Category Archives: 100% renewable energy papers

Links to the peer-review system questioning 100% renewable energy papers.

Elon Musk: When you “Electrify Everything” it HALVES how much energy you need to make!

Elon: when you Electrify Everything it HALVES how much energy we need to make in the first place! While oil was this incredibly dense energy source with a very high EROEI – the Internal Combustion Engine is terribly inefficient. Diesel … Continue reading

Posted in 100% renewable energy papers, Electric Vehicles, Solar | Leave a comment

Double the head, halve the cost of pumped hydro

Renew Economy is one of Australia’s biggest renewable energy podcasts. Here they interview Professor Andrew Blakers. (Click here or on image to go to episode.) Here they interview Professor Andrew Blakers. His team just won the engineering *equivalent* of the … Continue reading

Posted in 100% renewable energy papers, Storing energy | Leave a comment

Mike quotes Mark Mills: it’s Michaux 2.0

OK – Mike Stasse has found another Michaux. At first this new contender – Mark Mills – had a smooth manner and calm assertions. But within a few minutes I was already concerned. Then I did further research and the … Continue reading

Posted in 100% renewable energy papers, Denial, Doomers and Collapse, Materials & Metals | Leave a comment

Tom Murphy’s paper reveals something I also fell for back in the day

I again owe this next post to Mike Stasse’s indefatigable efforts to quote the dishonest (Michaux) or irrelevant (Murphy). With Mike, it goes like this. I show a fundamental error in one of Mike’s heroes – an error so blatant … Continue reading

Posted in 100% renewable energy papers, Hydro, Nuclear, Solar, Storing energy, Wind | Leave a comment

Michaux “Paints the world Singapore.”

Mike Stasse wanted me to watch another Simon Michaux piece. Thanks Mike – I know know how Michaux came to his odd conclusions about pumped hydro! Remember how mystified I was in my last post as to how he came … Continue reading

Posted in 100% renewable energy papers, Materials & Metals, Renewable energy, Storing energy | 2 Comments