cela me paraît être une idée...« géniale » comme seuls les zozos verts en sont capables.
bon, il y a des petits inconvénients
http://joannenova.com.au/2013/08/the-price-of-moral-vanity-a-catalogue-of-green-economic-disaster-unfolds-across-europe/
EU members states have spent about €600 billion ($882bn) on renewable energy projects since 2005,
cela c’est la partie émergée de l’iceberg, mais si on était capable de chiffrer les coûts indirects, on peut doubler la mise
c’est combien encore le problème grec... une aumône
- German’s electricity bills have doubled since 2000. (Germans pay about 40c a KWH.)
- Up to 800,000 Germans have had their power cut off because they couldn’t pay their bills.
- Germany’s renewable energy levy rose from €14bn to €20bn in one year
as wind and solar expanded. German households will pay a renewables
surcharge of €7.2bn this year alone.
- Germany has more than half the worlds solar panels. They generated
40% of Germany’s peak electricity demand on June 6, but practically 0%
during the darkest weeks of winter.
- Seimens closed it’s entire solar division, losing about €1bn. Bosch is getting out too, it has lost about €2.4bn.
- Solar investors have lost almost about €25bn in the past year. More
than 5,000 companies associated with solar have closed since 2010.
- Germany has phased out nuclear, but is adding 20 coal fired
stations. Gas power can’t compete with cheap coal or subsidized
renewables and 20% of gas power plants are facing shutdown.
- Despite the river of money paid to renewables, emissions have risen in Germany for the last two years.
Germany’s green energy transition alone may cost consumers up to €1 trillion by 2030, the German government recently warned.
vraiment, vous avez une bonne idée..