Re: Electric Induction Stove?
Originally Posted by
11.4
As for carbon-free clean power, natural gas pretty much comes out of the ground and straight to you. Natural gas is created in fairly bounteous amounts so, unlike, petroleum reserves, it doesn't take a hundred thousand years to create and isn't subject to depletion at the same rate. It's also very efficient as far as energy production, pollution, and so on. Carbon dioxide and water. The electricity either comes from a natural carbon source (power plant) or likely comes from a meaningful distance, which means high line losses, long rights of way required for power lines, the very un-ecological mining and purification of electrical-grade copper, and so on and so on.
I was with you until this. A shitload of methane is lost in production, and a whole bunch is lost as leakage in distribution. These losses are huge, and the emissions factor for natural gas may be doubled. That will put it close to oil as a fuel.
While the electricity generation sector is woefully inefficient, like 33%, most of that is inside the plant itself, energy wasted as heat. This conversion loss is often mischaracterized as line loss, but line losses are low (single digits maybe, don’t have a source at hand). And these distribution losses can be reduced with small distributed systems like cogen and solar.
Originally Posted by
11.4
Using a stove isn't typically high up on the wasteful list -- compared to idling for an hour while waiting for the kids, driving two hundred miles to a race, inefficient home insulation, certain industrial processes, and so on. Just my $0.02.
Amen, brother. Forest from the trees, or however that’s supposed to go.
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin
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