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History of Technology 1: Solar and Wind Energy 37 Views
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Description:
Solar and wind energy are both great ideas...until the weather decides to go rogue and overthrow our entire government. ...It could happen. Sleep with one eye open.
Transcript
- 00:03
In our search for renewable energy we decided to go to the
- 00:07
very top, the Big Kahuna... the Sun. Seems like a great idea right well after all [Footage of Earth is zoomed out until the entire planet is seen next to the Sun]
- 00:13
that's where the plant turns for their energy. Oh there was just one small issue...
- 00:17
We are not plants, we can't just stand around the sunlight and end up
- 00:22
with a full stomach. To harvest the sun's energy we needed to invent something new
Full Transcript
- 00:26
called the photovoltaic cell. The first working photovoltaic cell was built in [Solar cell with a halo]
- 00:33
1954 in the same research lab where the first transistor was
- 00:38
assembled. Turns out that putting strips of almost pure silicon, semiconducting
- 00:44
material, in the sunlight generates an electric charge. Even after the
- 00:49
scientists realized this it took decades before practical marketable solar panels [Solar panel at a party with a bow tie on]
- 00:54
showed up, and they were still super expensive. Most people weren't interested
- 00:59
in costly bulky panels when they could just plug into the electric grid. Then in
- 01:03
the mid-1970s we hit our first oil crisis, several Middle Eastern nations
- 01:08
stop selling us oil, which the US took about as well as somebody having stolen
- 01:13
a puppy. Prices skyrocketed people panicked and alternative energy sources suddenly
- 01:19
looked a lot more interesting. Well by the 1990s solar panels were cheaper and [Man scans a solar panel through a checkout]
- 01:24
more common it basically became the modern panels we know and love today.
- 01:28
And nowadays we have a direct line to the sun's energy, take that trees,
- 01:32
brussel sprouts and moss. (Laughing) Oh what? They were always rubbing it in our faces.
- 01:37
Well but we didn't stop with the Sun we're also like "hey how about the wind
- 01:42
that used to work pretty well way back when." Anyhow we totally figured out
- 01:46
wind power couple a thousand years ago. As soon as we knew how to generate [Prehistoric man holding a paper pinwheel]
- 01:50
electricity we hooked up windmills to generators and may wind turbines didn't
- 01:55
happen in some high-tech research lab either. First guy to make electricity
- 01:59
with wind was a Scottish professor named James Blyth and he built it literally
- 02:04
in his backyard in 1891 whoa. All the neighbors probably thought he was crazy.
- 02:10
Unlike solar power wind generated electricity was a relatively standard
- 02:14
option throughout the 20th century. We're not saying that we were dewy-eyed
- 02:18
environmentalists in their 30s who loved wind power because it was kinda nice to [Two people hugging wind turbines]
- 02:22
mother earth... Nope, wind power was just a practical and useful way to generate
- 02:27
power in certain circumstances. Like in rural areas too far from the power grid
- 02:32
such as the American great plains until the forties and fifties. Or on sailing
- 02:36
ships before they all converted to steam or internal combustion. Or on early [Sailors on a ship with waves crashing onto them]
- 02:41
expeditions to Antarctica where explorers would have plugged into a
- 02:45
Penguin if they thought it would fire up their electric blanket. But wind turbines
- 02:49
were pretty cheap and reliably produced a little bit of electricity so why not
- 02:53
use 'em. Well the same oil crisis that gave the solar industry a boost [Barrel of oil and wind turbine fist bump]
- 02:57
encouraged wind power research too. Private companies and government
- 03:01
programs began investigating wind turbines that were bigger, more efficient
- 03:05
and could be used for public utility electricity. You know it wasn't easy..
- 03:10
The first wind turbine that could produce megawatts of energy only lasted for 45
- 03:15
days before it um... broke. What's the return policy on these... While these days they've [Windmill falls down]
- 03:22
come up with a better model that's a lot less schlocky. If solar and wind power are
- 03:26
so great and efficient and we're running out of fossil fuels then why don't we use
- 03:30
more renewables? Well, good question. Wind power makes up a whopping 3.35%
- 03:35
of global electricity production full fired power plants on
- 03:40
the other hand make up about 41% of the world's electricity so
- 03:44
you know old king coal is still on his throne... But we still have some fossil
- 03:49
fuels left and coals still really cheap and available so why change? [Man with a trolley full of coal at a supermarket]
- 03:54
Climate change, climate change, right.. Well renewable energy is expensive compared
- 03:59
good old coal wind and solar power are really pricey to adopt and because of that not
- 04:03
many people want them for people to want them well they have to be cheap at least
- 04:07
competitive with coal and for them to be cheap people would have to, you guessed it
- 04:11
want them yeah catch 22. As much as we love them the sun and wind aren't as
- 04:15
reliable as coal fire. That means that renewable energy requires planning. [Smartly dressed people in a meeting room]
- 04:21
Where can we generate the most consistent energy? how do we store that
- 04:25
energy to make up for the dips in supply? what if it's cloudy with a chance of
- 04:29
meatballs? No those photovoltaic cells wont do much in that... [Meatballs fall from the sky onto solar panels]
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