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Renewables Surpass Coal Globally, Despite US Setbacks

Solar and wind power are outpacing coal for the first time globally. However, the US faces challenges in meeting clean energy goals due to material shortages, a lack of skilled workers, and political roadblocks.

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Something remarkable happened this year.

For the first time in history, renewable energy generated more power than coal worldwide. Solar grew thirty-one percent in just six months. Wind and solar together outpaced electricity demand.

China built more clean energy in half a year than the rest of the world combined. India’s renewable growth beat demand. Their fossil fuel use dropped.

Why? Simple economics.

Wind and solar are now the cheapest sources of electricity.

But here in America, we have a problem.

Johns Hopkins researchers just discovered we’ll fall thirty-four percent short of our clean energy goals by twenty fifty. Not because renewables cost too much. Because we don’t have the materials to build them.

Nickel. Silicon. Rare earth elements with names like neodymium and dysprosium. China controls ninety percent of the processing. And last week, they announced export controls.

Meanwhile, in Britain…

They’re creating four hundred thousand clean energy jobs by twenty thirty. Plumbers. Electricians. Welders. Building wind farms. Installing solar panels. Running smart grids.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband put it simply: “Where are the good jobs of the future going to come from? This is the answer.”

The Sizewell C nuclear plant alone needs ten thousand workers. But here’s the rub – they need to triple their welders, double their plumbers. The workers don’t exist yet.

Down in North Carolina…

Duke Energy just announced a new plan. They’re delaying wind projects. Extending coal plants. Not because coal is cheaper – it isn’t. But because artificial intelligence and data centers are driving electricity demand eight times faster than expected.

Glen Snider from Duke says they need reliability while demand surges.

The irony?

Duke’s moving away from the cheapest new sources of power – wind and solar – just when they need the most electricity. They’re choosing to extend expensive coal plants that cost more to run.

Australia sees opportunity…

Treasurer Jim Chalmers is in New York meeting with Blackstone and Wall Street. Australia has lithium, manganese, rare earths. They claim they can deliver the world’s lowest-cost renewable electricity by twenty fifty.

“Australia has exactly what the world needs, when the world needs it,” Chalmers says.

Think about this…

The technology works. Solar and wind are cheaper than coal. Batteries can store the power. Countries using these technologies are seeing their energy costs drop.

But America faces three bottlenecks:

First, we don’t control the materials. Second, we don’t have the skilled workers. Third, states like North Carolina are choosing reliability over cost savings.

President Trump calls renewables “a joke.” But JP Morgan says something different. They say America will have to use renewable energy whether we like it or not. Nuclear takes too long to build. Fossil fuels cost too much.

The numbers tell the story…

Britain: Four hundred thousand new jobs. America: Seven hundred thirty gigawatts short of materials. North Carolina: Eight times the demand growth. Global renewables: Cheaper than coal for the first time.

We’re watching the free market work. The cheapest energy is winning worldwide. Except in places where politics and supply chains get in the way.

The future of energy isn’t about saving anything. It’s about economics. And right now, the economics are clear.

The cheapest power comes from the sun and wind.

https://weatherguardwind.com/renewables-coal-us/

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Renewable Energy

How Fox News Does Its Thing

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A few times a week, I flick on Fox News for a minute or two just to see how they’re seeing current events under Trump.  What I notice is that they seldom mention Trump at all; most of their content is about Democrats.  You member them–the group that is powerless in the White House, the Senate, the House, and the Supreme Court.

They cover Joe Biden in great detail; they call him “Pothole Joe” now, I guess for his $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, some of which may have been misspent??  I honestly don’t know.

The point is this:  If you’re trying to make sense of the world around you today, how much do you need to understand about a man who has been out office since last January, and has no more effect on your political or financial lives than Daffy Duck?

How Fox News Does Its Thing

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Renewable Energy

Trump’s Impact on the United States

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The presence of Trump in our lives can be compared to the “chicken and egg” phenomenon.  Did Trump cause our immorality, ignorance, and lies, or did an intellectually and morally failing electorate bring Trump into power?

The author of the meme here believes it’s the latter of the two, though I would say that it’s impossible to make the call here, as neither could have happened without the other.

In any case, all this leads to another discussion that Americans have constantly with one another: Is a difference in politics worth losing friends over?  In my own mind, I frame the question a bit differently: How close do I want to be to someone who, for whatever reason, honestly believes that Trump is a good, honest, and effective leader of the United States?

I’d far rather have an evening martini and watch Jeopardy with my wife–even on a night when I really hate the categories.

Trump’s Impact on the United States

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Renewable Energy

Big Oil Donors Will Sure Like This One

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From The Other 98%:
Trump just gave away America’s last wild frontier — to Big Oil. It’s the largest giveaway of public land to fossil fuel companies in modern history. The announcement, made Thursday by Trump’s Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, opens 1.56 million acres of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge wilderness to oil and gas drilling.
Burgum bragged that “Alaska is open for business,” calling it a win for “energy independence.” Translation: the Arctic is open for destruction.

Big Oil Donors Will Sure Like This One

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