Re: Krugman Should Have Read EJ's "The Next Bubble"
Sure, like all industries, we sell a lot of things other than solar panels, not the least of which is hope for a sustainable and more secure world. Most readers and contributors at iTulip know I think this is a worthwhile endeavor, (whether they think so or not is an entirely different issue). I was making a statement stripped of my usual embellishments in an attempt to reveal the essence of my work to anyone who might think it's more than that. Who better on iTulip to understate the value proposition of solar than me?
If we can all agree on the most simple proposition that the purpose of solar panels is to deliver electricity, we may someday agree that installing solar panels that deliver a kilowatt hour of electricity for 25 cents is an amazing value. This costs more like 35 cents per kWh in Canada as the light resources are 30-35% less than the US Southwest.
You're correct of course, most users of electricity don't care where it comes from, only that it works. People feel that way about all products. I type away on a Compaq laptop and I know absolutely nothing about its real life cycle cost to the environment or to US workers jobs. Like electricity, it's a tool I paid for and as long as it turns on everytime I need it to, I'm happy. But this tool, like a solar panel or any other product has a very real, measurable, and not insignificant, embodied energy cost.
There is so much bad, (or maybe just dumb), information available to people, I'm going to try on iTulip to strip my knowledge of as many superlatives and adjectives as possible and present options as I see them. Before we can question the value of delivering electricity via other sources, we have to agree that solar panels are simply that, a conduit to reliable power.
Originally posted by GRG55
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If we can all agree on the most simple proposition that the purpose of solar panels is to deliver electricity, we may someday agree that installing solar panels that deliver a kilowatt hour of electricity for 25 cents is an amazing value. This costs more like 35 cents per kWh in Canada as the light resources are 30-35% less than the US Southwest.
You're correct of course, most users of electricity don't care where it comes from, only that it works. People feel that way about all products. I type away on a Compaq laptop and I know absolutely nothing about its real life cycle cost to the environment or to US workers jobs. Like electricity, it's a tool I paid for and as long as it turns on everytime I need it to, I'm happy. But this tool, like a solar panel or any other product has a very real, measurable, and not insignificant, embodied energy cost.
There is so much bad, (or maybe just dumb), information available to people, I'm going to try on iTulip to strip my knowledge of as many superlatives and adjectives as possible and present options as I see them. Before we can question the value of delivering electricity via other sources, we have to agree that solar panels are simply that, a conduit to reliable power.
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