• Vendul@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    It’s kinda good but it completely destroyed the European manufacturing for solar

    • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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      29 minutes ago

      When panels were 30c/watt, projects at $1/watt in EU and US happened. 70c/watt was spent on labour, copper, support structures, and grid connection equipment. All of those can be locally produced, with possible exception of last item.

      At 6c/watt, that is over 90% of power projects are local economy boosting instead of 70%. It provides cheaper energy that is useful for industrialization and cost of living benefits too. US tariffs on solar are entirely about protecting oil/gas extortion power instead of a $10B solar production industry that needs fairly expensive support.

      Solar imports does not cause energy dependence. You have power for 30+ years with no reliance on continuous fuel supplies. Shoes and apparel is a $450B industry in US. You need new supplies every year, and it makes much more sense to secure supply in that industry for war on the world purposes.

    • IndustryStandard@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      By providing big subsidies to green energy developement. Something the EU could also have done but refused to. And so they lost their entire lead.

    • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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      19 minutes ago

      You’re either an astroturfer or useful idiot spreading oil lobby talking points.

      Either you believe the climate science or you don’t. If you do, you know that we don’t have time for industry protectionism.

    • Allero@lemmy.today
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      2 hours ago

      It is good, period.

      Local manufacturing is politically advantageous and may employ some people at the same time, but that’s where benefits end.

      Europe didn’t reject Chinese face masks during COVID-19, and Europe shouldn’t reject Chinese solar during a climate emergency.

      Solve that first, and political struggles later.

      • nexusband@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        It’s not only a political struggle. Working conditions are tremendously better in Europe, Environmental Protection as well. Manufacturing photovoltaics takes a huge pile of chemicals that need to be handled properly to not cause any harm to the environment - China neither cares nor has any other incentives to actually do this properly, which is exactly why they are so cheap. Theres also the issue of poor quality, that if you’re manufacturing something that can have a significant impact on the environment, it should “count” and not be waste 10 years later.

        Not only that, China’s subsidies are utterly unfair.

        Destroying the environment in one part of the world to “save” a different one due to climate change is just ridiculously stupid and simple minded.

        • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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          26 minutes ago

          Manufacturing photovoltaics takes a huge pile of chemicals that need to be handled properly to not cause any harm to the environment

          Source for this? Cadmium is exclusive to 1 US manufacturer.

    • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Yep the EU will be beholden to a dictatorial regime again. Instead of placating Putin for gas it will be Xi for solar panels and batteries.

            • RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              5 minutes ago

              I didn’t mean they only last 2 years but battery degradation is a pretty common and known thing.

              By a quick search I didn’t find any claim of storage battery lifetimes outside of 10-15 years, so there doesn’t seem to be a breakthrough in tech I wasn’t aware of. 15 years is hardly the lifetime of a house, so you certainly don’t “buy only once”.

              Solar panels also don’t work indefinitely but their efficiency degradation is more on par with the lifetime of major parts of the building, like the roof itself.