Which Power Source Is Most Efficient?

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • Australian researchers just unveiled the most efficient solar panels ever. How efficient are they, and what is the most efficient source of energy?
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    Hydroelectric Power
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @BM-ud8uq
    @BM-ud8uq Před 7 lety +18

    While efficiency is certainly great, I think power density is going to matter more in the long run. It's great to have something that is efficient at converting one energy to another, but the amount of space we can devote to power plants is also a finite resource. This also has profound impacts on both ecology and commercial development.

  • @martinpieterse6470
    @martinpieterse6470 Před 8 lety +203

    Your efficiency equation is incorrect. It's energy out divided by energy in.

    • @radijsdude
      @radijsdude Před 7 lety +25

      his efficiency is 100% for everything...

    • @anjishnu8643
      @anjishnu8643 Před 6 lety +7

      Irrespective of whether efficiency is 1 or less than 1, the equation is fundamentally wrong. May confuse people new to the subject.

    • @Dhia_Hadhri
      @Dhia_Hadhri Před 5 lety

      THANK YOUU

    • @Mau365PP
      @Mau365PP Před 5 lety +3

      If I remember correctly
      Efficiency = Work(out)/Heat(in)
      It will always be less than one because you never use a 100% of the heat (for the power plant to work you always need to lose some heat in the process)

    • @roylopez235
      @roylopez235 Před 5 lety +5

      Everything is incorrect -this is one of those make-believe acts, with an specific agenda (green). Unfortunate (or fortunately depending how your view it), fossil fuels are cheaper and can be improved to more environmentally responsible (check this video to see the impact of solar and wind on the environment czcams.com/video/N-yALPEpV4w/video.html)

  • @SuperKillroy1
    @SuperKillroy1 Před 8 lety +34

    I don't pay a lot for sunshine, so I don't really care how efficient my panels are. I just care if I can get all the energy I need from the space on my roof and how much it costs per energy generated. So, efficiency is secondary.

    • @mikefranklin70
      @mikefranklin70 Před 4 lety +2

      Where did you get those free panels? So we can all get some!

    • @SuperKillroy1
      @SuperKillroy1 Před 4 lety +6

      @@mikefranklin70 , they are not cheap, but either is remodeling a bathroom. Yet, a nice new bathroom does not save me any money, but in California a solar energy system typically pays for itself in ~ 5 years. The more a heavy energy user the better for the return on investment.
      In the link below, it says that in California a typical savings over the life of the system is $73,000 www.solar-estimate.org/solar-panels/california?aff=4713&cam=45&gclid=CjwKCAjwp-X0BRAFEiwAheRui4pDyOGWXj9gHuRrrkURleTkZg_7064awjkpgPNpVIxQRs_43DtByhoC_u8QAvD_BwE

    • @beetlebuice8666
      @beetlebuice8666 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/Oa5mvmbxNio/video.html

    • @SuperKillroy1
      @SuperKillroy1 Před 3 lety

      @@beetlebuice8666 video removed for harassment

    • @beetlebuice8666
      @beetlebuice8666 Před 3 lety

      @@SuperKillroy1 yeah ik lmao

  • @AgentOracle
    @AgentOracle Před 6 lety +65

    Nuclear. No competition.
    There's too many reasons for me to type out here. But it is what I will passionately defend in person.

    • @shanekonarson
      @shanekonarson Před 5 lety +9

      AgentOracle if they ran a thorium reactor that would be ideal. The life span of the waste is significantly less then plutonium reactors.

    • @diannaskare7829
      @diannaskare7829 Před 4 lety +2

      Millions Of Gallons Of Toxic and Radioactive WASTE....Not an Option....billions of gallons of freshwater to produce...NOT AN OPTION!!!...Only Sustainable Energy...Geothermal in the USA would be Awesome, It has Very Good results so far!

    • @jhonfamo8412
      @jhonfamo8412 Před 4 lety +1

      @@shanekonarson upside is huge.

    • @laxmikukreja8786
      @laxmikukreja8786 Před 4 lety

      Bro
      Nuclear reactors produce a lot of radiations which harms human health

    • @melonshop8888
      @melonshop8888 Před 4 lety +2

      OUTER SPACE is NUCLEAR ENERGY. GOOD FOR NUCLEAR ENERGY. NUCLEAR NOT FOR EARTH.

  • @NiramBG
    @NiramBG Před 9 lety +177

    I'm still waiting on fusion reactors to come along and destroy the competition!

    • @darkheat246
      @darkheat246 Před 9 lety +3

      Sure let's make a sun that could collapse and become a white dwarf on earth said no one ever

    • @NiramBG
      @NiramBG Před 9 lety +37

      darkheat246
      yeah I think you took destroy too literally :D

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před 9 lety +30

      darkheat246 not sure if joking... or just stupid

    • @darkheat246
      @darkheat246 Před 9 lety +4

      *****​ I was kidding although imploding miniature star on your enemy would be epic

    • @cwjakesteel
      @cwjakesteel Před 9 lety +11

      darkheat246 Nah. Didn't you watch Spider-man 2? Just throw it in the ocean.

  • @candyazz28
    @candyazz28 Před 9 lety +380

    What about geothermal power like in Iceland?

    • @Seeker
      @Seeker  Před 9 lety +21

      We just decided to pick the top 5 for this video. If you want to learn more about it though, we covered it a few months ago here: czcams.com/video/aygNHYdv3dk/video.html

    • @candyazz28
      @candyazz28 Před 9 lety +7

      DNews
      Thank you thank you.

    • @marcelopacheco2479
      @marcelopacheco2479 Před 8 lety +15

      +TJ B Geothermal uses turbines too. Efficiency is a function of how hot steam enter the turbine. Geothermal typically captures heat deep underground.
      So total efficiency (considering heat at the capture point vs electricity produced) is likely in the 20-40% range.
      The other important aspect is usage of low pressure turbines. Those can increase efficiency by a third, but they cost a bundle and prevent the plant from doing load following.
      So it might make more sense to do geothermal without low pressure turbines as the fuel is free, just capture more heat and add another turbine if more power is needed.
      The other aspect not discussed is electrical losses. Nuclear and fossil plants usually are built fairly close to their intended consumers, to minimize electrical losses, while hydro plants (and geothermal) must be built where they can build the damn dam (or they have the high temperature vulcanic heat available). So while hydroelectric can convert up to 95% of mechanical energy into electricity, after 1000 miles of electrical lines that could loose another 20% or more of energy.
      My Brazil has the 2nd largest hydro electric dam in the world (Itaipu), with the biggest consumer of its energy 1000Km away. Other dams in Brazil have their primary consumer markets as far as 2500km away. But with the fuel being free and no CO2 emissions, hydro is still a good deal almost every time you can use it in large scales. Itaipu generates as much electricity as a half a dozen large nuclear reactors, and hydro can do load following, which allows solar and wind to be added to the grid without needing extra energy storage solutions.
      That is the biggest problem with solar and wind. Storage. With enough storage Hawaii and all other sunny islands could run 100% on a combination of solar+wind, but without storage that wouldn't work.
      I suggest looking into Tesla PowerPack and PowerWall.

    • @The1SimLash
      @The1SimLash Před 8 lety +4

      +TJ B energy.gov/energysaver/geothermal-heat-pumps
      These geothermal pumps have some crazy 300% efficiency, which doesn't even make sense to me. How could it be that efficient but it's not a common thing to homeowners?

    • @marcelopacheco2479
      @marcelopacheco2479 Před 8 lety +5

      Sim Lash Isn't that a heat pump ? That's not an energy source, but a electrical equipment (that consumes energy). Although it can pump 300% of the energy it consumes, its not "generating" energy.

  • @alexgood9397
    @alexgood9397 Před 9 lety

    Well that's kinda interesting! This defo helps with my homework. Cheers, DNews!

  • @teddybeyrouthy4995
    @teddybeyrouthy4995 Před 2 lety +16

    Okay so can you now describe to us the production costs of 1 MW of solar, taking into consideration the cost of panels and the weekly and costs of cleaning them so they can work efficiently. I think it would change a lot of opinions.

    • @noticedruid4985
      @noticedruid4985 Před 2 lety +3

      On top of that the life expectancy of Solar panels.

    • @mrxexes
      @mrxexes Před 9 měsíci +1

      Also solar, like wind turbines output is dependent on the weather conditions and light output from the sun. Taking all of that into consideration I declare nuclear power the true champion, the only thing is it needs to be reimagined and developed.

  • @skyearthocean5815
    @skyearthocean5815 Před 9 lety +10

    I highly encourage everyone to google space based solar. Without the atmosphere to filter it, the sun is much more intense in space, and it always shines. The technology to convert and beam the energy back to earth is safe and viable. Japan is investing 30 billion dollars into this and the rest of the world should too. Spread the word!

    • @ForestBeekeeper
      @ForestBeekeeper Před 9 lety

      Solar ranks with nuclear in terms of pollution. For each ton of heavy metal toxins produced as by-products from manufacturing, you can thousands of computers; Or 10 homes worth of solar panels. Thousands of computers is not a bad deal. But solar panels? Ouch.

    • @skyearthocean5815
      @skyearthocean5815 Před 9 lety

      Not sure what you are saying is 100% accurate. Also that is assuming photovoltaics. There are also technologies that use mirrors to concentrate light at one receptor, which can either use a smaller photovoltaic cell, or heat a fluid to generate power.

    • @skyearthocean5815
      @skyearthocean5815 Před 9 lety

      joecugo = troll I'll just disregard his stupidity and continue to try to have an intelligent conversations with others willing to have one.

    • @LeeeroyJenkems
      @LeeeroyJenkems Před 9 lety

      sounds like a pretty awesome weapon

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před 9 lety

      its an awesome idea, its perfect for when we manage to build a space elevator. but now, the maintenance cost is just too high. and most of the energy beamed to the earth is lost in the atmosphere, so even though its way better than harvesting on earth, in the end its inefficient because of the energy lost when trying to send it back to us.
      and there is some people that says that beaming the atmosphere with microwave is not that smart. in the 80's the USA and URSS made some experiments with climate control with huge antennas beaming radiation in the atmosphere... if it worked or not is conspiracy theory

  • @lzygenius
    @lzygenius Před 9 lety +175

    My favorite form of power generation is nuclear. Recently I've been very intrigued by thorium reactors.

    • @RGplayer101
      @RGplayer101 Před 9 lety +10

      try to convince people to do THAT. with the stigma about nuclear energy I think people would not like it a lot.

    • @ViolentKisses87
      @ViolentKisses87 Před 9 lety +24

      I like nuclear. quite a lot in fact.

    • @RGplayer101
      @RGplayer101 Před 9 lety +1

      well you're one of the few

    • @Azurren
      @Azurren Před 9 lety +12

      RGplayer101 I think you'd be hard pressed to find a DNews viewer who dislikes Nuclear power ;)

    • @japzone
      @japzone Před 9 lety +20

      RGplayer101 Thorium reactors are way more efficient and safer than currently used reactors. In fact the US invented them years ago, but since it was during the cold war it was dumped because it couldn't be used to make nuclear weapons. But today that con is now a plus with all the paranoia surrounding nuclear weapons. Also Thorium MSR reactors can't melt down or explode, and they can even run off of nuclear waste, reducing the amount and lifespan of the leftovers.

  • @cutegamerboy
    @cutegamerboy Před 6 lety +2

    I enjoy that these aren’t too long and drawn out

  • @saulsolache2039
    @saulsolache2039 Před 6 lety

    thank you. i appreciate the tips and time you take to create videos.

  • @TheDutchMitchell
    @TheDutchMitchell Před 9 lety +2

    I am a 2nd year chemistry student. At school I once made a polymer film with an Europium complex. I placed that on top of a solar cell and the efficiency went about 2-4% up. It's very fun to do and easy as well. Sadly Europium is very rare and costs a lot of money.

  • @vottoduder
    @vottoduder Před 7 lety +36

    I am all for solar/wind energy. But if our energy bill goes from $200/month to $1000/month, we wouldnt be able to make that work. If someone is able to make solar/wind energy worth the cost, then you wont have to convince us of anything. We would gladly use it.

    • @brynphillips9957
      @brynphillips9957 Před 7 lety +2

      Solar power is already reaching cost parody with fossil fuels, particularly as the more easily accessed fossil fuels are getting harder to dig up, the fossil fuel infrastructure is aging and the price and efficiency of Solar continues to drop. Many large scale electronics companies have in the last few years discovered that much of their assembly lines can be easily refitted to mass produce solar panels. This, combined with constant technological improvements mean that if it keeps to the current trend the only thing that will make fossil fuels competitive with solar cost wise in a few years time will be tax breaks and government regulation.

    • @vottoduder
      @vottoduder Před 7 lety

      Bryn Phillips Well, I havent noticed a price drop in solar energy. But I hope you are right.

    • @ronpaulrevered
      @ronpaulrevered Před 7 lety +1

      I have surely noticed a price drop in fossil fuels in the past 10 years as a result of fracking.

    • @vottoduder
      @vottoduder Před 7 lety

      RonPaul Revered Which is awesome! I love it.

    • @ronpaulrevered
      @ronpaulrevered Před 7 lety

      vottoduder Me too!

  • @MarinelliBrosPodcast
    @MarinelliBrosPodcast Před 3 lety +5

    There is a reason Canadas two main energy sources are Hydro and Nuclear, even though we have tons of oil.

    • @torum6448
      @torum6448 Před 2 lety

      Yes, nuclear and hydro are the only way you are every going to accommodate a growing population that is becoming increasingly dependent on electricity.

  • @1arritechno
    @1arritechno Před 5 lety +22

    Solar and Wind related Energy is too intermittent & unreliable to be factored in as base load ; it's too inefficient on the Grid.
    Power Factor Correction and Sine Wave Stability are problems that "renewable energy supporters" tend to ignore...

    • @AndyLowe-net
      @AndyLowe-net Před 4 lety +1

      I think if we can split an atom then we can solve the aforementioned problems if we put our minds to it. Or are you defeatist on the issue

    • @mikefranklin70
      @mikefranklin70 Před 4 lety +4

      @@AndyLowe-net I dont think you understand what hes talking about. Its the nature of electricity and how it has to be transmitted. Its like saying "since we know how to split an atom, we should be able to make up the new down!"

  • @songsofnk1978
    @songsofnk1978 Před 3 lety +33

    Hydro power the best ( cheap, effecient , " 95%" and mass production of energy , also cost effective

    • @joshswanson4719
      @joshswanson4719 Před 3 lety +10

      Hydro is great but most of the ideal locations for dams are already used

    • @mikesch2922
      @mikesch2922 Před 3 lety +7

      I think hydro works at night too. so 95% 100% of the time

    • @drewp.weiner2473
      @drewp.weiner2473 Před 3 lety +13

      Nuclear is superior

    • @khadija2739
      @khadija2739 Před 3 lety +5

      @@joshswanson4719 dam it
      Sorry

    • @uncensored1409
      @uncensored1409 Před 3 lety +5

      Exactly but how to produce hydro in the middle of dessert

  • @ReevansElectro
    @ReevansElectro Před 7 lety +20

    There is something fishy in your efficiency formula at 1:23 in the video. Efficiency = Pout / Pin = Pout / (Pout + losses) = (Pin - losses) / Pin where Losses are heat and noise.

  • @alphaknight8441
    @alphaknight8441 Před 6 lety

    @Seeker I am pretty sure that you calculations are incorrect. As far as I know, efficiency is output power divided by input power. So in case of Power plants that would be total electricity generated in watts divided by total energy fed to the turbines in watts.
    Do Correct me if I'm wrong.

  • @kevinalone
    @kevinalone Před 7 lety +1

    Hey DNews, I'm writing my thesis about energy efficiency and I'd very much appreciate if you could share the sources of those numbers. Thanks!

  • @scotthix2926
    @scotthix2926 Před 7 lety +10

    You forgot gas turbine-steam power-plants which run about 61% efficient. A gas turbine runs at approx 33%. then the exhaust heat is used to make steam for a steam turbine.

    • @mukhzinrashid5462
      @mukhzinrashid5462 Před 6 lety +1

      Steve b, lol scott was right. Scott was describing "combined cycle". Steam and gas turbine are not the same dude. And when you combined both, efficiency of the plant increase. Haha calling people dumbass when you were ignorant in the first place😂

  • @crafter2u
    @crafter2u Před 7 lety +70

    2 years later and still not on the market

    • @tuele4302
      @tuele4302 Před 6 lety +4

      Commercialization takes time.

    • @Snipergoat1
      @Snipergoat1 Před 6 lety +7

      They are very expensive and more prone to breakdown than standard solar cells.

    • @shanekonarson
      @shanekonarson Před 5 lety +3

      The Australian govt cut all funding to the CSIRO most Australian scientists head OS and take their inventions and knowledge with them .

    • @AMXM-do5kw
      @AMXM-do5kw Před 3 lety +1

      6 years later

    • @dhanushsai396
      @dhanushsai396 Před 3 lety +1

      6 years later

  • @murrayvonmises
    @murrayvonmises Před 9 lety

    Great video.
    and especially compared to your newer ones

  • @alejandrayalanbowman367

    When the weather is right we use solar power to heat our hot water. For heating the house we use a log burner to burn the prunings from the olive groves which have to be burnt to stop the spread of pests and diseases. They used to be burnt in situ on the hillsides resulting in a lot of smoke particulates (low temperature burn) but by burning them in the logburner, we achieve much higher temperatures ensuring that the smoke particulates are burnt giving very little smoke at all.

  • @evangangle3192
    @evangangle3192 Před 7 lety +20

    you can't compare nuclear to the rest of the energy sources because of its much higher capacity factor.

    • @throbbingshaft
      @throbbingshaft Před 4 lety +3

      Evan Gangle it’s so much better. Yet the USA funds wind.

    • @beetlebuice8666
      @beetlebuice8666 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/Oa5mvmbxNio/video.html

  • @DakuHonoo
    @DakuHonoo Před 9 lety +13

    you couldn't compare solar panels to nuclear power plants even if solar had 90% effi and the nuclear had 20% ... the amount of energy easily obtainable from nuclear reactions is simply overwhelming

    • @ForestBeekeeper
      @ForestBeekeeper Před 9 lety +7

      And nuclear creates much less pollution, as compared to solar panels.

    • @hiddenfog180
      @hiddenfog180 Před 9 lety

      When you're talking about percentages, the efficiency of nuclear plants is greatly misleading. Get enough solar panels, and you can produce just as much energy as a nuclear plant, and at a much lower risk.

    • @ForestBeekeeper
      @ForestBeekeeper Před 9 lety +8

      Lower risk? 10X the radioactive heavy metals toxic waste, is lower risk?

    • @hiddenfog180
      @hiddenfog180 Před 9 lety +6

      ForestBeekeeper Name just one incident where solar panels lead to a pseudo-Chernobyl, then come back here.

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 Před 9 lety

      hiddenfog180
      Not sure the amount of energy from the sun hitting the Earth is enough to support human consumption, no matter the panels' efficiency.

  • @n4rzul
    @n4rzul Před 9 lety +1

    I just have to say this. Trace you are awesome. Love your style of presentation.

  • @kalykalypso
    @kalykalypso Před 6 lety

    Great video loved it

  • @stefans4562
    @stefans4562 Před 9 lety +9

    in Germany heat from power plants is used for heating private houses. the Audi facilities in Ingolstadt are heated using 'waste' heat from a nearby power plant... which is a trash burning power plant

    • @darkheat246
      @darkheat246 Před 9 lety

      In germany there's no AC and everyone has to pay for crazy oil prices and electricity just to keep their homes warm and running

    • @stefans4562
      @stefans4562 Před 9 lety +4

      which is good for the Environment... it makes People think twice before wasting energy and oil.
      and actually Prices are quite ok. everyone complains about them but that's everywhere the same.
      and People who can't afford it get help from the state.

    • @darkheat246
      @darkheat246 Před 9 lety

      Stefan Sierraoneoneseven true I just feel spoiled from living in America after bring being in Germany for 2 years now some centralized air wouldn't kill anyone.

    • @symbolxchannel
      @symbolxchannel Před 9 lety

      In Québec, we have no need to use polluting energy sources… It's all hydroelectricity! :D

    • @emp0leontrainer
      @emp0leontrainer Před 9 lety +1

      SymbolX that's because Quebec is loaded with rivers and lakes... Not every place is so lucky

  • @ZeroKami86
    @ZeroKami86 Před 9 lety +10

    How much energy (from coal/nuclear) did it take to create those panels? Because I'm pretty sure they didn't include that in their efficiency ratings.

    • @BradSk88
      @BradSk88 Před 9 lety +10

      True. But if you have to spend $10000 on a money generator that gives you $1 a day, by the 10001st day you'll be making pure profit.
      Same story here.

    • @F3lken
      @F3lken Před 9 lety +2

      its not like they made those Specifically to create solar panels and seeing as they already exist obviously they will be used as they are the most common, SO OBVIOUSLY once there starts to be more solar plants produced you can move away from fossil fuels etc and eventually wipe them out and operate more on solar than others which in turn will produce more energy to make more solar Cleanly with solar energy so, NOT A GOOD POINT AT ALL!!!

    • @seanbouker
      @seanbouker Před 9 lety

      Now i'm just spitballing ideas here, commercial buildings are great candidates for solar. How much energy does it take to create a gallon of tight oil? Or to extract coal? day after day with no change in end results?

    • @jcstoner
      @jcstoner Před 9 lety

      Same can be said for the coal plants and nuclear plants.

    • @Rem_NL
      @Rem_NL Před 9 lety

      This comment makes 0 sense.

  • @visibletoonlyyoutubeusers9574

    You did not mention transmission losses. Also , dams built for hydro power create reservoirs , which in turn release a huge amount of greenhouse gases (methane from rotting vegetation ) in the long run . You could make a video on the pros and cons of Thorium Molten Salt Nuclear reactors .

  • @OldieBugger
    @OldieBugger Před 7 lety +1

    Another thing concerning the energy efficiency: you should also add the (energy) cost of producing of the equipment to the equation, as well as the maintenance requirements.

    • @mugishagabriel437
      @mugishagabriel437 Před 2 lety

      well it's the equipment and maintenance of the everyday power generation is expensive too. that's why you pay bills

  • @MeepMeep88
    @MeepMeep88 Před 7 lety +256

    Aaaaand cost of production not mentioned... As always

    • @spacedoohicky
      @spacedoohicky Před 7 lety +22

      Doesn't that decrease with solar over time compared to coal as solar panels only need to be manufactured once while coal has to be constantly mined.

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 Před 7 lety +18

      spacedoohicky
      But if something cost millions of dollars, how many years will it take to make back that 1 million dollars? Will it last before it gets paid off?
      Those are the questions I want to know also

    • @spacedoohicky
      @spacedoohicky Před 7 lety +14

      Candi Soda For a personal installation in 2009 it averages 15 years for a return on investment. Solar panels are cheaper now. So maybe 15 years would be a conservative estimate for paying back the entire cost of a solar plant. So basically solar panels cost less than zero dollars after ~15 years of usage. There's quite a few sites that have info about this. You should look at it yourself. I'm probably a bit off on my numbers because I haven't researched it myself in years. I'd think with this new tech the returns could be much greater. Personal installations are probably better than a plant because of resistance, but a plant is probably more easily maintained.
      As far as lifespan here's this www.engineering.com/ElectronicsDesign/ElectronicsDesignArticles/ArticleID/7475/What-Is-the-Lifespan-of-a-Solar-Panel.aspx
      I think that beats millions of dollars spent on coal that has maybe around 20% returns on investment because of mining, transportation of materials, heat loss, and more up down price fluctuation over time. In contrast to solar panels which cost about ~15-30% of what they did in the 1990s at initial cost.

    • @MeepMeep88
      @MeepMeep88 Před 7 lety +7

      THANK YOU!
      Read it, that's interesting stuff

    • @spacedoohicky
      @spacedoohicky Před 7 lety +2

      Candi Soda Sure. Like I said I'm probably off on some of my numbers because my info is from around 2009. The link is relevant though.
      Solar tech is an interesting thing. Being that in some cases it has a more that 100% return on investment which is unlike other energy tech. Wind is close, but it requires far more maintenance, and is more prohibitive for personal installations.

  • @roknor
    @roknor Před 7 lety +3

    I heard Co-gens were 80% efficient. I would be interested if you did a comparison of $/KW-hr over say 5, 10, 20 years of the project. To make it fair all costs would have to be included.

  • @WolfGamerBohumin
    @WolfGamerBohumin Před 7 lety

    Could you compare power source by energy produced during their lifetime vs energy needed to manufacture, maintain and dispose them, please?

