Looks to me like wind, hydro, and solar entered the market in 1930 and achieved 30% of electricity generation 90 years later. Seems like a slow transition, just as one would expect from previous transitions. Plus, this is electricity only. Transport is another story entirely.
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Solar and wind did not enter the market in 1930, trust me on that.
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TFW methodological nationalism fools you into thinking you've escaped the Jevons Paradox https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox …pic.twitter.com/WVuXbnVgAy
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Not sure what you are after there, but we did offer a helpful discussion on rebound effects in this episode of
@TransitionShow:http://bit.ly/2FpxUdI
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Not sure about this assertion? Decisions in UK to start switch from coal to gas for electricity power production, along with Gov subsidisation of wind-power probably taken 30 years ago?
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Sure, we can all argue different starting points. Many models I have seen use 1% displacement as the starting point because it can take an indeterminate time to get there, but then most technologies follow similar learning curves.
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Plenty of similarly impactful charts showing lightning speed change in the U.S. (Plug...) We'll have plenty of them when we release the 2020 Sustainable Energy Factbook with
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Awesome - I look forward to seeing that!
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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