MUScoop

MUScoop => The Superbar => Topic started by: NCMUFan on March 25, 2026, 10:12:49 AM

Title: Pretzel Logic
Post by: NCMUFan on March 25, 2026, 10:12:49 AM
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/23/climate/trump-totalenergies-offshore-wind-cancellation
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Billy Hoyle on March 25, 2026, 10:17:07 AM
Quote from: NCMUFan on March 25, 2026, 10:12:49 AMhttps://www.cnn.com/2026/03/23/climate/trump-totalenergies-offshore-wind-cancellation

Disagree. There is no logic of any kind involved here. Just Dear Leader's obsession with wind farms.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: cheebs09 on March 25, 2026, 10:34:01 AM
Quote from: Billy Hoyle on March 25, 2026, 10:17:07 AMDisagree. There is no logic of any kind involved here. Just Dear Leader's obsession with wind farms.

He's ticked they built a wind farm near one of his prized courses in the UK.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Uncle Rico on March 25, 2026, 10:38:17 AM
This is a very good example of fiscal conservatism in action
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: MU82 on March 25, 2026, 10:58:11 AM
Quote from: cheebs09 on March 25, 2026, 10:34:01 AMHe's ticked they built a wind farm near one of his prized courses in the UK.

This is sure to make him feel even more ornery:

In a special election yesterday, Dems flipped a Florida state House seat in the district in which Mar-A-Lago is located. In 2024, the Republican candidate won the district by 24%. Capt. Bone Spur had enthusiastically endorsed the GOP candidate who lost this time.

Oh, and the Hypocrite In Chief did vote in the election ... by mail.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Uncle Rico on March 25, 2026, 12:07:08 PM
Quote from: MU82 on March 25, 2026, 10:58:11 AMThis is sure to make him feel even more ornery:

In a special election yesterday, Dems flipped a Florida state House seat in the district in which Mar-A-Lago is located. In 2024, the Republican candidate won the district by 24%. Capt. Bone Spur had enthusiastically endorsed the GOP candidate who lost this time.

Oh, and the Hypocrite In Chief did vote in the election ... by mail.

It's ok if white people find easier ways to vote
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on March 25, 2026, 12:30:25 PM
As someone in the industry, this is not necessarily paying them to stop as much as it's refunding their lease with conditions. If I'm Total this is a great deal for me to get out of something that is being deliberately sabotaged.

This admin with all the work stoppages has made it so prohibitively expensive to build these sites that the rest of the world is charging full steam ahead on, it's a no brainer for them to take their money back. The energy companies building the few offshore farms now have taken mind boggling write downs as it is (the goal of the admin).

It still a matter of if, not when. There's offshore lease auctions going on constantly around the world.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: WellsstreetWanderer on April 05, 2026, 10:57:54 AM
Many people are not convinced about the ROI given the immense expense for construction, sporadic use and limited life expectancy coupled with inability to recycle the components.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 11:33:10 AM
Quote from: WellsstreetWanderer on April 05, 2026, 10:57:54 AMMany people are not convinced about the ROI given the immense expense for construction, sporadic use and limited life expectancy coupled with inability to recycle the components.



Can't manipulate the price of wind, it's always free vs pay by consumption for gas. Wouldn't be getting built rapidly all over the world by energy behemoths if the math didn't pencil.

Use is constant offshore where there are constant wind flows. Curtailment is mostly due to the grid constraints onshore, not the farm itself.

Useful life of modern offshore wind farms are more or less the same as gas plants (30-35 years with proper maintenance)

90% and rising of wind turbine components can now be recycled. That includes the blades. How much of natural gas emmissions can be recycled?


I know if you watch the show Landman, Billy Bob Thornton once said something differently though. Gotta hear both sides
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: TSmith34, Inc. on April 05, 2026, 12:46:48 PM
Quote from: WellsstreetWanderer on April 05, 2026, 10:57:54 AMMany people are not convinced about the ROI given the immense expense for construction, sporadic use and limited life expectancy coupled with inability to recycle the components.

Oh, are many people saying? Big strong guys with tears in their eyes saying sir?

Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: The Sultan on April 05, 2026, 01:01:24 PM
Quote from: WellsstreetWanderer on April 05, 2026, 10:57:54 AMMany people are not convinced about the ROI given the immense expense for construction, sporadic use and limited life expectancy coupled with inability to recycle the components.

