The truth about LNG

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  • čas přidán 27. 04. 2024
  • More and more gigantic tankers carrying LNG, liquefied natural gas, are crisscrossing the oceans - and we're building infrastructure to trade ever larger amounts. But shouldn't we be moving AWAY from fossil fuels?
    #PlanetA #LNG #naturalgas
    We're destroying our environment at an alarming rate. But it doesn't need to be this way. Our new channel Planet A explores the shift towards an eco-friendly world - and challenges our ideas about what dealing with climate change means. We look at the big and the small: What we can do and how the system needs to change. Every Friday we'll take a truly global look at how to get us out of this mess.
    Follow Planet A on TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@dw_planeta?la...
    Credits:
    Reporter: Malte Rohwer-Kahlmann
    Video Editor: Neven Hillebrands
    Supervising Editor: Joanna Gottschalk
    Factcheck: Jeannette Cwienk
    Thumbnail: Em Chabridon
    Read More (Links):
    LNG oversupply: globalenergymonitor.org/wp-co...
    Gas infrastructure tracker: globalenergymonitor.org/proje...
    Shell LNG Outlook: www.shell.com/what-we-do/oil-...
    Emissions from LNG carrier ships:
    pubs.acs.org/doi/epdf/10.1021...
    LNG worse than coal? (NOT peer-reviewed yet): www.research.howarthlab.org/p...
    Chapters:
    00:00 Intro
    00:41 What is LNG?
    01:29 LNG boom
    03:47 LNG's climate impact
    08:05 Stranded assets?
    10:28 Conclusion

Komentáře • 613

  • @DWPlanetA
    @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem +22

    What do you make of the LNG hype?

    • @microcomputermaster
      @microcomputermaster Před měsícem +5

      If hydrogen and carbon capture ever become a thing, much of the LNG infrastructure can be repurposed to move hydrogen. But that's a big "IF" on both counts.

    • @kkrolik2106
      @kkrolik2106 Před měsícem +3

      Me neighbor car running on it in CNG form :)

    • @johndoh5182
      @johndoh5182 Před měsícem +6

      I don't think it really matters about calling it "hype" or anything else.
      Here is what I think matters:
      You don't make your enemies wealthy because you think something is a bad idea.
      Europeans have made Russia a lot of money who is now attacking Europe and EUROPE doesn't seem to want to put the money into defending Ukraine properly, and the country that HAS put a lot of money into protecting Ukraine is a country producing LNG.
      So, WHATEVER your logic is, it's pretzel logic, because war is WAY WORSE than LNG.
      Get a clue?? Either that or send troops into Ukraine and deal with it.

    • @mickgatz214
      @mickgatz214 Před měsícem +2

      Rubbish. Used to be so cheap here in Australia, but all that has changed, for the worse!.
      We were paying like .75 cpl, yet were selling it to Japan for 5 cpl.
      Back in the '80s, gas (LPG/LNG), it's just 'gas', but we only paid like,15cpl
      😥

    • @Eikenhorst
      @Eikenhorst Před měsícem

      @@microcomputermaster Well, that is only if we go for hydrogen from natural gas and capture the CO2 for so called blue hydrogen. There are a whole range of issues with hydrogen, but if it ever becomes a big thing it would be in the green form. Say: cover a good part of the dessert of Dubai with solar panels just to produce hydrogen and liquify that.

  • @firefox39693
    @firefox39693 Před měsícem +244

    It's really cringe looking at countries like Germany spend billions on LNG and other natural gas infrastructure, but not nuclear.

    • @mathelga
      @mathelga Před měsícem

      Look at the millions of litres of contaminated water Tepco are dumping into the Pacific after their nuclear accident! Tell me what the outcome there will be?

    • @okman9684
      @okman9684 Před měsícem +8

      Haven't you seen Germany in 1920s? It was always Cringe

    • @hillbilly24
      @hillbilly24 Před měsícem +2

      Lng is the base of their industrial model. They use it for manufacturing the vast number of chemicals, plastics, and metals that they need to make their manufacturing model work not just for energy.

    • @zhubotang927
      @zhubotang927 Před 27 dny

      Japan and Soviet Union through their callousness completed ruined the reputation of the only clean viable nuclear energy.

    • @rok1475
      @rok1475 Před 25 dny

      Uneducated zealots managed to scare the rest of poorly educated population into thinking that German nuclear power plants would be run by the crew from Chernobyl and would also be at risk of tsunami from Pacific ocean.

  • @theworddoner
    @theworddoner Před měsícem +203

    The problem I have with German ‘environmentalists’ are that the same people bemoaning the problems of lng have shut down their nuclear power plants.
    In their own arrogance, they shot themselves in the foot.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem +16

      🤔 Here is a video we made on Germany's nuclear exit. 👇
      ☢️ "Is Germany's nuclear exit a mistake?"
      czcams.com/video/eWuGP_aBoYg/video.html
      And, you should explore our channel for more content on nuclear!

    • @jackred2362
      @jackred2362 Před měsícem +25

      Sure it's not like oil and gas companies have been lobbying against nuclear for decades. They are the ones donating the money to politicans, not ‘environmentalists’ .

    • @tayikolla6205
      @tayikolla6205 Před měsícem +9

      ​@@DWPlanetA Do you have another video on how the US helped Germany by blowing up NordStream2?

    • @roberts1938
      @roberts1938 Před měsícem

      Not only that, these guys are hypocrites. They fly to conferences in Dubai and talk about their utopian nonsense.
      I just read that Al Gore, who has been threatening for years about global warming and the resulting increase in ocean water levels by several meters, bought a property in Florida right by the ocean. An idiot or a clever fraudster who made money by trading emission rights?

    • @shanewilson2484
      @shanewilson2484 Před měsícem +6

      @@tayikolla6205 Do you have a video on how you know who blew up the pipeline? Why blow up pipelines that were not being used?

  • @Maverick_42
    @Maverick_42 Před měsícem +139

    00:27. Correction: It's making a 'few' people a lot of money.

    • @SvalbardSleeperDistrict
      @SvalbardSleeperDistrict Před měsícem +15

      Always important to point out class dynamics in all of this, which these videos often shy away from.

    • @ms-tw4sj
      @ms-tw4sj Před měsícem +2

      Plus the people working in the industry, plus the small investors (like me) who invested in LNG, plus the rural landowners whose wells are located on, plus the governments obtaining tax revenues from the industries, plus the construction companies putting up the facilities.

    • @Fenthule
      @Fenthule Před měsícem +10

      @@ms-tw4sj Compared to the greater population as a whole, that's still very much a few people. Stop kidding yourself.

