• ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    It’s amusing that during WWII, the US government was unable to get Atlantic City to turn off their fucking lights at night. As a result, in early 1942 U-boats took advantage of the handy silhouetting these lights provided to sink an enormous number of ships off the coast. It also didn’t help that Admiral King chose to ignore the British telling them exactly where the fucking U-boats were at all times thanks to their ability to decrypt German naval communications.

    I’m actually proud of my country for slapping the shit out of the Nazis eventually, but we sure as fuck did make it harder on ourselves than it needed to be.

  • Vegafjord eo@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    Not only that, but it also smells strongly of subsidizing corporations through lowering their electricity bill.

  • biofaust@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    I don’t think the consumption of even a few extra degrees of the whole population of NYC is even comparable to the consumption of Times Square.

    This, summed with what @freagle@lemmy.ml has already written, should be enough to rethink your upvote to this bad example.

    • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Indeed a bad example, still the principle is what’s important.
      I would put the AC higher just to be petty

  • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    All that lighting in Times Square is absolutely nothing, literally a rounding error, compared to all the air conditioners in NYC. Do you just need others to be miserable for you to be happy or something?

      • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        How else is he going to know what unnecessary product to buy and be delivered to him in excessive packing by a huge truck?

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        13 hours ago

        How else would I know what fine products and services I should be selecting? It’s literally the only way to do things, Jesus himself told me on a billboard.

  • MoffKalast@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    On the other hand, I see the exact opposite in my town. The municipality is making decent changes, replacing diesel busses with CNG and hydrogen, setting up alternative fuel and charging stations, closing up the city center for cars, planting an absurd number of trees around anything that is renovated. The district heating plant does burn methane which is not the best but still cleaner than other options.

    And then around those clean silent busses there is a sea of decade old 3 liter diesel cars that smell like a petroleum refinery, and every time it gets cold, everyone who doesn’t have that district heating smokes up the entire town in a layer of fucking smog from all the fuel oil heating.

    I think the average person could use a hard look at themselves too. Too many people are using just whatever is cheapest and dgaf as long as they get what they want in their life. The only time I’ve seen anyone consider anything else is when there are government subsidies or taxes that artificially make the sustainable option cheaper.

  • freagle@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    This is not an accurate understanding of the problem. The entirety of generation capacity for almost all of electrification (except for the last few years and for a very small number of power plants) has been built to handle peak load. Peak load only exists for something like 50 hours out of the entire year. The lights in Time Square represent base load, as they are always on. Turning off the lights in Time Square would do absolutely nothing to manage peak loads as compressors are far and away more energy intensive than lighting is.

    The evidence we should be looking for is whether they require turning off AC in commercial buildings during peak load. Instead what we find is that ConEd is literally paying commercial real estate operators to reduce energy consumption during peak while asking residents to do it voluntarily without offering them compensation.

    That’s how you know the game is rigged. Not through base load lighting, but by literally paying commercial land lords to do something that residents are asked to do for free.

    • Tinidril@midwest.social
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      1 day ago

      The lights in Time Square represent base load, as they are always on.

      I don’t see how that means turning them off at peak load wouldn’t lower peak load. It would also send a message that society is taking the issue seriously.

      • freagle@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        If you look at the difference between base load and peak load, it would be obvious that the lights are inconsequential to peak load.

        • Tinidril@midwest.social
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          1 day ago

          So is my air conditioner. It’s not like me turning the dial up a few degrees is going to keep the world spinning properly. /s

          It’s not just Times Square just like it’s not just my AC. Times Square is a visual representation of how seriously the city and it’s residents take the issue. If those lights are blaring, then I assume a whole lot of other corporate power consumption is likewise excepted.

          • freagle@lemmy.ml
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            16 hours ago

            That’s just vibes though. Your AC is a node in a distributed cooling system that all respond to the same ambient environmental signals which means they act in a distributed coordinated manner. There are government systems for power reduction of commercial spaces - certifications, tax incentives, negawatt incentives, etc. The distributed system of ACs is almost impossible to manage because it’s functionally anarchic. And the combination of your AC and all 8m of your neighbors’ ACs turns out to be an order of magnitude more draw than all of the lighting in the entire city.

