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World Clock Stats
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From
24/10/2010 14:50:00
 
 
To
24/10/2010 14:29:33
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01486772
Message ID:
01486782
Views:
38
>>>>>http://www.poodwaddle.com/worldclock.swf
>>>>
>>>>Interesting (and a bit scary).
>>>>
>>>>The 'Energy' section reminded me of an interesting fact I heard yesterday:
>>>>
>>>>The amount of energy delivered to the Earth in one hour by the sun would, if captured, more than meet the entire current energy needs of the world for one year.
>>>
>>>Solar insolation is roughly 1 kW / m^2 .
>>
>>My sister has just installed solar panels. Electricity companies in the UK have, by law, to buy any electricity which you produce by 'green' means at a premium price. That rate for photo-voltaic production is currently 41p per KwH and that is quaranteed for 25 years. This compares with an average purchase price of around 10-14p per KwH. The system she installed cost about £17K and should pay for itself in about 10 years. Of course the normal buying price for energy will probably increase over that period so the differential will be reduced.
>>
>>I think the guaranteed price is also set to drop a little in the near future. But that will only apply to new installations and the cost of the panels, etc is steadily reducing anyway.
>
>There is a lot of concern over here about so-called "feed-in tariffs" for "sustainable" energy. The province of Ontario's power generation system is fiscally a mess, and there is some thought these tariffs will triple or quadruple electric power prices in the not-too-distant future.
>
>http://microfit.powerauthority.on.ca/microFIT-Rules/microFIT-Program-pricing/index.php
>
>Relatedly, the province struck a large deal with Samsung:
>
>http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/ontario-samsung-in-7-billion-deal-for-green-energy/article1439002/

Interesting. The rates quoted in the first link seem broadly the same as here. However, towards the end of the second link it says that the market price for electricity is 3.31 cents which, if true, means that it is about one fifth of the rate in this country.

Something confusing in the second link as well: Snip:
"Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak said the deal contains no job guarantees, so all Ontarians have to go on is Mr. McGuinty's word."
but, just above:
"Samsung will receive $437-million in incentive payments over the 25-year life of the deal if it fulfills its obligation to create 16,000 jobs."

P.S I wonder what's available in the U.S. in this respect.....
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