    • @ms-tw4sj
      @ms-tw4sj Před měsícem

      @@FenthuleWhat's your solution? Get rid of LNG? Get rid of Property Rights? Communism? It's been tried, it doesn't work.
      LNG not only benefits the people in the industry, it benefits the consumers of LNG and the earth as a whole because it's cleaner. Everbody gained
      THANK YOU rich person, WHO PUT UP THE MONEY to drill the well, to build the infrastructure to transport the product and create the system

    • @rustyspottedcat8885
      @rustyspottedcat8885 Před měsícem +1

      1%

  • @cheweperro
    @cheweperro Před měsícem +54

    It's short term, it's optics, it doesn't address causes only symptoms

    • @xcofcd
      @xcofcd Před 15 dny +2

      Yes it's something they can throw taxpayer money at to look like they're taking action. These things are never thought through and rarely work...

    • @nhilistickomrad4259
      @nhilistickomrad4259 Před 3 dny

      Ure seeing the wrong optics. Before methane came into commercial use it was basically burnt up as it was useless. So that's why oil producers are interested in selling as otherwise theyd just use it in some captive plants for some synthesis and energy source but as methane sources are usually in war torn areas or inhospitable terrain so captive use would be less and more expensive than letting it burn or just blow away.

  • @fleachamberlain1905
    @fleachamberlain1905 Před měsícem +33

    Not "a lot of people". A few people. The vast majority of people in Australia, anyway, are not seeing that money.

    • @bofty
      @bofty Před 15 dny +1

      Neither is the government

  • @samuxan
    @samuxan Před měsícem +36

    not as good as renewables but way better than coal or diesel. I've seen how much worse the air quality is around a power plant using coal vs one using gas. I guess this has its place in the energy transition.

    • @showme360
      @showme360 Před 5 dny

      Thats the problem, there more here than meets the eye!

  • @RB-xq7qh
    @RB-xq7qh Před měsícem +7

    Fun fact - natural gas infrastructure can be retrofitted to hydrogen. Hydrogen is the next step. Power plants that were once coal have been refurbished to run on natural gas and many Turbines that make the power can be mixed fuel. Hydrogen and Natural gas. There are already turbines made by siemens that can run on 100% hydrogen but are now duel fuel turbines. So it very well is a great transition fuel.

  • @JakeShaft85
    @JakeShaft85 Před měsícem +41

    Don't make perfection the enemy of the possible. Always going to need reserves. In Sweden we burn oil for electricity on cold winter days (probably happened i other seasons aswell) if the wind doesn't blow. Sweden have 98% fossil-free elecricity but still depends on oil on harsch days. Storage is not an option now or any time soon why not burn natural gas instead of oil. Security landscape changed last few years. Each country need to be more self--relient. Storage of gas seem better then storage of oil to me. There are more variables then just climate to consider for nations when it comes to energy.
    Saying no to gas simply base on climate arguments I see as unserious. BUT if it turns out LNG emits more over the "lifecycle" then coal then there's no reason for LNG.

  • @markarca6360
    @markarca6360 Před měsícem +6

    Here in the Philippines, we have the Malampaya, which has been a media frenzy in the early 2000s.
    The adverts for this project, say, "How can you call energy cheap, if it costs an entire nation's treasure?"

    • @gardencity3558
      @gardencity3558 Před 18 dny

      Philippines burns a lot of imported coal correct? LNG would be a boon if done correctly. Less brownouts and costs savings, perhaps..

    • @ayusinnyu
      @ayusinnyu Před 8 dny

      They should drill more in palawan area . Government should invest and don’t wait for investor due to companies that have been on the industry wanted monopolize to be sold at export price not for local consumption only,

  • @maurinelse
    @maurinelse Před 24 dny +5

    My country, Argentina 🇦🇷 started to import LNG when internal production went down more than a decade ago, but now that shale gas production is rising there are plans to build liquefaction plants to export the surplus.
    We need to exploit our fossil fuel resources before the energy transition becomes a reality. In any case, we also have favorable conditions for the installation of wind and solar parks.

    • @xcofcd
      @xcofcd Před 15 dny +1

      You guys want to be very careful to not step on some big neighbors toes. Part of the reason Venezuela is so messed up is because they have so much oil...

  • @paulb9453
    @paulb9453 Před 5 dny +1

    “Dirty” coal is what made Germany rich. Good video. About time LNG was scrutinised, it’s not economic for many developing countries struggling with high unemployment. LNG is not as flexible as coal, liquefaction plants are not cheap.

  • @Viktor_Shcherbyna
    @Viktor_Shcherbyna Před 2 dny +1

    To resolve the problem we should follow he right sequence:
    1) To define the main contributors (materials/substances) to the global warming.
    2) To define the main sectors/industries and countries with the highest emissions of these substances.
    3) To find the way to minimize the greatest sources of pollution.
    These steps could reveal very interesting insights. For example, livestock is a huge contributor to global warming. The way when we work with main contributors will probably be the most effective. And, of course, if it happen that China is the main contributor in the world, the US and Europe shouldn't suffer and jeopardize their economic, social, geopolitical and energy stability.
    But DW goes another way: "we don't know how harmful is LNG, we don't even know whether it is more harmful than other fossil fuels, but we know that it is fossil fuel, thus it is bad and we must fight with that at any price".

  • @paulhill182
    @paulhill182 Před 10 dny +2

    This is a hit piece... the most common word used in this video is "IF" and then it is assumed to be true...

  • @TheBigChill1
    @TheBigChill1 Před měsícem +22

    In my country (Portugal) the tendency of consumption is in decline, as we consume more than 60% with sometimes peak of 80% on renewals, Wind, Solar and Hydro... We are small country anyway, but we try to make a difference and it seems we are going in the right direction according to the EU requirements... New big solar farms are also coming online and I hope we get each time more to the O% for domestic consumption... Transportation is the only elephant in the room that needs to be addressed along with the tourism factor that complicate the numbers on pollution...

    • @007jmsg
      @007jmsg Před měsícem +3

      Renewals are great ! when they are available ! when they aren't , do we shut it down ? The big problem from renewals is reliability we always need to double the install capacity with other reliable source ... for now , the only way for complying co2 emission targets is with nuclear for base power and renewals ! In transportation is really a bigger mess ...

    • @TTTT-sj3vz
      @TTTT-sj3vz Před měsícem +2

      why you dont metion that when you need energy you import from spain that runs on nuclear ?

    • @007jmsg
      @007jmsg Před měsícem +1

      @@TTTT-sj3vz yes , and some times we also export and some times Portugal and Spain import from France that is 70% nuclear and the back bone of Europe power grid ...

