• Kieselguhr [none/use name]
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    5 months ago

    Just a couple of sidenotes

    At the start of the Ukraine war, it was unclear whether Russia might also launch attacks on us, including our nuclear reactors.

    RU attacking Germany is as unlikely as RU shelling London, NY, or Tokyo

    Russia also attacked nuclear reactors in the Ukraine, which certainly reminded people of Chernobyl.

    I think the news was that someone shelled Zaporizhzhia “Russia and Ukraine blamed each other for shelling the Russian-controlled plant.” Now, I’m not Hercule Poirot, but if RU controlled the plant at the time, wouldn’t that make UKR the most likely culprit?

    Russia also cut off our natural gas supply.

    Surely Russia turning a tap is less pertinent than USA literally bombing the pipeline?

    We have practically no own Uranium deposits either,

    So where are you buying from the rest of your resources? Surely nuclear is more feasible than coal from a purely geopolitical/economic point of view? I guess good luck with the solar panels.

    You seem to be a bit confused about the situation.

    • @freebee@sh.itjust.works
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      -35 months ago

      It’s a bit more likely. Eastern part of Germany was USSR back in the days. Germans share common fears with Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, … for good reason. They’ve had this happen before.

      A decentralised network with many different production sites for solar, wind, water etc is in many ways less vulnerable than a network with fewer very centralised production facilities.

      The goal is moving away from coal and nuclear, clearly, it’s just taking too long. EU will start importing massive amounts of hydrogen overseas the next few decades, possibly also funding the green pduction itself in southern countries.

      The only real german stupidity was investing in and relying on nordstream 2, because that was after Russia pulled the crimea and donbas.