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- Dec 30, 2006
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Playing devil’s advocate here. All and any who block charging stations should be asked to leave. Anyone not doing so immediately should be arrested for trespassing.
Umm, I haven't read the rest of the posts, but sales of EV’s in California comprise 16%, not registrations. You must have meant new registrations, which would be correct.According to the CA Governor, 16 percent of vehicles registered in Cali are EV’s.
Wonder what it gonna be like when it goes to the 35% “wanted” in 2026 and the 68% in 2030?
Depends on the time. 8PM yesterday and gas usage is peaking in Cali because the sun has gone down:Blocking charging stations at night time when power draw isn't as high is idiotic.
Ain't gonna happen; Police have higher priorities. But I imagine if it did, most of this crap would stop.Playing devil’s advocate here. All and any who block charging stations should be asked to leave. Anyone not doing so immediately should be arrested for trespassing.
With rolling blackouts threatened, I would say there is still a harm and/ or foul.Of course but within the context of the OP the energy restrictions in Calif are limited to early evening hours only. If the owner of an EV was attempting to adhere to that request then there's no harm/no foul correct?
Playing devil’s advocate here. All and any who block charging stations should be asked to leave. Anyone not doing so immediately should be arrested for trespassing.
With rolling blackouts threatened, I would say there is still a harm and/ or foul.
A blackout could provide a lesson for a lot of people. Learn to adapt. Learn to help those that might need help like the elderly. People could actually get together and talk to each other.
If this old fogey can survive several weeks without power in much hotter conditions then it can be done for a few hours.
The policies are there for "undesirable" sources to be used during high demand events. The heat itself is unprecedented.While I am completely for all of the California folk learning a (hard) lesson, that is not the way to treat people.
Why don’t we do a policy change? Just this week a nuclear plant was allowed to stay running.
While I am completely for all of the California folk learning a (hard) lesson, that is not the way to treat people.
Why don’t we do a policy change? Just this week a nuclear plant was allowed to stay running.
Base your opinions on current events.And that is just keeping the status quo. Nothing has been gained.
If they had taken their high speed train funds and invested in power generation instead, maybe this conversation wouldn’t be happening.
Isn’t that train powered by electricity?![]()
Unprecedented? Is it really?The policies are there for "undesirable" sources to be used during high demand events. The heat itself is unprecedented.
We had the same thing - reduce usage at 4pm - last year I think, but only for a day. This time it is 5 days with little overnight cooling.
Base your opinions on current events.
The electric high speed train is how old? I’ll be polite and say 10 years.
Indeed it is.Yes and the whole climate argument is much older than that.
Yes there is record breaking temperature across the state and the number of days of the heatwave is unprecedented.Unprecedented? Is it really?
Nuclear is not unreliable. I am sorry. You’re wrong.
What temperatures make it unprecedented? Hot weather happens and then it doesn’t, but I’m curious.Yes there is record breaking temperature across the state and the number of days of the heatwave is unprecedented.
I said "undesirable" not "unreliable". It mostly relates to sources that break rules on air pollution.
I am a big fan of nuclear btw.
That was mentioned in another thread, and it shocks me again in this one. To conserve energy, Californians are asked to run their A/C at 70 degrees during the day. Not 72. or 74. The energy problem doesn't sound like much of a problem if the powers that be are advising 70 degrees during the day.We have been asked to conserve electricity between 4PM and 9PM to help the overstressed grid. This includes EV charging, AC, clothes dryers, ovens, etc. All contribute.
AC is the biggie, of course, We have been advised to cool to 70* and then set to 78* at 4PM