    • @TheBigChill1
      @TheBigChill1 Před měsícem

      @@TTTT-sj3vzNop... Our only LPG power plant produce enough... We only import power on very occasional situations...

    • @TheBigChill1
      @TheBigChill1 Před měsícem +2

      @@007jmsgWe don't have any nuclear power plant... Portugal is a non nuclear power country since the beginning...

  • @Clint-stanley
    @Clint-stanley Před měsícem +20

    Fantastik article. Who is incentivized to verify the emissions. The LNG industry wants to turn a blind eye. Like your reference, I have not verified Tony Seba's assertion in his book "Clean Disruption" that the pipelines have on average 3 to 4 leaks per mile. My Grandfather worked in the fossil fuel industry finding leaks in the pipelines.
    I like your supportive commentators. My plan is to replace all Gas in my house with renewable electric.

    • @roberts1938
      @roberts1938 Před měsícem +2

      What is renewable energy? How is the energy you use to insulate your house or your computer regenerated? Describe it according to the laws of physics.

    • @centurione6489
      @centurione6489 Před měsícem

      Outlaw LNG.🤣 It's part of the suicidal globalist agenda.

    • @muhammadyunan2811
      @muhammadyunan2811 Před měsícem +2

      After Europe can not use LNG, so they start to share propaganda that LNG not save for environment 😂

    • @bearlytamedmodels
      @bearlytamedmodels Před měsícem

      @@roberts1938 I'm really glad nobody bothered responding to your JAQing off and blatant attempt at trolling via missing the point. I'm just here with popcorn.

  • @antiquehealbot6543
    @antiquehealbot6543 Před měsícem +29

    And Germany ditched nuclear just for this lol😂.
    What a clown.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem +1

      Hey there! We tackled Germany´s nuclear exit a while ago. Check it out if you are interested in that topic 👉czcams.com/video/eWuGP_aBoYg/video.html

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca Před měsícem +2

    Excellent content - I’ve been working in energy policy for two decades and this is one of the best short videos I’ve seen on LNG. Thank you!

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem

      Hey Nancy! Glad to hear that you liked the video on LNG. If you are interested in similar videos, subscribe to our channel. We post new videos every week ✨

  • @bartlomiejkozak9221
    @bartlomiejkozak9221 Před měsícem +5

    One point missed in the material is the potential of adopting this infrastructure to green hydrogen.
    I know this might be just justification that has nothing to do with companies intentions but I think that point should have been risen.

    • @creedreaming
      @creedreaming Před měsícem +1

      Agreed! I was waiting for them to say something about green hydrogen. I also think they should have mentioned it cuz it's kind of a big point as the infrastructure for LNG is also viable (maybe with some minor adjustments) for hydrogen and this explains why so many terminals are built

    • @gardencity3558
      @gardencity3558 Před 18 dny

      @@creedreaming Hydrogen isn't politically correct to the solar and wind mafia. They support only these because they're involved in the industry, suck tax dollars etc, if hydrogen would become viable the combustion engine, would still be viable their aim is trap us at charging stations and high cost energy and overegulation. Hydrogen would smash all of that.

  • @Rich1Rodriguez
    @Rich1Rodriguez Před měsícem +6

    Thanks for posting the video.
    The answer to the question at the very end is simple - stop burning stuff.
    Every fossil investment is too much

  • @elinys2843
    @elinys2843 Před měsícem +5

    As always: if there’s a profit in it for western (US) investors, it will happen. No matter what the cost for everything and everyone else.

  • @ronkirk5099
    @ronkirk5099 Před měsícem +2

    If you do the fossil fuel comparison, if methane leakage from production to end use is greater than ~4%, it produces more greenhouse gas equivalent than ANY other fossil fuel including coal and oil. Researchers have measured leakage rates in the U.S. of 6-9% of the methane produced (Stanford News March 24, 2022 and other news sources). As currently produced with all the leakage, methane is definitely not the clean energy transition fuel the fossil fuel industry is claiming.

  • @wind-leader_jp
    @wind-leader_jp Před měsícem +6

    Using electricity at night when solar power isn't producing electricity is like strangling your children and grandchildren.
    Carbon dioxide and methane are extremely stable at the molecular level, so it is necessary to reduce them as much as possible.
    Also, if the LNG is leaking during transportation as shown in this video, I think it has something to do with the fact that the West ordered shipbuilding companies from South Korea and China because they were cheaper.
    Japan was the first to realize LNG maritime transport, and it has a history of being manufactured by Japanese shipbuilding companies with cutting-edge technology at the time.
    I read in an article that Japanese technology was passed on to Korea and China due to the difference in labor costs and kindness, and now almost no Japanese companies are able to receive orders.
    I recently learned that the water temperature in the North Atlantic has been rising over the past year to an extent that researchers cannot understand.
    It's possible that the suddenly increased number of LNG transport vessels is involved.

  • @icekk007
    @icekk007 Před měsícem +4

    The video said we have alternatives and they are getting cheaper and cheaper. China and India are both investing a lot on renewables, yet they are building many LNG terminals. Why? It seems we are missing something. Perhaps a country cares about energy security or the intermittency of solar and wind means you need a backup energy source.

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Před měsícem

      Nope.
      What they are doing is developing all forms of energy, because they plan to use all of them to reach first world standards of living.
      Using all means instead of just the best means of producing energy means they will get to their goal faster.
      The question is at what cost to their citizens?
      A first world standard of living cannot be maintained without civilization.
      If climate change does in civilization, everyone loses firsts world standards of living.
      Are you a gambler? This is the risk we are taking

    • @blueyhis.zarsoff1147
      @blueyhis.zarsoff1147 Před měsícem +2

      The green stuff doesnt cut it and is not replacing fossil fuel fast enough, many people know there is an energy crunch coming hence all the lng terminals

    • @wernerderchamp
      @wernerderchamp Před měsícem +1

      @@blueyhis.zarsoff1147 For Europe, its mostly a way to get away from Russian gas. The transition to renewables still stands. And even if battery storages fail completely, the backup would cut down gas usage to a third of todays usage.