  • @TheFearsomeSnyder
    @TheFearsomeSnyder Před 9 lety

    the "increase in efficiency" of a classic coal/fuel burning plant is usually achieved by using combined cycle installations, as explained here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_cycle. This leads to an increased efficiency, up to 50-60%. many (modern) plants reach these numbers. The numbers in the video may apply to 'most' powerplants, or most in America only, but certainly not to newer ones. Many nuclear power plants have been outfitted with CC turbines and get much higher efficiencies

  • @xskugga
    @xskugga Před 9 lety +9

    Nuclear power is best. We just need to figure out more advanced methods as well as figure out how to dispose of the waste properly, then it's all up to good regulation to keep it safe. Wind and solar just aren't that good, but they should definitely replace coal burning factories.

    • @ThinkBeyondOrdinary
      @ThinkBeyondOrdinary Před 9 lety +1

      "We just need to figure out more advanced methods as well as figure out how to dispose of the waste properly(...)".
      Well, you just said why many people think that nuclear isn't the best. At least, right now. If those problems are solved, *then*, yeah, it would be the best by far. Maybe if the nuclear fusion reactor becomes a reality.
      Until then... Not really. Nuclear waste is a really, really, reaaly big problem.

    • @jorgeasalas
      @jorgeasalas Před 9 lety

      But the future is energy produced at home. While nuclear energy is promising, solar energy could allow free power anywhere

    • @Neeboopsh
      @Neeboopsh Před 9 lety +1

      Yeah, but the research into nuclear seems to be making headway. More research is surely needed but with large projects like HIPER and the NIF, as well as lockheed's project to make a 100mw reactor in a few years, and material advances that may make molten salt reactors (thorium/uranium) a reality, they dwarf the energy you can make from a chemical process. orders of magnitude. you can call something 90% efficient, but if its from molecular sources, or the force carrier photons of the EM spectrum you're still way off from the strong nuclear force's raw dominance. molten salt looked like a stop gap until fusion, and to many still does, but if lockheed follows its schedule even approximately it may not be the case

    • @mrcalzon02
      @mrcalzon02 Před 9 lety +2

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_fluoride_thorium_reactor there are others as well, Loads of people just Freak at any mention of Reactors. don't take my word for it! ted talks Feature many Brilliant Folks in the field talking about them, and many other Great solutions.

    • @RottenDC1
      @RottenDC1 Před 9 lety

      nuclear fission and nuclear fusion are two different things. nuclear fusion only produces energy and helium. there is no uranium involved and therefore no nuclear waste.

  • @TechNick94
    @TechNick94 Před 9 lety +267

    Nuclear is safe and efficient, Hydroelectric is extremely efficient, Coal is cheap and inefficient, Solar is not cheap and requires large tracks of land and the glass is not easy or very green to make, wind is inconsistent
    Go Nuclear and Hydroelectric

    • @TechNick94
      @TechNick94 Před 9 lety +15

      Solinium Pulse They are only at that efficiency if they are tracking the sun. So depends on how the roof is angled, its about a third to two thirds as efficient. Still in places like deserts where they have the land and minimal clouds it would be very effective.

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 Před 9 lety +1

      Solinium Pulse
      I'm not sure the amount of energy humans use is equal to the amount of energy the sun sends to the Earth. I've heard people saying its not enough.

    • @CrythornMadness
      @CrythornMadness Před 9 lety +5

      Solinium Pulse the power needed just to boil a kettle. erm no roof solar panels wont save bollocks all, it may help lower your bills... eventually after you paid off the panels with the electric it has generated, sure... but again japan 1/3 or higher have roof panels, still needs nuclear in a big way (1 or 2 plants down and rolling black outs, enough said)

    • @TechNick94
      @TechNick94 Před 9 lety +4

      Solinium Pulse Efficiency is key, but it still requires a larger area than say Nuclear which gets a bad rep. Solar is a good idea but it is not the end all be all. We will always need a combination but coal should be replaced

    • @TechNick94
      @TechNick94 Před 9 lety +4

      Solinium Pulse Nuclear should replace coal. Hydro followed by wind/solar should supplement.

  • @itscomingoutofbothends8385

    In the late winter (late July to mid august) I still find that my Indian/Thai/F&C/Maccas/KFC diet is enough to warm the doona.
    Maybe it;s just me getting high on my own supply and not feeling the cold though one to watch.
    I have a small scale ~200W (~50 fans total and growing) wind power setup along the back and side fence lines + shed roof using recycled 120/140mm/180mm PC fans.
    I replaced the motors with (inner) clear PVC perspex and insterted 0.5mm notches notches inserted that sit ~2mm above flush and (outer) microfibre nylon bristle wheel.

  • @DennisComella
    @DennisComella Před 9 lety

    Efficiency isn't the only factor to consider. You also have to consider initial cost (high for solar panels), total capacity, whether it's renewable, reliability, safety... I'm sure there's more!

  • @huntera123
    @huntera123 Před 3 lety +3

    If hype about so-called "renewables" could turned into power, we could power the entire galaxy.

  • @philheaton1619
    @philheaton1619 Před 7 lety +7

    What are the costs involved?

    • @hithere7433
      @hithere7433 Před 7 lety +6

      This is a great question. The benefits alone aren't enough to estimate value.

    • @cestarianinhabitant5898
      @cestarianinhabitant5898 Před 6 lety +1

      Maintenance and replacing broken panels is bound to cost some, no such thing as forever.

  • @Chesstastic5000
    @Chesstastic5000 Před 9 lety

    Question, What are the costs predicted for this new solar energy? What is the cost per energy obtained in relation to other sources of energy?

  • @tonylarose4842
    @tonylarose4842 Před 9 lety +1

    There are wind turbines being tested that instead of just off a tower it actually is full of helium (or something else) and floats in the sky much higher than any other sort of turbine (was even featured in big hero 6) so not sure if it is more efficient or not but putting it out there

  • @aeolisticwill
    @aeolisticwill Před 9 lety +9

    All forms of clean energy have strengths and weaknesses, and the efficiency of any single method isn't relevant. The only factor that’s relevant, is what method is most practical in the environment it will be used in. I.E. how much wind, sun, hydro, thermal geographic access is there. Nuclear plants need reasonably isolated stable land in close proximity to a metropolitan area. And wind and solar work best if you put little bits of it everywhere and connect it to storage facilities as part of a smart grid. Window treatment, photoelectric paint, rooftop arrays, it all adds up. Corporations don't want to put money in the decentralized approach, because you can't easily bottle it up to sell.
    Here’s an idea, put together these new PV cells with Airlight Energy’s Dsolar dish, that uses a water cooling technology developed by IBM to use sea water to cool CPV’s. Put these dishes on coastal deserts to use the heated sea water from cooling the cells to start the desalination process and run pumps to flood large areas of desert with the brackish water. Then use aquatic plants and microorganisms to further clean the water so they can support tasty fish. Terraforming that produces energy neutral food, is good no?

    • @kylemccarter4211
      @kylemccarter4211 Před 9 lety +2

      That a good idea, I would like to talk about it more if your interested.
      P.S. have your heard of L.F.T.R? (check out my comment above)

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před 9 lety +2

      that is a really awesome idea, its something that would work really well here in brazil

    • @russellhess
      @russellhess Před 3 lety

      Sounds like it would pretty much destroy the desert ecosystem where it is located. We have a tendency to think there is nothing going on in the desert, but I bet there actually is.

  • @betterthenspirit
    @betterthenspirit Před 3 lety +4

    goverments reacting to nuclear fuel: *fwhauisghewaiurhvuiseufghseyuigyseghyuhdf*
    goverments reacting to fossil fuels: *STONKS*
    nuclear fuel is the most cleanest way to produce energy so its kinda funny

  • @steveberger1849
    @steveberger1849 Před 7 lety

    Thank you for your reply. The issue with fire is one of viewpoint. When we say burn, we generally mean burn with oxygen. Many things burn with oxygen. No oxygen, no burn. But, when we see something burning, we see fire and fuel, not the invisible oxygen that is causing the burning. People miss this because oxygen is invisible. So, while coal is the result of ancient photosynthesis. The oxygen actually being burnt is the result of recent photosynthesis.