            • Tinidril@midwest.social
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              16 hours ago

              Trump is President because of “vibes”. Vibes matter because they influence behavior. Just look at the stock market. There will be more compressors working harder because of the vibes put out by those lights. Guaranteed.

        • gressen@lemmy.zip
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          24 hours ago

          Peak load consists of base load plus variable components. Turning off some of the base load reduces peak load.

          • cogman@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            It’s actually a bit silly to call lighting a “base load”. That’s not how the grid works. Base load is specifically talking about the grid itself and what the lowest load is on the grid. They don’t have an actuarial table where your refrigerator gets put into the base load bucket while your bathroom lights are put in the peak load bucket. It’s all one load.

            What power companies are looking at is the demand curve. The lowest level of the demand curve is the base load. That’s all it is.

            Things do get trickier with commercial power, especially when talking about machinery. But for something as simple as lighting it’s completely straight forward. Turning off 150MW of lights frees 150MW of peeker capacity which can be used for more useful things like boiling water in a data center to answer questions wrong (I kid).

          • freagle@lemmy.ml
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            16 hours ago

            Yes, 100% true and also 100% irrelevant. The delta in NYC between base load and peak load is almost 5GW. And the base load itself is about 5GW. Given that peak loads happens only for 0.1% of the year, you can easily see that the problem has almost nothing to do with base load and everything to do with the rapid scaling up of peak load. This is why AC compressors are the culprit. They are fully automated, distributed, and they all kick on under shared environmental triggers. The starting up of ACs during a heatwave is literally almost equivalent to 100% of NYC base load.

            Shutting off a few 10s of MW for lighting cannot solve the problem.

    • cogman@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Compressor startup is more intensive than lighting. Once the compressor is running it’s a pretty steady power consumption.

      A window unit, for example, on startup (assuming it doesn’t have a smooth start) will pull a full 20A. However, during operation it ultimately will pull around 5A.

      That said, there’s not some sort of special electrical budget which makes the lights in NYT come from baseload generators vs peakers. If those lights turned off, the total grid load would go down by the amount of power those lights consume. And, as it turns out, those lights are consuming around 150MW. That’s ~4 steel mills worth of heat just being shoved into the atmosphere for advertisement. It’s at least 1 powerplant’s worth of power.

      Shutting those lights off would take the coordination of something like 10 businesses vs telling the millions of residence of NY to adjust their power consumption. They absolutely would make a difference. It’s not like there isn’t still a base load of power needed with those lights off.

      Edit: My numbers are off, it’s closer to 35MW. ~1 steel mill worth

      • healthetank@lemmy.ca
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        17 hours ago

        NYC has ~3.75mil housing units.

        Based on your 5amp draw, thats 600w, which a bit on the low side, but we can use it as an average. Assuming most (75%) of residences have AC units, 2.775 million AC units try to run at the same time, using 1665 MW.

        Also, please stop using that 150MW usage of times square, particularly if you’re taking it from GoogleAI. I cannot find ANY data supporting that (see possible originating claim for its use here).

        Data instead suggests ~35MW draw for the billboards, using a huge overestimation of the draw (since it assumes all buildings in times square have the same number/size of billboards as times square tower, which is false). This is ~2% of the energy required/used by AC units (not including starting draw), which is tiny.

        Its worth us pushing for, but lets be clear about what kind of impact that will have on the grid.

        • cogman@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          Caught me. Was just an easy number to pull.

          But I’d argue that 2% is still something to look at. A 2% shortfall in power capacity still means you are looking at rolling blackouts to handle the demand/production mismatch. If power has to be rationed, then I’d much rather have an extra ~50k AC units running vs pretty lights for advertisements. Especially since load tends to peak during the day anyways. Shutting off the lights during the day makes sense.

      • freagle@lemmy.ml
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        17 hours ago

        Whoa, 150MW of lightning in just Times Square? Or is that for all 5 boros? That’s a mind blowing number for lighting. Consider me moved.

