA gas fields it should work well. The question as always is - will the rates and government ownership be good enough to attract and keep the big commercial enterprises?