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Also as more solar and wind power plants are built, it will slowly change the USA's CO2 per KWh output. There is also the way gasoline is produced and the waste, pollution, cost of transportation, and politics involved with that process to consider.
[/QUOTE] Government is very much like the scab and scar lift from the small pox vaccination. Without either the results are catastrophic. And the smaller the scar the better. LOL
It appears to me Arthur Kent was attempting to unwind the confusing facts you seem too comfortable with. Your slurry or conglomeration of factoids about it all reflect nothing but a hypnotized consciousness of pure propaganda from the likes of dumb old Al Gore.
I've warned time and time again. Global warmers need not apply. Those who can run the figures know that Politicians both create problems and straw dogs then adroitly place themselves as the perceived solvers of these contrived problems. Libs are of 2 orders; Beggars and losers. (Got no problem helping those who have a string of bad luck.) or the second order; vain short sighted voters desperate to get some sort of assurance that they are not crazy or stupid and desperate to get that warm gooey goo goo gha gha sticky kind of false love and adoration that only exacerbates the problem.
Yes petroleum needs management but the wind farms and solar cells are an absolute joke. YOu and the public throw all these conservation terms around when in fact they are propagandized as solutions like Gore (my home state) and all the rest. Yes this country if very much starting to look like small pox gone wild and all you guys can do is scratch and make it worse. LOL[/QUOTE]
All for private solar and wind power plants, they can piss up a rope with their own money.
Five of these have been built in China every year for the last five years and are scheduled for the next ten, and it blows this way.
That is not steam. Due to rising demand in the developing world and emerging markets such as China, coal consumption rose 7.6% in 2010. Among the fastest growing coal consumers were China (up 10%) and India (up 11%).
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