    • @blueyhis.zarsoff1147
      @blueyhis.zarsoff1147 Před měsícem +1

      @@wernerderchampJan 2years ago wind and solar all stopped in a Jan snow storm. Germany had all coal running at 100%
      Wind and solar is temp power so is a battery

  • @rizaldi2298
    @rizaldi2298 Před 19 dny +1

    US is biggest LNG exporter and all those years behind media never talk bad about LNG and in the near future theres a lot of new gas field that Will fullfil asia demand of LNG and they Will not need US energi anymore thats why media began to talk about it

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Před měsícem +1

    Gas burned in a combined cycle plant can have 60% efficiency (or even 90% if the cooling water gets used in district heating) and can be turned on and off relatively quickly meaning it can load follow whatever renewables are on the grid. Windy day, no gas needed, calm day with clouds, turn on the gas plant. It's a good transition until other storage exists.

    • @wernerderchamp
      @wernerderchamp Před měsícem +1

      By just adding some batteries to balance (1/5 - 1/3 of daily consumption) one can very easily reach ~90-95% renewables. You'd only need to ramp them up when both wind and solar are out.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před měsícem +2

      @@wernerderchamp I'd say you need a bit more batteries for that (depending on location and what over sources are on the grid, if you have hydro and nuclear, great!) but other storage can play a very important part. Thermal storage for heat and hot water would go a long way to eliminate gas use by storing wind over production when it happens. Sand/rocks for thermal storage is cheap and plentiful, an oil cistern filled with it at 500 C is 10s of GWh storage. Would work well in places that have district heating anyway.

  • @sparky7915
    @sparky7915 Před 20 dny +1

    A simple way to help reduce methane emissions is to plant trees - especially lots of Christmas trees. They also absorb CO2 in the air.

  • @paul1979uk2000
    @paul1979uk2000 Před měsícem +1

    For me, LNG is a short term solution, the cost alone will end up pushing that aside for cheaper alternatives, likely renewable energy sources being created much closer to where it's used.
    In the case of Europe, there's a bit of a spike in buying up LNG since the war in Ukraine, but when looking closely, it looks like they are shifting their economy to an all electric system, which opens up more options on what energy sources you can buy and favours renewable energy sources, because of that and because LNG is so expensive, unless the ones that produce the LNG gas find ways of reducing the cost a lot, I can't see them being competitive with other energy sources, especially renewable energy that's getting better and cheaper all the time.
    There's also the security issue, since the war in Ukraine, more countries want to produce more of the energy they use internally, the only real issue with renewables is the inconsistency, but that can be solved with batteries acting as a buffer.
    Basically, there's a short wind fall for LNG because of the war in Ukraine, especially in Europe, but it seems short-lived just to fill the void that Russia is missing out on, so unless LNG becomes a lot cheaper to buy, I can't see it being that competitive for long and cheaper alternatives, likely renewable will replace it, at least in Europe, because Asia is a bit different, in many areas, they need as much energy as they can get from any source as they are a growing economy, whereas Europe is more developed and settled on its energy needs, so even thought it's going up, it's much more manageable with cleaner energy sources like renewables, especially as battery tech continues to get better and cheaper.

  • @Apocalypse9696
    @Apocalypse9696 Před měsícem

    you talked about LNG supply chain causing lot of emmissions. Coal supply chain is also very dirty, Mining it, then transporting it, often on ships, and then at ports, put on trucks for transport to power plants

  • @lawrenceheyman435
    @lawrenceheyman435 Před měsícem

    My country, Australia, as mentioned is a big exporter. I see a role for it, of supplying power when renewables are low. Low solar and wind. But hopefully diminishing to zero.
    The industry tries to push CCS, but it seems like green-washing

    • @wernerderchamp
      @wernerderchamp Před měsícem

      It definitly is green-washing. We need to get away from fossil fuels. More than half of the gas is just providing low-level heat.

  • @WiwatChang
    @WiwatChang Před měsícem +1

    Yes, Thailand is hooked on LNG for over half of our energy needs

  • @tsbrownie
    @tsbrownie Před měsícem +2

    Of course as more solar/wind/etc energy is brought online, the need to move LNG will decrease and its cost will increase. Economics will have its way.

  • @barry4148
    @barry4148 Před 2 dny

    LNG was also said to be used as a miracle for the transport of goods, but it turned out not to be as good and clean as expected.
    LNG is a dangerous development in my opinion because it remains a gas, it is just not as green as some people promise because of the production and transport of everything.
    There is still an easy solution to the energy problem, at least, if they just ignore cold fusion, which was already known in the 60s but nothing was done with it, it is now starting to take shape, but we are still far from there.

  • @axelsluis34
    @axelsluis34 Před měsícem

    In the Netherlands we build LNG terminals that can at a later state be refitted to receive hydrogen for ouer industry

    • @wernerderchamp
      @wernerderchamp Před měsícem

      Its also planned to refit the German terminals for hydrogen or ammonia.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 26 dny

      Hey Axel! Yes, if considered when builing the LNG terminal, parts of the terminal can be used for hydrogen. However, a Fraunhofer study shows that the adapting to be used for hydrogen still poses very high costs.

  • @timijosephariyo
    @timijosephariyo Před 5 dny

    Great video, very detailed and extremely helpful!

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 4 dny

      Hey there! Glad to hear that 😊 If you want to see more videos like these, subscribe to us ✨ we publish every Friday.

  • @ROHITPRADIPNAIK-mo8pf
    @ROHITPRADIPNAIK-mo8pf Před 16 dny

    Good content very informative❤❤

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 16 dny

      Hey there! Thanks for your feedback! If you enjoy content like this, consider subscribing to our channel. We release new videos every Friday ✨

    • @ROHITPRADIPNAIK-mo8pf
      @ROHITPRADIPNAIK-mo8pf Před 16 dny

      Done💓

  • @masamiyaleco
    @masamiyaleco Před 28 dny +3

    DW: Germany should stop importing LNG! German electricity should be left up or down to the wind!

  • @richdobbs6595
    @richdobbs6595 Před měsícem

    If interruptables are really practical, it would be possible to run the liquefaction and regasification plants off of them. If that were the case, then maybe all of this infrastructure wouldn't be stranded, it would reflect the required capital investment to make interruptables work. Better hope that the engineers will design this equipment to be supply following, although that might not be necessary for handling long duration wind droughts.

  • @unconventionalideas5683
    @unconventionalideas5683 Před měsícem +6

    I am glad that the US suspended the issuance of permits for new LNG export infrastructure. I think that this is a wise first step to perhaps causing countries to rethink their reliance on LNG.

    • @blueyhis.zarsoff1147
      @blueyhis.zarsoff1147 Před měsícem +2

      They know the will need it themselves

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před měsícem +3

      The already existing permits are enough for a tripling of the export capacity...