Sounds something the free market should be able to sort out.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: WarriorFan on April 05, 2026, 01:10:03 PM
Industry requires a steady base load of power on which it can rely 100% of the time.  Why is Germany de-industrializing?  No power.  Wind can be a partial solution but it's ugly and has very low return after extremely high Capex.  Companies like Total were doing it only because they were getting enough government money to make it have some small ROI.  Efforts now need to concentrate on reinforcing the base load through Nuclear, clean coal, and gas.  AI draws a huge amount of power, and that demand will only grow.  He who has the most power, wins.  Right now, unfortunately, that's China... and for China to win the AI race would be a risk to the type of society we hope to enjoy for a few more years. 
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: MU82 on April 05, 2026, 03:09:39 PM
Clean coal  :o
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 03:17:50 PM
Quote from: WarriorFan on April 05, 2026, 01:10:03 PMNuclear

Talk about CapEx! Nuclear is by FAR the highest.  You might do some more research.

Quote from: WarriorFan on April 05, 2026, 01:10:03 PMclean coal

Lol.  Filtered cigarettes are perfectly safe!

I won't deny that "modern" coal plants are much better (but still worse than natural gas, and not zero emission like solar and wind).  But most of our coal plants aren't new, and the CapEx of new ones is higher than solar and wind.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:29:35 PM
Quote from: WarriorFan on April 05, 2026, 01:10:03 PMIndustry requires a steady base load of power on which it can rely 100% of the time.  Why is Germany de-industrializing?  No power.  Wind can be a partial solution but it's ugly and has very low return after extremely high Capex.  Companies like Total were doing it only because they were getting enough government money to make it have some small ROI.  Efforts now need to concentrate on reinforcing the base load through Nuclear, clean coal, and gas.  AI draws a huge amount of power, and that demand will only grow.  He who has the most power, wins.  Right now, unfortunately, that's China... and for China to win the AI race would be a risk to the type of society we hope to enjoy for a few more years. 

We don't subsidize coal, gas, and oil. I stand corrected.

Why is there still a 3+ year supply queue for wind turbines after the gov sunsetted a bunch of the IRA benefits.

Why is there record setting asset acquisitions of wind/renewable energy assets by private equity if there's no returns
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:31:32 PM
"Returns on wind aren't good enough, we should be doing nuclear instead".

I say this with all due respect in tandem with Rocky's capex comment. Be serious
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 03:33:13 PM
Quote from: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:29:35 PMWhy is there record setting asset acquisitions of wind/renewable energy assets by private equity if there's no returns

Put solar (and a Powerwall) on my house a couple years ago.  Net exported 2.5MWh in 2025.  Total $ loser  8-)
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:35:03 PM
Quote from: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 03:33:13 PMPut solar (and a Powerwall) on my house a couple years ago.  Net exported 2.5MW in 2025.  Total $ loser  8-)

Yeah but much do you pay in subscription fees to the sun though
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 03:36:33 PM
Quote from: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:35:03 PMYeah but much do you pay in subscription fees to the sun though

It does try to irradiate me daily.  But it hated me before I got solar too.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: jesmu84 on April 05, 2026, 06:47:37 PM
Quote from: WellsstreetWanderer on April 05, 2026, 10:57:54 AMMany people are not convinced about the ROI given the immense expense for construction, sporadic use and limited life expectancy coupled with inability to recycle the components.

Immense expense? Compared to what other power generation construction?

Limited life expectancy? Source?

Inability to recycle components? Source? Is that same concern focused on other power generation components?

🤡
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: MU82 on April 05, 2026, 06:51:53 PM
Knock it off. "Windmills" are killing whales and causing cancer!
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 07:16:30 PM
Quote from: MU82 on April 05, 2026, 06:51:53 PMKnock it off. "Windmills" are killing whales and causing cancer!

You do know that's a myth right? They actually are there to activate the 5G chips implanted from the Covid vax
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: TSmith34, Inc. on April 05, 2026, 07:59:47 PM
Quote from: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 03:29:35 PMWhy is there still a 3+ year supply queue for wind turbines after the gov sunsetted a bunch of the IRA benefits.

Why is there record setting asset acquisitions of wind/renewable energy assets by private equity if there's no returns

Because you stupid libs ain't know how to do no ROI calculation, even with your fancy degrees and lattes. Eve'ybody knows clean coal is big ROI, which is why the coal companies is doin' so good. Private equity is just a buncha big dumb libs who's bad at the maths.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 08:06:10 PM
Quote from: TSmith34, Inc. on April 05, 2026, 07:59:47 PMclean coal is big ROI, which is why the coal companies is doin' so good. Private equity is just a buncha big dumb libs who's bad at the maths.

