The renewable energy changes and policy

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
This is clearly based on a very narrow reference frame.

And I don't need a specific youtube vid to know the technology is constantly being improved and expanded.


Well, sent them an email so you can save them some time and money. To the daughter of Godfather of Cultured Meatt, or founder of world's first climate neutral egg farm, or Florentine Zieglowski with two masters degrees with a focus on cellular meat. Among others. Not people who downplay serious obstacles or work on fantasies (that's rich coming from you). Old stables and barns... Aside from the fact we don't have those, farmers here are already high-tech, it's already robots and machines that milk cows, they have plenty of room to build new facilities as clean as any industrial site could.
I'm sure the scientists involved in this experiment and pilot program know all about the latest developments in the industry, including the continuous fermentation process I posted about, in fact they might even be counting on it or developing technologies like it to make their vision work.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
It might also lull those "cunt farmers" into a false sense of security
As I mentioned, the whole point of the respectFarms project is that it's a feasibility test. To create a blueprint for farmers, IF viable as a business model, so they know the risks beforehand, to avoid any false expectations and surprises.

I'm pointing out some issues with the vision they have
That's one way of putting it, and by all means, you do you man, but in this case that involves making assumptions about how they view and consider the obvious challenges such as production capacity, scalability and contamination risks. Which is exactly what they are not doing. They're actually finding out. They're into verifiable facts. To make any sensible decisions, conclusions, predictions even, they should be based on data that has the 5 essential traits: accuracy, completeness, reliability, relevance, and timeliness. The second is never 100% met, especially not when considering the rate at which technology advances, hence the push back on absolutes.

I'm sure the scientists involved in this experiment and pilot program know all about the latest developments in the industry, including the continuous fermentation process I posted about, in fact they might even be counting on it or developing technologies like it to make their vision work.
Right, and many more they don't post youtube vids about and what they design themselves. And yes, they might. But our data on that is not complete...
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Stellantis making the Ram 1500 Ramcharger an EV with on-board gasoline generator is an intelligent way to get more people into EV's. 145 miles powered on batteries alone, and 690 miles with full battery and full tank of gas. The generator is still going to require maintenance like any other engine, but many drivers will be able to go a long time without using the generator to charge the battery.

I wouldn't be surprised to see many more manufacturers use the same concept. That generator should be pretty efficient as it won't need to adjust for load.

nice right up. Can't believe they're kicking out the HEMI, strong motors. I have one it's a 2010 1500 w/ Hemi 4.7. In all honesty i think they should keep the HEMI and add a generator to it, but that's just me. It doesn't mention any type of towing capacity, and that's the major downfall for EV's and Hybrids imo. Battery life gets almost cut in half. Now if manufactures can get that battery life and engine life to be able to tow lets say 3k at a distance of 500 miles then they are on to something.

Overall nice looking truck...
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
Now if manufactures can get that battery life and engine life to be able to tow lets say 3k at a distance of 500 miles then they are on to something.
On a gold mine. That's a pretty big ask for now. How long does it take you to go 500miles? Is there not plenty of time for stops and topping up along the way? The BMW iX almost meets your towing needs. Would have to charge every 100miles or so though... but that will only get better.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Right, and many more they don't post youtube vids about and what they design themselves. And yes, they might. But our data on that is not complete...
I'm looking for technical developments that can drive the food biotechnological revolution forward, in short, I wanna see how close we will come to the RethinkX predictions. As for me, I see scaling fermentation and cultured meats as major bottlenecks, as it is currently done. Some of these people are promoting businesses, niches in the emerging industry, and the fellow redesigning bioreactors could be onto something. It can reduce capital and operating costs and looks like, initially be scaled for pilot projects, something the size a farm could handle and be highly automated. The problem with all things like cultured meats whether in factories or on the farm is the batch process used and continuous production doesn't mean you need three stainless steel tanks and setup new batches while sterilizing everything between batches. If anything can make this farm production idea work, it is a new highly automated continuous production bioreactor scaled to the appropriate size and running on renewables.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
On a gold mine. That's a pretty big ask for now. How long does it take you to go 500miles? Is there not plenty of time for stops and topping up along the way? The BMW iX almost meets your towing needs. Would have to charge every 100miles or so though... but that will only get better.
From where i live to El Paso it's just over 500miles, if driving in a gas vehicle it would take you just under 5hrs to get there. From where i live to Ft Worth/Dallas area it's just over 450 miles. Now if an Hybrid/EV truck can tow 3k of material to either one of those cities on one charge, then manufactures have got something...and from where i live to both of those cities it an up hill as well. Heck from where i live to Houston is still 3hr drive for me.

