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Mixer 85

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Posts posted by Mixer 85

  1. Whilst the wind is blowing….good.

    During periods of calm…very bad.

    Simply look at your most recent electricity bill and ask yourself what benefit have you seen from the billions of investment in wind farms and all the government subsidies that make them commercially viable? 
     

    It’s been calculated that in order to store enough energy to see the UK through a 10 day calm period in winter, an investment of 3 trillion in battery storage is necessary, just roughly 18 months GDP. This is also an ideal world scenario where there are no losses in energy between turbines and batteries and no leakage over time. It’s also based on current demand which is likely a fraction of a net zero world where every home, business, social environment is heated using heat pumps, every vehicle is electric, every meal is cooked on electric hob, all smelting & foundries use electric arc.
     

    One might argue this is achievable for a wealthy and advanced nation like the UK but it’s only when you consider this on a global scale that you realise how farcical this net zero persuit really is. Do the maths and work out how much this will cost each and every individual. Will it even work? Will we be enduring rolling blackouts like China are currently? All this whilst the globes worst co2 producers ie India/China enjoy cheap energy and render our efforts moot.

    Garden path springs to mind.

    NZW_storage2.png
    WWW.NETZEROWATCH.COM

    (1) On a bad winter day, at present, we would need 40 GW*; this equates to about 1 TWh/day*.  This estimate is based on a 30 GW average daily demand

     

    • Like 1
  2. 8 hours ago, cheeky_monkey said:

    funny how every weather event is caused by climate change. ...scientists say..who the fork are these scientists? apparently England chances of winning the world cup have diminished due to yesterday's performance against Hungary..scientists say 

    It’s most likely a case of correlation being dressed up as causation. With a system as complex as climate it’s probably not hard to find correlations. I’m sure if you try hard enough you’ll find a correlation between Boris Johnson’s flatulence frequency and Arctic sea ice. 
    The ‘World Weather Attribution Initiative’ were set up to quickly draw links between extreme global weather events and climate change. Part of their  goal is to attribute such events in a timely fashion so as to get reports to the media whilst these events are fresh on people’s minds.

    • Like 2
  3. 44 minutes ago, Mucka said:

     

    We have a government that denies responsibility for every crisis they create and the proposed solution is always more tyranny.

    But don't worry Boris is fully behind UN Agenda 2030 and the first restrictions on home energy use will begin in 2022 which as always will be the gateway to the total control over the power you consume and for what.

    This green energy is really working well for us, we just need a constant gale and we will be fine, except for the SF6 the windfarms use which is 1000 times more potent a greenhouse gas than Co2.

    Good job we closed all those clean burning plants otherwise the tiny fraction of a percentage of extra Co2 we put into the atmosphere would have been the tipping point, but more importantly the ten thousand times extra Co2 than that put into the atmosphere by China being exempt from climate policies that are saving the Earth is irrelevant - a pensioner with a nice detached country house who had travelled to London to sit in the road told me.

    I wouldn’t be too dependent on that constant gale…..LOL

    8C008286-5052-4A50-B1C2-1F329AF8BA85.jpeg

    • Like 1
  4. 2 hours ago, Ed Stone said:

    Why is an Antarctican cold spell 'no doubt a good thing'? Is weather, the world over, not made up of 'spells'?

    Perhaps it’s a good thing if one hasn’t subscribed to the Armageddon narrative. Perhaps it’s a good thing if one is hoping for the mainstream science to be proven wrong.
     

    Most importantly, it’s much easier to see it as a good thing if it’s seen for what it actually is rather than a mere ‘cold spell’. A whole continent largely below average for the past 6 months. Coldest September ever recorded and a ‘mere’ 0.6 degrees away from a lowest temperature ever recorded. How on earth can this be construed as a‘cold spell’?

    atmosphere-12-00217-g001-550.jpg
    WWW.MDPI.COM

    The European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) released its latest reanalysis dataset named ERA5 in 2017. To assess the performance of ERA5 in...

    This reports 40yrs of good things, or a 40yr ‘cold spell’ depending on your political orientation. 

    • Like 3
  5. 9 hours ago, Quicksilver1989 said:

    You seem to be unable to separate localised weather from global climate variations. Areas can still have notable cold spells in a warming climate. Do you seriously believe that global warming is over just because the USA has the odd cold winter?

    Notable cold spells can still occur but the extent of the warm spells and their frequency outweigh the cold and hence you have a warming trend, with more warm extremes in the future. Does this graph really look like it is snowballs in the face of climate scientists?

    image.thumb.png.19777f3f81f3d8d60d5066e29b8f2598.png

    To be fair though we should take note of what’s happening in Antarctica and be grateful of what is no doubt a good thing. 6 months of anomalous cold spread over an entire continent is by no means localised weather variation (not suggesting you implied that). 
     

    • Like 2
  6. 23 minutes ago, Optimus Prime said:

    Well we currently have a government that refuses responsibility of food supply over it's citizens. If they can't take responsibility of that then what hope have we got.

