I find it kind of neat to think that the #solar (and #renewable) power uprising is unstoppable at this point
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I find it kind of neat to think that the #solar (and #renewable) power uprising is unstoppable at this point
it does not matter if you don't think it's worth it, in the long run solar always wins due to near-zero operating expenditures, and in the short term solar also wins because even high efficiency panels are literally cheaper than plywood these days.
and if you're worried about the nights: guess what, (e.g LiFePo4) battery cells are now also like 50-100$ per kWh.
Fossil fuels are losing.
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R ActivityRelay shared this topic
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I find it kind of neat to think that the #solar (and #renewable) power uprising is unstoppable at this point
it does not matter if you don't think it's worth it, in the long run solar always wins due to near-zero operating expenditures, and in the short term solar also wins because even high efficiency panels are literally cheaper than plywood these days.
and if you're worried about the nights: guess what, (e.g LiFePo4) battery cells are now also like 50-100$ per kWh.
Fossil fuels are losing.
also this image is still one of my favorite pictures to show people about the rate of solar adoption
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I find it kind of neat to think that the #solar (and #renewable) power uprising is unstoppable at this point
it does not matter if you don't think it's worth it, in the long run solar always wins due to near-zero operating expenditures, and in the short term solar also wins because even high efficiency panels are literally cheaper than plywood these days.
and if you're worried about the nights: guess what, (e.g LiFePo4) battery cells are now also like 50-100$ per kWh.
Fossil fuels are losing.
@anthropy good, good
Still looking to see if adding solar to this building would be viable and cost-effective (vs supporting local larger-scale projects, which we already do).