  • @robhwren
    @robhwren Před 7 lety +1

    It would be cool to see the efficiency%/dollar comparison on video

  • @lavabeard5939
    @lavabeard5939 Před 7 lety +80

    Talking about efficiency between radically different forms of production is ridiculous. Wind efficiency vs solar efficiency is not comparable in the slightest... you might as well talk about return on investment rather than literal efficiency, because there is no basis to compare a quantity of fossil fuels to a quantity of solar light.

    • @dickhamilton3517
      @dickhamilton3517 Před 7 lety +13

      wrong. efficiency is thermodynamic efficiency = (energy output) / (available energy at input), and you can work it out for any kind of energy transforming process, even your muscles, your body, you. Coal has a certain amount of energy per ton (unit weight) locked up in it - burn a ton, boil water, put the steam through a turbine and turn a generator to produce electricity, run the electric through a heating element - how much heat did you get? And sunlight has a certain amount of energy per unit collection area, and you can do the same kind of calculation. The result is a dimensionless number > 0, but < 1 in both cases, and directly comparable.

    • @lavabeard5939
      @lavabeard5939 Před 7 lety +10

      That is only technically true though, it doesn't actually address the economic viability of solar. There are mountains of costs associated with converting any energy, and these costs are not equal across methods, so speaking of efficiency is a moot point.

    • @dickhamilton3517
      @dickhamilton3517 Před 7 lety +10

      look Jacob - the title of the video... We're not talking about cost, or
      cost-efficiency or whether a thing is affordable or
      "economically-viable" or economic. That's another subject entirely. You
      want to talk about those, fine, but that's not the topic here.
      The efficiency of basic Si solar cells has hardly changed in the last 30 years - the cheapest cells have improved from 12 to 15% overall conversion efficiency. But the cost has reduced by hundreds of times. Utility solar electricity is now cheaper than generation from coal per MWh, or around 3.8c/kWh, and getting cheaper.

    • @lavabeard5939
      @lavabeard5939 Před 7 lety +7

      This video has a political angle, people are going to take from this that solar is more efficient and people will come up with conspiracy theories about why we're this magical technology isn't widespread

    • @dickhamilton3517
      @dickhamilton3517 Před 7 lety +9

      nonsense, Jacob. There's no politics here. Words have meanings, not just what you want them to mean. 'Efficient' has a very definite meaning. It's completely quantitative - not some qualitative hand-waving. Solar is potentially much more efficient as a means of generation of electricity, AND more cost-efficient - Trace tells you what's lost in turning heat from burning coal into electricity. None of that long chain happens with solar. The laws of thermodynamics tell you that coalfire->steam->alternator just cannot be made to be very efficient - it has too many steps. And, capping it all, with solar, the source energy falls on you out of the sky - you don't have to dig it out of the ground, or transport it to the point where you will convert it into electric - these two are the primary cost of coal, and they _don't happen at all_ with solar - the energy comes to you, wherever you are.
      This 'magical technology' is becoming more widespread with every day that passes - it's been held up by vested interests far too long - there's your only 'conspiracy', if you insist on finding one. And it's attracting much of the available investment, along with windpower, which at present is the cheapest source of bulk electricity ever - nobody is going to be building new coal-fired power plants, in fact they are shutting them down as fast as they can bring alternatives on-stream. E.G. the chinese have decided not to build dozens of plants they planned for 10 years ago.

  • @bilbo_gamers6417
    @bilbo_gamers6417 Před 7 lety +12

    HydroElectric, Geothermal, Nuclear, and Solar energy are obviously more efficient.

    • @bilbo_gamers6417
      @bilbo_gamers6417 Před 7 lety +2

      Than any combustion engine.

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 7 lety

      Efficient, yes. Reliable, no.

    • @josemadureri3254
      @josemadureri3254 Před 7 lety +7

      Well the nuclear energy is very reliable

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 7 lety

      jose madureri Reliable yes, but not very reliable. It takes longer to turn it on an off than a fossil fuel power plant.

    • @howardbaxter2514
      @howardbaxter2514 Před 7 lety +4

      Schwarzer Ritter yeah 6-8 weeks for outages. However assuming everything goes to plan it will run for 18 months. Multiple nuclear reactors are the best because a nuclear power plant is constantly providing energy. Also, nuclear doesn't have the limitations of solar or wind with the fact that wind stops and it is not always day, because you can't stop radioactive decay.

  • @georgiamathews1711
    @georgiamathews1711 Před 6 lety

    We always have high winds where I live so I think it makes sense to harness that energy as soon as scientists and engineers can get closer to 100% efficiency.

    • @throbbingshaft
      @throbbingshaft Před 4 lety

      Georgia Mathews hot every spot In the world does though.

  • @narfen20
    @narfen20 Před 7 lety +2

    i was hoping for a video wich way was most efficient financially

  • @123476565656
    @123476565656 Před 3 lety +3

    It's great that hydroelectric is efficient, but it also has ecological impacts in the rivers that it's in. This also didn't factor in any pollution created in making any of these. There are a lot more factors to think about than just efficiency when deciding upon one.

  • @larsiparsii
    @larsiparsii Před 9 lety +9

    I'm pretty proud to say that 99 % of norway's power comes from water! ^_^

    • @XGMoney93
      @XGMoney93 Před 9 lety +1

      what's a norway?

    • @shanimzy9749
      @shanimzy9749 Před 9 lety +4

      Norway has super good recycling system as well, right? You all seem to be ahead....In good areas....

    • @TVjoakim
      @TVjoakim Před 9 lety +1

      XGMoney93 Norway is a country. I am really hoping you are joking with that question.

    • @imonsulpher7364
      @imonsulpher7364 Před 9 lety +1

      To bad the acid rain from Germany's pollution is fucking up your fish life though...

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 9 lety +1

      Yeah, I'm already envious enough of Norwegians, no need to rub that in as well. Fucking number 1 HDI in the world for years..... it's not fair, why should only norwegians be happy :(

  • @MoJoM0J01
    @MoJoM0J01 Před 7 lety

    I am curious as to how the effeciency of solar is measured in this video? Are you referring to the energy that is transmitted to the grid vs energy wasted due to heating of the turbine etc.
    Burnt coal stays chemically changed, however wind that is not captured stays in motion.

  • @extremetaz
    @extremetaz Před 9 lety

    Curious - are those efficiency figures inclusive of fuel extraction, refinement & transport?
    If so can you cite a reference as that the sort of data I'd really like to get a look at.

    • @extremetaz
      @extremetaz Před 9 lety

      found the refence material [facepalm] - cheers.

  • @jamiecourtney730
    @jamiecourtney730 Před 9 lety +48

    The only problem with hydroelectricity is that it harms marine life!!

    • @someone-cs3lk
      @someone-cs3lk Před 9 lety +20

      FUCK THE MARINE LIFE!!!

    • @jamiecourtney730
      @jamiecourtney730 Před 9 lety +13

      ***** IF YOURE OKAY WITH THE RIPPLE EFFECTS OF RUINING EVERY OTHER ECOSYSTEM then ok

    • @someone-cs3lk
      @someone-cs3lk Před 9 lety +4

      Jamie Courtney
      YOLO

    • @deannasmith4443
      @deannasmith4443 Před 9 lety +7

      actually, with modern fish ladders, this is not a problem.

    • @jamiecourtney730
      @jamiecourtney730 Před 9 lety

      deanna smith wouldn't that only help with salmon and other fish that jump? or is it every fish's natural instinct to propel its body upwards?

  • @Juxtavarious
    @Juxtavarious Před 9 lety +3

    I always get mixed feedback on solar power. I hear that it's either super efficient and Germany is 100% solar power and they make so much that they have to pay other countries to take it off their hands so their plants won't melt down or it's such a colossal failure that Germany is going into deeper debt to bring in power from surrounding countries.

    • @MegaBlueT
      @MegaBlueT Před 9 lety

      Unless Germans want to pay more for their electric bills, keeping Germany off of nuclear power is unsustainable.

    • @MikkoHaavisto1
      @MikkoHaavisto1 Před 9 lety +5

      Juxtavarious Germany's energy produced is just 25% renewables. Solar power is just 4% of the energy. They could have moved away from coal and oil in a much faster way if they increased nuclear power alongside renewables.

