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Redman wrote:Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:Redman wrote:Depends when the Nat Gas runs out -reserves vs usage.
Depends on how soon we can scale up Solar to meet the demand in 20 whenever.
@teems- i thought we on take or pay with TGU and Powergen?
What about wind farms on the east coast of Trinidad?
Putting the generation on the East coast with Demand on the west coast might mean a transmission network.
How much Wind power can we generate at peak load hours would be another hurdle-
How much wind power can we generate in terms of the space we have and the issues that come with that infrastructure.
I think its about 1.2M USD per MW in Turbine cost-as a GENERAL rule of thumb.
Im on record that Nuclear is something that we need to look at if it is that Nat Gas over the long term is becoming questionable- one site has us at 14 years of NG reserves at pre covid levels.
pugboy wrote:can private consortiums setup their own turbines ?
or is the wind owned by govt like how wasa owns all ground water
There is no current T&TEC licensing requirement for building a turbine. The Electrical Inspectorate would likely get involved just to certify safety and segregation from the electrical grid the same way that generators are certified. There is no mechanism that I know of to sell excess energy to the utility, either.88sins wrote:pugboy wrote:can private consortiums setup their own turbines ?
or is the wind owned by govt like how wasa owns all ground water
WASA doesn't just own all ground water, WASA owns ALL water in T&T, including rainwater. Yeah, it dat dred, I couldn't believe it first time I read it either.
I suppose it can be done. But don't be amazed if legislation gets passed so they have to pay the gortt for it. What kills it tho, is the power storage system. Power needs to be reliable and consistent. When windspeeds drop, last thing you want is low or no power on the grid.
agent007 wrote:With 2367.1MW of capacity, how much is actually being utilized at the moment? Based on what I understand, we have excess supply ever since Alutrint got the axe and TGU entered the grid.
So unfortunately any means to introduce wind, tidal and solar to our supply would affect the long-term strategy for POWERGEN and TGU etc.
Unless like WASA does for water, T&TEC decides to apply a similar costing on all solar derived electricity to our homes and businesses which must be meterized for tracking purpose and we pay a fee/rate per kWh used.
Then the business model of T&TEC et al may have to change to go into this type of business because on one end we talking savings and then on the other hand, tax payers may have to bail out these entities eventually.
From a reduced carbon footprint standpoint, I say do not ramp up capacity at any power plant, instead, slowly put reliance on solar and wind etc to add to the overall MW figure. So let POWERGEN, union estate etc finance the windmills etc.
Or let's give the smelter the green light and a huge recycling plant to utilize our MW potential and leave solar and wind to handle a chunk of residential customers.
I talking chit or I making some sense here?
88sins wrote:pugboy wrote:can private consortiums setup their own turbines ?
or is the wind owned by govt like how wasa owns all ground water
WASA doesn't just own all ground water, WASA owns ALL water in T&T, including rainwater. Yeah, it dat dred, I couldn't believe it first time I read it either.
I suppose it can be done. But don't be amazed if legislation gets passed so they have to pay the gortt for it. What kills it tho, is the power storage system. Power needs to be reliable and consistent. When windspeeds drop, last thing you want is low or no power on the grid.
If in the hands of pnm operations , like paria and niquan , then yes.wing wrote:Nuclear power in Trinidad?
sMASH wrote:If in the hands of pnm operations , like paria and niquan , then yes.wing wrote:Nuclear power in Trinidad?Screenshot_2024-10-23-19-57-42-955_com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox-edit.jpg
If in the hands of the actual competence here, it woukd be as safe and unassuming as universal cereal company .
Bring nuclear !
Operations manager at trindad nuclear power generation company , sounds like a nice title to have.
PNM have a failure rate of industrial plants and they should not be in any business that allows square PNM pegs tobe in round holes.j.o.e wrote:Wasn’t this the same country that was against an aluminum smelter ?