Please keep in mind i live in a state where it takes you 2 days to cross it, either north to south or east to west......
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
If anything can make this farm production idea work, it is a new highly automated continuous production bioreactor scaled to the appropriate size and running on renewables.
The CO2 emission and energy costs are well researched, it's obviously a given it needs to run on renewables. Did you notice the 100 or so solar panels on the roof of that farm in the video you posted? Anything that can run on renewables must and will, no different here. Highly automated agriculture is what they do here. Nobody wants to get their hands dirty anymore, work smart not hard.

The capacity, scalability challenges, workload and impact on the climate are aspects that are obviously being addressed. There was no reason to assume an inefficient batch production method or downplaying of contamination risks. I read a piece in dutch yesterday about one of the cultivated meat startups using a system from which they could continuously 'harvest', don't know what they use at respectfarms. If you are convinced that is required than that's what they're already doing. I think there's a lot more to it and they're ten steps ahead on youtube vids and are far more interested in the factual results and the potential implication than educated guesses (being generous there) about the results beforehand and on again incomplete info.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The CO2 emission and energy costs are well researched, it's obviously a given it needs to run on renewables. Did you notice the 100 or so solar panels on the roof of that farm in the video you posted? Anything that can run on renewables must and will, no different here. Highly automated agriculture is what they do here. Nobody wants to get their hands dirty anymore, work smart not hard.

The capacity, scalability challenges, workload and impact on the climate are aspects that are obviously being addressed. There was no reason to assume an inefficient batch production method or downplaying of contamination risks. I read a piece in dutch yesterday about one of the cultivated meat startups using a system from which they could continuously 'harvest', don't know what they use at respectfarms. If you are convinced that is required than that's what they're already doing. I think there's a lot more to it and they're ten steps ahead on youtube vids and are far more interested in the factual results and the potential implication than educated guesses (being generous there) about the results beforehand and on again incomplete info.
Just looking at it from the environmental perspective and likely timeframes for development. Experts have identified the issues and bottle necks in scaling production. The rules that hold true about other industrial processes are the same here and continuous fermentation is a technical challenge, at least for the way these people are doing it with yeasts, fungi and mammalian cell cultures. I'm looking at the RethinkX forecast as sort of a benchmark for the industry and feel that the experts have identified the bottlenecks of using this methodology and the bioreactor needs a rethink and redesign. If they can pull it off it might revolutionize the industry and put the RethinkX forecast more on track, it is a foundational technology. I don't know much about this industry and I'm learning, it was the implications for the environment, the economy and agriculture that caught my eye. This thread is more about general knowledge and possible solutions to climate change using technology and about the public making informed policy choices.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
From where i live to El Paso it's just over 500miles, if driving in a gas vehicle it would take you just under 5hrs to get there. From where i live to Ft Worth/Dallas area it's just over 450 miles. Now if an Hybrid/EV truck can tow 3k of material to either one of those cities on one charge, then manufactures have got something...and from where i live to both of those cities it an up hill as well. Heck from where i live to Houston is still 3hr drive for me.

Please keep in mind i live in a state where it takes you 2 days to cross it, either north to south or east to west......
Totally appreciate the fact I'm in a very different situation with the highest density of (fast) charging stations, takes me 2 hours to cross the entire country. But you being able to drive 500miles in under 5 hrs changes a lot. That's like 160km per hour. 500miles would take me 7hours at least, because of speed limits. In reality more like 8, which means at least 2 stops but don't mind a third if the coffee and view is good.

Such speeds, such weight, on a single charge... yeah... no.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
That's why I mentioned VOC mentality, pioneers of capitalism. But not so much greed - that's just wealth and already covered by modern day capitalism - instead, a desire for prosperity.


