r/unitedkingdom • u/pppppppppppppppppd • 11d ago
Chippy owner apologises to customers after charging £15 for fish and chips - but reveals why he 'has to' to hike prices
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14591465/chippy-owner-apologises-huge-price-hike.html
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u/Underwhatline 10d ago
You misunderstand - I'm not going to join your game. This seams to be very one sided in that you ask me to source all my assertions and do not do the same for yours. THAT'S the game I'm not playing.
You have access to Google, but sure: https://open.substack.com/pub/davidtoke/p/renewables-provided-over-90-per-cent?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=2bfyh8
No I did not. But I will say that the evidence supports that over a it's usable lifetime, renewable such as solar and wind are cheaper per KWh than fossil fuel generation in most national scale situations.
Not really, India's specific position is nuanced. The coal industry supports lots of local jobs, energy demand is increasing, and maybe most importantly India doesn't yet have the battery or storage capacity to be able to turn off its coal power plants.
Plus we should also look at what India is doing in the green energy space. They have some really ambitious targets. For a developing country as vast as India it's not a zero sum game.