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Energy companies spent $212 billion on new plants this year. But just to feed data centers. Adopting LEDs and efficient appliances was pointless.



Photo above – cast members of the CGI generated Netflix show “Resident Alien” try to figure out why there’s always snow on the street winter and summer, but their breath never makes vapor in the cold air. “This-is-some-bullshit” agrees alien Harry Vanderspiegle (in human guise), on the right.

Money spent on new US electric plants is skyrocketing. Up $40 billion over the prior year alone. Up 130% over the past decade. I’m going to turn my thermostat to 75 and switch off the night lights at home to see if that helps. No, it didn’t . . . my meter is still spinning like crazy. The government says electricity inflation is “normal”. I guess normal means rising 5% a year. My bill is up 25% since 2021.

No, I don’t have an electric water heater, and I don't take insanely long hot showers. I don’t have an EV or plug in hybrid. My cooktop is electric induction – they don’t get any more efficient than that. I’d blame my neighbors with EVs and $7,500 tax credits, but they’re not the problem.

The problem is “data centers”. Giant buildings filled with computers. The largest in the USA is in Nevada. 8 million square feet. Bigger than the pentagon. But there are hundreds more. These data centers are training AI how to surf the net to violate copyrights for literature, paintings, and photos. So that we can get pink slips saying we’ve been replaced by ChatGPT, Gemini, or Llama. So “quants” can use AI to flash trade stocks in milliseconds, and make the idea of long-term investment in a 401K pointless.

People will just have to sit home and binge on Netflix. Which has 3,657 original shows, mostly rendered by CGI and Artificial Intelligence. If you doubt this, just pay closer attention to your favorite shows. The wind doesn’t blow outdoors, and there’s no vapor when actors speak on a winter's day.

This is why America is doubling its electrical demand, and my bill is going through the roof.

I'd send an email to my congressperson to complain. Except the CoPilot logo pops up at the top of MS Word, and wants to write it for me, before I even hit the first key. And when I press the send button, I’m pretty sure I’m going to get an AI generated response from my congressman’s office.

Can we just cut out the middleman, and replace all the politicians with ChatGPT? If everything is going to be done with AI, government officials are the most irrelevant thing in America.

I’m just sayin’ . . .

US energy groups spend record sums on power plants to feed data centres
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jehova · 31-35, M
Thats rediculous. I have high hopes for wind power especially kite turbines. Its a delicate balance though. Rumor has it a kite turbine improperly balanced resulted in hurricane katrina.
A kite wind turbine generates 1 terawatt (10^12th watts) aka 1000 giga watts aka 1 billion kilowatts an hour.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jehova i think wind turbines hold more long term promise than solar panels, which are "off" at least half the day.

I don't know much about kite turbines, but i hope no airplanes stray into the cables anchoring them into the ground. And no terrorists cut the cables.

offshore wind turbines seem the most promising. Except for the Chinese World's Largest Offshore Wind Turbine, which broke apart in a thunderstorm earlier this year.
jehova · 31-35, M
@SusanInFlorida i hadnt heard about the chinese one, but per the cable anchoring the kite to the ground. It could easily be kept out of known\most commonly used air paths. And itd allow for energy freedom\ reduced reliance on steam generstion.
Export energy to generate revenue to pay the nation's debt.
We gotta do something.
@jehova This nation, and the world, world share your hopes.

Nearly 41% of global power came from clean energy last year
https://www.foxbusiness.com/energy/nearly-41-percent-global-power-came-clean-energy-last-year

Utility-scale solar and wind capacity additions were the largest across all primary generation sources, accounting for close to 90% of all new builds and expansions in the first nine months of 2024, versus 57% of capacity added for the same period in 2023, according to Deloitte analysis of data from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
https://www.deloitte.com/us/en/insights/industry/renewable-energy/renewable-energy-industry-outlook.html


Cost, AKA capitalism, is the driving factor.
jehova · 31-35, M
@ElwoodBlues that great to hear. Domestic production is vital.