• DahGangalang@infosec.pub
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    23 hours ago

    renewable sources produced 33.8 percent of the world’s electricity last year, compared to 33 percent for coal.

    I mean, I’m all in for renewable energy and this does seem like an alright milestone, but that’s comparing one source (Coal) to at least two sources (Solar and Wind*).

    If we’re going to do that then I’d be more comfy when renewables cross the mark and beat out ALL fossil fuels generation and/or when one of Wind or Solar beats Coal.

    Also a little bothered that they don’t enumerate the remaining ~33% of power generation. It seems fair to assume its mostly other fossil fuels with a small but not quite negligible chunk for Nuclear?

    * = I assumed they would lump Hydro + Geothermal into “renewable”, but they only explicitly mention wind and solar

        • logi@piefed.world
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          16 hours ago

          That’s all just nuclear fission with more steps.

          Are there perhaps only two primary power sources: fission (in stars for now) and fusion (on Earth)?

            • logi@piefed.world
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              22 minutes ago

              Tidal is really feeding off the momentum of the planet, but yeah, that’s not nuclear.

              Potential energy… that’s more a storage medium.

              Perhaps we need to add the original energy of the big bang to nuclear. That threw things apart so they could have potential energy, and it gave a lot of matter a lot of momentum which gets topped up occasionally by a nuclear exploding star.

          • Egonallanon@feddit.uk
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            12 hours ago

            Other way around. Stars produce energy through nuclear fusion, nuclear reactors produce energy through fission.

            • Malgas@beehaw.org
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              4 hours ago

              And if we want to be really precise about where energy comes from, it’s worth noting that all elements heavier than hydrogen (i.e. all if them) are the result of stellar fusion. Up to iron in the main phase, and anything heavier in supernovae, neutron star mergers, and possibly other extremely violent events. So fission is extracting the stored energy of dead stars.

              Ultimately, it’s probably all just residual energy from the Big Bang.

    • morto@piefed.social
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      22 hours ago

      They also don’t show the actual numbers, so we don’t know if coal production had any reduction, or if renewables just grew faster. The rest of the article makes it seem like the latter