Saturday, July 5, 2014

2014 (10) June (4) May (1) January (1) March (2) February (1) January (1) 2013 (77)


One of the economic interests that kept alive the farce of climate battery operated fridge change is the interest of the nuclear sector. So I say this because I believe, and it is said too little. Nuclear power needs to seek more space in the distribution of electricity and cake with the excuse of climate change, battery operated fridge and the cross contaminant to CO2, is to let him take a bite at coal site.
Sources of electricity in the United States ("coal": coal) Here's a story about two great American companies, Peabody and Exelon, only to compare how they are doing. battery operated fridge Each one belongs to a different, coal and nuclear, and both are beauty queens in Illinois (largest city: Chicago). Today, 48% of electricity comes from coal in Illinois and another 48% is nuclear. Peabody is the name of the world's most important coal sector in the private sector. Already born more than a century in Illinois, the state that Obama was senator. Illinois shares with Indiana and Kentucky a coal basin, the Illinois Coal Basin, and that explains their initial location. Exelon is the largest industry in the U.S. nuclear power company. battery operated fridge It has ten nuclear power plants, six of which are in Illinois. There, in 1960, one of his predecessors, ComEd (Commonwealth Edison), which is now part of Exelon Corporation, made the first U.S. nuclear battery operated fridge power plant running. When Obama was a senator was an ardent supporter of coal but when presidential candidate was was also an environmentalist, preferring to extol grandly renewable energy and, less grandly, the ailing nuclear power since the disaster at Three Mile Island in 1979, no account in the U.S. with no new plant. In appreciation Exelon supported Obama, being probably one of the companies (although difficult to prove there evidence) that most helped finance his campaign. Well, I put up a graph comparing the evolution of the prices of these two companies on Wall Street from a year ago to today. Fall the brutal actions of Peabody suffered just a year ago, when Obama was elected president observed. Then the quote turns and its tendency is clearly rising since January. battery operated fridge It happens that, despite the drawbacks that receive coal in their own country, where consumption has dropped, this natural fuel continues to be increasingly requested day in Asia, thereby increasing U.S. exports over both bound in the manufacture of steel, bound as electricity. Furthermore, Peabody has already mines not only in the Illinois Basin but in other parts of the United States and the world, mainly from Australia. So he is going very well. And Exelon? battery operated fridge Well look at the chart, battery operated fridge please they will give me a snack, and you yourselves conclude battery operated fridge this post. . ref: State Nuclear Industry - Illinois Peabody Coal Company - Company History Exelon Corporation - Company History Peabody Energy (NYSE: BTU) Exelon | Nuclear
Earth's Climate History (kindle)
2014 (10) June (4) May (1) January (1) March (2) February (1) January (1) 2013 (77) January (6) October (6) October (2) August (4) June (8) May (7) April (10) March (14) February (13) December (7) 2012 (132) December (11) October (9) October (13) September (17) August (10) July (12) June (7) May (7) April (8) March (12) February (16) December (10) 2011 (115) October (9) March (13) October (12) December (10) August (5) July (4) June (10) May (9) April (11) September (8) February (10) December (14) 2010 (114) December (12) December (14) October (11) December (10) August (8) July (9) June (8) May (11) April (7) March (6) February (10) December (8) 2009 (88) December (4) September (9) Carbon intensity Ozone Scandal, the story Meet the net emissions effect of the crisis on the Frio CO2 Emissions bad time per square kilometer China Peabody and Exelon fail October (8) October battery operated fridge (7) August (4) July ( 8)

No comments:

Post a Comment