This does not seem to be the case. For instance: https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/publications/safety-in-restrooms-and-facilites/
spiffmeister
Who do the authors think the residents will sell their houses to?
Thanks for this, I wasn't sure where to look.
Yeah the ratings for things in Munich are absolute bullshit. I find it better to check Reddit posts than google ratings.
For a country with a reputation for being rugged and resilient, people sure do buy the "don't worry everything will be normal again soon, you don't have to change."
Why does this grease sacks opinion get to be headlines? Her wealth?
Correct.
You're probably right. From what I remember most submarine-boffins/recommendations was to build diesel subs anyway - I'm sure if we offer the French some baguettes and a chance to annoy the British they'll still build us some subs.
Surely the cost of just building our own (you know, just in case) is gonna be chump change compared to how much we paid for aukus anyway.
Ahhh, how spines change.
Renewables do decrease prices though? Maybe l2add?
If you’d heard it was 40% why did you say it was only 6-8% in your previous comment?
Because that's literally what the referenced article states? Maybe l2read?
You can do a bit better than citing a dude with vested interests. You can even find government sources that roughly agree with you: The AEMC report
However the report also notes that:
Delays to new wind and transmission build, and the uncoordinated use of CER are projected to have the biggest impact on electricity costs.
Highlighting that renewables do decrease prices. Of course, reducing gas prices would probably also reduce prices.
Also at least for last quarter the [AEMO] (https://www.aemo.com.au/-/media/files/major-publications/qed/2024/qed-q4-2024.pdf?rev=d75996ee2317495783a18c996d5878ac&sc_lang=en) report that coal and transmission are the driving costs. Negative energy prices were primarily driven by renewables.
Also
Transmission makes up about 50% ...
Network costs (the poles and wires) account for about 45 per cent of a power bill and it's these costs that are on their way up.
I heard it was up to 100% Last time I checked it was 156% Old mate said it was 196%
The actual figure I saw was around 40%, but sure you can inflate things by saying upto.
Don't have x so can't view it. If you have responded to a study with a single Twitter post though the mate... What are ya doin...