- 2 Posts
- 21 Comments
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Discovery of unopened ballots prompts recount in SA seat One Nation won by just 58 votesEnglish
51·2 months agoThey’re cookers - what minds?
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•New research shows regional Australians move on foot more in 'walkable' townsEnglish
1·2 months agoIn the City Of Melbourne LGA, there was a group running last council elections called “Rip up the Bike lanes” - lead by a guy who was angry at bike infrastructure being around Lygon St because he thought they hurt the business of the cafes and restaurants there. Apparently bike riders never buy coffee or gelato.
There was a similar thing on Chapel Street with a business association leading protests against bike lanes because they said that changing parking to bike lanes would hurt their businesses (apparently bike riders never go shopping for overpriced clothing either).
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia's EV charging blackspots: The truth behind 'range anxiety' as car sales surgeEnglish
3·2 months agoSome more numbers from the RACV to dispel the EV misinformation
- “Slow” charging from a 240V mains charger adds 10-12km of range per hour charging.
- The average commute is 30km per day, so about 3 hours on mains should be sufficient for average driver.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia's EV charging blackspots: The truth behind 'range anxiety' as car sales surgeEnglish
4·2 months ago240v charging adds 10-12km of driving range per hour. If your car is plugged in 12 hours from 7pm to 7am you can drive at least 120km each day. That’s a lot further than “just around the corner” - that RACV page also notes that the average commute is about 30km per day so you only need 3 hours on an ordinary mains.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Australia's EV charging blackspots: The truth behind 'range anxiety' as car sales surgeEnglish
2·2 months agoI did the maths back in 2017 and got rid of my car. Calculated that if I took two or less car trips per week, it was cheaper to get a taxi for those than to pay for ongoing maintenance, registration etc.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•A 'wake-up call': How can Australia realistically reduce its reliance on oil?English
3·2 months ago97% of new cars sold in Norway are EVs. We have excess solar power going unused. Why dig up oil just to burn it when we could be running off free solar?
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Albo will speak to Australians on TV tonight – this is never good | First Dog on the MoonEnglish
1·2 months agoTelling rich people they can’t waste fuel on their own jets and have to travel on a commercial airliner would guarantee a recession?
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Live: PM to address nation tonight on response to Middle East warEnglish
3·2 months agoOne of the most depressing things about COVID was learning how selfish most Australians are. Forget everything we like to pretend about community spirit and mateship and all that. People were acting like having a bit of fabric over their mouth was oppression, and taking a month off going to the pub was apparently unbearable.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Live: PM to address nation tonight on response to Middle East warEnglish
1·2 months agoNah, don’t waste it. Anyone caught hoarding fuel should get demerit points.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Albo will speak to Australians on TV tonight – this is never good | First Dog on the MoonEnglish
2·2 months agoAs I said, I reckon the best thing the govt can do for everyone including those at the bottom of the economic hierarchy is to put some pressure on those countries receiving our LNG to reciprocate.
Why not limit the most excessive uses of fuel? Private jets should be restricted so more fuel is reserved for essential trips. Combustion car races, use of yachts etc could be suspended until they replace with electric or the crisis is over.
I would prefer to see fuel rationed for the most important uses rather than the government cut tax on it to make it cheaper for the most wasteful people to use it all up.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Government halves fuel excise to cut price on petrol and dieselEnglish
192·2 months agoLowering the price will just increase consumption and hoarding.
The solution to shortages is rationing, but the government is worried (probably accurately) that it will be unpopular.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Long-promised animal cruelty prevention laws quietly shelved by Victorian governmentEnglish
7·3 months agoThe dog photographed in the article - Millie the Maltese shih tzu - was bashed with a metal pole by Mark Martinaj for 5 minutes and has since disappeared, presumed killed. He successfully appealed his jail sentence and got off with a community corrections order.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Government says people can 'make the call' on work from home amid fuel supply concernsEnglish
11·3 months agoWe need to somehow invent batteries and solar panels that can be made using nothing non-renewable, but we’re not even close.
This is simply untrue. Here’s an in depth Technology Connections video about renewable power, including the ease of recycling both solar panels and batteries
Solar panels are 90% recyclable and most parts can be easily separated by hand. The aluminum, glass, silver and copper can then be simply melted down. The only reason it isn’t more common is that the labor costs are more expensive than buying virgin raw materials - a capitalism problem, not a technical problem.
Likewise, most batteries are recyclable by simply separating the electrodes and melting them down. For alkali metals like Lithium and Sodium you have the complication of having to work in an inert space but that doesn’t make it impossible, just more work (Edit: Ask a chemistry graduate, they have probably done this in a glove box before). Again, it’s a problem of the labor cost of recycling being prohibitive, not a technical problem. Lithium batteries are 98% recyclable.
The suggestion that 98% recyclable batteries are somehow less sustainable than oil-based fuels that are literally burnt up and completely unrecoverable is ludicrous.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Government says people can 'make the call' on work from home amid fuel supply concernsEnglish
11·3 months agoWhat non-renewable materials?
What is less renewable than literally burning a finite resource?
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Government says people can 'make the call' on work from home amid fuel supply concernsEnglish
11·3 months agoIf that’s the lesson you think needs to be learned, you’ve learned the wrong lesson from this.
As another person said, we’re at the “And Find Out” stages of climate change and fossil fuels.
We need to take more ownership of our petrol/diesel/oil supply.
Or maybe we could shift away from the fossil fuel fetish toward sustainable sources of energy.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•BYO sandwiches and no cafe lunches as retirements threatened by rising costsEnglish
2·3 months agoThese people who complain about being “not able to leave their house” are probably the same people who complain about the NDIS paying for support workers to get disabled clients out of the house, saying that that’s not necessary or essential.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Australia@aussie.zone•Government says people can 'make the call' on work from home amid fuel supply concernsEnglish
3·3 months agoProbably the same ones who bought a stupidly oversized and heavy vehicle and now complain about fuel prices.
budget_biochemist@slrpnk.netto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•How refill stores are changing the way we reduce wasteEnglish
0·3 months agoFor certain food styles, I buy bulk spices sometimes because I don’t like to pay for an entire jar I won’t use, knowing that most of it will go stale by the time I’m through the jar. Being able to buy tiny quantities is sometimes way cheaper.
Have you considered sharing with friends/family who would use the same spices or other supplies? I sometimes do this with spices, legumes, baking soda, etc.


More accurate headline: