Month: March 2017

Energy & Environmental Newsletter: March 20, 2017

Energy & Environmental Newsletter: March 20, 2017

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The Alliance for Wise Energy Decisions (AWED) is an informal coalition of individuals and organizations interested in improving national, state, and local energy and environmental policies. Our premise is that technical matters like these should be addressed by using Real Science (please consult WiseEnergy.org for more information).

A key element of AWED’s efforts is public education. Towards that end, every three weeks we put together a newsletter to balance what is found in the mainstream media about energy and the environment. We appreciate MasterResource for their assistance in publishing this information.

Some of the more important articles in this issue are:

Wind Energy is an Attack on Rural America

As Wind Grows, So Does Its Opposition

Five Key Reasons to Pull the Plug on Wind Subsidies

Proposed US Carbon Tax — A Recipe for Disaster

The War on Affordable Electricity

Science Deniers in the Wind Industry

Short video: Poison Wind

How Would Oklahoma’s Anti-Wind Tax Affect The State’s Industry?

Europe’s Lessons Teach Us — Don’t Go Green!

RGGI Works Well — It Just Doesn’t Reduce Much Carbon

How Leonardo DiCaprio Can Persuade Me on Climate Change

A Handy Primer for Deluded Warmists

Climate-Change Models are Flawed Because Climate Science is so Incomplete

Scrutinizing the carbon cycle and CO2 residence time in the atmosphere

G-20 Poised to Signal Retreat From Climate-Change Funding Pledge

Getting to the Bottom of a Climate Crusade

Solar Panels Increased Emissions of a Gas 17,200 Times More Potent Than CO2

President Trump’s Proposed OMB Budget

 

Greed Energy Economics:

Five Key Reasons to Pull the Plug on Wind Subsidies

How Would Oklahoma’s Anti-Wind Tax Affect The State’s Industry?

The War on Affordable Electricity

Proposed US Carbon Tax — A Recipe for Disaster

‘Conservative’ Carbon Tax Prescribes Liberal Dose of Nonsense

Massachusetts’ Promotion of Turbines Risks $18 Billion in Tourism Income

Wind Turbines Kick Seniors to the Curb in Canada

Amazon Wins NC Offshore Lease Bid, for $9 Million

UK Budget 2017: Solar industry facing 800% tax increase

NY PSC Wants Utilities to Bury Costs of Renewable Energy

 

Turbine Health Matters:

Once Turbines Arrive, Say Goodbye to Peace and Quiet

Science Deniers in the Wind Industry

Mass DEP After Ten Years Of Wind Turbine Testimony Again Takes No Action

Vermont’s PSB proposes new turbine setback and noise rules

Wind Turbines and Aviation Safety

 

Renewable Energy Destroying Ecosystems:

Short video: Poison Wind

Environmentalists Question Wind Project off Fire Island (NY)

 

Miscellaneous Energy News:

Wind Energy is an Attack on Rural America

Europe’s Lessons Teach Us — Don’t Go Green!

RGGI Works Well — It Just Doesn’t Reduce Much Carbon

As wind grows, so does its opposition

Globally, clean energy has been on the decline for the last 20 years

Five Ways Trump Can Improve Environmental Policy

How the EPA Could Gut Climate Change Regulations

OPEC is losing the global oil game

NC County Eyes Stiffer Solar Rules

Proposed Legislation Would Freeze NC’s Energy Mandate

GOP lawmaker confronts Gov Kasich on Ohio’s green-energy mandates

Renewable energy is defective solution in search of a problem, money, and power

South Australia – A Renewable State?

Is the Lappeenranta renewable energy model realistic?

Wind is a financial and political boondoggle

Elaborate Wind Turbulence Study Set to Improve Modeling

Weather service concerned that wind project could interfere with forecasts

Falmouth Wind Turbine Lawsuits and RICO statute

Oklahoma chamber wants state military commission involved in wind project siting

Little Reactors a Big Energy Boon

 

Manmade Global Warming Articles:

How Leonardo DiCaprio Can Persuade Me on Climate Change

A Handy Primer for Deluded Warmists

Solar Panels Increased Emissions Of A Gas 17,200 Times More Potent Than CO2

Scrutinizing the carbon cycle and CO2 residence time in the atmosphere

Getting to the Bottom of a Climate Crusade

A New SLR Analysis for the US East Coast

Useless’ Climate modeling is the hot new thing at a green bank

Yale Climate Opinion Maps (2016)

German Minister Announces the End of Unilateral Climate Targets

Trump Reported to Cut US UN Funding in half

Trump to Drop Climate Change From Environmental Reviews, Source Says

Trump Orders EPA to Zero Out Global Warming Programs

To Protect Climate Money, Obama Stashed It Where It’s Hard to Find

EPA Science Advisory Board Reform Act of 2017

Bills to fix EPA “science” introduced in the House

Those “devastating” EPA reductions

Driving policies through fraud and fear-mongering

A Conservative Children’s Book: Carbon Comes Out of the Closet

Financial Stability Board Climate Deceit

Hundreds Of Scientists Urge Trump To Pull Out Of A 25-Year-Old UN Environmental Treaty

Discussion of “Hottest Year on Record” for Australia

Debunking the Climate Scam

The Natives Are Getting RETless

Obama Hid Over $77 BILLION in Climate Change Funds

President Trump’s Proposed OMB Budget

 

See Prior AWED Newsletters

 

The post Energy & Environmental Newsletter: March 20, 2017 appeared first on Master Resource.

