Transcripts For DW Made In Germany - The Future Energy Mix 20240708

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truly want to get it under control, we have to wave farewell to fossil fuels for the same time. we also need to satisfy the world's insatiable appetite for energy. our energy consumption has increased 60 percent in the last 3 decades alone, or were developing parts of asia, africa, and latin america needing ever more power. a key question hangs over us. where will we get our energy? and as the theme of this edition of made the w's business magazine. now the oil and gas corporation, b, p, has made a prediction. this is how it thinks our energy usage will develop between now and 2040. the strongest growth will be in renewable energy is like wind and solar power colored in green here. but the most surprising forecast is that our oil, gas and coal usage is not set to go down. in fact, we are lying on fossil fuels, even more of china and india are likely to be the biggest contributors to that. but every investment in coal is an investment in an industry that's ultimately dying, as, as it's moran. john reports this cobham, this is what it does to us. but even though we know how dirty coal is, we can't get enough of it. coal powers phones heats homes, and it's used to make the concrete and steel alive the built around cohesive falling in the us and europe. but across asia, it still came. cold is the biggest source of energy in countries like china, india, and indonesia. they've had to keep mining cold and building clots to burn it. so how did the world get hooked on cold? and how can we quit the addiction? oh, the story of cold begins 250 years ago. when british advent has realized you could heat water with coal to make steam spin turbines and power machines. actually let 31300000000 years before the steam engine to carbon rich plants, the died in swamps, millions of years of heat and pressure turn. these fossils into rocks packed with energy and back in the modern world. that energy was solely needed. the industrial revolution created machines. lots of them lead to a global boom in prosperity, but was unprecedented in human history. there were little to no alternatives, therefore it was very rational. it's very understandable, and it was not that controversial. this is how you, he's an energy expert. he studies how countries that have invested in cold can we've to clean the sources of energy for europe. we can definitely see that there has been a very good side of coal. through the 20th century, economic prosperity came across the continent as well as piece that went along with your union. that the prosperity cold brings comes at a price, mining and burning cold damage of the climate and has people's health. and that's why the u. n. is cool to kick cold out of electricity by 2013 rich countries, and by 2040 for the rest of the world. we need renewable energy and green jobs. no more fossil fuel subsidies or new coal fired power plants. so we have that coming along. well, global coal emissions have basically plotted in south america and africa, coal with values in the 1st place in the us. and europe code has been declining for decades. but across asia, co just keeps on growing with last year, china and india been more than 2 3rd of all the cold that the world. but the rest of the continent use is more cold than the e. u and u. s. put together. and the problem is that even just the coldest binding to day, the new minds that opening and pow plaza building designed to run for decades now, some southeast asian countries cancel plans to build coal plants last year. but india, for instance, wants to invest $55000000000.00 in coal in the next decade. and he spent several times that on renewables to meet of targets. and then that china, it burns half the wealth co, but has pledged slash carbon emissions to net dairy by 2060 here's what a report by 2 environmental research groups found out about that. to me it's climate goes. china must been new coal power plants and double the electricity at mate from wind and solan that are not to prepare to fully prepared to achieve that . this says she way, john lead author of the report. he said that co plans built today will become stranded assets that are on profitable to keep running the most important since we, we need the 222 star, the build of renew assess new physical assets. and so as possible, the industry difficulties the world may not light coal, but the well needs cole. this is a speech by the boss of the world cold association in september 2020. but this is not about being light or popular. it's about being realistic. the industry argues that it can make cold clean by sucking c o 2 out of power plants and storing it in the ground. but the technology is banking on it expensive and it doesn't exist at scale yet. each year the wealth can capture about 40 mega tons of c or 2 from industrial sites. and you'll carbon emissions a hundreds of times bigger. so how can countries quit cold and can china and india and from the west mistakes? let's look at the u. s. cold have been declining that the decades because of cheap alternative, like oil and gas, and now wind turbines and solar panels are making it full even fast. the westlake $36.00 colton last year and has cut its capacity by 25 percent in the last decade. scientists have a problem, governments need to quit cold to keep us safe, but they also need to protect the livelihood, the communities who live from it. that's what jim needed. it closed that final hot coal mine in 2018 after 60 year, the steady decline and did say without firing a single minor, the government retrained younger miners and paid