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Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
I see Sir Freebie is paying back some of the money, the guilt got too much.

The prime minister is covering the cost of six Taylor Swift tickets, four to the races and a clothing rental agreement with a high-end designer favoured by his wife, Lady Victoria Starmer.

Too little too late.
Which is Edeline Lee, I’m imagining Victoria in this little number

51C86DCB-59C1-43B5-9873-918310BD3566.png
 












Curious Orange

Punxsatawney Phil
Jul 5, 2003
10,226
On NSC for over two decades...
Probably fits on this thread as it does critique policy, and worth a view. I don't agree with everything in it, as certainly heat pump technology for heating can be very good if properly implemented. But I am concerned by the loss of our ability to make our own steel, and the lack of local resilience in the energy sector. To my mind exporting our strategically important industrial base in order to meet a climate target is the basically sweeping the problem under carpet.

The assumption is that the world is going to remain a friendly and cooperative place, when unfortunately the events of recent years indicate otherwise.

 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,014
Probably fits on this thread as it does critique policy, and worth a view. I don't agree with everything in it, as certainly heat pump technology for heating can be very good if properly implemented. But I am concerned by the loss of our ability to make our own steel, and the lack of local resilience in the energy sector. To my mind exporting our strategically important industrial base in order to meet a climate target is the basically sweeping the problem under carpet.

The assumption is that the world is going to remain a friendly and cooperative place, when unfortunately the events of recent years indicate otherwise.


most danergous is silly click bait, which is a shame because it'll discredit some of the useful points being raised. Miliband will be allowed to run with the zero emission ball until it becomes evident its not deliverable, and dependable power is prioritised.
 


Javeaseagull

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 22, 2014
2,808
Probably fits on this thread as it does critique policy, and worth a view. I don't agree with everything in it, as certainly heat pump technology for heating can be very good if properly implemented. But I am concerned by the loss of our ability to make our own steel, and the lack of local resilience in the energy sector. To my mind exporting our strategically important industrial base in order to meet a climate target is the basically sweeping the problem under carpet.

The assumption is that the world is going to remain a friendly and cooperative place, when unfortunately the events of recent years indicate otherwise.


Couldn’t listen to it all. The same thing has been said for years by climate change deniers. They always fail to mention the subsidies fossil fuels get when they spout about economics. Yes, wind and sun are variable but tides aren’t. I grew up in Seaford and the tides are very dependable. Unless a profit can be made nobody wants to know. Tidal barriers could protect the coast and produce energy but no-one can see how to make a profit out of it so it won’t happen It is what it is.
 


nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,574
Gods country fortnightly
Probably fits on this thread as it does critique policy, and worth a view. I don't agree with everything in it, as certainly heat pump technology for heating can be very good if properly implemented. But I am concerned by the loss of our ability to make our own steel, and the lack of local resilience in the energy sector. To my mind exporting our strategically important industrial base in order to meet a climate target is the basically sweeping the problem under carpet.

The assumption is that the world is going to remain a friendly and cooperative place, when unfortunately the events of recent years indicate otherwise.


This guy clearly doesn't understand how the global pricing of energy works. What he fails to acknowledge is higher bills are driving by the global price of fossil fuel prices. Instead tries to blame to increase level of renewables on the grid causing Intermittency . This is something regularly pedalled by lobby groups in the sector, they know the writing is on the wall for them in the medium term.
 
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Curious Orange

Punxsatawney Phil
Jul 5, 2003
10,226
On NSC for over two decades...
most danergous is silly click bait, which is a shame because it'll discredit some of the useful points being raised.

The YouTube algorithm is a bit rubbish and encourages such titles, there is some quite interesting and balanced commentary buried beneath many a lurid headline.

Couldn’t listen to it all. The same thing has been said for years by climate change deniers. They always fail to mention the subsidies fossil fuels get when they spout about economics. Yes, wind and sun are variable but tides aren’t. I grew up in Seaford and the tides are very dependable. Unless a profit can be made nobody wants to know. Tidal barriers could protect the coast and produce energy but no-one can see how to make a profit out of it so it won’t happen It is what it is.

Yes, it was a bit hit and miss I found. I don't think he mentioned the subsidies either part of the industry get.

