Month: April 2017

Energy Manifesto Calls For Reforms That Ensure Cheap And Reliable Energy Future

Energy Manifesto Calls For Reforms That Ensure Cheap And Reliable Energy Future

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

The first priority of British energy policy should be to enable business and households alike to have access to cheap and reliable sources of energy.

 

This is the key message of the Global Warming Policy Forum’s Energy Manifesto 2017 published today.

 

GWPF_Manifesto_Cover

In the run-up to the general election on 8 June, the GWPF is calling on all parties to adopt policies that prevent further economic harm to the UK economy and halt the rising policy costs to energy bills for households.

The GWPF manifesto calls on the next government to undertake a comprehensive review of energy and climate policies to ensure that the UK can prosper as an independent trading nation after leaving the European Union.

The cost of Britain’s unilateral renewable energy policies is running out of control, the inevitable result of replacing cheap and reliable energy with expensive, intermittent sources.

In 2016, the combined costs of the Levy Control Framework (LCF) and carbon taxes reached over £9 billion.

According to official figures, the Climate Change Act will cost the UK economy over £300 billion by 2030, costing each household £875 per annum.

‘Only through radical reform of current policies can the UK hope to take full advantage of low-cost technologies, tackle the scourge of fuel poverty and improve the competitiveness of the UK economy,’ said Dr Benny Peiser, director for the GWPF.

The GWPF Energy Manifesto

GWPF_Manifesto_Cover

The first priority of British energy policy should be to enable business and households alike to have access to cheap and reliable sources of energy.

The new government should take immediate steps to prevent further economic harm and rising policy costs while simultaneously undertaking a comprehensive review of energy and climate policies to ensure that the United Kingdom as a whole can prosper as an independent trading nation after leaving the European Union.

The new government should 

  • Undertake a new and up-to-date review of the economics of climate change.
  • Suspend commitment to the Carbon Budgets in line with the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee’s recommendation.
  • Suspend the Carbon Price Floor, a unilateral carbon tax that puts an unequal and unfair burden on British industry.
  • Suspend commitments post-2020 under the EU Renewables Directive which puts an unequal burden on the UK economy.
  • Phase out subsidies for renewable energy generators of heat and electricity. The renewables industry repeatedly claims that they are now cheaper than conventional energy. Government should take them at their word and cut all support after 2020.
  • Freeze commitments to ethanol and biodiesel under the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation, which is distorting international food and crop markets.
  • Remove mistaken incentives for the use of diesel in passenger vehicles.
  • Remove all fiscal obstacles to further realisation of the potential of the North Sea reserves of oil and natural gas.
  • Promote hydraulic fracturing to exploit the full potential of the massive UK shale resources.
  • Increase research budgets for nuclear fission and fusion, and also for electricity storage.
  • Redirect the UK’s international climate diplomacy towards equitable, joint approaches instead of the self-harm of unilateral target and virtue signalling.

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

April 25, 2017 at 08:52PM

In an attempt to discredit Judith Curry, Gavin at RealClimate shows how bad climate models really are

In an attempt to discredit Judith Curry, Gavin at RealClimate shows how bad climate models really are

via Watts Up With That?
http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

From the “whoopsie, that’s not what I meant” department

Guest essay by Thomas Wiita

A recent poster here wrote that they had stopped looking at the Real Climate web site, and good for them. It has become a sad, inwardly focused group. It’s hard to see anyone in the Trump Administration thinking they’re getting value for money from their support of that site.

I still check in there occasionally and just now I found something too good not to share with the readers at WUWT.

Gavin has a post up in which he rebuts Judith Curry’s response to comments about her testimony at the Committee hearing. Let me step aside – here’s Gavin:

“Following on from the ‘interesting’ House Science Committee hearing two weeks ago, there was an excellent rebuttal curated by ClimateFeedback of the unsupported and often-times misleading claims from the majority witnesses. In response, Judy Curry has (yet again) declared herself unconvinced by the evidence for a dominant role for human forcing of recent climate changes. And as before she fails to give any quantitative argument to support her contention that human drivers are not the dominant cause of recent trends.

