U.S. Energy Association
U.S. Energy Association
  • 572
  • 139 864
USEA PSP Episode 103: United Illuminating Connecticut Director of Regulatory Affairs Ted Novicki
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Ted Novicki, Director of Regulatory Affairs for Connecticut with investor-owned utility United Illuminating, answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish from the utility perspective about Connecticut’s process for moving its utilities to performance-based regulation, a new business model which rewards the utilities for achieving public policy goals instead of for investing in infrastructure.
มุมมอง: 16

วีดีโอ

USEA PSP Episode 102: Citizen’s Utility Board of Illinois General Counsel Eric DeBellis
มุมมอง 1012 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Eric DeBellis, General Counsel for the Citizen’s Utility Board of Illinois, answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about the consumer advocate’s perspective on the emergence of and continued development of performance-based regulation in Illinois.
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 101: Sealed VP of Policy Dave Kolata
มุมมอง 34วันที่ผ่านมา
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Dave Kolata, VP of Policy for energy efficiency provider Sealed and formerly the executive director of Illinois consumer advocate the Citizens Utility Board, answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about the private sector’s perspective on the emergence of and continued development of performance-based regulations for utilities in Illinois.
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 100: GridStrategies Vice President John D. Wilson
มุมมอง 109หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, John D. Wilson, Vice President with policy and energy consultant GridStrategies answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about findings in his just-released paper, now the talk of the energy world, on the magnitude and drivers of the surging U.S. demand for electricity. This episode closes out our 2024, but we’ll be back to thrive in 2025. We are ...
December Virtual Press Briefing: DER and Virtual Power Plants: The Easiest Supply Boost
มุมมอง 112หลายเดือนก่อน
The next virtual press briefing in the United States Energy Association’s monthly series will examine distributed energy resources, virtual power plants and transactive energy. The briefing is set for Dec. 11 at 11 a.m. ET. “All of a sudden, distributed energy resources and virtual power plants have come of age, after being a pipe dream of environmentalists,” says journalist Llewellyn King, who...
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 99: Ulupono Initiative President & Managing Partner Murray Clay
มุมมอง 27หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Murray Clay, President and Managing Partner of Hawaii’s clean energy-focused Ulupono Initiative investment fund answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about Hawaii’s performance-based regulation, probably the most advanced and far-reaching change in the regulation of a US electric utility in a century.
Evaluating the Utility of NRAP Tools in UIC Class VI Injection Permits
มุมมอง 21หลายเดือนก่อน
The United States Department of Energy - National Energy Technology Laboratory (DOE-NETL) has been developing the National Risk Assessment Partnership (NRAP) to evaluate several aspects of carbon capture storage (CCS). The existing NRAP tools satisfy four key areas of CCS projects: (1) risk-based areas of review (AoRs), (2) induced seismicity probability and impacts, (3) monitoring approaches, ...
USEA PSP Episode 98: Hawaii Natural Energy Institute Faculty Energy Specialist Jennifer Potter
มุมมอง 26หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Jennifer Potter, a former commissioner with the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission and now a Faculty Energy Specialist with the Hawaii Natural Energy Institute answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about Hawaii’s performance-based regulation, probably the most advanced and far-reaching change in a US electric utility’s regulation and business m...
Consent Based Siting & Permitting, Social License, & Community Oriented Project Development
มุมมอง 12หลายเดือนก่อน
Learn how tribal nations can actively engage in decision-making processes for infrastructure projects, ensuring that cultural values, sovereignty, and community well-being are respected. We’ll discuss strategies to build trust, secure community consent, and promote sustainable development that benefits tribal communities, while respecting the land and traditions. This webinar is essential for t...
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 97: Rabago Energy Principal Karl Rabago
มุมมอง 26หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Rabago Energy Principal Karl Rabago, who has served as a DOE Deputy Assistant Secretary and as a Commissioner with the Public Utilities Commission of Texas, answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about the emerging national momentum toward performance-based regulation and why PBR is an important step in reforming the utility business model to me...