    • @mage1over137
      @mage1over137 Před 9 lety +1

      Well that's because people have no idea what they talking about. Solar is good but has it's downsides, just like wind and nuclear. Germany Solar program does not make 100% of there power, but has been seen more successful than anticipated.

  • @tracyofbg
    @tracyofbg Před 7 lety

    Solar/battery combo and localized maybe the best bet with grid providing backup. Grid can be complemented with other renewable sources that are dispersed in such a way that the average is maintained.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +tracyofbg Grid networked solar only works if there is someone to use the un-necessarily power and load following production to buy from when power is needed hence non load following production such as solar and wind can not exceed a certain percentage of a grid's power production often referred to as the base load without the grid becoming unstable. Hawaii is already at it's estimated max for solar photovoltaics. Wind power is using weather forecasting to argue for exceeding the base load production but that would be based on probabilities. Energy trading between grid's can further extend the safe limit but if you want more solar and wind you need to add load following production such as hydro or molten salt nuclear reactors, current solid fuel rod reactors are not load following and both natural gas and coal are slow at load following with natural gas being much better than coal but the latency of natural gas and coal load following can be handled with current energy trading and or over production practices.

    • @tracyofbg
      @tracyofbg Před 7 lety

      John Wang thanks. My thinking was that battery storage combined with solar can be used to level demand vs production. The wind generated power when is coming from vastly dispersed sites as opposed to concentrated from one site can be predicted in terms of average output. The argument against wind is mostly to do with weather, which is valid for a single location, but when all locations are taken into account for a single grid, then the picture is different. What remains is smarter infrastructure and management of providing the rest of the output by other means.

  • @jackjohnson9954
    @jackjohnson9954 Před 7 lety

    How much embodied energy is needed to produce the panels/wind turbines? Could you do a study that takes embodied energy into account.

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    Geothermal energy!

    • @JonathanRivard-REMAX
      @JonathanRivard-REMAX Před 9 lety +2

      Permanent perpetual battery combined with heavy duty capacitors... and why not add a Tesla Coil System for intake!!!

    • @ionmurgu783
      @ionmurgu783 Před 9 lety

      "The Well of Life" by Ion Murgu Cleveland will be, wait for USPTO To publish second Apllication for The Well of Life

    • @taajman1559
      @taajman1559 Před 6 lety +3

      Not every place has access to geothermal energy. Iceland would be great though.

    • @canadiannuclearman
      @canadiannuclearman Před 5 lety +2

      it depends on where you are
      iceland ok.

  • @troypetryk2043
    @troypetryk2043 Před 7 lety +10

    I live in Manitoba and hydro is the best

    • @troypetryk2043
      @troypetryk2043 Před 7 lety +3

      But it requires a specific type of terrain

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před 7 lety +1

      Troy Petryk the issue is dams damage the natural course of the river hurting fish
      Also sediment build up along the dam. lots of environmental issues.

    • @thecauseandfx
      @thecauseandfx Před 7 lety

      MB has great wind power potential.

    • @danni8191
      @danni8191 Před 7 lety

      Robert Schuster none of that is true.

    • @thewesternreport2654
      @thewesternreport2654 Před 6 lety

      Hey i live in manitoba too

  • @Dayman.
    @Dayman. Před 7 lety

    For the people that are asking about the different costs of the different energy types I'd like to direct you towards the EIA report on LCOE(Levelized cost of electricity). It accounts for the lifetime cost, fuel costs, O&M, the time value of money and is probably the most reliable tool for comparing costs of generation technologies. It is by no means perfect and the intermittent power sources have to be taken with a grain of salt due to the capacity factor varying greatly by location, but that factor is accounted for in the report and as such it serves as a good average estimate to use.
    www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/electricity_generation.pdf

  • @alexanderkrizel6187
    @alexanderkrizel6187 Před 5 lety

    I love his shirt. Something many people should learn.

  • @gaebing
    @gaebing Před 5 lety +5

    According to the "efficiency equation", most power plants are operating at about 300% efficiency.

    • @gaebing
      @gaebing Před 4 lety

      @Carbonic Potassium Detection Contraption I was pointing out that the equation they used in the video for the efficiency was incorrect.

  • @OculusGame
    @OculusGame Před 7 lety +3

    Update: Solar energy surpassed fossil energy AND wind energy, with "surpass" I mean cheaper and more efficient.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +OculusGames That's not entirely true. Yes, the cost of solar has been steadily dropping but it is only being competitive with fossil sources because coal power plants which produce power at 3 cents a kWh are being shut down and being replaced with natural gas power plants and wind turbines which are upwards of 16 cents a kWh. Besides, with the new administration, the restrictions closing the coal plants will likely be dropped.

    • @Jemalacane0
      @Jemalacane0 Před 6 lety +1

      That's not remotely true. At least in the U.S., solar and wind have the highest per kwh price and are the most heavily subsidized.

    • @a.j.deutsch1792
      @a.j.deutsch1792 Před 6 lety

      Gammareign, why are they even subsidized? I guess to get them going! But why. We have hydro and Nuclear we are good.

  • @praneethp7991
    @praneethp7991 Před 6 lety

    Good summary of all the technologies, but you left out fuel cells; specifically, Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFC). SOFC's can reach as high as 70% and they run on natural gas just like a lot of gas fired power plants.

  • @meowtima
    @meowtima Před 9 lety

    Are the numerator and denominator of the efficiency equation reversed? Either that, or "output power" and "power produced" mean something drastically different in your definition and if "heat" only accounts for reclaimable heat.
    For fossil fuel power plants, wouldn't efficiency be better presented as:
    (energy output)/(energy output + heat lost) ?

  • @flalife904
    @flalife904 Před 9 lety +127

    My favorite form of obtaining power is by pizza . Pizza plants are 259.999% effective. The meat and crust alone would power all of man kind, but the cheese would top the charts but we would have to watch for melt downs on the cheese , it could harm the taste of the power.

    • @imonsulpher7364
      @imonsulpher7364 Před 9 lety +15

      Your not funny in the slightest...

    • @teistooher8844
      @teistooher8844 Před 9 lety +4

      If that were a thing, I would eat the goddamn power plant.

    • @voxpop9
      @voxpop9 Před 9 lety +1

      im sorry but if u can make 300% power ul be able to loop that energy to power the plant itself which inturn makes more energy to be looped back. one problem though, it does not exist.

    • @flalife904
      @flalife904 Před 9 lety +2

      Aaron Lee you fools !!! The human body is running on eletric energy! The proteins in the crust and meat keep you alive by feeding your body and reproducing white and red blood cells. There would be ZERO power plant i REPEAT THERE WOULD BE 0 POWER PLANTS if it wasnt for the food that you eat . Mostly meat and carbs and a side of veggies(or cheese aka dairy) you wouldnt exist , nor would your simple minded "opinions" of what power plant produces the most eletric power aka toxic waste that charges your cell phone battries fastest. So in the name of all living things!PIZZA power is one of the most powerful souce of energy to man kind and to correct you they DO EXIST!

    • @abra238
      @abra238 Před 9 lety +4

      ***** I thought it was funny. And if you're going to attempt to insult someone, don't look silly doing so in the process. YOU'RE*

  • @AlexCab_49
    @AlexCab_49 Před 8 lety +5

    we need to go atomic!

  • @gilian2587
    @gilian2587 Před 3 lety +1

    So instead of tapping 210 W/m^2 (15% efficiency) at peak hours, they can tap 616 W/m^2 (44% efficiency); so we've gone from powering 9% of an electric oven per square meter to being able to power 26% of an electric per square meter at peak hours in the day (given the standard electric oven consumes 2300 Wh/h). I am deeply impressed...

  • @mansamusa1743
    @mansamusa1743 Před 7 lety +1

    Given the efficiency of Hydroelectric I think some more of those would help

  • @AdonisGaming93
    @AdonisGaming93 Před 7 lety +3

    45....really? pretty sure i read somewhere about a solar panel that was like 51% like a year ago...

  • @humanyoda
    @humanyoda Před 7 lety +17

    Considering that there is a gigantic amount of solar energy falling onto our planet, I am OK with low efficiency of solar panels.

    • @lukefrance9558
      @lukefrance9558 Před 7 lety +2

      humanyoda no you don't want to be because you want to get he most energy in the smallest and fastest way especially since the panels themselves don't just come out of the sky in huge amounts for free

    • @leerman22
      @leerman22 Před 7 lety +7

      You can replace all the world's natural forests with solar panels and biofuel farms if you want.