     

     

    Agreed, and adding to that, much of what we eat travels from all over the world. Food miles are a major issue and unfortunately much of what’s travelling around the globe is utter rubbish.
    Shelves and shelves of junk food lining our supermarkets. The health implications of this are monumental. Do you think many of the sick or obese members of our society give a damn about climate change? Unlikely, these unfortunates have enough to worry about.

    Yet when you compare the costs of healthy wholesome foods against processed junk food there’s a huge disparity. Taking more money away from the lower/middle classes is going to exacerbate the health issue, funnel more money towards junk food suppliers, so on so on. 


    Like I said before, an instant rewind back 150yrs would solve a lot of problems but given our current and expanding population it will likely cause a lot more.

    • Like 3
  7. Okay, let’s put the debate aside for a moment and assume we are headed for a climate disaster. How is the approach we’re taking in any way going to help us avoid such a disaster. We are too dependent on fossil fuels. We are too dependent on our modern comforts. We are investing trillions globally that are not going to do diddley squat in the grand scheme of things. 
    Our governments are signing up to net zero agreements that can not and will not be achieved without putting us back 150yrs. Taxpayer money is being funnelled towards this insurmountable task, meanwhile we are being encouraged to consume consume consume. Buy buy buy the cheap consumable products coming from countries like China who produce the vast majority of greenhouse gases, countries that have no intention in reducing their emissions. 
    I live in a country that releases .01% of global emissions yet I’m paying through the nose for energy. We’ve a health service that’s in shambles. We have energy hungry data centers going up at a rate equivalent to 140,000 homes per year over the past 5yrs coming onto our grid. These data centers contribute nothing to our economy in terms of employment, yet the Irish tax payer is fronting the costs in terms of a failing energy infrastructure. Meanwhile our government commit to legally binding emissions targets that won’t be reached, funnel billions into renewables that won’t suffice and then tell us we have to cough up our carbon taxes, buy electric cars that we can’t afford and heat our homes with unicorn farts because oil and coal will soon be a thing of the past. Their means to convince us is the impending disaster that’s going to arrive in 2050. 
    Forgive me for being so cynical but if such a disaster is imminent, wouldn’t you think the policys would be a little more meaningful as opposed to the usual squeeze of the middle and lower class.

    Setting science aside it’s very difficult to support and engage with a political system that’s so flawed. I’m all for a cleaner, greener environment but we are by no means moving in the right direction and likely going to strangle our economies in our virtuous persuits. I for now will remain a sceptic. I don’t believe the science is settled. Scientists are still far away from fully understanding our climate which is so vast, diverse and under constant change. As long as there’s debate and scepticism there will be a persuit for better understanding and knowledge. It’s a healthy aspect of science and deserves it’s due course.

    • Like 5
  8. 1 hour ago, Optimus Prime said:

    You're making an example of one extreme scenario and using it as prophecy, now who's sounding religious?

    Almost all of the predictions, specifically James Hansen led, which predicted temperature rises predicted in the 70's to present day have more or less come to fruition. You can cherry pick data used in that analysis to refute this claim, but then you would be ignoring the ensemble mean which has been remarkably accurate and takes in to account multiple variables.

    I don't believe the world will end. That is ridiculous but it's quite obvious we will not be able adapt in time to avert the displacement of billions of the world's most vulnerable.

    It's always the vulnerable that suffer, that's why people like you feel they shouldn't need to worry about it. Be it not just climate change but social inequality the racist war on drugs, police brutality etc.

     

    First off the example I gave is human psychology and not religious. It may be adopted through religious beliefs but one mustn’t confuse one over the other. 
    Secondly “people like me” is a gross categorisation of someone you don’t know. I am a conservationist at heart. I believe strongly in protecting our planet and it’s environment. I do not believe the poor and vulnerable should suffer. I believe poorer nations should be given access to cheap reliable energy derived from fossil fuels, just as we had. There is an attempt to deny this based on the so called irrefutable science. We are endlessly bombarded with these terrifying ‘predictions’ that are clearly tailored to instill fear into our young. 
    Regardless of who’s right or wrong in this long running debate what bothers me the most is that science has been politicised. Any scientists who engage in the debate quickly find themselves ‘persona non grata’. Any studies that dispute  the narrative are kept out of sight. Lies and false claims are being trumpeted constantly.

    I believe in the human pursuit of truth and understanding in all fields of study and sadly in the case of climate science this no longer applies. It’s turned into irate school girls berating our leaders in front of the world. Quite sad really.

    • Like 3
  9. 10 hours ago, Optimus Prime said:

    You might want to read up on 'motivated reasoning'. It's a classic mental condition most humans suffer from. It's believing what you want to be true, rather than what would be considered rational or evidence based.

    You might want to read up on ‘apocalypticism’. It’s a classic mental condition most humans suffer from. It’s believing that the end is nigh, be it from religious apocalypse to environmental collapse. It quite easily explains the endless and unsupported doomsday prophecies touted by alarmists and many media outlets.

