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25th February 2024, 07:17 AM #1966Senior Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2010
- Location
- NSW, but near Canberra
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- 285
I've never been to Norway, but much of what I've read, and discussed with various people over the years, suggests that they have a very different outlook from much of the world. I have postulated that this is a result of the climate. It seems to me that countries with very cold climates often seem far more "community" oriented than warmer places, and I wonder if this is a direct result of that cold climate. People without shelter and food don't survive the winter, and perhaps (historically?) people who don't help others, are in turn not helped by others. The result is a culture and mindset in which everyone pulls together, and there are perhaps fewer "freeloaders" than in warmer climates. If this is the case, it would explain how schemes like the universal income are easier to implement, as people will tend to do the right thing and try to contribute as well as take. Maybe the same culture or state of mind means that implementing climate friendly solutions and schemes is easier, as outright profit and personal gain are less important than community and survival?
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27th February 2024, 09:08 PM #1967
Warb
This is my first time in Norway so there is a huge learning curve for me too. i think you may be being overly generous towards the Norwegians as they are not necessarily more ecologically inclined than average. However, they have some distinct advantages over many other countries. Firstly, they managed their natural resources well and have wealth from those resources of which the main one was oil from the North sea. They did not give the profit away to multinational companies. Secondly, their electricity comes from initially hydro schemes and also wind. So they were not polluting much right from the get go.
My impression is that they have two grids. One in the North and the other in the South. The Southern grid is connected to Europe, supplies into that market and as a consequence is much more expensive than the Northern grid.
Where we are, in Tromsø (pronounced "Tromser," because of the "ø") we are about 350Km above the Arctic Circle. However, the climate is showing signs of warming here too. For example, the tree line is gradually going higher and this has an adverse effect, ironically to my mind, on the creatures that live there. Secondly, it rains more often instead of snowing. Nothing and nowhere is immune it would seem.
A small digression, so back to electricity in Oz.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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27th February 2024, 09:22 PM #1968
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27th February 2024, 11:15 PM #1969
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29th February 2024, 09:48 PM #1970
[QUOTE=FenceFurniture;2329467]...or not. Keen to hear more about the situation in Norway, actually.
FF
Maybe not in this thread: Don't want to offend the OP!
Perhaps when I return to Oz I will start a new thread. We'll see: No promises.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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29th February 2024, 09:52 PM #1971
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29th February 2024, 09:55 PM #1972
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1st March 2024, 01:06 AM #1973
OK. This link may be of interest as to why Norway is so far ahead with EVs.
Norway – the EV capital of the world
and in particular:
"we have more than 3000 public charging stations, and 7753 fast chargers, all over the country. Say goodbye to range anxiety!"
All that is in quite a small country in terms of physical size, although long and slim, and a population of 5.4million.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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1st March 2024, 01:09 PM #1974
Like many/most economists I have long admired the economic management of Norway. For a long time they have successfully placed long term national interests of the population ahead of vested interests and party bickering. And it has largely worked. The only other country on that list is Switzerland; Japan fell off 30+ years ago and has not yet refocused.
But I actually know virtually nothing about Norway; Paul's comments catalysed me to look up some data and try and put it in perspective:
Size: 385,000 km2 - just under half the size of NSW - 801,000 km2
Length: 1,750 kms - about the same as the distance from Melbourne to Brisbane
Population: 5.4 million - about the same as Queensland
Sovereign Wealth Funds: US$1,555 billion - slightly larger than the Saudi SWF and about five times larger than the Australian and USA equivalents.
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1st March 2024, 08:00 PM #1975.
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 1,174
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2nd March 2024, 01:54 AM #1976
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3rd March 2024, 10:41 PM #1977
Here is a rational take on nuclear energy:
Attention Required! | Cloudflare
This is the thrust of the article:
There’s no danger of a nuclear power plant being built in Australia, but it’s banned anyway."
and
"But apart from the fact that it makes no sense, the main reason for Labor to remove the ban, you would think, is that advocating nuclear generation is the Coalition’s only energy policy; without being against the ban, which the Coalition itself imposed, it would have no policy at all and would have to think of something sensible."
In addition, it leaves open the nuclear path should the multitude of issues ever be resolved.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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3rd March 2024, 10:55 PM #1978
I just finished watching Insiders where Dan Tehan was talking up the Coalition's loss in the Dunkley by-election yesterday as "a fabulous result" for the Coalition (there was an absolutely stock standard swing against the sitting Govt of ~3.5% (expected, as usual, as is the way in by-elections) so... ...this might be a little way off yet.
We need strong Oppositions to hold whatever flavour Govt of the day to account, but what we have now appears to be a version of AI (Artificial Idiots).
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9th March 2024, 06:41 PM #1979
They have 3463 public charging stations, so ignoring places where you can't drive (for ease of calculation) that's one station per 111 km². Call it 100 km², and it's a 10x10km square...the longest you have to drive in this perfect grid is 28km, assuming you have to drive across 2 diagonals of 14km each.
Australia has a way to go yet...
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11th March 2024, 06:37 PM #1980
Norwegian Power Plants
There is a company in Norway that specialises in building small power plants in conjunction with the landholders. There is one these behind where our son lives. I will have a little more on this once I get back to Oz, but in the meantime here is a link.
Our partner: Smakraft AS - Climate Futures
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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