Alberta?
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Where I lived in Ontario they relied heavily on hydro-electric. They actually call it 'hydro' over there rather than 'electric'.
It probably wasn't as cold as Alberta, but it was a hell of a lot colder than Texas. It routinely got down to -30C.
Canada relies a lot more on sustainable energy than the US.
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Yeah we still have a couple of coal fired plants. They're scheduled to be phased out by 2023. By then we'll be exclusively gas fired generation in addition to a couple of small hydro dams down south.
There are also some wind farms down south but I don't know how much power they generate. The City of Medicine Hat though is geo-thermal and has been for some years now.
Read the article posted above though. Wasn't too impressed either, gives the impression we like coal and want to keep it. We don't. It also fails to point out the reason things run up here in the winter is because all industrial construction is at minimum certified to -45 C. More often than not it can operate at -60 C.
There's a reason we build drilling rigs and gas plants here and export them to places like Alaska, Siberia and Northern China. Texas built rigs and oilfield equipment in general don't work worth a damn in the cold.
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The idea that gas and oil would have saved Texas is utter bullshit.
Ill-preparedness is what caused the disaster to be worse than it needed to be.
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@doctor-phibes said in Alberta?:
Where I lived in Ontario they relied heavily on hydro-electric. They actually call it 'hydro' over there rather than 'electric'.
Remember the blackout of 1965. The whole northeast including Boston and New York went dark because someone pulled the plug from Niagara Falls.
They even made a Doris Day movie about it
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@doctor-phibes said in Alberta?:
The idea that gas and oil would have saved Texas is utter bullshit.
Ill-preparedness is what caused the disaster to be worse than it needed to be.
What's harder to winterize, a solar panel farm or a coal plant?
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@doctor-phibes said in Alberta?:
The idea that gas and oil would have saved Texas is utter bullshit.
Ill-preparedness is what caused the disaster to be worse than it needed to be.
What's harder to winterize, a solar panel farm or a coal plant?
To be honest, I have absolutely no idea, however the Canadians seem to manage to winterise their hydro plants pretty effectively.
67% of Canadian electricity is generated from renewables, according to Wiki
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@doctor-phibes said in Alberta?:
@doctor-phibes said in Alberta?:
The idea that gas and oil would have saved Texas is utter bullshit.
Ill-preparedness is what caused the disaster to be worse than it needed to be.
What's harder to winterize, a solar panel farm or a coal plant?
To be honest, I have absolutely no idea, however the Canadians seem to manage to winterise their hydro plants pretty effectively.
67% of Canadian electricity is generated from renewables, according to Wiki
I've seen the rivers in Texas. I can spit over some of them.
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The question seems to be moot, since Texas didn't winterise any of them.
Blaming this disaster on environmentalism is like blaming WW2 on vegetarianism.
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Vegetarianism? Interesting, you may just be onto something. He was also teetotal, or imbibed very little and then only with food .
I wonder.
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What's harder to winterize, a solar panel farm or a coal plant?
I failed to mention that solar is growing popularity here. It's not that it is problem to winterize the panels and associated faclities - hell, most of the panels are on the flat roofs of commerical buildings and private homes . Rather it is a problem having sufficient duration and concentration of sunlight this far north in the winter months.
Winter sunlight shouldn't be a problem for Texas.