    • @haysjack6818
      @haysjack6818 Před 23 dny +3

      Apparently you think that all countries including poor developing countries where the majority of the worlds population live have the ability to invest the huge sums of money required to develop wind and solar power that the USA has? It is very arrogant and ignorant to think that making energy harder for poor people to have access to plentiful cheap natural Gas so they can improve the quality of life is ok because it does not effect you? Do you actually think that if the countries that need natural Gas will not simply find other sources of natural Gas? Do you actually think it is good that Europe depends on Russia for their Natural Gas? If you lived in a poor country in Africa you would think very differently about having your access to cheap Natural Gas taken away.

    • @gardencity3558
      @gardencity3558 Před 18 dny +1

      The US already has so much LNG infrastructure so they didn't need it anyway.

    • @umeshchittirai
      @umeshchittirai Před 15 dny +1

      USA is the biggest LNG exporter and they aren't going to suspend it as currently they have enough production

  • @moors710
    @moors710 Před 12 dny

    One alternative for oil producers is to flare the natural gas as the oil in more valuable and stranded gas generally has no net market. A greater LNG market could make less of this gas simply flared into the atmosphere. The gas is flared to prevent methane from going into the atmosphere. Suppressing the consumption could easily lead to much more atmospheric methane by marginal producers in third world countries just vent the gas.

  • @marcelo.griebeler
    @marcelo.griebeler Před měsícem +1

    I missed an analysis to whether the LNG infrastructure can be repurposed for hydrogen. I don't know regarding the transport and storing (H2 is usually very tricky to deal with) but I heard that the natural gas power plants that are being built in Germany will be convertible to hydrogen. Nonetheless, great content as usual from the Planet A team!

    • @MrRobertjparsons
      @MrRobertjparsons Před měsícem +2

      Most LNG and natural gas infrastructure cannot be used for hydrogen as the H molecules embrittle iron and steel pipes and components causing them to fail. Much work needed to make H a viable fuel for most applications. Also it's incredibly expensive (Cupertino CA price of $33 per kg, or about $120 per gallon last month)

  • @DeathsGarden-oz9gg
    @DeathsGarden-oz9gg Před měsícem +3

    How hard is it to go to a sewage treatment plant and change it.
    Like make it produce lots of methan to collect ad a dome or something and not have it open to the air for all smells to leave like they do now.

    • @atrumluminarium
      @atrumluminarium Před měsícem +1

      Honestly with manure it's relatively easy and you get fertiliser as a byproduct and gives a use to wasted food that we have so much of in the west.
      I think the issues will be more related to regulations.

    • @NikolaiBeier
      @NikolaiBeier Před měsícem

      Extracting methane from sewage treatment plants seems to work well several places in Denmark.
      Sewage seems like a very stable resource to depend on, and thus it is good to invest in this sort of extraction to reduce the need for imported methane.

  • @alanrobertson9790
    @alanrobertson9790 Před 19 dny +1

    The global warming potential of methane is around 25 not 80. 80 relates to a short term 20 year figure not allowing methane life time. Also methane is not deliberately released as part of LNG production but no process is 100% immune to leaks. All figures given on Wiki so you can check for yourself.

  • @jerrydriscoll8636
    @jerrydriscoll8636 Před 13 dny

    You you never mentioned that if the methane is not used, it's flared so the result it is just as much CO2 flaring.

  • @tombarry2523
    @tombarry2523 Před měsícem

    Methane can be converted to hydrogen. The carbon left behind is in powder form. Hydrogen can then be chilled and transported just like LNG. It’s definitely more challenging to transport due to its lower boiling point compared to methane but it is possible.

  • @vasu_devan
    @vasu_devan Před měsícem +1

    Its making sense but if ships run on cleaner fuels then it makes sense

    • @tomwobus1482
      @tomwobus1482 Před měsícem

      Dude, they use Fraking to get the gas, what kind of sense are you talking about🤪🤪🤪

  • @rushja
    @rushja Před měsícem

    Thanks for making this video. It's important to point out that there are many steps before we even burn fossil fuels that are forgotten. Those steps are probably the most polluting part of the whole enterprise. When we say that a fossil fuel is cheap we're not taking the cost of the effects of future pollution into account, and we should be!

  • @dr.saritgreendas3105
    @dr.saritgreendas3105 Před 29 dny

    LNG is very very critical for Sustainable Development in a era of Climate Change. Before the industrial dynamics set forth, a comprehensive assesment on methane leakage should be carried out to make better policies.

  • @bryancampbell9622
    @bryancampbell9622 Před měsícem

    There is a lot more use for natural gas than most people think. The shipping industry needs to find cleaner fuels to use. LNG so far is a good candidate for a future shipping fuel. Unless the industry can manage to get an engine design to use ammonia commercially. Which is made using natural gas. If the climate will make farming more difficult in certain areas it will have to be done using less land. This will require us to use more fertilizer, and nitrogen based fertilizer is made from natural gas. With the amount of mining required for the energy transition's need for more powerlines to bring electricity from renewables to populations, it is doubtful that can be done in time. During that transition time baseload plants such as natural gas plants can provide power during low renewable output times. Until we can get the proper high voltage direct current lines to take advantage of longer distances to spread the risk of an outage, we will need them. And considering the third world isn't expected to go carbon neutral until 2100, they will need inexpensive energy in the mean time. Are these forecasts expecting the third world to continue to be poor? If their economies improve their energy usage will increase.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem

      Hey Bryan! Ammonia Shipping is a big topic and we actually tackle that in one of our videos the next two weeks. Subscribe to our channel to be notified and let us know what you think ✨

  • @Rocker4040
    @Rocker4040 Před dnem

    As long as common doesn't get direct benefits of switching over to renewable energy that too at low cost..its going to be har to convince him.

  • @danielgospodinov5786
    @danielgospodinov5786 Před měsícem +1

    We use fuels for production. If our TV, Phone, Printer, Car and all in between are long lasting and reparable not made for one time use. Then we don't need so much fuel of any kind.

  • @hmartim
    @hmartim Před 28 dny

    Methane is only a viable transition fuel if an electricity plant is built as close as possible to the well and then its energy distributed along the high-voltage transmission lines.

  • @croutiflex953
    @croutiflex953 Před měsícem +2

    This shouldn't even be a debate. building any new long term fossil infrastructure is a really bad idea. The only reason some people think otherwise is because fossil companies make them.

  • @davidetomatis6864
    @davidetomatis6864 Před 2 dny

    Please also consider that GWP 100year of hydrogen is ~10, therefore the same should be said for H2

  • @neverrl3379
    @neverrl3379 Před 6 dny

    Awesome channel you got here. Thanks.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 5 dny

      Hey there! Glad to hear that you like our channel. By the way: We publish videos like these every Friday. Subscribe to us to be notified ✨

  • @henlohenlo689
    @henlohenlo689 Před měsícem

    why no drive down the road with old school and fire stove on the car. some how the heat makes movement.

