Month: September 2017

Govt To Reignite Hideously Expensive Hydrogen Gas Plan

By Paul Homewood

 

 

h/t Patsy Lacey

 

 

It appears the fruitloops really are in charge, as dozy Jillian Ambrose reports:

 

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Ministers are expected to reignite plans for a £50bn hydrogen overhaul of the country’s gas grid to help strip harmful carbon emissions from the ­energy system.

Within weeks the Government will publish a long-delayed strategy to clean up emissions from the country’s heat, transport and industrial sectors in a multi-billion pound energy evolution as radical as the power sector’s move from fossil fuels to renewables.

thermostat

The plan could usher in an ambitious move to convert the nation’s boilers to run on lower-carbon hydrogen rather than methane-rich natural gas.

 

Experts say this could slash carbon emissions from heating by more than 70pc at the lowest possible cost. But it would still require £50bn and add £170 to gas bills every year by 2050.

A report from KPMG found that converting the UK gas grid to use hydrogen could be £150bn to £200bn cheaper than rewiring British homes to use electric heating powered by lower-carbon sources.

Crucially, the consultants said ­hydrogen heating would be the least hassle for energy customers because very few appliances would need to be replaced. The existing gas grid would need only minor upgrades because it was originally designed for hydrogen, the report added.

Natural gas has been used to heat homes since the North Sea oil and gas heyday in the late 1960s and early 1970s. But for 100 years before then the country ran on “town gas” which is mostly hydrogen with smaller quantities of carbon monoxide and methane.

A return to hydrogen heating is ­already being trialled by Northern Gas Networks which is working to transform Leeds to become a “hydrogen city” by the late 2020s.

But green groups have warned that waiting at least a decade for hydrogen heating is a high-risk option which could make meeting climate targets even more difficult.

The report is already over a year late. A government spokesman declined to comment on when the report will be published.

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It is worth emphasising that even this horrifyingly expensive scheme is said to be £150bn to £200bn cheaper than rewiring British homes to use electric heating powered by lower-carbon sources. This should be frightening in itself.

 

But let’s go back to basics.

Jillian Ambrose claims that it will cost £50bn and add £170 to annual household gas bills. However, this is not the whole story.

As the Telegraph reported last year, the Leeds pilot trial would cost £2bn, which based on 320,000 households equates to £6250 each. Therefore applied to the country as a whole, we would be looking at a total capital cost of £144bn. (This assumes 4 million homes without access to the gas grid).

So why the big discrepancy? Simply that the £50bn only covers the cost of converting 17 cities by 2050. Two thirds of the country won’t be converted, and will either have to carry on using natural gas, or electrify.

As for the extra annual running cost, the Telegraph also told us last year that the Leeds pilot would add £139 million of annual running costs. This equates to £434 per household.

The lower figure of £170 again arises because only a third of the country is to be converted. Even this equates to £4bn a year.

These extra running costs arise because of the need to convert natural gas into hydrogen. For instance, it has been estimated that hydrogen produced by steam reformation costs approximately three times the cost of natural gas per unit of energy produced. The estimate is an old one, but the principle remains the same.

These huge and horrifying costs will therefore only save a third of domestic gas demand, which itself only accounts for 60% of total UK gas consumption.

The residential sector, including all fuels, only accounts for 16% of total UK CO2 emissions. And only about half of that comes from gas.

So we plan to spend billions to save a tiny fraction of our emissions.

In global terms, the UK consumes just 2% of the world’s total of gas.

 

 

And, of course, the steam reforming process still emits large amounts of CO2 anyway, both from the splitting of the methane, and from the energy needed to provide the heat for the process.

As Lord Oxburgh pointed out in his report to Parliament last year, “Lowest Cost Decarbonisation for the UK: The Critical Role of CCS”, with regard to hydrogen for heat:

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All of this, even if feasible, will cost billions more.

 

 

In other words, we are expected to pay £50bn, plus an extra £4bn a year on our bills, just so that we can cut emissions of CO2 by, if we are lucky, 2%.

But even then green groups don’t think that is enough, and that waiting at least a decade for hydrogen heating is a high-risk option which could make meeting climate targets even more difficult.