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 96: Regulatory Assistance Project Senior Associate Mark LeBel
มุมมอง 68หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Regulatory Assistance Project Senior Associate Mark LeBel answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about the emerging national momentum toward Performance-Based Regulation and why PBR is important as a means to reform the utility business model to meet 21st century clean energy and climate policy goals.
USEA PSP Episode 95: NCCETC Associate Director for Policy & Markets Autumn Proudlove
มุมมอง 40หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Autumn Proudlove, Associate Director for Policy and Markets with the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center at North Carolina State University kicked off a new USEA series on performance-based regulation, or PBR, by answering questions from journalist Herman K. Trabish about the emerging national momentum toward PBR, which can change the fundamental ...
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 94: Amperon CEO & Co-Founder Sean Kelly
มุมมอง 12หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s final episode of the USEA Power Sector Podcast series on data, Amperon CEO and Co-founder Sean Kelly answered questions by journalist Herman K. Trabish about the uses of machine learning and accelerated computing-based algorithms to design, operate and optimize data to improve the economics of clean energy for power providers and their customers.
November Virtual Press Briefing: After the Disasters: Making the Supply Chain More Resilient
มุมมอง 135หลายเดือนก่อน
There was a time, not so long ago, when businesses followed the just-in-time (JIT) management philosophy and inventory strategy that aims to reduce waste and increase efficiency by receiving inventory only when it is needed. It had originated with Toyota and Japanese efficiency experts and was promoted in the West by W. Edwards Deming, the business theorist, known as the father of the quality m...
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 93: Ascend Analytics Founder, CEO, & President Dr. Gary Dorris
มุมมอง 872 หลายเดือนก่อน
In today’s USEA Power Sector Podcast, Ascend Analytics Founder, CEO, and President Dr. Gary Dorris answered questions from journalist Herman K. Trabish about how data from accelerated computing is becoming critical to accurate modeling for energy portfolios, risk management, asset valuation, and long term resource planning.
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 92: Mission:data Coalition President Michael Murray
มุมมอง 252 หลายเดือนก่อน
USEA Power Sector Podcast Episode 92: Mission:data Coalition President Michael Murray
The National Tribal Energy Roundtable, Webinar #12 (FINAL): Trail of the Chiefs Energy Corridor
มุมมอง 322 หลายเดือนก่อน
The National Tribal Energy Roundtable, Webinar #12 (FINAL): Trail of the Chiefs Energy Corridor
NETL Carbon Storage Planning Inquiry Tool (CS PlanIT) Webinar
มุมมอง 242 หลายเดือนก่อน
NETL Carbon Storage Planning Inquiry Tool (CS PlanIT) Webinar
Worthington Family Remarks: USEA's 100th Anniversary Celebration
มุมมอง 112 หลายเดือนก่อน
Worthington Family Remarks: USEA's 100th Anniversary Celebration
USEA PSP Episode 91: NREL Strategic Energy Analysis Center Market & Policy Group Manager Jeff Cook
มุมมอง 212 หลายเดือนก่อน
USEA PSP Episode 91: NREL Strategic Energy Analysis Center Market & Policy Group Manager Jeff Cook
EnergyTech Connect: Collaborative Energy: Solutions for Managing the Grid's Rising Demand
มุมมอง 492 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Collaborative Energy: Solutions for Managing the Grid's Rising Demand
EnergyTech Connect: Balancing Act: Insights and Strategies from ISOs and RTOs
มุมมอง 652 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Balancing Act: Insights and Strategies from ISOs and RTOs
EnergyTech Connect: Closing Remarks
มุมมอง 72 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Closing Remarks
EnergyTech Connect Keynote: The Role of Nuclear in Powering Innovation: Chris Levesque, TerraPower
มุมมอง 1442 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect Keynote: The Role of Nuclear in Powering Innovation: Chris Levesque, TerraPower
EnergyTech Connect: Innovations in Digital Infrastructure
มุมมอง 782 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Innovations in Digital Infrastructure
USEA PSP Episode 90: Neara Senior Vice President & Managing Director of the Americas Robert Brook
มุมมอง 532 หลายเดือนก่อน
USEA PSP Episode 90: Neara Senior Vice President & Managing Director of the Americas Robert Brook
EnergyTech Connect: Supply and Demand How Industry Evolves
มุมมอง 322 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Supply and Demand How Industry Evolves
EnergyTech Connect: Powering Innovation: Utility Perspectives on Meeting Demand
มุมมอง 212 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Powering Innovation: Utility Perspectives on Meeting Demand
EnergyTech Connect: State Commissioner's Views on Load Growth
มุมมอง 202 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: State Commissioner's Views on Load Growth
EnergyTech Connect: Key Projections and Considerations for the Future
มุมมอง 192 หลายเดือนก่อน
EnergyTech Connect: Key Projections and Considerations for the Future

