• @Fallenwout
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    5 months ago

    Yes we have, but I can’t afford it. These stop oil want to redirect subsidizing from oil to renewable. This sound great in theory until you think about all you need to go renewable: a lot of solar panels for sun, wind turbines for winter, large battery, gas boiler replaced with heat pump, petrol car replaced with electric (wife), motorcycle replace with electric (me commute)

    No matter how much the government subsidizes this, this will bankrupt every middle class worker with a mortgage 3x over. And even if you want to do the conversation step by step to save up, in the meantime your unsubsidized fuel is 5x more expensive so you have nothing to save up.

      • @Fallenwout
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        15 months ago

        I guess I am. But they should add “too poor to convert to electric” in that bubble.

    • @[email protected]
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      45 months ago

      What? No, that makes no sense.

      Why would renewables be that expensive?

      The electricity grid should absolutely be replaced ASAP. Old homes with ancient gas, coal, and oil heating will also need more modern alternatives like geothermal, heat pumps, or even direct electric heating.

      Not literally every single thing needs to be replaced today.

      It will take time but we should ramp it way up.

      • @Fallenwout
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        05 months ago

        You’re ignoring my statement when you say “not everything needs to change today”.

        When subsidizing switches from oil to renewables (this is what stop oil wants) there is no gradual transition because oil will be too expensive. If that happens I can’t afford heating or transportation unless I replace those with electric, which I can’t afford either.