    • @danni8191
      @danni8191 Před 7 lety

      leerman22 so greeeeeen

    • @humanyoda
      @humanyoda Před 7 lety

      Luke, a relatively small percentage of a huge amount of energy may not be too bad.

    • @zolikoff
      @zolikoff Před 7 lety +2

      Energy wise it's enough, of course, but the resource cost goes up. Panels need maintenance and have a limited lifetime and eventually have to be replaced every couple of decades. You want an energy solution that is as resource efficient as you can make it. Otherwise even if you're getting enough energy, you're slowly losing.

  • @leander_1_
    @leander_1_ Před 4 lety

    How high is PV efficiency with power storage, so that we have a continuous base load of energy?

  • @watchthe1369
    @watchthe1369 Před 6 lety

    what is the total picture cost? how much energy goes into coal and nuclear plants vs. solar plants? Land costs, costs of materials and energy to make the solution plus the manhours, plus the possible pollution clean up costs for the manufacturring process? I have yet to see any analysis in that fashion.

  • @AntonFetzer
    @AntonFetzer Před 8 lety +3

    The efficiency of solar cells is not that much of a big deal, because the sun is shining anyway.
    If 2/3 of the sunlight is wasted, then that is still better than not having a solar cell because that would waste 100% of the sunlight on a given surface.
    Powerplants that use fuel are different to that. If you have a fixed amount of fuel, that you even have to pay for and that polutes the planet, you should really worry about every % of the energy inside that fuel, that could be used.
    Even if solar cells would have less than 10% efficiency, you would only waste solar rays, that you get for free, if you want to have them or not.

    • @ariswitty99
      @ariswitty99 Před 7 lety +1

      The problem with the low efficiency of solar is that it would be extremely expensive and would require very large quantities of land in order to meet the enegery demands of today. Putting solar panels on individual houses or buildings is a great idea to help reduce our energy needs, but we will still need another source capable of putting out the energy we need, unfortunately solar as it stands would be far too expensive and take up far to much room to act on its own

    • @ariswitty99
      @ariswitty99 Před 7 lety

      +Transhumanist Space Exploration That's a good thing. I think solar panels are a good option to be placed on rooftops but they couldn't realistically meet all of o it power needs. Solar panels should be more of a cost controller for people instead of a full on source of power.

    • @ariswitty99
      @ariswitty99 Před 7 lety

      +Transhumanist Space Exploration It's hot fusion they are investing in. But that date is relatively correct for when the ITER will go online. Cold fusion is has never been replicated. I never said that Solar and wind couldn't meet the global energy demand it's just that it would be much more costly (several times) and would take up vast amount of land. Though this could be minimized if hydroelectric power was brought in as that is highly productive and is the only source that can have power stations that produce more than current nuclear reactors.

    • @ariswitty99
      @ariswitty99 Před 7 lety

      Yes. Germany and France have the Wendelstein 7-x stellarator and the ITER tokomak respectively. Both are huge milestones in the path towards fusion power

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +Transhumanist Space Exploration The purposes of fusion power is to produce the stable fusion of our Sun's core. Well the energy production of the Sun's core is less than 300 watts per cubic meter ( look it up ), who is less than that of a hot compost pile. Yes, higher energy production rates us possible with less stability such as in a fusion bomb but Fusion power is an oversold concept to get funding for research. Don't get me wrong, the research is valuable in itself but for civilian energy production it's not.

  • @Kneedragon1962
    @Kneedragon1962 Před 7 lety +1

    Nice to know we're leading the world in something. We seem to have forgotten completely how to play Cricket...
    What's the best energy solution? I think it's a mix. Wind is good but sometimes there's no wind. Solar is good but sometimes it's cloudy. Conventional nuclear I have some reservations about, but Thorium / molten salt reactors do address many of my concerns. I am not hugely enthusiastic, but it would be better than having a few thousand big diesel generators just sitting around idle in case of cloudy days with no wind that go on for weeks... Another advantage of hydyo-electric, is you can make a high dam and a low dam, and use it for main grid storage. It's perhaps not the ideal solution to that problem but it's maybe better than a million Samsung Galaxies in one building...

  • @brucerandell3771
    @brucerandell3771 Před 8 lety +1

    But how do you supply your evening peak demand when it is dark outside, and the wind is not blowing, and you live in a water scarce country? This happens more often than I'd like to be without electricity. Can you store enough energy in batteries or sodium chloride solutions to power a whole country's peak demand?

  • @Pilotamericano
    @Pilotamericano Před 7 lety +3

    If there was a way to transfer energy wirelessly we could set up solar panels on the moon ✌🏻

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +Arvind Andrew Das There is wireless power transmission and it's even used in some power grid's around the world but it's only about 80% efficient. However, calculations of space based power stations still show higher capital costs compared to Earth based power stations even if the launch costs were reduced to zero.

    • @westelaudio943
      @westelaudio943 Před 5 lety +1

      @@johnwang9914
      Which wireless power grid is 80% efficient? I've only heard about a small experimental one with resonators and that was still less than 50%.

  • @tomt.8387
    @tomt.8387 Před 7 lety +3

    This video is misleading in that the raw efficiency of a source of power isn't the most important thing. While increasing efficiency does increase the usefulness of a technology, if you are investing in solar power, for example, the % efficiency is less important than the amount of power per dollar invested and the amount of watts per aggregate ton of emitted CO2. The highest efficiency solar panels are always extremely expensive and are almost never worth actually using. This advance should be taken as more of a benchmark for how the technology is progressing. One day we'll have 48% efficient panels everywhere, just not anytime soon,
    For example, if solar panels were super cheap to make (which has changed a lot recently), it wouldn't matter that they are 15% efficient, since we're only using a tiny portion of incoming solar energy.
    The fact that hydro is really efficient is due to the dynamics of a power station. The potential energy of a water column can't really be lost, and a turbine is a simple enough and well-understood enough mechanism that we can get a lot of efficiency out of it. The trouble with hydro is that there aren't that many viable places where we can build dams, and the dams themselves are really expensive.

    • @bjarneappel125
      @bjarneappel125 Před 6 lety

      Exactly!
      Talking so much about the efficiencies is nonsense.

  • @matthewarnold4557
    @matthewarnold4557 Před 6 lety +1

    Realistically, all four of these are not enough alone. They should be used to complement each other not to compete with each other.

  • @afiwubh4go9aiosugb
    @afiwubh4go9aiosugb Před 9 lety

    I believe that dams create so much power (Ive been to boneville dam and it is amazing) It helped end WWII! it sent electricity to the Hanford Site Reactor B which created the Plutonium for the Fat Man Atomic Bomb that ended the war, But there were major sacrifices such as the loss of Cascade rapids, and with the newer The Dalles Dam we lost on of the most amazing water falls on the columbia river... Celilo falls, it was a major native american fishing site too so it's a sad loss... but dams don't last forever so hopefully one day we will see the falls once again.

  • @candiduscorvus
    @candiduscorvus Před 7 lety +4

    It only counts when I can wire my house up to these solar panels and get off the grid. Until then, I guess good job?

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +candiduscorvus Well, you can go off grid now by using batteries but amortizing the capital costs of such an off-road system over the estimated power production over the design life would probably be about four times the cost per kWh of buying from the grid. Being grid tied instead of battery based can bring the costs down a lot but it would still be less expensive to just buy from the grid. Unless you look at say the forcasted energy costs of say Alberta where they are planning to update their entire grid, at Alberta's forcasts, personal photovoltaics may be a viable option especially if the carbon tax is ramped up as it's expected to be. Unfortunately, as capital expenses, only the rich would benefit from solar in Alberta.

    • @ynemey1243
      @ynemey1243 Před 7 lety

      Yep, you can.

    • @milanswoboda5457
      @milanswoboda5457 Před 7 lety

      You already can go completely off-grid with todays Photovoltaic & Wind Power generation and electrical storage technologies but the initial cost is significantly higher than a grid tied system and you'll likely never recover the cost of the investment on such a system or will have an extremely long payback period unless your local grid electricity rates are extremely high.

    • @brdfnick3886
      @brdfnick3886 Před 5 lety

      yes, but not recommended due being expensive, you might well use grid tied system instead.

  • @miguelrealp
    @miguelrealp Před 9 lety +8

    Go Nuclear!!!