I'd almost forgotten about tidal power, the main problem as far as I can tell is the sea destroying the technology! However the O2 tidal project up in Scotland looks interesting, hope they can find a way to scale the technology into arrays without disrupting the local environment too much.

This guy clearly doesn't understand how the global pricing of energy works. What he fails to acknowledge is higher bills are driving by the global price of fossil fuel prices. Instead tries to blame to increase level of renewables on the grid causing Intermittency . This is something regularly pedalled by lobby groups in the sector, they know the writing is on the wall for them in the medium term.

I think both things are true though, aren't they? Intermittency of renewables causes demand on other parts of the energy mix.
 




Withdean South Stand

Well-known member
Mar 2, 2014
646
Oh please. Let's not pretend the Conservatives didn't spend their time in power accepting absolutely everything they could. I thought it was terrible when they were doing it and it's terrible now Labour are doing it but it shouldn't be reported as if Labour are doing something dodgy which has never happened before and is totally beyond belief.

Hopefully this focus and attention on the freebies will drive behavioural change, because it's obviously grubby and inappropriate, but it's also obvious that the "outrage" is largely staged and an inconsistently applied standard.
 
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beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,014
I think both things are true though, aren't they? Intermittency of renewables causes demand on other parts of the energy mix.
that's the significant issue with renewables that gets overlooked or deliberately hidden. the additional infrastructure, storage, backup power dont get added to the total cost for the wind farm. then there's the whole market CFD model skwed to make earlier renewables look cost effective, then makes the marginal cost higher for all energy. the right approach would be to show the costs, to drive incentives to make overall project viable - obvious option would be hydrogen storage/combustion which will scale far better than alternatives. until then we'll continue to need gas backup (or coal in some countries).
 


BLOCK F

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2009
6,723
They’ll be taking foie gras off the lunch menu next.
You should have seen the shite we were served up with at public school 60 odd years ago. It certainly wouldn’t have been appreciated by the Bon Viveur lefties on here.
No names mentioned.😁
 


BLOCK F

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2009
6,723
2 years at college learning plumbing, for the final 3rd year to become 'qualified' you have to take on a apprenticeship. Apprenticeships min wages are £6.40ph at aged 18. Min wage ph at 18 for those not in an apprenticeship is £8.60.
Why would any kid in their right mind want to leave college and potentially earn the wage of an under 18 by going into an apprenticeship? Literally 2 years wasted because they'll earn more money working anywhere else at the age of 18, than getting an apprenticeship to finish their qualifications.
I may be misunderstanding your post, but hopefully an apprenticeship will give them a skill for life enabling them to earn decent money for the rest of their working days. It would more than make up for losing a couple of quid an hour as a youngster, in what could be a dead end job.
 


The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,182
West is BEST
You should have seen the shite we were served up with at public school 60 odd years ago. It certainly wouldn’t have been appreciated by the Bon Viveur lefties on here.
No names mentioned.😁
Was still shite in the 80’s.

Despite the misconception of public school privilege, we were still served chips with everything, grim processed meat roll, packet mash etc.



The only difference, we were able to eat it in a lovely, grand, wood panelled, freezing cold and drafty hall that we had to queue up in for ages while the upper years and prefects pushed their way to the front of the queue every day.

I still recalls the day we got a salad bar;

A bowl of cold sweetcorn
A bowl of cold baked beans (??)
Some water melon slices.

Oh! Happy days.
 






BLOCK F

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2009
6,723
Was still shite in the 80’s.

Despite the misconception of public school privilege, we were still served chips with everything, grim processed meat roll, packet mash etc.



The only difference, we were able to eat it in a lovely, grand, wood panelled, freezing cold and drafty hall that we had to queue up in for ages while the upper years and prefects pushed their way to the front of the queue every day.

I still recalls the day we got a salad bar;

A bowl of cold sweetcorn
A bowl of cold baked beans (??)
Some water melon slices.

Oh! Happy days.
I can sympathise and when I tell my state educated wife some of the tales from those very far off days ( thank f—k😁), she can’t believe it.
I really think that some on here who have banged on about public schools, but actually have no idea what it was like would have struggled to survive intact.
So different now, thankfully, but it was a pretty brutal austere life back in the day.
 


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