willedoo Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago Our domestic production has had a fairly brief history. Our first commercial oil field was discovered late in 1961. Before that we imported everything. We don't have a lot of heavy crude, but some of the oil from the Cooper and Surat basins is like ready made diesel. Santos used to fill their Toyotas with it under some excise agreement with the government. I'm not sure what type of fuel filters they used, but standard ones clog up fairly quick. A lot of our oil is not economical to extract. 1
randomx Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago Oh, and as usual, apparently most of what oil we do process is sold off OS - as usual just like they do with gas, they hardly save any for their own people. 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago The answer is simple. Get an electric car. Solar, and petrol prices are a thing of the past.. 2 1
onetrack Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago 1 hour ago, facthunter said: There's only 2 Refineries operating in Australia. Storage costs Heaps and may not be the answer. Bass Strait oil dried up years ago There was a bad accident at the Refinery. Nev W.A.'s Kwinana oil refinery, just S of Perth, was Australia's newest and biggest oil refinery. But it was built in 1954, by the "Anglo-Iranian Oil Co", which became British Petroleum. However, it was shut for good in 2021, as BP stated they couldn't compete with the oil refinery running costs of the S.E. Asian refineries - which all had huge capacity and cheap labour. The bottom line is, we are dependent on overseas oil, regardless of whether it's refined here or not. As Jerry says, EV's are the way to go, with many EV's having 400kms range today (or battery options to increase to "long range" ability) - and with many people having solar systems on their house, it's free energy from the sun, right where you are - and no amount of warring or global upsets can beat that. 2 1
randomx Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) That's not simple, that'll take decades to implement and the silly bastards sell off half our power too, to other countries anyway. Next minute they'll be telling us we don't have enough power for a country full of EV's. Besides, fuel wise we have the next few probably 6mths to worry about and pay for right now. Well l do anyway, maybe your loaded. Who's gonna pay for my EV. Edited 14 hours ago by randomx 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) Hmm is that why three states are about to give away electricity in the middle of the day? What they tell us and what is true are often two different things Edited 15 hours ago by Jerry_Atrick 2
onetrack Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 5 minutes ago, randomx said: That's not simple, that'll take decades to implement and the silly bastards sell off half our power too, to other countries anyway. Next minute they'll be telling us we don't have enough power for a country full of EV's. Besides, fuel wise we have the next few probably 6mths to worry about and pay for right now. Well l do anyway, maybe your loaded. The amount of electrical power generated by house rooftops in Australia is more than all the public and private power stations combined. All that's needed is electrical storage, and most States are addressing that angle as we speak. Here in W.A., the State Govt is installing massive batteries at Collie and at other locations, to stabilise the grid and to make use of the power generated by house rooftops during the day. A large percentage of people aren't home during the day, so the power being generated just needs to be stored. https://www.synergy.net.au/Our-energy/SynergyRED/Large-Scale-Battery-Energy-Storage-Systems/Collie-Battery-Energy-Storage-System
randomx Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago (edited) Well your not wrong there that's for sure. But eh if they're giving it away why have power bills gone up and not just gone up , gone mad. My neighbours has gone up 300% in 5 yrs, ofc that's just a total rip off and more gouging. Mind you, mines free , solar. But eh that's what's all over the news. ps, not that l'm against EV's, looks like the best future atm, atm. But it's gonna take time and billions over a whole country , nothing simple about it. And everyone's gotta be able to afford one to even bother , they won't even be able to trade in their old car bc they'll be scrapped. Edited 14 hours ago by randomx 1
old man emu Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 24 minutes ago, randomx said: why have power bills gone up Because of the costs of managing the distribution infrastructure. How much does it cost to have crews available to restore power when the infrastructure is damaged by storm and tempest? How much does it cost to ensure that transmission lines are not in danger of damage from vegetation? Transformers wear out. It is no doubt true that the cost of generating electricity using renewables is very low. The costs are really those of putting the smoke into the wires and keeping it there. 2
facthunter Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago NO smoke with solar and wind That's for Lucas Electrics on Bikes and cars. I'm paying 30 cent / kw Hr What's so bad about that with $400 annual for the connection. What are you paying for your internet or Netflix subscription.? Nev 1 1 1