  • @trs4u
    @trs4u Před měsícem

    We're only liquifying it because we're shipping it so far. Japan is attempting to synthesise net zero methane for domestic capture. The North Sea countries of Europe should do it using offshore wind to pipe (unliquified) to the rest of Europe. The thing about gas is that it stores vast amounts of energy in compressible volumes, so continuing to run our fallback electricity generation and economies off e-gas makes sense. The risk in e-LNG is that it makes renewable resources more globally tradable, which allows global markets too much leverage over intrinsically local renewables opportunities.

  • @jeffallen4377
    @jeffallen4377 Před měsícem

    The infrastructure is being built out in the USA and there are long-term environmental consequences. Really, putting in renewable energy infrastructure is about the same cost, and it does not pollute. I do not know the answer, but I would like to see studies look at methods to transition the LNG world to liquid hydrogen, liquid air or something similar to move energy around the world. If the source does not pollute the atmosphere, water or land, we will all benefit.

  • @shaqisumari304
    @shaqisumari304 Před měsícem

    Thanks for sparing Malaysia,

  • @theamici
    @theamici Před měsícem

    My country (Norway) is a major exporter of LNG and I'm so ashamed of how much our government insists on releasing even more pollutants into the atmosphere. The time for a break was like 20 years ago, the fact that we haven't been able to stop sooner or stop now (instead due to the war, we're accelerating our production) is terrible and heartbreaking.
    I hate my government and I hate the old fools who're driving us straight into climate doom

    • @RudyG01
      @RudyG01 Před měsícem +1

      But there's a tradeoff, those LNG exports are making Norway a fortune, and afaik avg Norwegians do benefits from it. Plus its cleaner than coal or oil (hopefully) so while not the cleanest source of energy, its still better than exporting oil or using coal.

  • @shantanusapru
    @shantanusapru Před měsícem

    Excellent video!!

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem

      Thank you! We post videos like this one every week. Subscribe to our channel to not miss any of these.

    • @shantanusapru
      @shantanusapru Před měsícem

      @@DWPlanetA Already do.

  • @antona9723
    @antona9723 Před měsícem

    If you would mention about lng infrastructure, which can be used for hydrogen in future, it will start to make sense.

  • @contraplano3157
    @contraplano3157 Před 17 dny

    In Portugal we might put H2 in the equation, in pipes. How much gas will be lost in 800km of pipe lines?
    I agree it is bad

  • @maxdontask
    @maxdontask Před měsícem

    Who cares how we the people feel about it. The politicians don’t the companies don’t. Therefore it won’t make a difference unless our apartments get cold and there is less food on our plate.

  • @JasonVoorhees-zd4ko
    @JasonVoorhees-zd4ko Před měsícem

    Biggest thing that needs to happen is for solar+storage to become cheaper than LNG.

  • @ST-jl2tb
    @ST-jl2tb Před měsícem

    The world is switching steadily to alternative fuels like hydrogen, ethanol, etc. Having infrastructure in place like that of LNG, PETROLEUM STATIONS will ensure smooth transitioning to these cleaner fuel, with minor modifications in existing facilities. So building up new setup isn't that bad of an idea, if done with the right intentions. Kindly correct me if I am wrong.

  • @sailflydriverobert2700
    @sailflydriverobert2700 Před měsícem

    Saving on energy is the future. On all levels of the society and industry. And up to now, there's hardly anyone saving. And with saving, I mean, instead of replacing a light bulb in the room by replacing it with 4-6 LED's, imported from China, you'd better switch off the light first and start thinking...in the dark.
    Everything you buy nowadays comes with a power cord. What was done manually in the past, is now electrically powered.
    Insulate against heat, not against cold. I've been working for decades in tropical regions worldwide, nowhere I saw a modern building insulated against the heat, but A/C's were running everywhere at full power. Even in the most developed tropical counties and cities, there is zero insulation in modern buildings. With the exception of a few buildings in the Emirates.
    With global warming, the tropical regions become even hotter. And more A/C's will be needed with higher energy consumption as a result. Electric energy produced out of LNG?
    Since mankind uses energy, mankind is in energy transition, continuously. Think at least 1-2 steps further into the future to tackle the issue.
    The new worship should be based on thermodynamics and physics, more sustainable than any other religion and it might keep child birth rates within limits.

  • @MrArtist7777
    @MrArtist7777 Před 17 dny

    LNG is a short term answer, until solar, wind and small nuclear infrastructure is built to replace LNG, which it will over the next decade, or so.

  • @kanesaw7456
    @kanesaw7456 Před měsícem

    In regards to methane escaping. The Operators are all over it. Otherwise youll have an explosion. Shipping co2 can be reduced using Air lubrication systems and or converting existing LNG ships to nuclear powered (SMR) ships. Mike Wirth Chevron CEO spoke in current CFR meeting about using SMR's to reduce CO2 from the business. That would be another reduction. All for green energy and Other alternatives.

  • @stevecallagher9973
    @stevecallagher9973 Před 26 dny

    Theoretically speaking an LNG tanker would be far less polluting if it spilled its cargo at sea as opposed to a crude oil tanker doing the same?

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 26 dny

      Hey Steve! If LNG spills on water it would not harm aquatic life or damage waterways, so in that way it is less worrying than crude oil spillages. However, it would vaporize and produce methane, a potent greenhouse gas. So, that would be an issue, too.

  • @benediktkaufer8194
    @benediktkaufer8194 Před měsícem +23

    Expanding solar, wind and storage is our best bet! LNG sucks...

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem +1

      We have many videos on these in our channel - check it out! And don't forget to subscribe. 🌱

    • @ms-tw4sj
      @ms-tw4sj Před měsícem +9

      NO, Nuclear Power is our best bet.

    • @za7v9ier
      @za7v9ier Před měsícem

      A diverse energy mix the our best bet. Nuclear can complement solar & wind when there isn't any. @@ms-tw4sj

    • @MayankTrivedi2
      @MayankTrivedi2 Před měsícem

      India recently inaugrated a fast breeder reactor (first one of its kind) for thorium energy. China has also made huge leaps in this regard and is ahead of India in many regards, I think soon Thorium can also provide us a great way @@ms-tw4sj

    • @hsvfanjan17
      @hsvfanjan17 Před měsícem +2

      @@ms-tw4sj Nuclear power is extremely expensive (in France they HEAVILY subsidies their nuclear power to "make" it cheap) and waste still is an issue, even though it's gotten much better already. They also have a few videos on it here

  • @Dqtube
    @Dqtube Před 23 dny

    And now imagine a world in which one country did not become dependent on gas because it shut down some of its nuclear power plants before the end of their technological life. Imagine how many other sources could have been built with the billions of euros that were wasted on gas when nuclear power stations could still supply power to the grid.

