chubbs Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago Long article on rapid introduction of electric HD trucks in China. China is upending fossil fuel economics: "The lesson for Western operators and policymakers is that the cost curve has shifted. The decisions that made sense even in 2024 do not match the realities of 2025." https://cleantechnica.com/2025/11/26/chinas-bev-trucks-and-the-end-of-diesels-dominance/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WolfStock1 Posted 39 minutes ago Share Posted 39 minutes ago 2 hours ago, chubbs said: Don't agree with your comments. The article provided references. Other than fully depreciated gas and nuclear, Renewables are the lowest cost of electricity in the US. New gas plants, to meet increasing demand, will be much more expensive than fully depreciated; and, as the article states, costs and backlogs for new gas plants are increasing. I don't disagree with regards to the cost of new builds (though again - they generally don't take into account many factors including regulations, transmission lines, and opportunity cost effect on reliability). But the title of the article, and your comment, is referring to the cost of electricity, not the cost of new plants. They are not the same thing. Specifically a big contributor to rising electricity prices is the shutdown of existing operational plants, lowering the supply and thus increasing prices. You seem to keep ignoring/forgetting that. Electricity isn't just created by new-build plants. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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