Not a typical startup, not building a farm, but a blueprint. The whole project is a feasibility test to see if small scale production of cultivated meat can be decentralized and take place at current farms. So if any farmer wants to switch to the new technology he/she doesn't have to start from scratch, reducing the risk. The farmer who joined the project in that video is a fictional example. Results of the test are expected later this year.
Capitalism was never about prosperity. It is about the first derivative, which is wealth disparity.
That’s why I think DIY is not correct in thinking capitalism will drive a green new deal.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Capitalism was never about prosperity. It is about the first derivative, which is wealth disparity.
That’s why I think DIY is not correct in thinking capitalism will drive a green new deal.
I was being a bit humorously cynical with the greed is good thing. Lots of things drive change including social and emotional factors, but technology drives it the most. The fact that economic interests are aligning with environmental ones on solar, wind, batteries and EVs is cause for some optimism.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
It took me two days from Beaumont to Alamogordo (just past El Paso) on a heavy motorcycle.

I did not exceed 60mph (for reasons not only of economy, but of not wishing to be on guard for cops) but, excepting two hours spent admiring the bleaching bones of Apollo in Houston, I did not spend much time not in saddle.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I was being a bit humorously cynical with the greed is good thing. Lots of things drive change including social and emotional factors, but technology drives it the most. The fact that economic interests are aligning with environmental ones on solar, wind, batteries and EVs is cause for some optimism.
Ok, tell me how big oil and coal are preparing for a decarbonized future.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Ok, tell me how big oil and coal are preparing for a decarbonized future.
From what I can see impeding progress on renewables, mounting disinformation campaigns and generally freaking out, it's not just private oil companies, but countries like the Saudis and Russians, when they were selling oil. They influence a lot of international reports on renewables and such and were consistently underestimating their impact and still do. In reality there is not much an industry can do when their value chain is disrupted from the gas pump to the oil well. Like some creatures they thrash around before they die, projected solar and battery costs are the factors in their demise.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
Capitalism was never about prosperity. It is about the first derivative, which is wealth disparity.
That’s why I think DIY is not correct in thinking capitalism will drive a green new deal.
I think the point of his comment remains intact. Capitalism is a major thriving force for innovation. I do not agree with your first statement because of the 'was never' but yeah that's why I explicitly mentioned prosperity as something not included in capitalism, unlike greed. Big oil and coals actions don't refute that but to answer this:

Ok, tell me how big oil and coal are preparing for a decarbonized future.
By doing what they do best. Exploit countries, make deals with repressive nations, and use their power for more profits.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think the point of his comment remains intact. Capitalism is a major thriving force for innovation. I do not agree with your first statement because of the 'was never' but yeah that's why I explicitly mentioned prosperity as something not included in capitalism, unlike greed. Big oil and coals actions don't refute that but to answer this:


By doing what they do best. Exploit countries, make deals with repressive nations, and use their power for more profits.
Capitalism scientists and engineers who want to make a buck or see their work make a difference is the fastest way to get it from the lab to the fab and get it into public or industrial use. Old Russian communism would have never tackled climate change the scientists would have been in a gulag. Not even powerful oil companies can do much if solar, batteries and EVs disrupt their value chains with lower costs for alternatives. Many countries want energy independence for economic and geopolitical reasons and policy will reflect this and eventually it will offer massive value to consumers.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
From what I can see impeding progress on renewables, mounting disinformation campaigns and generally freaking out, it's not just private oil companies, but countries like the Saudis and Russians, when they were selling oil. They influence a lot of international reports on renewables and such and were consistently underestimating their impact and still do. In reality there is not much an industry can do when their value chain is disrupted from the gas pump to the oil well. Like some creatures they thrash around before they die, projected solar and battery costs are the factors in their demise.
Do you see that that kicks a big hole in the idea that market forces tend toward the common good?
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I think the point of his comment remains intact. Capitalism is a major thriving force for innovation. I do not agree with your first statement because of the 'was never' but yeah that's why I explicitly mentioned prosperity as something not included in capitalism, unlike greed. Big oil and coals actions don't refute that but to answer this:


By doing what they do best. Exploit countries, make deals with repressive nations, and use their power for more profits.
It is a major driving force only for the kind of innovation that can be monopolized or cartelized.

It’s why supply-side economics is such a cynical lie.
 
Last edited:
Top