Comments by "Archangel17" (@MDP1702) on "Into Europe"
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@andrefasching1332
1. Sure, but it is clear to most that individually EU countries won't really count in the future, that is exactly one of the reasons to unite: to not become irrelevant/weak.
2. There were also different languanges in the US in the past: English, French, German, Dutch, Spanish, ... German only really diminished around WW1 for example. And the US still doesn't have an official language. Overtime you'll get a common language in the EU next to the native ones. In fact English is already becoming that language.
3. That isn't really relevant. The Colonies at the time of creation weren't all exactly the same in terms of (local) government. And again, this is something that changes overtime. The US didn't form their identity in a few years, it took decades/centuries. The current EU is barely a few decades old (depending on when you'd like to start counting).
4. Yes, they left Europe for several reasons, one of them was to keep their identity that was being subdued in their homeland.
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@metaxu3305 If anything I believe they might be underestimating the transition, if EV's reach price parity (expected to happen around 2025), its sales will skyrocket and ICE will plummet.
But when I talked about gridstorage, I am talking about specifically the storage solely meant for the grid. If I meant gridstorage from EV's, I'd talk about V2G.
Moreover I wasn't talking about how much gridstorage there will be, but that it will be price competitive unless nuclear goes down a lot in price (not to mention public opinion importance).
As for people willingness to let their EV battery be siphoned, it would be their choice, but there obviously will be compensation. Whether V2G will become commonplace depends on the wear a battery experiences due to V2G (though this is expected to be limited since there will be no massive draw, rather a tiny amount from many batteries and only within a certain battery range) and the compensation. If the compensation comes out higher, people would make money by allowing it without needing to do anything (though it would be limited gain ofcourse at best). Another likely option is the use of V2H, where people just use their EV to power their home in the evening, though this will mostly depends on whether there are more variable prices (like expensive in the evening, cheap during the day/night), whether they have solar panels that can charge their car during the day (for people working from home forexample) or access to cheaper electricity at work for example.
Reducing the overall individual cars will unfortunately not happen any time soon, at best somewhere around 2040-2050, by that time dedicated grid battery storage will have greatly improved/come down in price even more.
And batteries aren't the only possible gridstorage by then.
Yes, thorium and molten salt show promise, there however are still non-operational so far I know. They are likely at least 20 years out before large scale roll out will even begin, a bit too late, though it might possibly compete with the second generation of renewables+gridstorage.
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@pietvanleeuwen110 Poland has the same color of the UK, so I don't see how they would be the least efficient for wind energy.
But there is something wrong with this picture (or at least the description), since less people per MW potential wind energy is actually better. And if I try to calculate Belgiums wind power potential from this chart (or at least its minimum), I get just 36MW potential (a few wind turbines), but Belgium already has over 2000 MW in wind power installed or if I made a mistake 36TW. If I ignore the (x1000), I get 36 GW, more realistic, but is it trustworthy considering I ignored part of the legend?
What is even weirder is that this is representation of power and not energy like it is said in the video. However a quick google search by image (literally first try and first row) I found this image, it doesn't say wind energy potential like in the video, but is part of a study called "how much wind power potential does europe have", which is locked behind a paywall. It isn't even certain this chart is actually representing the wind energy potential, but possibly something else (in fact the graphs title is power density potential in Europe, not energy and nothing about wind), I am starting to wonder whether this uploader even read/has access to the study where this chart comes from, or just took it from google just having read the title.
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@andrefasching1332 My point is that your points were not entirely correct or relevant.
That European countries were superpowers 100 years ago doesn't really matter that much, what matters is the current and future situation, which would make European power more similar to that of the colonies at that time, than a high power status (individually).
There was no unified language at that time, sure maybe less differences than in Europe, but enough that the difference doesn't really matter, the main reason why it wasn't a problem, was due to much less travel and communication over distances. Even now there still are a lot of people in the US with a different native language, they just use English as a common language when needed. This is also already happening in the EU slowly with English being used as a common language next to native regional languages.
Yes, the US was a republic from the beginning, and so is the EU essentially. The differences in 'local' government systems isn't really that important as long as they don't clash (which it shouldn't if all are representative democraties).
Embracing the US identity was logical
This is also just not correct. It took a long time for a real general US identity to establish and many people that left for the colonies did so to be free to have their own identity/religion, their descendants just adapted to a new reality, which is also happening in the EU with younger people feeling more and more European than past generations, identity is formed over generations.
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@geordi5054 The marshall plan came years after the war ended, +-3-4 years later. It mostly helped speed up reindustrialisation in for example western Germany, since it allowed them to focus less on food production and more on industry. Without the marshall plan, this could have happened maybe 3-5 years later then now, that is hard to know for sure. Als don't overestimate the marshall plans budget. In today's currency that would be around 114 billion dollar, or less than 1% of GDP (though at the time it was around 3-4% due to a lower US GDP though it was also spread out over 3 years, so around 1-1,5% of GDP yearly). The GDP growth due to it in the countries involved was less than .5%.
Even to this day the actual financial impact it had is still disputed. However it had a great influence propaganda wise and to strengthen US influence of Western European countries.
Just because you throw money against problems, doesn't mean you can effectively eliminate them. Just look at Afghanistan, it actually received more aid than Western Europe did I believe, and it barely had an impact, if it had one at all. (The afghan army alone got 80 billion dollar, that is only 34 billion less than European nations got in total under the martial plan in todays currency)
And were did I claim it trapped Europe?
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