That's why proper design is key.pugboy wrote:imagine some crap happen and we saddled with storing large amounts of radioactive water for centuries like japan
cant just dump into the neighbourhood box drain outsidesMASH wrote:If in the hands of pnm operations , like paria and niquan , then yes.wing wrote:Nuclear power in Trinidad?Screenshot_2024-10-23-19-57-42-955_com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox-edit.jpg
If in the hands of the actual competence here, it woukd be as safe and unassuming as universal cereal company .
Bring nuclear !
Operations manager at trindad nuclear power generation company , sounds like a nice title to have.
sMASH wrote:If in the hands of pnm operations , like paria and niquan , then yes.wing wrote:Nuclear power in Trinidad?Screenshot_2024-10-23-19-57-42-955_com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox-edit.jpg
If in the hands of the actual competence here, it woukd be as safe and unassuming as universal cereal company .
Bring nuclear !
Operations manager at trindad nuclear power generation company , sounds like a nice title to have.
zoom rader wrote:PNM have a failure rate of industrial plants and they should not be in any business that allows square PNM pegs to be in round holes.j.o.e wrote:Wasn’t this the same country that was against an aluminum smelter ?
What the fvct does an aluminum smelter have to do with a nuclear plant ?
The issue with the aluminum smelter was the PNM corruption and no country willing to take the pot liners.
I for one do not agree with any nuclear plant in Trinidad cause the people here are not disciplined to operate that kind of plant. Trinidad is filled with short cut workers and they do not take ownership of their jobs.
The risk of a nuclear plant on a small island is a major disaster, one mishap and the islands is wiped off.
No Nuclear plants fvck PNM
zoom rader wrote:PNM have a failure rate of industrial plants and they should not be in any business that allows square PNM pegs tobe in round holes.j.o.e wrote:Wasn’t this the same country that was against an aluminum smelter ?
What the fvct does an aluminum smelter have to do with a nuclear plant ?
The issue with the aluminum smelter was the PNM corruption and no country willing to take the pot liners.
I for one do not agree with any nuclear plant in Trinidad cause the people here are not disciplined to operate that kind of plant. Trinidad is filled with short cut workers and they do not take ownership of their jobs.
The risk of a nuclear plant on a small island is a major disaster, one mishap and the islands is wiped off.
No Nuclear plants fvck PNM
Nope, it was the way PNM tried to hook wink the population with the pot liners when other countries refused to accept it.j.o.e wrote:zoom rader wrote:PNM have a failure rate of industrial plants and they should not be in any business that allows square PNM pegs tobe in round holes.j.o.e wrote:Wasn’t this the same country that was against an aluminum smelter ?
What the fvct does an aluminum smelter have to do with a nuclear plant ?
The issue with the aluminum smelter was the PNM corruption and no country willing to take the pot liners.
I for one do not agree with any nuclear plant in Trinidad cause the people here are not disciplined to operate that kind of plant. Trinidad is filled with short cut workers and they do not take ownership of their jobs.
The risk of a nuclear plant on a small island is a major disaster, one mishap and the islands is wiped off.
No Nuclear plants fvck PNM
Most people had concerns over the environmental impact of the fluoride and other wastes.
Unionize or not, they all PNMpugboy wrote:imagine having unionized workers
That's the thing. In pt lisas there are projects many times more complex than the paria divers job , that are handled very often, and go off sans incident .Les Bain wrote:sMASH wrote:If in the hands of pnm operations , like paria and niquan , then yes.wing wrote:Nuclear power in Trinidad?Screenshot_2024-10-23-19-57-42-955_com.google.android.googlequicksearchbox-edit.jpg
If in the hands of the actual competence here, it woukd be as safe and unassuming as universal cereal company .
Bring nuclear !
Operations manager at trindad nuclear power generation company , sounds like a nice title to have.
The Paria divers is a strong case against this. One mishap and it will be downplayed into oblivion while everybody from President to pauper is glowing green, melting and blaming Kamla for bringing nuclear power to Trinidad.
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