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This is why it is so vitally important to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.
SteelHands · 61-69, M
@CorvusBlackthorne No.
@SteelHands Yes.
SteelHands · 61-69, M
@CorvusBlackthorne Propagandists and useful idiots that don't know better aside, you live in fantasy land if you even slightly think this is ever going to happen.
FACTS.
But be delusional if you want. See if anyone not an idiot really believes your so called "truth"
FACTS.
But be delusional if you want. See if anyone not an idiot really believes your so called "truth"
@SteelHands How much is Exxon paying you?
SteelHands · 61-69, M
@CorvusBlackthorne That's a funny way of admitting you only hold opinions when you are paid to hold them.
I'm an idiot schooled by earlier ideologues, demagogues, self righteous virtue posers and attentin seeking narcissists. I get all my facts by not reading books for 55 years.
I'm an idiot schooled by earlier ideologues, demagogues, self righteous virtue posers and attentin seeking narcissists. I get all my facts by not reading books for 55 years.
@SteelHands I merely thought that since you seem to have an unreasoning hatred of renewable resources, you must be on the payroll of an oil company. That is the only reason I can conceive why anyone would hate the idea.
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Graylight · 51-55, F
@SteelHands [quote]Wind power was the number-two source for power generation in the U.S. for the first time ever on March 29, surpassing coal and nuclear power, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said Thursday.
Wind turbines in the continental U.S. produced 2,017 gigawatt hours of electricity on the 29th, according to data from the EIA. While there have been days in the past when wind generation separately outpaced coal and nuclear generation, the 29th marked the first day that it surpassed both power sources.
The Hill [/quote]
Oxy, EOG Resources, ExxonMobil and Chevron have all added to solar energy project deals in recent years. Even they know which way the wind blows.
Wind turbines in the continental U.S. produced 2,017 gigawatt hours of electricity on the 29th, according to data from the EIA. While there have been days in the past when wind generation separately outpaced coal and nuclear generation, the 29th marked the first day that it surpassed both power sources.
The Hill [/quote]
Oxy, EOG Resources, ExxonMobil and Chevron have all added to solar energy project deals in recent years. Even they know which way the wind blows.