  • @grahamt2672
    @grahamt2672 Před měsícem

    Hopefully it will soon be confirmed how LNG compares to local coal WRT GHG emissions. To me the process is so intensive and wasteful I expect it to be as bad if not worse than coal especially when they measure all typical fugitive methane emissions.
    Also I think/hope that countries looking to move off coal are more and more likely to bypass LNG as a bridge and go straight to renewables (with whatever you currently have as a backup until grid storage is fully sorted): as noted they are cheap and getting more so, quick to stand up, free of geopolitical strings, and the fuel is free. China and the US made a recent agreement to triple renewable energy generating capacity by 2030 which should create huge momentum.

  • @colgategilbert8067
    @colgategilbert8067 Před měsícem

    Missing is the absence of a discussion that it will take 40 -60 years to build out 'Reliable" 'Green Energy" alternatives at Scale. Also, most current 'Green Energy Solutions' are only 30% reliable. It took between 50 and 70 years to build out our current global energy system. It could easily take the same for its alternatives.

    • @zeugundso
      @zeugundso Před měsícem

      Yeah but getting to 90 - 95% is doable in the coming 15 to 20 years so we should not let be the perfect be the enemy of the good.

    • @colgategilbert8067
      @colgategilbert8067 Před měsícem

      @@zeugundso It's not bad to get 30% energy supplements into your power grid, but I feel the 90% in 15-20 years as being overly optimistic. Example, EV's have hit market saturation in the US and dealers are having to returned them to the manufactures. In many places there is a 2 year moratorium on just applying for Permits to link Green Power sources into the power grid, never mind review, acceptance, design, getting finance, construction and activation. Both will have a pushback chain reaction impact on the industries fabing the energy sources, building out the martial sources and various refining processes for large scale production. Plus competition from other industries for the same basic materials to build out other things as the supply lurches towards the unknown. With Europe's and China's declining labor force and the US having a more limited one, there could also be a shortage of grunts to build out this new grid. These are the delays in the plans I see, so a temporary build out of the current energy system is desirable.

  • @zukacs
    @zukacs Před měsícem

    All countries who massively benefitied from industrilization should put down their share towards prosperity of the planet

  • @Theoryofcatsndogs
    @Theoryofcatsndogs Před měsícem

    It is not that we have much choice. We still need to keeps the lights on, heat the food and warm our home. Renewable still have some major limitations, like power transmissions, dependence on weather, and limited by location.
    LNG is just less evil compares to oil and coal.

    • @NikolaiBeier
      @NikolaiBeier Před měsícem

      How much of annual electricity consumption that needs to be generated from stored energy rather than wind and sun, has been a research topic.
      For North America and Europe it is normally less than 20 % of the annual electric energy consumption. Keeping nuclear running, further limits the amount of methane needed, and it may be cheaper to build more wind farms and solar systems with lower utilisation than normal (to reduce the gap left to be filled with stored energy), than to buy methane.
      Anyway, it is possible to reduce the amount of methane used for electricity, by replacing methane with solar and wind, and still keep the lights on.
      For heating food, induction cook-tops works very well. For heating homes, heat pumps can also work very well, if suitable equipment is installed properly.
      So technically, there is a choice to reduce methane consumption.

  • @bikingcat3283
    @bikingcat3283 Před měsícem

    Notice how no one talks about breaking patents on energy saving technology. All about profit.

  • @leskuzyk2425
    @leskuzyk2425 Před měsícem

    wow DW ... you are sooooo clever to figure that out

  • @bogdanmarkovic
    @bogdanmarkovic Před 4 dny

    Although gross CO2 emissions might be equal to burning coal, big part of it is generated outside of country where it is finally burned (used).
    For governments that want to show how green their country is this is win win situation. Undeniably burning gas is greener than coal so if half of gross CO2 is released thousands kilometres away from you why should that government care when their only goal is to show how green is their country, not the world.
    It is same as with electric cars. You still need "dirty" power plants to charge them, but at least they don't release most of CO2 directly in your city but rather somewhere far away where power plant resides.
    In most cases its just a matter of where emissions are released rather than how much.

  • @grogery1570
    @grogery1570 Před 15 dny

    All the surplus gas terminals means that there will be a surplus of customers looking to make their investment pay or at least not look like a white Elephant. That means higher prices for gas and bigger profits for the producers, and when have the oil companies ever missed an opportunity to take every last dollar they can?

  • @popandbob
    @popandbob Před měsícem

    Near the end it says renewables will replace gas... but this just isn't true yet. Wind and Solar are just not reliable enough, and storage batteries are too high of a climate impact currently to install. There is an alternative however - Biogas. If we can create more natural gas using non fossil fuel sources then why can we not continue to use natural gas in the future? Yes it has challenges such as leaks but that can be fixed and monitored whereas wind&Solar need new technologies to exist to be reliable enough to fully replace gas. Up here in Alberta where we produce 2/3rds of Canada's wind and solar, we just about had a major grid outage during a -40 cold snap because it was cloudy and the wind wasn't blowing. The on grid battery storage facilities we had also failed in the cold. So until there is a reliable solution to store wind & solar power on a large scale - natural gas will continue to be the baseload power here.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před měsícem

      Hey there! We tackled the production and challenges of energy from biomass in another video in detail 👉 czcams.com/video/XXu15NlOuGo/video.html

  • @dave55ides
    @dave55ides Před měsícem

    It’s a good well balanced video - many thanks. I think the major issue is that the quoted “climate goals”, presumably 1.5 deg C over pre industrial levels are unrealistic. You would need to engineer a global economic depression over the short term to achieve that - and you should not. Far more realistic is to seek to achieve 2-2.5 deg C by 2100, which means Net “Not Much” in about 40 years. That is realistic and we should be able to adapt to that - and (of course) then the stranded assets argument goes away.

  • @tonysherwood9619
    @tonysherwood9619 Před 16 dny

    The politics of fuel dependency!

