Latest Thread
Germany is done. I won't be surprised if Germany pays back the 300 billion $ Russian money that is confiscated with a written apology.
Sorry, but where did Germany cancel any aid?
If you read the first message of this topic, you will see that people in Germany are afraid of freezing (last year's news) if there is no gas.Your defence knowledge aside, you sure like to say a lot of unqualified things about Germany. Is it something personal?
Because you know, sitting here in Germany, there is no done-ness visible here or any panic. Germany has the economic power to get through a total Russian gas stop with just a minor recession, by the summer next year it will be back to normal.
Germany can afford to buy expensive LNG for years if it has to, to burn coal if it has to, and to restart the nuclear reactors if it has to. You know how rich Germany is? (I'm not bragging, just stating facts) its in a position where it decided to turn of perfectly fine nuclear reactors and very modern state-of-the-art coal power stations because of its effects on the environment.
Germany can afford because it can still loan a shitload of money and still has a good debt to GDP ratio. Germany can afford it because it is exporting more goods into the world in a good month than Turkey does in a year. And I haven't even talked about the companies itself and their plans to withstand the gas stop.
But mark my words, Russia will not stop delivering gas to Germany.
Because:
they need the money
the gas has to go somewhere, they can only store little of what they produce
they cant just stop the gas wells without damaging them or some of them might be gone for good.
they cant sell it elsewhere, because Russia's gas grid and fields are de facto separated with gas fields for the western markets and pipes for it and gas fields for the Asian markets and separate pipe network for it. They are not connected or do not have the capacity to just pump it elsewhere.
My household is heated through district heating and the electricity is coming from the same plant too. Its burning rubbish with an efficiency of 96%. But I'd gladly take one cold winter if its going to hurt Russia and end the war.
Also do you mind answering this question from yesterday?
Maybe try to use sources for once, instead of just claiming things.
I mean no offense but.... it is true that the Germans give priority to their well-being over anything else tbh. Iam not saying it is wrong to do so but if the Germans believe that the cheap russian gas is the way to go, then 10 years later and Putin will invade Germany. Putin just proved to the whole world that he will restore the Soviet Union regardless of the expensesYour defence knowledge aside, you sure like to say a lot of unqualified things about Germany. Is it something personal?
Because you know, sitting here in Germany, there is no done-ness visible here or any panic. Germany has the economic power to get through a total Russian gas stop with just a minor recession, by the summer next year it will be back to normal.
Germany can afford to buy expensive LNG for years if it has to, to burn coal if it has to, and to restart the nuclear reactors if it has to. You know how rich Germany is? (I'm not bragging, just stating facts) its in a position where it decided to turn of perfectly fine nuclear reactors and very modern state-of-the-art coal power stations because of its effects on the environment.
Germany can afford because it can still loan a shitload of money and still has a good debt to GDP ratio. Germany can afford it because it is exporting more goods into the world in a good month than Turkey does in a year. And I haven't even talked about the companies itself and their plans to withstand the gas stop.
But mark my words, Russia will not stop delivering gas to Germany.
Because:
they need the money
the gas has to go somewhere, they can only store little of what they produce
they cant just stop the gas wells without damaging them or some of them might be gone for good.
they cant sell it elsewhere, because Russia's gas grid and fields are de facto separated with gas fields for the western markets and pipes for it and gas fields for the Asian markets and separate pipe network for it. They are not connected or do not have the capacity to just pump it elsewhere.
My household is heated through district heating and the electricity is coming from the same plant too. Its burning rubbish with an efficiency of 96%. But I'd gladly take one cold winter if its going to hurt Russia and end the war.
Also do you mind answering this question from yesterday?
Maybe try to use sources for once, instead of just claiming things.
You are missing one of TheInsider's first points which is that the only reason Germany is able to be such a production giant is because of Russian resources. You can't make something from nothing.Your defence knowledge aside, you sure like to say a lot of unqualified things about Germany. Is it something personal?
Because you know, sitting here in Germany, there is no done-ness visible here or any panic. Germany has the economic power to get through a total Russian gas stop with just a minor recession, by the summer next year it will be back to normal.
Germany can afford to buy expensive LNG for years if it has to, to burn coal if it has to, and to restart the nuclear reactors if it has to. You know how rich Germany is? (I'm not bragging, just stating facts) its in a position where it decided to turn of perfectly fine nuclear reactors and very modern state-of-the-art coal power stations because of its effects on the environment.
Germany can afford because it can still loan a shitload of money and still has a good debt to GDP ratio. Germany can afford it because it is exporting more goods into the world in a good month than Turkey does in a year. And I haven't even talked about the companies itself and their plans to withstand the gas stop.
But mark my words, Russia will not stop delivering gas to Germany.