out old ones who wanted to retire early. but scientists say the energy transition needs to be fat and fast. germany dragged out its transition over decades and as recently as 2020 was still building plants to burn cult. 2 reset to that, the technical university of berlin in 2019 found the to quick a phase out would have cost less and less mining communities adapt better with cling lawn for too long with an old dying industry has a tendency not to support new alternative industries because these are being seen as a kind of competition that might speed up the process to what can co hungry countries like india, where more than 700000 people work as miners take away from this. well, 1st politicians should be honest with voters. that cold air is over and set to clear ended then instead of subsidizing cold companies, government could put the money into retraining work and making new industries for their families. a plan for the future perhaps, but for now, fossil fuels still rule our world. just recently, the price of crude oil has been climbing as economies bounce back from the pandemic . that becoming ever more hungry for it. address no house reports on why the era of oil still isn't over boiled blessing or cass it's greasy, poisonous, and it stinks. crude oil is actually made of our gay and small organisms that have been decaying on the sea floor for millions of years. and that's exactly why it's so valuable. this black gold is packed full of energy, an excellent fuel source, rushing through the economy like blood. it's been used for thousands of years to seal wooden boats mummified the dead and shoot down enemies with fiery arrows. but it was the popularity of the oil lamp that sparked the 1st real pain. the oil well drilled by edwin drake and pennsylvania, in 1859 became world famous. it was the 1st productive oil. while john d rockefeller became an oil trader. in $1865.00, he found it the company standard oil, which made him the world's richest man. his goal was to have an oil monopoly. the most production of cars eventually made crude oil, the most important raw material in the world. the driving force behind the economy . oil meant prosperity, but it also triggered many crises and was today's biggest oil producer is the u. s. followed by russia and saudi arabia. but this black goal destroys the environment. oil spills and drilling, accidents pollute the seas, and the lumps suffocates under mounds of plastic waste. made from it. as the scotch rolled, her natives becomes increasingly desperate. the production of oil still continues to rise. in 2019 more crude was produced than ever before. nearly 95000000 barrels every day. reserves a finite though, as is the power of the oil companies and the countries that rely on oil exports, the opec cartel meetings might soon be a purely social gathering. oh, so how do we reduce c o 2 without stalling the engines of the world's growing economies? while some say the answer is staring us in the face in the form of atomic energy you, you is currently planning to designate new nuclear power plants. as green investments provider, they come with a satisfactory plan to dispose of their radioactive waste. that has environmentalists, rubbing their eyes in disbelief. arena strauss and mary on who to report on a new nuclear power struggle. the world's demand for energy is growing. how can the supply be more sustainable? what role can nuclear power play? ah, who shima and nuclear disaster that shot the world that had a lasting effect on attitudes to nuclear power? fukushima galvanized him, says enclave shock. after the disaster happened, the anti nuclear activists travel to japan for worse, it to the hope was up to me. it was like the end of the world, you know, she was we from that moment on, i wondered about the risk of living close to a nuclear reactor, especially for women and children. what kind of dangers would they be exposed to in the event of an accident on his expose orgy, bushings next door nuclear. the fact is, nuclear energy is a lot more dangerous than renewable energy. yet it's also true that on balance nuclear accidents claim fewer lives than coal mining and gas extraction accidents. still, germany opted for a nuclear phase out in the wake of the fukushima disaster. if you hear guns austin's, i would like to say that although i support civilian nuclear power, my view of nuclear energy has been altered by the events in japan. yup. on site in thus, germany's nuclear phase out astonish the world, not least because at a time when coal mines are being closed down as part of efforts to tackle climate change, nuclear energy is widely seen is playing an important role in making up the energy shortfall. we haven't for gen, an enormous talent in, throughout the us. we really cannot afford it looked through it to say no. however, the nuclear phase out has helped boost the renewable energy sector. renewables now account for 50 per of electricity production in germany compared to 20 percent 10 years ago. you can argue it both ways, but probably germany would have been able to reduce emissions a bit quicker bit differently. but also that supported really the uptake of radio or also not only in germany, but more bearing france meanwhile, has taken a different road its home to more than 50 nuclear reactors. and many of them have been operating for decades. brutal for nuclear. the field of the reactors are, the greater the risk of accidents. no, no one can guarantee that they will remain safe for her after all, nuclear power plants produce radioactive substances. equal receiver music, such as plutonium at the la on site. now over 50 years old. plutonium is extracted from spent