I mean, this is gold.  But that's expensive to mine.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: tower912 on April 05, 2026, 08:08:03 PM
But if the world got smart and went huge on wind, solar, etc., Iran, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Venezuela could drown in their oil.  There are so many options.  But we continue to willfully make the worst, most destructive, illogical choices. 
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: TSmith34, Inc. on April 05, 2026, 08:12:25 PM
Quote from: tower912 on April 05, 2026, 08:08:03 PMBut if the world got smart and went huge on wind, solar, etc., Iran, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Venezuela could drown in their oil.  There are so many options.  But we continue to willfully make the worst, most destructive, illogical choices.

And Saudi Arabia, UAE, etc. have recognized this for a few decades now and have been furiously diversifying their investments.

Cross posting this from the investing thread, where I have mentioned this company before:
https://investors.hasi.com/news/press-releases/detail/321/hasi-announces-fourth-quarter-and-full-year-2025-results-with-new-investments-up-87-yy-to-a-record-4-3b-adjusted-roe-up-70-bps-to-13-4-and-adjusted-eps-up-10-to-2-70

Obviously these fools don't understand that their investments don't have any ROI. And sure, their ROE went from 12.7% to 13.4% to a projected ~17%, but that's probably because they are secretly investing in clean coal.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 08:32:49 PM
Quote from: TSmith34, Inc. on April 05, 2026, 08:12:25 PMAnd Saudi Arabia, UAE, etc. have recognized this for a few decades now and have been furiously diversifying their investments.

Norway is an interesting story.  Mineral rich, but have always used hydro.  That may need to change soon:
https://cleantechnica.com/2026/04/03/norway-faces-energy-shortage-as-lack-of-winter-snow-depletes-reservoirs/
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 11:16:44 PM
Quote from: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 08:32:49 PMNorway is an interesting story.  Mineral rich, but have always used hydro.  That may need to change soon:
https://cleantechnica.com/2026/04/03/norway-faces-energy-shortage-as-lack-of-winter-snow-depletes-reservoirs/

Norway converting their boats to hydrogen already
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 11:18:21 PM
Quote from: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 11:16:44 PMNorway converting their boats to hydrogen already

No doubt, they're far ahead of most of the world, while also realizing they can exploit that same world.  That's leadership.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 11:19:53 PM
Quote from: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 11:18:21 PMNo doubt, they're far ahead of most of the world, while also realizing they can exploit that same world.  That's leadership.

The Phillip Morris of socialism
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: MU Fan in Connecticut on April 06, 2026, 05:11:59 AM
The Saudi's are investing in solar.  Aren't they building a city in the desert running all on solar?
I read that all the Arabian peninsula countries are investing in tourism to diversify their economies.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: WarriorFan on April 06, 2026, 06:11:31 AM
Quote from: rocky_warrior on April 05, 2026, 03:17:50 PMTalk about CapEx! Nuclear is by FAR the highest.  You might do some more research.

Lol.  Filtered cigarettes are perfectly safe!

I won't deny that "modern" coal plants are much better (but still worse than natural gas, and not zero emission like solar and wind).  But most of our coal plants aren't new, and the CapEx of new ones is higher than solar and wind.

Nuclear has highest Capex however by far the lowest operating cost and longest life.  New technology is developing which reduces project timelines by installing smaller reactors with repeatable designs. 

PE is buying wind turbines to greenwash their other investments.  Nothing about the actual financial ROI, just making sure they have 3-4 pages of the annual report that keep the treehuggers away.  I have direct personal experience with this.

But it all comes back to handling base load.  Wind cannot do it because there's not always wind.  Solar cannot do it because of night.  Batteries are still too expensive to compensate at scale.  (that will change).  Even when the battery technology improves, solar is relevant only for a portion of the world, and that portion is not the most populous nor industrialized. 

Industry wants stable power at the lowest cost per kwh.  Right now, AI companies are buying $.19 to $.27/kwh solutions (diesel, reciprocating gas, gas turbines) as fast as they can because they need surety of supply of power.  Compare that to a profitable Nuclear or coal base cost of $0.03 to $.07/kwh and it's insane.  Take into account the opportunity cost of not doing it and it becomes reasonable.

Right now solar is the next best option, with straight solar possible below $0.1/kwh and with batteries in the sub $0.15 range.  Companies like that, BUT it's still MUCH higher CAPEX than a reciprocating solution, takes HUGE space, and is much slower to deploy. 

