Month: September 2017

ECIU Disinformation About Grid Companies Profits

By Paul Homewood

 

 

The Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) was set up a few years ago with support from rich liberal foundations in the US and elsewhere, with the purpose of disseminating climate change propaganda.

It has been headed from the outset by ex BBC man, Richard Black, so it is not surprising that most of the information coming out of the ECIU is biased and often fake.

True to form, it has just published another grossly dishonest piece of spin:

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The six companies that run the cables bringing electricity to homes and businesses across the country made annual average profit margins of 32% over the last six years, a new analysis concludes.

Electricity Meter By James Burrell

A Government review of energy costs is currently underway. Image: James Burrell, creative commons licence

 

 

This equates to about £10bn on the nation’s collective energy bill over six years (2010-15), or around £27 per home per year.

The analysis from the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) found that these Distribution Network Operators (DNOs) paid dividends to their shareholders during this time amounting to 15% of turnover – roughly half of the final profit. This equates to almost £1bn (£850m) per year, or roughly £13 on the average domestic bill.

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WOW! How dare they make a profit of 32% on turnover!

It is clear to see what they are up to. Gradually people are becoming aware of just how much the Climate Change Act is costing them. The ECIU of course remains in denial about this. Faced with the fact that they cannot dispute the facts, they choose to put up a smokescreen to convince the public that it is all the fault of the wicked energy companies.

The only trouble is that when you dig deeper, the real truth is not what they would like you to believe.

Let’s start with that £10bn figure. As they say, it is over six years, an average of £1.6bn a year. This figure pales into insignificance with the cost of the Climate Change Act, estimated to be £9.4bn this year alone.

Most people would, of course, assume that the ECIU are referring to the Big Energy companies themselves, who are often accused of profiteering.

But that would be wrong. As OFGEM show, the element of profit (EBIT) in energy bills is tiny, just 4.8% last year, and that is before tax and interest.

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What the ECIU are talking about are the Distribution Network Operators (DNOs), who run the distribution network. Imagine that if the National Grid ran the motorways, the DNOs would run the A and B roads.

As such, the DNOs do not buy and sell goods on which to make a margin. Instead they are highly capitalised businesses, which effectively charge for using their assets.

There is a similarity here with service industries. Let’s take a simplistic example:

Tesco buy £800 of goods, and sell for £1000 – they make a margin of 20%.

Mr Bloggs, the plumber, charges £1000 for a job, and the cost of parts fitted was £100 – he has made a margin of 90%.

But has the plumber profiteered? Of course not, as most of his cost is his own labour.

Comparisons of profit as a percentage of turnover are irrelevant and misleading in these sort of cases.

Coming back to the DNOs, we need to recognise that most of their cost is capital, ie interest and depreciation. If we take the example of Electricity North West, top of the ECIU list, we find that their profit last year was £71 million, after tax.

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But their equity was £764 million, so the return on capital was only 9.3%.

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In total, the assets are valued at £3.3bn, so the return on assets would be much smaller still.

Much of the profit made needs to be reinvested of course, not least to upgrade the networks to cope with renewable energy.

According to the ECIU, the dividend last year was £30 million, giving a return on capital of 3.9%, a not unreasonable figure.

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I would be the last to defend the DNOs or the National Grid, but they are regulated by OFGEM because of the monopolistic position they are in. If OFGEM were able to squeeze their pips any more, it would make little difference to our bills.

It also needs to be remembered that it was the government which originally sold off the grid, so taxpayers have benefitted.

There may be a case for renationalising the lot, but the government would then need to find tens of billions to buy them back, and then find the cash to plough billions more into upgrading networks. I suspect even Jeremy Corbyn’s magic money tree might struggle with that.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

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September 5, 2017 at 01:42PM

Climate Craziness of the Week – @kurteichenwald: “I predicted Irma using ‘climate equation’ 100% correct”

Climate Craziness of the Week – @kurteichenwald: “I predicted Irma using ‘climate equation’ 100% correct”

From the ‘I’m not a scientist but I play one in Vanity Fair” department comes this ridiculous tweet from writer Kurt Eichenwald.

Via Wikipedia: no mention of climate or weather skill:

Kurt Alexander Eichenwald (born June 28, 1961) is an American journalist who serves as a senior writer with Newsweek, a contributing editor with Vanity Fair and a New York Times bestselling author of four books, one of which, The Informant (2000), was made into a motion picture in 2009. He was formerly a writer and investigative reporter with The New York Times and later with Condé Nast‘s business magazine, Portfolio. Eichenwald had been employed by The New York Times since 1986 and primarily covered Wall Street and corporate topics such as insider tradingaccounting scandals, and takeovers, but also wrote about a range of issues including terrorism, the Bill Clinton pardon controversy, Federal health care policy, and sexual predators on the Internet.

Of course, that makes him highly qualified (in Alt-climate world) to say things like this:

Rightfully, since he didn’t show any work, he’s being flamed in replies to that tweet.

Dr Ryan Maue was quick to weigh in:

 

in Climate Craziness of the Week.

via Watts Up With That?

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September 5, 2017 at 12:12PM

Not A Scientist – Just A Moron

via The Deplorable Climate Science Blog

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September 5, 2017 at 12:03PM

62% of Australians don’t want to pay even $10 a month for renewables

The Money Question trumps

Three quarters of Australians may believe climate change is real (so the ABC keeps telling us) but only 13% of Australians are willing to pay $1 a day or more to save the world. Anyone can tick the box “Don’t pick on me, I believe in *Climate$%@$#Change*”. But if people believed it was a threat they wouldn’t balk at paying $100 a year, which is what 62% of Australians did in the latest Newspoll.

87% of Australians think a dollar a day is too much. But hey, it’s only the planet at stake.

Most Australians don’t want to pay anything more for renewable power.

The survey is still biased. There was no option to pay “less than zero”. How much are you willing to pay to get rid of renewables?

The sad thing is that most Australian’s don’t realize they’re already paying so much more.

For starters, The Australian calculated that the bill for federal renewable subsidies would be $60 billion by 2030. That’s $2500 per Australian. In a house of four, that’s $10k over 20 years or $200 per year. And that’s only the federal subsidies and schemes, it’s not the state schemes, nor […]

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via JoNova

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September 5, 2017 at 11:46AM