It appears that they would much prefer the even more expensive option of total electrification.

The Telegraph says the government report is already over a year late. I am not surprised.

I highly suspect that the costings are so outrageous, and the sheer logistics so ridiculous, that nobody in the government wants to publish it. We can expect much watering down of the proposals, and tampering with the costings to make them slightly less disagreeable.

And then it will be wrapped up in hopelessly make believe assumptions that some new wonderful smart technology will come along to save us all eventually.

And then we will sail blindly on.

In other words, nothing will change.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

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September 3, 2017 at 04:39PM

Oreskes’ Oracular Orifice

This new paper Assessing ExxonMobil’s Climate Change Communications (1977–2014) by Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes, published 23 August 2017 “..assesses whether ExxonMobil Corporation has in the past misled the general public about climate change, [presents] an empirical document-by-document textual content analysis and comparison of 187 climate change communications from ExxonMobil … [examines] whether these communications … Continue reading Oreskes’ Oracular Orifice

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September 3, 2017 at 04:02PM

Why Phi? – the rainbow angle

The rainbow angle [credit: Hong Kong Observatory]

The minimum deviation angle for the primary bow [of a rainbow] is 137.5° according to Wikipedia. This is known as the rainbow angle. A circle is 360 degrees, so the ratio of the rainbow angle to the circle is therefore the square of the golden ratio i.e. 137.5:360 = 1:2.61818~.
– – –
Hong Kong Observatory has some useful explanatory text and graphics (rounding 137.5 to 138 degrees) titled:
Why is the region outside the primary rainbow much darker than that inside the primary rainbow?
Written by : SIU Kai-chee (summer intern) and HUNG Fan-yiu

Let’s first look at Figure 1, which shows sun rays entering a water drop and going through refraction and reflection.

The ray (ray no. 1) passing through the centre goes directly backward on reflection, i.e. a change in direction of 180 degrees.

For ray no. 2, this angle becomes smaller, following the rules of refraction and reflection.

For the next (ray no. 3) the angle continues to decrease, so on and so forth. This trend does not continue for long, however.


It is found that after a certain ray (ray no. N), the angle starts to increase instead, after going through a minimum angle of 138 degrees.

The figure also tells us that the outgoing rays tend to be more concentrated near ray no. N, making that region brightest. In fact, the angle of 138 degrees is the primary rainbow angle.

Now a rainbow is formed from lights coming out of many water drops. In fact, each of the colours in the rainbow comes to the eye from a different set of water drops.

Figure 2 [click here] makes it easier to visualize. Rays A and B on coming out of the water drop turn through an angle less than 138 degrees, and thus do not reach the eye. They either pass over our heads or to our right or left.

On the other hand, such rays as C and D turn through an angle near 138 degrees, and become part of the primary rainbow. This explains the darker region above the primary rainbow.

Below the primary rainbow and further down, e.g. ray Y, the angle is larger than 138 degrees, and light reaching our eyes is mostly reflected light from the water drop’s front surface. This region, being made up of all such rays, is thus brighter.

[Reference: “Atmospheric Phenomena”, Readings from Scientific American, W.H. Freeman and Co., 1980.]

Source: Why is the region outside the primary rainbow much darker than that inside the primary rainbow? | Hong Kong Observatory

via Tallbloke’s Talkshop

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September 3, 2017 at 02:54PM

‘Exceedingly early frost’ possible for U.S. Corn Belt next week

From NOAA’s Climate prediction Center: PROGNOSTIC DISCUSSION FOR MONTHLY OUTLOOK NWS CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD 300 PM EDT THU AUG 31 2017 30-DAY OUTLOOK DISCUSSION FOR SEPTEMBER 2017 THE BACKGROUND CLIMATE DRIVERS REMAIN UNCHANGED FROM THE 0.5-MONTH LEAD FORECAST. THE MJO HAS RECENTLY EMERGED OVER THE INDIAN OCEAN, BUT ITS FUTURE EVOLUTION IS … Continue reading ‘Exceedingly early frost’ possible for U.S. Corn Belt next week

via Watts Up With That?

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September 3, 2017 at 02:29PM