ความคิดเห็น

  • @simonbowman6206
    @simonbowman6206 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hi for OZ ,,, Do you really want power to get cheaper? Well in Australia 10yrs ago a proof of concept test was run this system was a retrofittable unit that gave dams the ability to have three extra banks of turbines with no issues to the main turbine hall and no extra water used. Not heard of it I WONDER WHY!!

  • @Helen-y7x1d
    @Helen-y7x1d หลายเดือนก่อน

    You're doing a fantastic job! Could you help me with something unrelated: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). What's the best way to send them to Binance?

  • @colinmegson7721
    @colinmegson7721 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Using NPPs in combination with heat storage, to load follow, is insane. The unavoidable efficiency losses in the '3-circuit' heat exchanger set-up plus an oversize turbine-generator means substantial extra capital cost and waste of precious materials and resources. It might well decrease the NPPs capacity factor by 10% or so. Every extra penny wasted on an electricity generating technology and any loss in efficiency affects the poorest in society to a disproportionate degree. Affordable, pollution-free electricity is the name of the game. Bill Gates should rethink his support for this technology because the raison d'être for Natrium is ethically tainted by profiteering through the crazy pattern of generation from dysfunctional wind and solar power plants. Natrium stores reactor heat when these intermittent technologies produce too much electricity and prices crash; as demand ramps up and/or 'the wind don't blow (often) and the Sun don't shine (every day), it allows a Natrium operator to [inefficiently] return that heat to electricity and charge the higher prices that then prevail. So, as is always the case, the greatest disservice of 'propping-up' high prices, will simply makes the poorest poorer. Instead, NPPs can operate at 100% availability and load-follow grid demand within milliseconds, when combined with PEM electrolyser plants that manufacture greener-than-green, nuclear enabled hydrogen (NEH). Supplying electricity or manufacturing a valuable product 100% of the time, is very profitable for plant operators In the UK, a NPP capable of supplying grid electricity and manufacturing NEH can benefit from 4 revenue streams: electricity sales; greenH2 sales; load following grid service; frequency correction grid service. This is the way the existing Gen III+ technologies, with a whole of life fuel cycle infrastructure in place, will be able to decarbonise all sectors of energy use: colinmegson.substack.com/p/how-nuclear-enabled-hydrogen-neh

  • @dusandragovic09srb
    @dusandragovic09srb 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    govern-ment = control-mind The Great Jordan Maxwell, the Teacher, the Man: th-cam.com/video/AOngxMTIQe4/w-d-xo.html Thunder god: th-cam.com/video/YA6vnSZk_w8/w-d-xo.html They fear You th-cam.com/video/JDSfRcCOsg8/w-d-xo.html Holy Wood th-cam.com/video/eFljUYPeigM/w-d-xo.html "Quantum Mechanics" - REAL EXPLAINATION: th-cam.com/video/8EUy_82IChY/w-d-xo.html Animal gods: th-cam.com/video/kzbDKLeXmwY/w-d-xo.html Metal will save us: th-cam.com/video/CK-lK0LMhA4/w-d-xo.html

  • @IbrahimAlAamri-b6e
    @IbrahimAlAamri-b6e 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    please put the link of the report in the description

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome. Covered a ton

  • @MuratGonullu-l3x
    @MuratGonullu-l3x 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Taylor Melissa Hernandez Anna Thomas Gary

  • @Lamyitjakarang96
    @Lamyitjakarang96 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What are PJM south regions?