The only reason any of these really come into discussion is because there's not enough coal/nuclear base power.

In many years around this industry, I've never encountered a wind project for any purpose other than greenwashing.  Solar - there are some excellent practical solutions, but they were driven by greenwashing first... not economics. 
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: rocky_warrior on April 06, 2026, 08:32:10 AM
Quote from: WarriorFan on April 06, 2026, 06:11:31 AMgreenwashing

There is a valid discussion to be had about baseload, but your overuse of the word greenwashing, lumping offshore wind together with onshore, inaccurate nuclear information, and push for coal tell me you don't really want to have an honest discussion.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Skatastrophy on April 06, 2026, 08:50:13 AM
Quote from: Shaka Shart on April 05, 2026, 11:19:53 PMThe Phillip Morris of socialism
I need to know what the Zyn/Snus of energy is so I can invest. What are the kids into

Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: MUBurrow on April 06, 2026, 09:13:20 AM
Quote from: WarriorFan on April 06, 2026, 06:11:31 AMIn many years around this industry, I've never encountered a wind project for any purpose other than greenwashing.  Solar - there are some excellent practical solutions, but they were driven by greenwashing first... not economics. 
Quote from: rocky_warrior on April 06, 2026, 08:32:10 AMyour overuse of the word greenwashing

Consumers have preferences for something other than the cheapest option all the time.  When was the last time anyone had an RC Cola? 

Its so dumb that when that same concept applies to energy, and for laughably more logical reasons, those preferences suddenly become a conspiratorial bastardization of the market.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: JWags85 on April 06, 2026, 11:12:43 AM
Quote from: MUBurrow on April 06, 2026, 09:13:20 AMConsumers have preferences for something other than the cheapest option all the time.  When was the last time anyone had an RC Cola? 

Its so dumb that when that same concept applies to energy, and for laughably more logical reasons, those preferences suddenly become a conspiratorial bastardization of the market.

If this was in regards to green/renewable energy in general, I'd agree with you.  But if its specifically about wind power, then he potentially has a point and it can be about silly optics. 

I only say this cause I have a customer who ran an obsessive restructuring to become green.  The end aim was totally fine, but the timeline, methods, and way they did it was what was obsessive.  Anyways, one of the consultancies that pitched them on this was super pro-wind power and spoke glowingly about the environmental benefits of wind compared to not only fossil fuels, but other renewables, and how wind was the most "pure" and "harmless" form of energy.  Yes, pure and harmless were both used multiple times.

Well the consultancy didn't actually implement any of the energy source transfers or conversions, so as they went into the market, they found that purely wind sourced energy would be significantly pricier than solar and some hydro.  But the executives were hellbent on wind, cause of how pure and harmless it was.  A fiscal quarter later they ended up switching to a renewable blend cause of cost, cause money talks  ;D

I'm not anti-green energy and I'm fully aware there is tons and tons of BS claims and data to diminish the potential and/or benefits of renewable energy by those who have a vested stake in continued reliance on fossil fuels, or other political/ideological oppositions.  One of my biggest hopes for science and technology is that, in my son's lifetime, renewable energy gets to a place where it wins and becomes the dominant energy source because its better, more efficient, and cheaper, not because there is an ideological battle it won over fossil fuels.  But there is also an entire parallel multi MULTI-billion dollar industry of emotional and morality based consulting and pseudo science around being "green" that preys on companies and executives, that ends up being a net negative to renewable energy as a movement. 

And I say this as someone who has worked with 2-3 different green energy consulting firms, had to have his company be "net neutral" certified 2 different times for 2 different organizations by 2 different methodologies...while working in an industry that is FLAGRANTLY wasteful and unconcerned with pollution and the environment (hello Indian manufacturing!) while simultaneously also being very focused on purely superficial "green" optics over the last 5-10 years as a selling point.  I know multiple smaller/mid sized companies who went green for one reason or another, and dropped it as soon as they were no longer required by a large customer or organization not due to any moral or ideological reasons, but because they were sick of being ripped off and manipulated with BS by the intermediaries who were assisting or "certifying".
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: Shaka Shart on April 06, 2026, 01:52:23 PM
Quote from: WarriorFan on April 06, 2026, 06:11:31 AMNuclear has highest Capex however by far the lowest operating cost and longest life.  New technology is developing which reduces project timelines by installing smaller reactors with repeatable designs. 