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March 19, 2017 at 06:17PM

Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Sux

Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Sux

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Guest Post By Willis Eschenbach Bizarrely, and unlike almost every other industrialized country, the US has fuel efficiency standards for cars. Each corporation (Ford, Chevy, etc.) has to meet certain fuel economy standards called the CAFE standards. Let me start by saying that I think that this is governmental over-reach. In virtually every other part […]

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March 19, 2017 at 11:53AM

The lessons we learn from nutritional science

The lessons we learn from nutritional science

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My employer is concerned about the health of his employees and subscribed us all to a health newsletter. Every two weeks we receive some health tips in about ten to fifteen lines, based on the latest findings in health science. In the last newsletter, there was one article that jumped out on me. It was titled “A lot of fats or a lot of carbohydrates?”. This is how it starts: (translated from Dutch)

Nutritional Sciences made large blunders in the past. For a long time, we had to avoid fats to stay healthy. Not only was this the wrong advice, it also has proved counterproductive.

In the 1950s, scientists drew the wrong conclusions from population studies. They focused on fats as the only cause of obesity and heart disease. Recent studies provide a more nuanced picture: a diet rich in fats and low in carbohydrates works at least as well to lose weight!

This sounded very familiar. Until a few years ago, fats were seen as something bad for our health due to our sedentary life styles and considered as THE cause of obesity with a plethora of negative side effects like hypertension and heart disease.

The industry jumped in on the hype and began to produce “light” products among which products with less fats. Problem with this is that fats bring taste to the food, so to compensate for that, they added for example sugars. Now it was found that those sugars play a much greater role in obesity, hypertension, but also in other things like diabetes.

In that light, I could agree with the statement that it was not only the wrong advice, but also counterproductive. By trying to avoid the “negative effects” of fats, the experts exposed the public to a substance that is now believed to have actually a lot of negative effects, also those that were previously attributed to fats.

Wasn’t that a case of progressive insight? Scientists of last century obviously drew the wrong conclusions, but today’s scientists found out how it really worked and now come with a different recommendation? I believe that is true, but there is more to it. The experts, with help from the media, broadcasted their recommendations with certainty to the public. The same is true for this health tip. It basically said that the conclusions of the scientist from the 1950s were wrong, but now we know better and, hey, these are the new recommendations. They also didn’t mention the interesting history of this reversal.

Weren’t these things then not known until a few years ago? Not exactly. I heard about this hypothesis already in the 1980s, so why did it take so long to change the recommendations? The problem was that the scientists of last century claimed that there was a consensus on fats being bad for us and other scientists who didn’t adhere to this consensus were marginalized, vilified or neglected. The best known example is probably John Yudkin who proposed his hypothesis already at the end the 1950s.

In fact, the issue was brought to the public attention by skeptical outsiders, not by nutritional scientists. The experts were blinded by this apparent consensus and skeptical scientist were pushed out of the debate.

Before I continue, let me be clear that I don’t want to claim that eating a lot of fat is good for you. Dose is the key. Fats deliver certain essential nutrients and in that quantity are just fine. This post however is about the earlier consensus of fats in our food and how this consensus changed over the last few years.

I saw some large parallels with climate science:

  • they both study a complex, coupled system (the metabolism of humans and the climate system)
  • both are focused primarily on one specific element from that system (fats and CO2)
  • there is a self proclaimed consensus (on fats being bad for our health and CO2 being bad for the climate)
  • the message is brought with a certainty that is unwarranted for an observational science
  • this consensus side is trusted by the government to make policy recommendations
  • in both cases this consensus is defended viciously against those who think otherwise (not only with scientific arguments)
  • the media and government play a big role
  • skeptical scientists fearing for their careers, leaving it to skeptical outsiders to bring the issue to the public

Okay, would you say, the fact that nutritional sciences made some serious errors in the past, doesn’t necessarily mean that climate scientists would be wrong now. True, the fact that nutritional sciences made errors in the past and that the consensus position was the reason why these errors were uncovered only many decades later, doesn’t prove that climate science is plagued with the same issues.

It however proves that a consensus on its own can not be trusted. It proves that scientists can be fooled by a consensus. Even all scientists of a particular field can be fooled by that consensus. Setting back development for many decades, giving bad advice to policy makers and wrong recommendations to the public for at least two generations, with unintended consequences as a result.

While I perceived the consensus as something natural in my believer’s years (if all scientists agree, it must be true), later it didn’t make much sense anymore. Especially considering climate science being a multidisciplinary field that is studying long term changes in a complex, coupled, chaotic system over a long time frame with only one subject and only reliable data for the last decades. Wouldn’t it then be more logical that more scientists disagree with each other? Claiming a consensus in a highly complex system with sparse data seems a downright miracle to me. Also, even nutritional sciences have the advantage of having lots more subjects to study (there are a lot of people) over climate science (which has only one system to study).

Concluding, from my current point of view, it is my firm impression that climate science is riddled with the exact same issues as nutritional sciences until a few years ago…

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March 19, 2017 at 11:49AM

The 300th Anniversary of the Great Colonial Snowcover of 1717

The 300th Anniversary of the Great Colonial Snowcover of 1717

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The recent nor’easter (blizzard to some) here in New England reminded me that I better get moving on a post here about the 300th anniversary of what was likely the deepest snow cover in these parts in the past 400 years or so, and probably a lot longer. I suspect that, like fish stories, this […]

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March 19, 2017 at 10:06AM