willedoo Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 4 minutes ago, facthunter said: NO smoke with solar and wind That's for Lucas Electrics on Bikes and cars. I'm paying 30 cent / kw Hr What's so bad about that with $400 annual for the connection. What are you paying for your internet or Netflix subscription.? Nev That's a good deal Nev. With Origin I'm paying 35 cents/kWh and $520 connection fee. I don't use much power so it's not a big expense, about $25 per week all up. A lot cheaper than council rate charges which is about $35 per week. 1
facthunter Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago Origin is not my favourite MOB but I think there is worse Now that My wiring is Properly sorted the Panels (15 years old) and the 10 KW battery should help save a bit. Solar is Less than 1/4 of what I paid for it originally. Having it on Big Roofs Like Bunning s where the electric supply is large and it can feed back in easily is a no brainer, and the aircond would cost nothing on a hot day. Nev 1 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 1 hour ago, old man emu said: Because of the costs of managing the distribution infrastructure. How much does it cost to have crews available to restore power when the infrastructure is damaged by storm and tempest? How much does it cost to ensure that transmission lines are not in danger of damage from vegetation? Transformers wear out. Exactly. A spare population of a geographically large land will require that. Good for the big cities, but local renewables and battery has to be cheaper in the long run. 1
red750 Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago Our next door neighbours, who have solar panels and two Teslas, had two solar batteries installed today. Apparently, the subsidy for batteries ends shortly. 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago (edited) Victoria's broke. Fossil fuels are estimated I think by the Austrlaian institute to be subsidised by $30,000 a minute: https://australiainstitute.org.au/post/ffs-fossil-fuel-subsidies-cost-australia-30000-a-minute/ Imagine if clean electricity generation, and the research to exploit it were subsisdised to the same tune. Your taxes are paying for you to have high energy costs, with associated high costs assocaited with the environmental damage and health complications it causes. That $40K per minute directed at the renewable industry would clean it up in a few short years.. And you would have less energy costs to boot. And if the government didn't change taxes, there would be more to spend as other costs would be reduced. And the economy is susceptible to global shocks per messrs Chump and Net. et al. Wake up, Australia! Edited 11 hours ago by Jerry_Atrick 1 2
randomx Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Jerry_Atrick said: Wake up, Australia! Ha, exactly what l've been saying for yrs. At any rate, on EV's l'd love to have one reckon they'd be very cool but no hurry really still very very early days in where all that's going ha, they can spend a few more yrs getting all the bugs out and fine tuning things for me ha ha. They'll get far far better. Actually Musks got an aluminium battery on the go atm . No nasties at all in it or needed and says it'll last twice as long to boot but even that'll be old school in another 10yrs. EV's will prob run and charge themselves down the track or God knows what none of it has even scratched the surface yet. Shame, doubt l'll ever be able to get one now though. l;m completely off grid. Whole country should be they don't even need infrastructure any building can run itself, schools office blocks shops plazas even high rise and most def every house in the country whole cities especially smaller towns . Only leaves a few things like heavy industry and such but even that Musk and the many others, China, all working on all that. Wouldn;t piss on Netflix Nev and only pay my Mob and internet, 40bucks a mth. Tank water no other bills except rates. Car stuff ofc. Edited 10 hours ago by randomx 2
Jerry_Atrick Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 1 hour ago, randomx said: At any rate, on EV's l'd love to have one reckon they'd be very cool but no hurry really still very very early days in where all that's going. While the battery technology will still evolve quickly, early days is hardly how I would characterise it. In the UK, we are finding traction is really taking off.. There are battery charging only service stations: https://www.bp.com/en_gb/united-kingdom/home/news/press-releases/bp-launches-first-dedicated-ev-charging-and-convenience-hub.html I was mightily p155ed off when I had a very low running petrol tank on my bike and thought that servo was my salvation. The reality is today, battery technology is very reliable; the degradation is not anywhere as near as the dooimsdayers have predicted, range anxiety is a thing of the ignorant. They are more expensive to buy (but the gao is closing) but their reeduction in operating and fuel costs puts you ahead oif similar ICE cars in about 2 - 3 years instead of the old 5 years. Battery technology will continue to improve through a steep curve for a whilem but the context of what we normally mean to be early days has well and truly passed. I am holding off buying a used BEV because hopefully in a couple of months this house will goup for sale and sell, and it will be Aussie bound. But for reference, 3 year old cars on average have less than 5% degradation - most I have been looking at are in the 2 - 3 % range. With the normal distance range starting at 300km, and 500+ becoming common, I am not too worried about a 50% degradation over around 50 years (that is calcualted straight line, and I have a feeling the gradient will curve away as time rolls by.
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