  • @rogergagne2256
    @rogergagne2256 Před měsícem

    Great video! And those final remarks by Robert Rozansky, about the falling cost of renewables, continue to hold true and to gain weight. This video was made in March 2022. In both 2022 and 2023, heat pumps outsold natural gas furnaces in the US. In 2023, the EU cut their gas-fired power production by 15% from the previous year. And, globally in 2023, at least 68 gas-fired power plants planned for construction were canceled because they couldn't compete, on cost, with solar + batteries.
    We CAN dramatically cut our emissions, and start to stabilize the climate system. That is a very low priority for the fossil fuel industry, and they are fighting hard to preserve the status quo.

  • @philborer877
    @philborer877 Před 15 dny

    No need for the dirty energy!! Renewables and battery storage are scaling up.

  • @TheRustyLM
    @TheRustyLM Před měsícem

    You know what’s REALLY REALLY dirty?
    Making solar panels & windmills.

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 Před měsícem

    My country, Canada is looking at exporting LNG to Europe. I rather see the gas being used rather than flared off at oil wells. It is more difficult to transport than oil or liquid fuels but the clean burning part is good.
    Since Natural Gas is a natural product of decomposition, I wonder how much is being released by our oceans naturally? Obviously leaking gas is bad for profit margins so companies will be on that but I wonder how big of an issue leaks actually are. Also I always say domestic fuel is the best fuel

  • @Eikenhorst
    @Eikenhorst Před měsícem

    I think this hits a very important issue with many investments in the energy sector: by making the investment it might be significantly better than what we currently do. But it also means we are locked into this for a long time, and then significantly better is far from great. Fair enough, but this sounds also like another reason to just do nothing right now.

  • @pasilinnosto6712
    @pasilinnosto6712 Před měsícem

    I think Australia dumps its LNG outside the country and uses very little

  • @phatmeow7764
    @phatmeow7764 Před 26 dny

    tbh i would gladly get on the LNG train rather than the (currently) unreliable and sometimes hare-brained push for "renewables" Also LNG + SMRs (small modular nuclear reactors) for me as a real, practical energy source/s for long term. Also instead of demonizing diesel, the German auto industry ought to make them run better with DME? DME can be made from natural gas, biomass or direct carbon capture? I would love a compression ignition BMW/Mercedes/Audi with a V6/Inline 6 running smooth and clean on DME but one can only dream haha

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 25 dny

      Hey there! We are actually publishing a video on SMRs next Friday ✨ If you want to be notified about it, subscribe to our channel. Until then, you might want to check out our video on synthetic fuels as you mentioned DME 👉czcams.com/video/zDyh-H7AAcg/video.html

  • @marc.sellgren
    @marc.sellgren Před měsícem

    This was good until that guy in the end touts renewables as the solution/replacement of LNG. Intermittent renewables are a huge part of why LNG was needed in the first place, because of their intermittency. Any "solution" for this, be it storage or back-up, will add to the cost. Not only monetary but also resources, both in terms of land and materials used. In the end this drains their EROI which was already poor to begin with.

  • @yankee3698
    @yankee3698 Před měsícem

    One argument that is often times broad forward when it comes to gas and LNG investments (that is not found in this particular video) is that it is "H2-ready" or at least that it is easy to convert the infrastructure to one that can handle hydrogen instead. Theoretically it does seem to make sense, but how credible is it that this switch will take place and be globally complete before 2045-2070 (the timeframe in which many countries pledge to become carbon neutral). It seems like this makes only sense if at the same time there is MASSIVE investments in getting the H2 production up and running. Of course there are such investments (see e.g. Hyphen Hydrogen Energy) however what will I see if I look at the planned expansion of export capacity of LNG for the next 20-30 years and the planned construction of green hydrogen export capacity? How difficult will it actually be to convert the infrastructure?

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 26 dny +1

      Hey there! A Fraunhofer analysis found that about 50 percent of initial LNG capital expenditures could be reused when hydrogen compatible materials are already being used in the initial construction of the LNG terminal. So, it is yet to see how expensive the retrofitting for hydrogen is going to be and how it will work out.

  • @jamilaad5387
    @jamilaad5387 Před 20 dny

    Interesting report 👍

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 20 dny

      Glad you enjoyed it! Subscribe to our channel 😉

  • @alexanderaleksander4272
    @alexanderaleksander4272 Před měsícem

    I would also like to say that you need to take into account the final user infrastructure. Gas water heaters and stoves in homes and gasoline-powered cars make people seriously concerned about personal investments in the transition to renewable resources, and people tend to save at the expense of good ideas. If LNG will not require the involvement of the end consumer, it will be visible in their homes only in the form of an electric meter - no problem, it will be easy to transfer everyone to renewable sources as planned. But if something will be changed now in front of the end customer and by its money, it’ll stay for at least generation.

  • @wiezyczkowata
    @wiezyczkowata Před 18 dny

    biogas plants - we get tid of manure and have a biogas we can use for heating homes and electricity and for fueling cars

  • @alexanderx33
    @alexanderx33 Před měsícem

    7:23 Incorrect. Natural gas infrastructure, with the exception of wells themselves, CAN be converted into fossil free fueling infrastructure via the sabatier process. You need only change the source of the methane from geologic deposits to the ocean and the atmosphere to fix the mass accumulation equation that governs climate change.

    • @elinys2843
      @elinys2843 Před měsícem

      That’s a dead end … again! This process is energy negative. It needs more energy than it produces. Use fossil fuels for it, you just make fossil fuel demand higher. So there’s no point. And if you want to use green energy for it, wouldn’t it be better to use the green energy as it is.
      Every ‘big oil’ solution - brought up by their army of lobbyists and happily repeated by western ignorants - to reduce carbon emissions leads to a dead end. Not less but often even more emissions. And certainly not profitable if green. Smoke screens every single time.

  • @neilmckay8649
    @neilmckay8649 Před 8 dny

    Growing world population (food production, clothes, diapers, water and sewage treatment, home and transport construction) plus individually consuming more (internet usage data centres) DEMAND increase will outstrip wind, solar and wave for the next 100 years.

  • @justinw2141
    @justinw2141 Před měsícem +1

    We should be exploiting all energy sources. If you want to go "green" with solar and wind(not reliable or that "green") then go for it, but don't force expensive energy on the rest of us. Id reather not freeze to death the go "green".

  • @mysystem32
    @mysystem32 Před 16 dny

    Remind me again who blew up Nord Stream pipeline requiring expensive ship imports from US...

  • @Jun31719
    @Jun31719 Před měsícem +1

    I think this video is only a half right. Amongst fossil fuels, LNG is the cleanest source of energy. Yes it will generate a lot of carbon footprints when you produce LGN itself and construct infrastructure. Still you need to generate the same or more energy to extract crude oil and refine it or mine coal. Even you need to put a lot of energy to build and generate green energy power. 🤷‍♂️