Because:
they need the money
the gas has to go somewhere, they can only store little of what they produce
they cant just stop the gas wells without damaging them or some of them might be gone for good.
they cant sell it elsewhere, because Russia's gas grid and fields are de facto separated with gas fields for the western markets and pipes for it and gas fields for the Asian markets and separate pipe network for it. They are not connected or do not have the capacity to just pump it elsewhere.
My household is heated through district heating and the electricity is coming from the same plant too. Its burning rubbish with an efficiency of 96%. But I'd gladly take one cold winter if its going to hurt Russia and end the war.
Also do you mind answering this question from yesterday?
Maybe try to use sources for once, instead of just claiming things.
This farsightedness you speak of always remains on paper. In fact, the French neglected the necessary maintenance as they did not train engineers for their nuclear power plants. And after all, only half of the 56 nuclear power plants are operating today.Germany should have gone fully nuclear as possible like France for the power grid.
Then it should have built enough LNG terminals and the infra for that, to be prepared to import gas by sea rather than switch to depend on large country that was on other side of cold war for so long.
Its honestly why I hold the French in much greater regard (to the Germans) for their long term strategic thinking.
Germany is classic case of establishment being quite idiotic relative to the potential on offer.
This farsightedness you speak of always remains on paper. In fact, the French neglected the necessary maintenance as they did not train engineers for their nuclear power plants. And after all, only half of the 56 nuclear power plants are operating today.
In other words, the French have become a country that importing electricity from being an electricity exporting country. The French, who are incapable of claiming the strategic value they have, were about to join the rush of closing nuclear power plants a few years ago.
Germany is doomed, good opportunity for global competitors to take over German share of global high end manufacturing sector.
The kind of reactors shut down from the peak is a larger story (i.e why are breeder phenix et al not so economical in the long run).
Whatever the transient power grid issues they have (w.r.t exports/imports), nuclear provides the vast bulk of their electricity generation....the only major economy in the world this is the case.
What is the indication that French signalled any move away from nuclear power as bulk of power grid quickly? (especially as quickly as Germans did with the handful of reactors they stupidly closed down prematurely and now chugging on coal to replace).
If anything I have seen French double down on it (and planning next generation expansion), more than any other european country.
French didn't do things as well as they could have been (as it goes for everyone in the end), but they tried and achieved a result right now.
Germans didnt even try. They are clearly worse relative to the French on this.
With 56 reactors, France’s atomic fleet is the biggest after the United States’. A quarter of Europe’s electricity comes from nuclear power in about dozen countries, with France producing more than half the total.
But the French nuclear industry, mostly built in the 1980s, has been plagued for decades by a lack of fresh investment. Experts say it has lost valuable engineering expertise as people retired or moved on, with repercussions for EDF’s ability to maintain the existing power stations — or build ones to replace them.
“EDF’s strategy, endorsed by the government, was to delay the reinvestment and transformation of the system,” said Yves Marignac, a nuclear energy specialist at négaWatt, a think tank in Paris. “The more EDF delays, the more skills keep getting lost, technical problems accumulate and there is a snowball effect.”
But the few new nuclear reactors that EDF has built have been dogged by huge cost overruns and delays. An EDF-made pressurized water reactor at Hinkley Point, in southwest England, won’t start operating until 2027 — four years behind schedule and too late to help Britain’s swift turn from Russian oil and gas. Finland’s newest EDF nuclear power plant, which started operating last month, was supposed to be completed in 2009.
France is not much better than Germany, EU 's energy crisis is self inflicted, no sympathy for them.I `m talking about this. It's too late to invest now. Moreover, as you can see in the news, the construction quality of nuclear power plants is creeping on the ground. France doesn't have 10 years anymore.
I `m talking about this. It's too late to invest now. Moreover, as you can see in the news, the construction quality of nuclear power plants is creeping on the ground. France doesn't have 10 years anymore.
Germany fell for the Fukushima scare-mongering which is why they are behind. I don't think it's fair to say they didn't even try.The kind of reactors shut down from the peak is a larger story (i.e why are breeder phenix et al not so economical in the long run).
Whatever the transient power grid issues they have (w.r.t exports/imports), nuclear provides the vast bulk of their electricity generation....the only major economy in the world this is the case.
What is the indication that French signalled any move away from nuclear power as bulk of power grid quickly? (especially as quickly as Germans did with the handful of reactors they stupidly closed down prematurely and now chugging on coal to replace).
If anything I have seen French double down on it (and planning next generation expansion), more than any other european country.
French didn't do things as well as they could have been (as it goes for everyone in the end), but they tried and achieved a result right now.
Germans didnt even try. They are clearly worse relative to the French on this.
Germany fell for the Fukushima scare-mongering which is why they are behind. I don't think it's fair to say they didn't even try.