    • Like 3
  10. Well this is the most surreal Paddy’s Day I’ve ever witnessed. I live in a small town in the Midlands (Ireland). I just drove into town and it was deserted, almost everything closed, no cars or people. Went to a service station and they had oil drums stacked in front of the counter so as to maintain distance. 
    Very very strange and eerie indeed as usually there’s loads of hustle and bustle around and on this day in particular you’d have everyone in town for the parade and pubs would be overflowing. 

    • Like 3
  11. Apologies if this has being highlighted already but second wave of the Spanish Flu is believed to have been caused by a much deadlier mutation of the first strain, spread widely by soldiers returning home from war, so, seems rather pointless to build herd immunity if a second wave scenario similar to Spanish Flu is expected. 
    Surely trying to stop this thing in its tracks is the best solution. No doubt after it’s all under control there will still be localised outbreaks but these can be managed as they emerge. I’m sure at that stage there’ll be majority immunity anyway or perhaps even a vaccine.

    • Like 3
  12. 12 hours ago, ciel said:

    For the avoidance of doubt, and with reference to your railing against BBC reporting;

    This latest reading was taken at a monitoring station on Seymour Island, part of a chain of islands off the same peninsula, at the northernmost point of the continent.

    Although the temperature is a record high, Mr Schaefer emphasized that the reading was not part of a wider study and so, in itself, could not be used to predict a trend.

    "We can't use this to anticipate climatic changes in the future. It's a data point," he said. "It's simply a signal that something different is happening in that area."

     

    _110901738_gettyimages-84670570.jpg
    WWW.BBC.CO.UK

    The temperature was recorded on an island off the Antarctic continent's northern tip.

     

    There’s no doubt whatsoever that the article is an attempt to peddle the doomsday prophecy. One doesn’t have to scroll very far to even find the word doomsday. In addition to this you get a nice pic of terrified penguins running around wondering where all the ice has gone.

    That’s just my opinion on it and to each their own.
     

    .....and thanks to @Midlands Ice Age for your regular updates, your posts are incredibly informative and well put together.

    81E337B2-9F6F-4563-A796-1A69CB300323.jpeg

    • Like 6
  13. 1 hour ago, Mattwolves said:

    If I had a quid for everytime I've heard the.... I'll just finish me last few fags then I'm quitting quote! Personally I think vapimg is much safer than the fags, I know there is serious debate on whether it is.... But if all the vapers I've spoke to who, saying they quit fags 12 months ago for it, and now say they know longer are chesty, or indeed have a cough!! So some good signs on that front. 

     

    Good that your other half is into fitness mate. One word of advice from me would be to mix cardio with weights... Ie... Strengthen your heart  and lungs with the cardio and your muscles with the iron, always remember your body works as an whole, so train it as such, never just work on one part! You will feel the benefits instantly from all those extra adrenal hormones mate.. Long term, think 6 months on major health improvements. This is a good point for anyone out there, the fitter you are, the more likely you will recover from anything life throws at you. I'm aware some won't be able to over do it, but just a little helps, even if it's just for the mental side of things, in removing the stress hormones. Perhaps we should now be starting a Netweather keep fit and yoga class at noon everyday!! 

    May help us relieve some of that stress folks... And 1-2-3-4.....repeat, and breath!

    Fantastic post as always Matt although it’s worth pointing out that high intensity weight and cardio training is incredibly taxing on our bodies and immune systems and for those not used to such training it can cause a weakening of the immune system.

    Sorry if off topic but just thought it’s worth pointing this out in case some rush to the gym and start slamming metal in the hope of strengthening their defences. ??‍♂️

    Key point is to not go too hard when starting off. Generally hitting the gym hard wouldn’t be an issue but right now it’s in our interests to maintain our immune system. 

    • Like 4
  14. Count yourselves lucky in the UK that government is disclosing outbreak locations. Here in Ireland we’re being totally kept in the dark with “east of the country” and “west of the country” Personally I’d like to know at least roughly, what towns/areas are affected. It might help somewhat with avoidance/containment but also adopting the mindset that it’s potentially all around and taking appropriate action with regards to hygiene is probably wisest.

    • Like 3
  15. 7 minutes ago, na52 said:

    Oh whereabouts ,I have family near Zittau upside the Polish border 

    A wee town called Straubenhardt on the edge of the Black Forest....an hour from Stuttgart. Seeing a grand German lass from here so travel over and back quite often. It’s a beautiful area. 
    Looking forward to a nice winter wonderland walk in the woods in the morning Snow is shown to continue until 4am so hopefully will see some accumulation.

  16. Looks to be a very intense squall line headed this way. Interesting to see how intense this is as there’s already been a heavy downpour of hail battering on the window and it’s barely showing up on radar.

    Let’s hope we see plenty of intense squalls developing in the cold westerly flow Monday/Tuesday giving us all a good ole dumping.
    Best of luck to all in the coming days. We finally have a bit of excitement upon us so hopefully it’s a matter of sit back and enjoy the ride! Oh and @Sperrin please don’t be greedy and keep all your snow drifts to yourself. If you’re not gonna invite us all over for sledging and snowball fights at least share plenty of pics

    • Like 2
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