  • @oneway707
    @oneway707 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    FEAR FEAR FEAR!! You guys are hilarious - & cheap. Where can I send my money? We know that's next. Oh wait, you try to get it via taxes, that's right.

  • @oneway707
    @oneway707 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1- "aberrant weather" is an oxymoron. Not saying this channel or those speaking on "USEA" are the 'moron' part of oxymoron...but fear mongering of "extreme weather" is elementary, high school drama term that WE ALL have caught on to. Notice how many comments or thumbs up you have - and how long this has been on youtube?

  • @Veronica-d5v
    @Veronica-d5v 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This guy always had a 4.2 GPA Salimas High school ,his father is a lawyer and his mom teacher ,Dad was Hispanic mom was White , Ziggyv

  • @Paradoxisthefingerprintofgod
    @Paradoxisthefingerprintofgod 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Whats Rondo Energy? Sounds corrupt and dumb.I hate everything U.S.

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If AI is the backbone of our economy, what have I been putting my back into the last 20 years?

  • @piezo523
    @piezo523 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Would it be possible to also add the english audio or subtitle to the video?

  • @projectcanary
    @projectcanary 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great webinar, thanks for having us!

  • @grim1427
    @grim1427 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Interesting discussion! I really liked the discussion around getting the best results while also acknowledging "resource restraints". If any company anywhere discusses security without acknowledging resource restraints, are they helping or just laying a trap for themselves to fall into.

  • @quaidcarlobulloch9300
    @quaidcarlobulloch9300 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you all for the wonderful presentations.

  • @monoarhossain4788
    @monoarhossain4788 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hello, Your content is great but Your content SEO error. You create content very hard but no content is going viral because your content is not properly SEO. If you do good SEO then your content will go viral. And you can take me help if you want

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    🎉🎉

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 ปีที่แล้ว

    shareholders and customers..... what about the frontline employees?

  • @tmangono
    @tmangono ปีที่แล้ว

    Great work! Very insightful

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent interview thx

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca ปีที่แล้ว

    Great interview w Autumn P

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca ปีที่แล้ว

    Glad you’re on youtube

  • @theianmce
    @theianmce ปีที่แล้ว

    Yes! I'm the 4th one to thumbs up and comment!

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 ปีที่แล้ว

    The emperor has no clothes. You guys are evil and making excuses. Trying to get fossil fuels into developing countries! SHAME ON YOU! Always expanding always digging more out of the ground when our atmosphere has met its threshold. I can’t believe the “cost” is being discussed without the human life and human quality of life. And animal quality of life! When fossil fuel money is being funneled through animal agriculture from offshore banks. Disgusting. The embarrassment of our country is that we recycle NOTHING and waste everything. The “energy” of heat and air escaping our uninsulated homes, our food waste, our antibiotics shoved in, our b.s. waste of time having these stupid, pointless conversations that ARENT difficult or complicated if you don’t have money hooked to fossil fuel dividends

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 ปีที่แล้ว

    I am absolutely stunned by this video. I cannot believe this. You literally called gas and propane cleaner sources of fuel. The public consciousness is stuck waiting for you supposed experts to stop the “economy collapse” mindset and actually see the environmental and human rights collapse that is happening because of these outdated modes of “energy”. Drawdown needs to happen and I don’t see why transportation is still under discussion as fossil fuel. What a red herring! The economic collapse is around the human beings dying from pollution in their schools and jobs that run fossil fuels. Employees in fossil fuel need a retirement exit strategy rather than being kept in golden handcuffs. This is wild. 26:00 closer to an actual question. This is going to be a bloodbath among fossil fuel mega villains, but what does that have to do with everyone else? They need to pay! People, us regular people not investors like you all, we want trains, simple apps to use trains around the country! We want vegan options, disability-accessible transportation and buildings, INSULATION, electric city and school buses, free bikes, hospitals, microgrids! Net metering. RECYCLING, battery recycling! Metal recycling! Chop up these internal combustion engine cars and build trains! Stop resurfacing asphalt roads at a million dollars a mile and build frickin rails! The only place where fossil fuel needs to be continued is in the chemistry sector. This is bonkers how much these “issues” are contrived by people like you! You guys who have all you retirement investments in fossil fuels!!!! You guys are getting rich and profiting off fossil fuels, you’re about to retire on them! So of course you aren’t talking about anything but excuses and issues that have already been solved! It’s only this expensive and “economic” because the exact conversation in this video has been running in circles for decades! And in that time, fossil fuel mega villains have been profiting instead of paying for the damage they’re causing. The people they’re killing, the species they’re killing. Just bonkers how corrupt you all are. Every one of you.