        Edit: oh. Just saw the other commenter breaking it down. Nevermind.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      For sure that’s a better analysis of the whole thing. Although, I do think it is worth noting how much energy is devoted to stuff like advertising, which is ultimately not productive use of energy. And if that wasn’t done in the first place, there would be more energy to go around avoiding the problem of not having enough of it at peak ours.

      • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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        1 day ago

        how much energy is devoted to stuff like advertising

        And stores and businesses leaving the lights on inside, even at night when the place is closed and nobody is there. And lighting up their entire giant parking lot all night as well, all night every night, even though they’re only open during hours of darkness for a few hours each day.

        I know it’s not that much energy in the grand scheme of things, especially now that everything is LED. But still, their complete disregard for energy savings – such that they can’t be bothered to install a simple timer circuit – irritates me.

        (I suspect that they’re also leaving the HVAC running at full capacity overnight as well. That might be a more significant waste of energy.)

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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          1 day ago

          Exactly, and that’s just one example of massive waste. Another one is the fact that around half the food produced is just thrown away because it’s just more ‘efficient’ to do that. Capitalism is an absolutely insane system.

        • freagle@lemmy.ml
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          1 day ago

          HVAC is not left on over the weekends in most office buildings in NYC. There are incentives and certifications and standards that drive that.

  • whelk@retrolemmy.com
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    23 hours ago

    I’ve been playing 5ish minute songs whenever I shower recently so I don’t take too long and waste water just because I want to be personally more responsible but man, it’s really hard to feel it’s worth caring sometimes when there’s so much water being gleefully dumped into AI and various other large scale wasteful practices

    • johnyreeferseed@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 hours ago

      It’s not even just AI. I used to work at a place that cleaned rugs, the amount of water we were using each day was mind blowing. 8 hours a day 5 days a week of thousands of gallons.

  • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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    16 hours ago

    “lit up”? Does this person… Do they… Do they think public space mother fucking light sources are the big bro hyper capitalist megacorps lobbying demonic entity? It’s a bit illiterate, but well at least their spirit is in the right place

  • zd9@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It would be real easy to fix the problem. There’s a handful of people controlling these industries.

      • zd9@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Well first of all there are some people blocking movement completely.

        Then the transition to renewables would cover easily 100% of our current energy. Of course base load is a problem so nuclear in general, then grid-scale storage solutions such as pumped hydro in places allowable, Li-ion batteries, molten salt, etc. Then our grids need improvement because Republicans have constantly voted down attempts to modernize to allow this level of electricity (because they are in the pockets of fossil fuel and know that we can’t move away from it without modernizing the grid).

        Anyway, it’s very very possible, it’s just being blocked by a relatively small group of people. These people are the problem.

      • Macchi_the_Slime@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        20 hours ago

        Yes they all involve less consumption, but the ones that actually are serious have that reduced consumption as a by-product of regulating industries that are the biggest offenders. You can’t “personal responsibility” your way out of climate change. That doesn’t mean people shouldn’t take responsibility, but they should realize that personal responsibility alone cannot solve this.

  • o1011o@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Many things follow this pattern, but not all. It’s important to recognize when you’re being fed outright lies by the real villains and when you’re actually part of the problem. Don’t pretend corporations are solely to blame if those corporations can only do what they do because you willfully pay them for it. When they have a monopoly on necessary goods, sure, they’re entirely the bad guys. When they would do harm whether or not you pay them, same thing. But don’t act like the corp is the bad guy and you’re the poor little victim if you’re choosing to empower the bad guys when you have the option to spend your money ethically instead.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      21 hours ago

      We do not choose to exist within capitalism, nor do the working classes control the state in capitalism. People do not choose to empower corporations, their control of capital and the state is what gives them power.

    • orc girly@lemmy.ml
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      14 hours ago

      Voting with your dollar means a select few (those who control corporations) get billions of votes. This has always been the case under capitalism, but it’s extremely transparent now for example with the massive price hike in tech leaves us consumers unable to do anything about it just because corporations decided to buy everything up for data centers, or how many necessities are commodified, for example most of us can’t ever dream to own a house unless we inherit wealth or get extremely lucky.