PE is buying wind turbines to greenwash their other investments.  Nothing about the actual financial ROI, just making sure they have 3-4 pages of the annual report that keep the treehuggers away.  I have direct personal experience with this.

But it all comes back to handling base load.  Wind cannot do it because there's not always wind.  Solar cannot do it because of night.  Batteries are still too expensive to compensate at scale.  (that will change).  Even when the battery technology improves, solar is relevant only for a portion of the world, and that portion is not the most populous nor industrialized. 

Industry wants stable power at the lowest cost per kwh.  Right now, AI companies are buying $.19 to $.27/kwh solutions (diesel, reciprocating gas, gas turbines) as fast as they can because they need surety of supply of power.  Compare that to a profitable Nuclear or coal base cost of $0.03 to $.07/kwh and it's insane.  Take into account the opportunity cost of not doing it and it becomes reasonable.

Right now solar is the next best option, with straight solar possible below $0.1/kwh and with batteries in the sub $0.15 range.  Companies like that, BUT it's still MUCH higher CAPEX than a reciprocating solution, takes HUGE space, and is much slower to deploy. 

The only reason any of these really come into discussion is because there's not enough coal/nuclear base power.

In many years around this industry, I've never encountered a wind project for any purpose other than greenwashing.  Solar - there are some excellent practical solutions, but they were driven by greenwashing first... not economics. 

PE is buying wind turbines because nobody can get gas turbines and they are quick to build relative to everything else besides solar. And because they generate decent returns, 5-10% IRR for low risk investments.

Nuclear plants are what, 1% if that? Smaller Modular maybe improves that but those are not commercially deployed at scale yet.

Are you arguing that Brookfield, Blackrock, and all the other private equity firms are spending 10b for each all cash transaction to Greenwash? Do you sincerely believe that the brand image value play in greenwashing is worth hundreds of billions annually?

I would love to know how your direct personal experience with this 100% greenwashing only makes you so confident because as someone else who works in energy, I can assure you that you're not even close to being right.

Again, Be serious.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: TSmith34, Inc. on April 08, 2026, 08:34:33 AM
The Scots obviously can't calculate ROI

(https://images2.imgbox.com/64/c4/ahLi8N4L_o.png) (https://imgbox.com/ahLi8N4L)

Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: JWags85 on April 08, 2026, 10:26:31 AM
Quote from: TSmith34, Inc. on Today at 08:34:33 AMThe Scots obviously can't calculate ROI

(https://images2.imgbox.com/64/c4/ahLi8N4L_o.png) (http://"https://imgbox.com/ahLi8N4L")



Not to be that shrieking meme, but do you have a legit source?  I saw something similar not long ago, but everything I see with that figure is from a social media meme picture or post.  The best similar data I ever find in actual articles is how at times wind power has provided more than 100% of Scotland's need, but also how this is brief periods because 1) wind power is inconsistent by both location and time of year and 2) energy needs are also fluid based on time of year so wind providing X gigawatts in one month may be more than needed but X gigawatts is significantly under need in other months.

Again, I'm not a renewables hater or opponent, just fully cognizant of how much attempted "GOTCHA" BS there is in the debate, whether to discredit or champion.  And I think the burden of proof/cultural mindset shift is still on renewables until they become undeniably cheaper/more efficient, as I mentioned in my previous post, so vague claims or slanted data just give the monster incumbent fossil fuel side more ammunition.
Title: Re: Pretzel Logic
Post by: TSmith34, Inc. on April 08, 2026, 10:45:50 AM
Quote from: JWags85 on Today at 10:26:31 AMNot to be that shrieking meme, but do you have a legit source?  I saw something similar not long ago, but everything I see with that figure is from a social media meme picture or post.  The best similar data I ever find in actual articles is how at times wind power has provided more than 100% of Scotland's need, but also how this is brief periods because 1) wind power is inconsistent by both location and time of year and 2) energy needs are also fluid based on time of year so wind providing X gigawatts in one month may be more than needed but X gigawatts is significantly under need in other months.

I mean, duh? Of course the wind varies, as does demand. No where is the claim made that they are powered 100% by wind 100% of the time.

Everything I am seeing is that the specific problem in Great Britain is that they are paying the companies money to shut off the power they are generating because the grid can't handle it. So, grid upgrades are needed, as is enhanced energy storage capability.

https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/scotland-wind-energy-renewable-power-electricity-wwf-scotland-a7183006.html

See also California, which at times struggles with what do with their excess solar output.
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