  • @chelseashurmantine8153
    @chelseashurmantine8153 ปีที่แล้ว

    End fossil fuels. It’s not even a question, this is ridiculous

  • @charlesoparah3178
    @charlesoparah3178 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent presentation. Is there a part 2 to cover the rest of NERC-CIP? thanks

  • @clarkkent9080
    @clarkkent9080 ปีที่แล้ว

    There is no such thing as economies of SMALL scale. NuScale was given $2 billion in taxpayer money, free government land on which to build, and NRC fully approved their design and they cancelled the project due to ballooning costs. It is all about the cost.

  • @surendrakverma555
    @surendrakverma555 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for posting useful information

  • @michamilka
    @michamilka ปีที่แล้ว

    I as an investor in Tellurian have all the belief and trust that Charif will do the same but even better. Let's go boss!

  • @andybochman
    @andybochman ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice job people. A diversity of strategies is so far keeping the power on while facing a diversity of situations. Important to remember while feeling mainly good so far, is that today's extremes will seem tame from the perspective of future years. Have to build and update operations with a different and continually changing climate in mind.

  • @EV-Tech
    @EV-Tech ปีที่แล้ว

    Great information!

  • @wengyin3365
    @wengyin3365 ปีที่แล้ว

    i work in both areas give me headache LOL .

  • @arshifthumbil864
    @arshifthumbil864 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great information!

  • @scottbrown7415
    @scottbrown7415 ปีที่แล้ว

    How do you guys come to the conclusion that renewable energy is not expensive? It is! And it's not exactly a volume contributor unless done on a scale that dwarfs the largest of the industrial plant footprints ever created in the industrial age.

  • @فيصلشافعيتايوانالصين
    @فيصلشافعيتايوانالصين ปีที่แล้ว

    Magnat mashin 😂💔🦸🏻‍♂️🇺🇳🇺🇸🕊🛸🤝🏻💐👍🏻👏🏻👋🏻

  • @Oluwapelumi_E
    @Oluwapelumi_E ปีที่แล้ว

    Welldone Ma 👏 Thanks for the innovative words

  • @fiddiehacked
    @fiddiehacked ปีที่แล้ว

    Regarding Dr Simon's portion, we won't be at net zero by 2050. There are many corporate & societal headwinds, but perhaps by 2080 if we include nuclear as a significant portion of total energy. Otherwise the flawed dream of renewables only will merely get us to 80% clean energy by 2200 - and half of that gain will be because of population declines. JMHO

  • @andrew5278
    @andrew5278 ปีที่แล้ว

    *promosm*

  • @efreimvillena7440
    @efreimvillena7440 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very helpful and informative.

  • @OldScientist
    @OldScientist ปีที่แล้ว

    There is no climate emergency. There isn't too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is the most essential gas in the atmosphere, and it exists as only a trace. If the levels were much lower all complex life on the planet would disappear. Removing it from the atmosphere is hubristic madness.