nuclear fuel and then reprocessed. but the industry will be different in the future, say experts it would, it would be idea is to develop reactors that can be produced in factories with processes that hours fully automated as possible. that keeps costs down without compromising standards, the alpha in light of the climate crisis. many countries are banking on nuclear energy and building new reactors, especially in asia. but critics aren't convinced and point to the political aspects of nuclear energy. they say that nuclear energy is actually more costly than the alternatives costs carried by tax payers. it normally would, in places where economics are put 1st, nuclear energy doesn't play much of a role. francis tradition, me and nuclear power. economically, it was a disaster. the french utility company, e. d. f, electricity to france, or which bore the brunt of this program, has debts worth 40 to 45000000000 euros, and has had to be rescued from bankruptcy by being re nationalized to leave you open court. the issue remains controversial. we need more energy and lower c o 2 emissions. the role of nuclear power in the energy mix is a question that countries are deciding for themselves. but as we seek to turn back the tides of climate change, it could be the tides themselves that provide the solution. solar power and wind energy are only as reliable as the weather. but as long as the sun and moon continued to exert that gravitational influence on our seas, title, energy would never let us down off the coast of scotland. you could witness this wind turbines being put into the water. they're called tidal turbines. they sit on the sea floor and harness the energy and the moving water that comes in and goes out with the tides. the potential is huge. it's estimated the we could practically capture enough tidal energy to power all home from the united states twice over. yes, at the moment, all the energy we get from existing title power plants worldwide can power less than 400000 homes. so how does tile power walk exactly? and why isn't it every way it tides are predictable. they come in, they go out and they've been doing this the same way since the moon was born. so with the dial stick a turbine on the water as it flows in or out. and viola you can make electricity with the same principle that window binds. you moving water mix the turbine spin, this powers a gearbox on a generator which turns mechanical energy into electricity. water incidentally is over 800 times damsel than air. which means that time turbines need to be studio, but they can be smaller and slower and still individually produce more power than wind turbines. wind starts and stops blowing somewhat randomly, and the sun isn't always out. so these renewables can be difficult to integrate into the grid tides, as we know, i really, really predictable and consistent. so if batteries are charged, when tides are flowing, we could use those batteries each time there's no movement and repeat at regular intervals. with tides to mean with extract power exist, once called title stream and the other title range. let's talk about titled range power. that takes advantage of the difference between the high and the low tide which go up to 12 meters. and this kind of title power has been along for decades. the oldest title rained generator lawrence was built in northern france in 1966. it cost around $1000000000.00 in today's money, which is cheaper than a comparable nuclear power plant. there are 4 other titled range plants running in south korea, russia, canada, and china. about from geography the infrastructure to support title drange plants does, doesn't exist everywhere. and people have a bose the massive structures because they can be who defeat with the local environment, disturbing migratory fish, the composition of the soil, and even taking space away from local communities. 98 percent of title energy. today comes from titles range, projects that together have a capacity of $520.00 megawatts, which is still a tiny, tiny fraction of consumption. but the other kind of title, power generation could ship things up for the younger and sexier kind of the market titled stream power. it's showing more promise of the moment with its simpler devices that depend on underwater currency caused by the tides. they vary in shape and design. i like wind turbines that have been known to cause the lungs of bats flank boss to implored. the pressure difference caused by total barrages could have a similar effect on the internal organs of fish. but title stream projects are already more eco friendly. what we see is climate change is by far the worst enemy . so yes, these things will have a environmental effects. but we should put them in that context of climate change compared to wind of solar energy. title has been slow for the reason you might have guessed. sadly, a lot of the solutions are really expensive because the industry, so young with very small industry, it's, you know, it doesn't have an established supply chain or manufacturing chain. corrosion is going to be big problems. you're going to choose your materials, really carefully, bio falling as a really big issue where, you know, you put something, the water is things are going to want to grow on it. and it's gonna make it into low, many repo habitat, the performance of the term of deteriorates. he finds when we are renting. that that's a huge operational, which is why most titled stream generation project cluster in the global, not where financial support to death. the technology at this stage exists china and south korea joining in but low income countries like india, have been slow, a drop plans to try