Not sure what you want to say by posting this chart (can some Mod please btw fix it so it fits the page? I'd also want to know how it's done, so I (and perhaps even Doc) can do it myself in the future... ) apart from highlighting that we have cut emissions by 30% since 1970, while at the same time having a 20% population increase (from 8.0 million in 1970 to 9.6 million in 2013).Strangelove wrote: Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Sweden:
...
To quote Obama: Yes we can!

And if you actually tried, so could probably you.
In fact, it seems you may have started to actually do something in the last decade, but you still emit more today than you did in 1990, so you still have a long way to go!


Well, I didn't give an actual number, but I did say "In 1970, fossil fuels accounted for 80% of energy consumption in Sweden (oil alone was 76%). Following the oil crisis of 1974/75, the government decided that it was fundamental that we stop depending on an energy source that must be imported. Today fossil fuels only account for 30% of energy consumption here, with hydro power, nuclear power and bio fuels picking up most of the slack".Strangelove wrote:
Why didn't you mention how much nuclear power Sweden is relying on these days (meltdown imminent?)![]()
Today our sources of energy are pretty balanced. With 30% coming from fossil fuels, 33% from nuclear energy and 38% from renewable sources. Nuclear power was a fast track to rid us of our oil dependency and peaked around 1991 when it made up 40% of our energy consumption. Since then we have actually closed three power plants, and some political parties want us to follow the lead of Germany and scrap nuclear power altogether.
I think the main focus here still is reduction of fossil fuels though, but preferrably some day we should reach 100% renewable, which means the nukes must go away as well.
Nuclear Power is clean while running, but the mining and waste disposal processes pose some serious environmental problems, so I agree it is not an optimal energy source. But at least it's better than oil and coal.
Btw, your chart stops in 2009, when wind power only provided 2 TWh, or roughly 0.4% of our energy. By 2014 (the last year I have seen figures for, that had risen to 11 TWh, or 2%. That means wind power has already passed natural gas in importance and is closing in on coal.

Vattenfall is atm prospecting to build a wind power park up in Lapland, where I have some property, and if all things go according to plans I will get a yearly windfall (sic!) from their enterprise.

And with that we can return to the main topic by noting that Vattenfall recently whipped Trump's ass in a Scottish court of law!

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-vatte ... SKCN101157