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@Anonymous: But the divisions in economic regions isn't about countries... You don't have nationalism mucking the politics up.
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@Anonymous: what would be the point of that? you can only send electricity so far before diminishing returns make it pointless.
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@hamslice: that may be true in say a free trade zone between the US and Canada or korea and Japan, but you must be careful not to get to close when one makes bad choices and writes checks the others aren't willing to cash (greece)
Honestly though, short of the currency I think the EU is a great idea. it is best as an open bordered trade zone and military coalition. Time will tell I suppose. -
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@Anonymous: Well I guess that explains the regional grids. They are also interconnected if one regions grid is under to much stress.
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@Anonymous: to what end? shipping electricity is fucking moronic, considering we don't have to. we have enough resources regionally to do it the right way.
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@Anonymous: So when a hurricane knocks out a whole cost and the PP's shut down then what?
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@Anonymous: The Interstate connects smaller state highways that also connect county roads. However with the electric grids now they CAN send power to each other, but are centralized to their region for ease of power transmission.
Like how in battlefield 3 you select your region central US, east coast, west coast, south. This allows quick efficient connection.
Of course the big problem we had was the Enron company in California. Something most foreigners don't know about the US, California is kinda like our Quebec. Very different laws, culture, and very rude people. -
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@Anonymous: Its good that you can now transfer energy. Now you just need to come to the blue side.
220-240V,AC 50Hz FTW. -
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@Anonymous: What does that map measure? I see numbers in the legend, but not what they measure.
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@Anonymous:
>Something most foreigners don't know about the US, California is kinda like our Quebec. Very different laws, culture, and very rude people.
Chingate fker -
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@Anonymous: The voltages are not high enough to transmite energy from 1 side to the other.
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@Anonymous: HOLY SHIT are you telling me that nearly 2000 people in Russia don't get there energy from the national grid?
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@Anonymous: The voltages are not high enough to transmite energy from 1 side to the other.
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@Anonymous: The voltages are not high enough to transmite energy from 1 side to the other.
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@Anonymous: The voltages are not high enough to transmite energy from 1 side to the other.
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@Anonymous: At that voltage you would suffer over 70% loss of energy over that distance,
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@Anonymous: >show me russias powergrid then if your're so rite
>if your're so rite
>your're
KIMMO, is that you? -
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