• Gormadt
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    5 months ago

    Impeding the function of necessary infrastructure is pretty bad, especially when it comes to power plants.

    The more you know about how the electrical grid works the more serious you realize impeding its function is. And depending on the time of year and the integraty of the grid in that area it can range from serious to really fricking serious.

    Edit: I misread the word “port” as “plant”.

    • poVoq
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      115 months ago

      This is about a coal shipping port. The impacts are weeks removed from actual power plant use. All this does is hurt the bottom line of these fossils fuel companies.

    • @Maggoty
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      35 months ago

      This is their low energy season. It’s cool enough to have all the windows open and leave the air controls off, which is the major driver of energy usage and energy interruption related deaths. So they actually picked a good time to do it.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 months ago

      If two people doing little more than breaking a fence and climbing into a machine can seriously damage your nation’s essential infrastructure, that’s more on the government than on those two people. Any actual sabotage and there might not have been an infrastructure left to save.

      The electrical grid should be able to handle any one power plant shutting down unexpectedly. Ideally it should be able to handle severed power lines and multiple simultaneous failures, with emergency generators for anything essential. Not even because of sabotage, just because power plants are complex machines that can just unexpectedly fail.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 months ago

      I think disruption in the temporary justifies the means of stopping the planet from wiping all life out with the exception of the rich of course