out idle power. but they could benefit when the costs of deployment begin to fall. so especially in close to long island nations title does have the power to play a significant role in getting the net 0 in a relatively less destructive way. the need of the hour is to make tighter power competitive. well, the total phase out of fossil fuels is going to mean the revolutionize ation of our entire economies means changing how we heat our homes, how we run our factories. and of course, how we power our cars. in that case, the magic word is electron mobility and perhaps the chief wizard is teslas. ellen musk. yes, this is the new model why we just picked up a tesla and disorder. we're very proud of it. i'm on once you've driven tesla. you never want to drive anything else and he's on his hob, negative. yeah. for them fog of food as it does in terms of the driving experience . yeah. the whole concert and presentation mahoney and test it. so consumer friendly, ha, ha, point least tesla currently sells more e cars than any other company. 6 100000 globally in the 1st 3 quarters of 2021. and it doesn't even have a p r department. it clearly doesn't need one. it gets in of good publicity as it is. what do you make of your 1st tesla, tesla, super, super. it's the best car in the world to live it. not before i still drive, it has much. rather i'm driving one again. i'm crazy. is ellen musk paying you the snow? it's a u. s. company with a 0 budget concept. it doesn't do advertising the boss tweets that keep to going testily, that payrolling anyone cannot just go on tesla. not even lars hendricks. he's president of the t f f. the german chapter of the tesla owners club or get me oh, i see my mission as furthering sustainable mobility. that's important to me. i want to leave my child the world no worse on a one. he was born in tears to love. mobility is a factor and that way the border with ashby just making a hollow. ah, every saturday lars hendricks drives to the crow tilden charging hub, one of the largest in germany. there are thousands of e vehicle charging stations here. he's in his element and wanted i model 3. this guys obviously here for the 1st time. okay. bye. okay. you're parked at a v to charging point. so your charge at half as fee, as you would at the $3.00 point top of that, because like, as in, hendricks knows all the tricks whenever he can. he plugs his club, the t f, f canal. well, by the way, if you haven't seen it already, is, is the latest addition of our magazine hope you like it. we can't help noticing that it's a very male world. any of our mortgage banker wasn't human or nothing. eventually we do spotter woman, diana burma, was an early adopter, making the switch to an e car almost 10 years ago. that was what a lot of the charging infrastructure has massively expanded since i 1st when electric, back in 201213 watson foot under this. but in terms of quality, there's still a lot of room for improvement. it was a small hospital, then he still oftentimes charging points that are out of order for not up and running. defect is gonna fatigue of enough of that still happen. and so now and then yes, you know, peter e mobility has been booming in recent years. today there are over 1000000 e vehicles on germany's roads. chestler isn't the only company doing well. ok, as is the key. okay, this is zekia a v 6. she is english named tucker, which we do when we say i phone too. it's an ab 6 i. e v 6. if you buy an electric vehicle in germany, you can receive a premium of up to $9500.00 euros. but that's not why he bought one. it happened to live on. i have sold a root panel. i could earn a few cents feeding circles electricity into the grid for frank, but i prefer to be able to charge my car and avoid gas and diesel or the diesel. but today he's charging it here because it's a meeting place for other e mobility in theseus. at least on saturdays, a place to meet like minded people and share experiences and love of the vehicles. but the great green transition cannot run on love alone, like tesla or it also needs drive the is to come will tell us if we have put enough energy into making it happen. that's it. from this addition of made a more on the money that makes the world go around, had to be to we dot com slash business until next time you take care with, [000:00:00;00] with ah, with who i it's vital, essential, important, and obviously healthy water. the motto is, drink lots of it, but is that always good for you? kim, water also be harmful among refreshing answers to some old waterman in good shape . 30 minutes on d. w. y, surviving the holocaust sanctuaries against extermination. natalia romika is seeking them out and restoring a uncovering secret hideout ah, close up ah 90 minutes on d. w. for the battle against cove it the only clue variant is putting healthcare systems around the world to the test. vaccination campaigns are accelerating while restrictions are intensifying once again. but are these measures enough to stop the spread of omicron, fax, data and reports with, you know, a weekly covert 19 special? every thursday on d. w. welcome to the dark side where intelligence agencies are pulling the strings. there was a before 911 and after 911, he says after 911, the clubs came off. where organized crime rules were conglomerates and make their own laws. they invade our private lives through surveillance. hidden opaque, secretive works true was big. it doesn't matter. the only criteria as well. we'll hook people up. we shed light on the opaque worlds who's behind benefits. and why are they a threat to was all over the world. this week on d w ah,

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