  • @Alessandro-1977
    @Alessandro-1977 ปีที่แล้ว

    Indirect methanol fuel cells, even in the form of hybrid vehicles (methanol+batteries), looks like very interesting and promising

  • @hyknusa3538
    @hyknusa3538 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    bravissima Jennifer

  • @colinmegson7721
    @colinmegson7721 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Using NPPs in combination with heat storage, to load follow, is insane. The unavoidable efficiency losses in the '3-circuit' heat exchanger set-up, an oversize turbine/generator and the substantial extra capital cost and waste of materials and resources, effectively decrease the NPPs capacity factor. Every wasted $1 spent on electricity generating technologies and any loss in efficiency inevitably affects the poorest in society the most. Bill Gates should be ashamed of himself because the raison d'être for Natrium is ethically tainted. It is profiteering from the craziness of dysfunctional wind and solar power plants (WASPPs). Natrium stores reactor heat when these ridiculous technologies produce too much electricity and prices crash. This then allows a Natrium operator to [inefficiently] return that heat to electricity and charge the higher prices which prevail when demand ramps up and/or 'the wind don't blow (often) and the Sun don't shine (every day). So, as is always the case, the greatest disservice of 'propping-up' high prices, makes the poorest disproportionately poorer. Instead, NPPs can operate at 100% availability and load-follow both diurnal demand and the crazy patterns of WASPP generation - almost instantaneously, when combined with electrolyser plants for the manufacture of greenH2. That's 2 revenue streams for 100% of all the available time. For the future decarbonisation of all sectors of energy use, greenH2 manufacture is as vital as generating low-carbon electricity. To load follow electricity demand, NPPs and electrolyser plants are the best combination. Electrolyser plants are low cost ($300/kW------>$200/kW) and suffer no technological issues from rapid load changes (electricity input to the process). The overall efficiency losses from this combination will be miniscule. However, the manufacturing rate of greenH2 from cold electrolysis is only 18 kg/MWh and should only be used for load following. For seasonal load following - with the computer power available - the total of combined plants for base load to peak load demand can be optimised and planned outages for maintenance and refuelling should be possible in the most efficient and cost-effective manner. By 2050, net zero targets can only be met by the supply of vast quantities of greenH2 to decarbonise transport, heating/hot water, industrial, etc sectors. As it can only be produced from low carbon electricity, it means many (double to treble) the numbers of dedicated NPPs will be needed. As publicised by NuScale, LWRs can deliver steam at 850°C steam to high temperature steam electrolysis (HTSE) plants and the production rate of greenH2 jumps by 50%, to 27 kg/MWh. 0.9 MWh of greenH2 energy comes out, for every 1.0 MWh of electrical energy that goes in. This is surely the future of an energy system that eliminates the burning of fossil fuels and prospects of a 100% nuclear/greenH2 world becomes an ever more exciting possibility with the deployment of SMRs, such as GE Hitachi's BWRX-300, on the horizon.

    • @davidmacquigg4267
      @davidmacquigg4267 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Excellent video. I am glad to see this moving forward, especially the hydrogen production. Build it and they will come!! All the problems with hydrogen being not as compact as gasoline will be worked out with existing technology, starting with trucks, trains, and ships that can carry huge tanks. Process heat is another biggie. We may have to move a few steel and cement factories nearer to a source of hydrogen. I was confused by how you get 850°C steam from an LWR, but reading the NuScale PR, I see that is done by using 1.8 MWe of electric power to boost 250 MWt of heated steam at 300°C. Seems like it would take a lot more than 1.8MWe to get that boost, but I will trust NuScale engineers on this. As I understand it, each 250 MWt reactor can deliver 77 MWe electricity, or 68 MWt of hydrogen, or any linear combination of these two. I still see a role for thermal storage in a molten-salt reactor. If you are supplying power to a grid that already has a lot of wind and solar, it may be good politics to offer them a few hours of storage. There is very little loss of power storing molten salt in a big well-insulated tank. Natrium has it as part of their original design. ThorCon can add it, if their customer needs load following faster than 5% per minute. Load following is generally not a problem with MSRs. I agree, however, that hydrogen production is a better use of excess available power.

  • @luciaparra4231
    @luciaparra4231 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Happy to be part of this excellent company! Congratulations.

  • @scadacitect3296
    @scadacitect3296 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I sell the key on SCADA. For information and purchase, write to the mail.

  • @zeesmart6540
    @zeesmart6540 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent keep posting please

  • @whowereweagain
    @whowereweagain 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    coal is not a rare earth metal you fucking psychos, hasnt greed ravaged the indians enough? mining is not famous for its munificent dealings with indigenous people.