  • @jugemujugemugokonosurikire4735

    Last time I was this late seeker was Dnews

  • @melanielittle8568
    @melanielittle8568 Před 4 lety

    Would like magnetic generators included. How rated? Over 100%?

  • @deannasmith4443
    @deannasmith4443 Před 9 lety +12

    hydroelectric where possible, thorium when not.
    but then im a hippie from WA state. so, yea.

    • @Merecir
      @Merecir Před 9 lety +4

      Thorium where hydroelectric.
      Restore the rivers!

    • @jeremiahtompkins6952
      @jeremiahtompkins6952 Před 5 lety

      Nobody ever mentions thorium, its most likely our only realistic long term cost effective option

  • @aqwsjhk6358
    @aqwsjhk6358 Před 8 lety +4

    i want hamster power make the hamsters run in there wheels

    • @lxttx12
      @lxttx12 Před 3 lety

      Even though this was 5 year ago CANCELED (2020 humans smh)

    • @CUBETechie
      @CUBETechie Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/E86o_9jizF0/video.html

  • @abdooolle
    @abdooolle Před 6 lety

    I like verical wind generator with adjustable blade that can be closed in massive wind speed or typhoons to protect them from damage.

  • @burningSHADOW42
    @burningSHADOW42 Před 7 lety +1

    The efficiency thermal Power plants (like coal) can be improved by combining power generation and district heating. Small oil or coal plants that use their waste heat to heat the nearby households can have up to 90% efficiency.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety

      +burningSHADOW42 Ultimately, fossil fuels are energy captured from the Sun by ancient photosynthesis and given that modern plants are about 0.5% efficient at capturing solar energy by photosynthesis...

  • @howardbaxter2514
    @howardbaxter2514 Před 7 lety +4

    We need all forms of energy, and that is a fact. I personally prefer nuclear, mainly because of it's efficiency in outputting to the electric grid (not the equation he used but the amount of time a nuclear power plant provides for the electrical grid). Also nuclear is far safer than any of the other sources of electricity, with the exception of geothermal because of the very little maintenance that has to be done on it.
    However, like I said earlier we need all forms of energy because not all of them are perfect and never will be perfect, that is why I like what France does and has a lot of sources of energy.

    • @Arisudev
      @Arisudev Před 7 lety +1

      SgtKilgore406 i've read somewhere that actually the number of failed nuclear power plant is much lower than coal-based power plant. however the environmental effects of those failing power plants are more severe.
      when we want to call it safer or not, we must first argue the definition of "safe" itself

    • @ynemey1243
      @ynemey1243 Před 7 lety +1

      Nope, this is false, including the bit about "safety". You only "need" all forms of energy if you want it to continue being cheap for the next 50 years. Either way, prices will go up and we'll only have renewables then. Nuclear is dead.

    • @Arisudev
      @Arisudev Před 7 lety +1

      Ynemey ummm.... nuclear can give technically "infinite" energy so in long term nuclear is not dead. the reason why nuclear is hated is because of its safety rather than its cost and its efficiency.

    • @ynemey1243
      @ynemey1243 Před 7 lety +1

      Ari Sudewa That is not an argument that matters. Wind, solar, hydro, thermal, nuclear, tidal, bio; they are all close to infinite. I am talking politically and socio-economically. Nuclear is politically dead and dying socio-economically.

    • @tealeyan5392
      @tealeyan5392 Před 7 lety +3

      What type of nuclear energy is dying? Fusion or fission? As far as I know fusion energy is undergoing rapid development and I think it is our next hope to keep the world light up

  • @alphacause
    @alphacause Před 9 lety +5

    While the fossil fuel industry has made a lot of money for some very brilliant and deserving people, like civil, mechanical, and chemical engineers, and geophysicists - people whose intellect and hard work I have the utmost respect for - the fossil fuel industry also makes a lot of useless people wealthy as well. Some of these people are land owners, who were merely fortunate enough to own land that happened to have large amounts of fossil fuels. Some of these people are business types, who make money doing the simple task of selling this fuel. Some of these people who are wealthy, are the children of these useless people, who, due to the good old boy system which is rampant in the fossil fuel industry, get their lucrative professions due to nepotism. So outside of getting a cheaper, cleaner, and a limitless supply of fuel, once the greater efficiency of these greener sources of energy becomes more accessible to the public, the other positive is that these aforementioned useless people, who are not wealthy because of their talent, but because of circumstances born of the fossil fuel industry, will now finally be on the losing side of the economic ladder - where they belong.

    • @mpc77769
      @mpc77769 Před 9 lety

      You got that right!!!
      I personally give your statement a 100% efficiency rating!

    • @IizUname
      @IizUname Před 9 lety

      I like most of what you're saying

  • @samanthamonaghan7579
    @samanthamonaghan7579 Před 6 lety

    great how efficient is that 30% in areas where peak sun occurs in a 4 hour period for 120 days a year and what is the cost compared to other methods? Coal is considered dirty but even in the video there was mention of heat capture.

  • @Privateerblack
    @Privateerblack Před 9 lety

    I'm in Southern Arizona. Getting these more efficient solar panels installed on the roof of one's house would be a godsend for homeowners and businesses. With as much sun as we get down here, it'd be stupid NOT to do that.

  • @himurakenshiro2126
    @himurakenshiro2126 Před 7 lety +14

    Solar has became so cost effective that las vegas one of our nations largest consumers of energy is getting most of its energy from Solar panels

    • @TREDxMUSIC
      @TREDxMUSIC Před 7 lety +6

      That is a terrible sales pitch for solar. It works but only for a city in the middle of a desert at 115 degrees latitude and with 15 hours of sun every 24 hours.

    • @christophergonzalez5552
      @christophergonzalez5552 Před 6 lety +2

      himura kenshiro Yes, but Las Vegas is a desert wijth pretty much Sun and almost no clouds year long. If we were to use solar panels in, let's say, Seattle, that would be very expensive and inefficient as it rains too often.

    • @luongmaihunggia
      @luongmaihunggia Před 6 lety +2

      Solar: 78€/MWh
      Fossil fuel: 38€/MWh
      You were saying?

  • @lastempire7302
    @lastempire7302 Před 7 lety +8

    i want fusion

    • @Max-po9gd
      @Max-po9gd Před 7 lety

      well u ain't gonna get it

    • @EmilKlingberg
      @EmilKlingberg Před 7 lety +3

      well travle to the sun and enjoy its safe and highly efficient output

    • @HosamSherif
      @HosamSherif Před 7 lety +1

      Solar is a means to extract energy from a fusion reactor; the sun. Kind of similar to the way a steam generator is used to extract energy from a fission reactor.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 7 lety +1

      +Kevin Ping The hope for a fusion reactor is to somehow achieve the stable fusion of our Sun's core. Well, look at the energy production of our Sun's core, it's about 300 watts per cubic meter which is less energy production than a hot compost pile. Obviously, more energy can be produced but only with less stable fusion conditions with the most extreme being the fusion bomb. The public is misled about fusion power and though the research is good useful research, the prospects of safe fusion power is overstated. It would be better to invest in safer fission reactors such as Liquid Flouride Thorium Reactors and or Doppler pebble reactors.

  • @ColdCutz
    @ColdCutz Před 9 lety

    Outshine the competition, Trace...

  • @steffieboy19
    @steffieboy19 Před 9 lety

    Liked this video very much! I read a lot about solar power expansion etc. But 15% is very bad. But the first cars weren't very efficient either. So give it some time and Sun, wind and hydro electric will rule over dirty power!
    Let's do this!

  • @rdavian
    @rdavian Před 7 lety +7

    eff solar thorium is abundant clean and want put people in the poor house tell the truth

    • @AnimeHumanCoherence
      @AnimeHumanCoherence Před 7 lety +5

      Learn english first, please.

    • @rdavian
      @rdavian Před 7 lety

      ***** didnt know i was in school today?

    • @VanessaFlyhight
      @VanessaFlyhight Před 7 lety +1

      R Davian
      Never mind punctuation, solar thorium? You've just nonsensicaly combined two types of power generation!

    • @rdavian
      @rdavian Před 7 lety +1

      so now that you feel smart what else will you do on the internetz.........

    • @VanessaFlyhight
      @VanessaFlyhight Před 7 lety +2

      R Davian​
      Don't try to be smart, you're the idiot