Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Flat Creek in Feb. 2024. Much changed by the force of the hurricane floods in Sept. 2024.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Top 10 countries for wind and solar energy

 My first thought is to share how I feel after staying up till I couldn't any longer...and then woke to find out tRump and the GOP had won so very much of the election. I am wanting to curl up and cry for hours. I am wanting to scream and throw things. I am wanting to have friends hug me and tell me everything will be alright.

None of those things are happening. I'm sort of walking through my life in a daze, feeling incredibly sad. I am shocked still when I see the banners on the news declaring tRump is the president elect. This is a new reality. I am not prepared for it. There was one of my first reactions of not wanting to live any more. But of  course that passed, and I wanted very much to at least disappear from my little amount of public life, where I've spoken against those now in power, where I am now afraid that I'm on a list somewhere, and will suffer for my opinions. This is just part of my coping.

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The top 10 countries for wind and solar energy

(In case you thought I wasn't still interested in Climate Change!)

According to the most recent data available, from December 2023, here are the

10 countries that use the highest percentage of homegrown wind and solar 

energy in their electricity mix. 

 
CountryElectricity from solar and wind
Denmark67%
Greece41.1%
Netherlands41%
Spain40.5%
Portugal39.7%
Germany39.4%
Uruguay39.4%
Ireland37.5%
United Kingdom32.7%
Chile31.7%

(Data courtesy of Ember) 

*We excluded countries with populations less than 15,000 (including the Cook and

Falkland Islands) and countries — Lithuania  and Luxembourg — that have high

levels of renewables but import most of it from neighbors. 

 

SOURCE: Environmental Defense Fund newsletter Vital Signs, Oct. 31, 2024


"By mid-2024, wind and solar accounted for 18.6% of all U.S. electricity, and analysts anticipate that even more clean power will come online by the end of the year. 

“If we keep our foot on the pedal, we can build a clean energy future that dramatically improves many fundamental aspects of our lives,” says Derek Walker, Environmental Defense Fund’s vice president for global energy transition. 

China and India stood at 29th and 39th, respectively, at the end of 2023. But both nations are making progress. China recently met its ambitious clean energy goals for 2030 six years early. And in the first half of 2024, the country was home to more than half of all the solar power installed worldwide. 

India built out more solar and wind power in the first five months of 2024 than in all of 2023, despite technical and financial challenges. “There is a consensus that renewables make sense for India from an economic, strategic and environmental perspective,” says Hisham Mundol, EDF’s chief advisor in India. 

“With clean energy, there’s no question: a revolution is underway,” says Walker. “This remarkable progress is benefitting our health, our wallets and our futures.” 


Today's quote: (Sorry, the format came through that way)

I love the story about A.J. Muste, who, during the Vietnam War, stood in
 front of the White House night after night with a candle – sometimes 
alone. A reporter interviewed him one evening as he stood there in the 
rain, “Mr. Muste,” the reporter said, “do you really think you are going
 to change the policies of this country by standing out here alone at 
night with a candle?” A. J. Responded, “Oh, I don’t do this to change 
the country. I do this so the country won’t change me.”            
      - Andrea Ayvizian, The Sun magazine.



16 comments:

  1. I was very shocked, too. German economy will suffer, Ukraine even more, I never expected this outcome.
    How could any woman vote him, he is against their rights. And what nonsense comes from his mouth. Maybe he bought votes, enough money he has...
    Wind and solar is the right way, I agree. My company´s roof has solar-panels.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for your words from Germany. It's a time of big changes again. So glad that there are wind and solar energies being used there.

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  2. Good, ethical people are still reeling. I was up at 4:30 yesterday and 4:15 today. I feel especially for good folk like you who live there. I have decided to limit my Twitter exposure today, just to try to settle my mind a bit.

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    Replies
    1. I'm in agreement. Wanting to do so much has left me with wanting to do nothing.

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  3. Hello Barb,
    I am still in shock and feel sick from the results of the election. Those who will be in charge do not care about climate change. We will go backwards. Take care, have a great day!

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    1. I just read my 3 GOP cousins remarks on Facebook. They totally think they've done something good for the nation. I am sad that they will soon find out otherwise.

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  4. ...with Trump, we might make the top 100!

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  5. Shock and numbness still here. On the bright side: Harris conceded graciously unlike in 2020, there were no calls of rigged elections like 2020, and there was no violence. Democrats know how to act and know what it means to lose in democracy unlike tRump. There are so many things in the future that are not on the bright side but I hope it will mean that the electorate responsible for putting him in the White House will finally have an aha moment and realize they made a major error of judgement. Some of them will have serious problems when they lose their health insurance, die from lack of OB doctors willing to end their troubled pregnancies, and have police/military knocking on the door to drag them to detention camps and deport them to countries they no longer call home.

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    1. They are in a bubble of delusion, and of course celebrating their win for hatred. I can no longer feel any forgiveness toward those who I know were brainwashed...but they still spew the hatred around.

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  6. I'm depressed too and I don't even live there! I fail to understand how people can be so delusional. Not sure how I can cheer you up but I'm trying to focus on the here and now and the good things still going on. Anything else is, as yet, just my wild imaginings and they aren't helpful.

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    Replies
    1. I'm glad to see some people (leaders?) are able to start talking about Democratic resistance to the new era in which our government is about to take. I'm not thinking yet at all, more just dwelling in the everyday chores that a household demands. So I also have a Terry Pratchett book to read while I go to the free laundry provided by FEMA (since ours is still not operational at the apartments). And I quickly scan the news, mainly to see how schools are now open again, and if the world has anything good happening! We survivors of the storm Helene still cannot drink the water that's coming in our pipes. I remember it was 10 days before these apartments had electricity, and many more before water was safe to shower and wash dishes. Simple things to be grateful for.

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  7. The artist Valerianna Claff described it as grieving.
    I think we all are, in the USA or not.

    Interesting stats.
    Maybe Lithuania and Latvia buy in their power..but if that is renewable I reckon that counts

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  8. I was afraid of this. Harris was seen as too liberal and too brown and too female. I got angry every time I would hear someone, usually a woman, say that the US isn't ready for a female president! What on earth has gender to do with it? I am heartsick, and like you will just go on living my life and hoping to God he does not do even a tiny bit of all he has threatened/promised.

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  9. Yes, these are stages of grieving. Eventually we will accept and go on, as we must. But I have glimmers of hope that Democrats have some resistance ideas up their sleeves.

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  10. The growth in renewable energy is very encouraging. I think we have passed the tipping point in that renewables are now recognized as economically wise. Big corporations are interested in their bottom line and will do the right thing if it saves them money.

    I’m concerned about the kind of person that Vance appears to be. I don’t see how DT can last in his physical condition.

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  11. Hi Barbara, While I don't think that 'whatshisname' is good for the environment, the die is cast and we'll continue to move toward cleaner energy, albeit a bit slower than many would like. My wife and I have discussed not watching the news for the next 4 years...but then we wouldn't have advance notice that we are expendable. I like the solution you used to solve a missent blog post...so simple and yet my brain failed to call up this basic idea, one that I've used on other projects, just not on the blog site. Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.