Her reasoning consists of a small number of plausible sounding, but ultimately unconvincing issues that are nonetheless worth diving into. She summarizes her claims in the following comment:

… They use models that are tuned to the period of interest, which should disqualify them from be used in attribution study for the same period (circular reasoning, and all that). The attribution studies fail to account for the large multi-decadal (and longer) oscillations in the ocean, which have been estimated to account for 20% to 40% to 50% to 100% of the recent warming. The models fail to account for solar indirect effects that have been hypothesized to be important. And finally, the CMIP5 climate models used values of aerosol forcing that are now thought to be far too large.

These claims are either wrong or simply don’t have the implications she claims. Let’s go through them one more time.

1) Models are NOT tuned [for the late 20th C/21st C warming] and using them for attribution is NOT circular reasoning.

Curry’s claim is wrong on at least two levels. The “models used” (otherwise known as the CMIP5 ensemble) were *not* tuned for consistency for the period of interest (the 1950-2010 trend is what was highlighted in the IPCC reports, about 0.8ºC warming) and the evidence is obvious from the fact that the trends in the individual model simulations over this period go from 0.35 to 1.29ºC! (or 0.84±0.45ºC (95% envelope)).”

clip_image002

The figure was copied straight from RC. There is one wonderful thing about Gavin’s argument, and one even more wonderful thing.

The wonderful thing is that he is arguing that Dr. Curry is wrong about the models being tuned to the actual data during the period because the models are so wrong (!).

The models were not tuned to consistency with the period of interest as shown by the fact that – the models are not consistent with the period of interest. Gavin points out that the models range all over the map, when you look at the 5% – 95% range of trends. He’s right, the models do not cluster tightly around the observations, and they should, if they were modeling the climate well.

Here’s the even more wonderful thing. If you read the relevant portions of the IPCC reports, looking for the comparison of observations to model projections, each is a masterpiece of obfuscation on this same point. You never see a clean, clear, understandable presentation of the models-to-actuals comparison. But look at those histograms above, direct from the hand of Gavin. It’s the clearest presentation I’ve ever run across that the models run hot. Thank you, Gavin.

I compare the trend-weighted area of the three right hand bars to the two left hand bars, which center around the tall bar of the mode of the projections. There is way more area under those three bars to the right, an easy way to see that the models run hot.

If you have your own favorite example that shows that the models run hot, share it with the rest of us, and I hope you enjoyed this one. And of course I submitted a one sentence comment at RC to the effect that the figure above shows that the models run hot, but RC still remembers how to squelch all thoughts that don’t hew to the party line so it didn’t appear. Some things never change.

via Watts Up With That? http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

April 25, 2017 at 07:52PM

Renewables Work Just Fine – Provided There’s a Diesel in the Shed

Renewables Work Just Fine – Provided There’s a Diesel in the Shed

via STOP THESE THINGS
http://ift.tt/2kE7k62

A Diesel in the Shed Pickering Post Viv Forbes 14 April 2017 You can have your solar panels and your turbines on the hills; You can use the warmth of sunshine to reduce your heating bills. You can dream you’re self-sufficient as you weed your vegie bed; As long as you make sure to keep […]

via STOP THESE THINGS http://ift.tt/2kE7k62

April 25, 2017 at 07:30PM

EU POLICY – IF THE SCIENCE GOES AGAINST POLICY, IGNORE THE SCIENCE

EU POLICY – IF THE SCIENCE GOES AGAINST POLICY, IGNORE THE SCIENCE

via climate science
http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

That would seem to be the stance according to this article recently published in the Times. Now they have been exposed ignoring scientific research in one area why should we trust them in other areas such as climate change. A good job we are leaving and a pity we can’t leave more quickly.

via climate science http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

April 25, 2017 at 06:30PM