funny how many try to make an argument against solar by pointing out location/cost etc, when countries like germany (less sun than washington state),
shows it can be done.
they have
gotten emissions to match the 2020 goal by 2013, certainly not by ignoring solar...
and last time i checked, they have storms/hail etc. as well, and its not a problem, ignoring that most 1st world countries wont allow you to build homes that are up to code in the U.s.
to be used as more than a weekend home (not permanent residency), so if 5% of the global population cant build proper homes/roofs, doesnt mean we all need to stay away from solar tech.
@
evernessince
except humans have build so many dams and are holding back so much water, that the planet tilted by about 3ft when comparing 1990 to 2010.
not sure if its a good thing we now are wobbling thru space, while not caused by "nature" events..
By outsourcing manufacturing, mining, farming, and just about everything else to the lowest bidder, who typically have worse environmental "standards".
Solar is good.
It is not the reason why the west can consume at the level they do and still claim "green" political talking points.
That together with selling carbon "credits". E.g. West emits more, pays for a poor country to not use much, or to "offset" these emissions. Poor country takes the money and fakes some documents. Everyone happy.
Countries being able to buy product from other countries and that apparently being generated out of thin air without pollution makes any of these emissions goals laughable.
No. It isn't greener to have China make your thing and ship it halfway around the world. Or to fish something, send it to east Asia for processing, then ship the fillets back because that's cheaper.
So many false economies.
Also, the main manufacturer of solar cells, which have a similar water intensive/rare earth mining process as computer chip manufacturing, is China.
The icing on the cake is idiot emission standards, meaning the Netherlands, which is the most efficient farming nation in the world, producing extremely high quality foods with optimal usage of resources, gets hit hard by per capita emissions targets. Forcing farmers to sell up generational farms, making room for nice new "eco" developments. Never mind they are a massive exporter of food and they feed much of Europe.
Not surprised the farmers there and elsewhere in Europe have been pumping manure onto EU governmental buildings in organised protests for quite some time now.
Germany, for example, has been leveling historic villages, to build open pit mines sourcing brown coal, because they closed all their nuclear plants and the eco generation is not baseline.
(not a joke)
German energy giant RWE has begun dismantling a wind farm to make way for a further expansion of an open-pit lignite coal mine in the Western region of North Rhine Westphalia.
euobserver.com
I'm using Germany as an example since you mentioned they are "showing how it can be done".