Month: March 2019

Solar car parks to pop up across Scotland in pilot project 


This looks like a ‘build it and they will come’ strategy. But the problems of EVs such as high cost, range anxiety and heavy depreciation mainly due to uncertain battery life, are not going away – as shown by the very low numbers of adopters compared to fuel-burners. Using EVs to help charge the grid, as proposed here, could adversely affect their battery life.

A consortium is preparing to start building solar-powered car parks across Scotland as part of a trial project for so-called Smart Hubs that will feature both EV charging points and battery storage, reports OilPrice.com.

The six trial sites will also include vehicle-to-grid facilities (V2G) so EVs can feed energy back into the grid when necessary.

The Scotsman reports that the consortium behind the project involves several energy companies, among them Flexitricity, Turbo Power Systems, Flexisolar, and Smart Power Systems, which are hoping to have the pilot car parks ready later this year.

The aim of the project, however, is not just a way of spurring greater EV adoption. The solar-powered car parks will also alleviate the potential pressure of EV charging on the grid, which, the daily notes, is already strained. If successful, the project will be expanded into other parts of the UK.

The UK has pledged to phase out gasoline and diesel cars by 2040, but the Scottish government is even more ambitious: it eyes 2032 as the year when there will be only EVs on its roads. The goal is truly ambitious, especially in light of estimates that say by 2030 there will be some nine million EVs on UK roads.

While that’s not enough to replace the current ICE fleet, it is a substantial number, and having solar-powered charging sites would help the grid cope with the increased demand.

Full report here.

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March 28, 2019 at 08:45AM

Irish Parties Clash On Carbon Tax Hike Over Fears Of Cost To Voters

A stand-off between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil has threatened to derail a proposal to quadruple carbon tax.

The recommendation to increase the levy from €20 a tonne to €80 a tonne by 2030 will remain in the Oireachtas climate action committee report despite attempts from opposition politicians to have it removed last night.

Timmy Dooley, a Fianna Fáil TD, had proposed removing the defined increase, arguing that more time was needed to research how it would affect vulnerable households. He lost an amendment to remove the €80 recommendation. He accused Fine Gael of having a “fashionable” interest in climate change.

“If we go ahead with this amendment we are loading another layer of tax on citizens who are already under serious financial pressure without any firm evidence that increasing the cost would work,” he said.

Carbon tax is levied on fossil fuels as part of efforts to slow climate change.

Martin Heydon, a Fine Gael TD, suggested his opposition rivals were being short-sighted and that other political parties were likely to be in power over the course of the next decade…

Eamon Ryan, the Green Party leader, surprised committee members by calling for a delay of four to five months to negotiate the level of the carbon tax increase. He said that this was to “avoid the water charges scenario” which resulted in a reversal of plans to introduce charges.

Full story

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March 28, 2019 at 08:28AM

Excellent News: All Climate Change Science Is Now Wrong

All current – all current political that is – climate science is now wrong. Felled by just that one inconvenient fact, we’re using less, not more, coal.

Of course, there are those who have been saying that all climate change science has always been wrong but my statement is rather different, that even within the terms of the debate at the IPCC etc all climate change science is now wrong. For the predictions of looming disaster depend upon one specific fact, one that is incorrect. No, not that CO2 doesn’t warm, or that climate has always varied and all that. Instead, there’s an assumption made about how the future is going to be. That assumption being wrong. Thus all that is derived from that assumption being wrong is also wrong.

Thus this is good news for sensible people, a disaster for those who would force us all into something like the Green New Deal – either variant.

The number of coal-fired power plants being developed around the world has collapsed in the last three years, according to a report. The number of plants on which construction has begun each year has fallen by 84% since 2015, and 39% in 2018 alone, while the number of completed plants has dropped by more than half since 2015. The report, from the NGO-backed Global Energy Monitor, says the falling costs of renewable energy are pricing coal out of the electricity market, more than 100 financial institutions have blacklisted coal producers, and political action to cut carbon emissions is growing. “It’s only a matter of time before coal is a thing of the past worldwide,” said one of the report’s authors, Neha Mathew-Shah, of the Sierra Club.

Coal is the most CO2 intensive of energy production methods, it diminishing in usage is a good thing for ameliorating climate change therefore. Excellent news.

However, it gets better than this. All those predictions of looming disaster depend upon what we think the future is going to be like. We have to make assumptions about how many people there will be, how rich they’ll be and what technologies they’ll use to be that rich. And all of the bloodcurdling predictions depend upon something called RCP 8.5. No, it’s boring to know what that is.

But RCP 8.5 depends upon the following assumption:

The scenario’s storyline describes a heterogeneous world with continuously increasing global population, resulting in a global population of 12 billion by 2100. Per capita income growth is slow and both internationally as well as regionally there is only little convergence between high and low income countries. Global GDP reaches around 250 trillion US2005$ in 2100. The slow economic development also implies little progress in terms of efficiency. Combined with the high population growth, this leads to high energy demands. Still, international trade in energy and technology is limited and overall rates of technological progress is modest. The inherent emphasis on greater self-sufficiency of individual countries and regions assumed in the scenario implies a reliance on domestically available resources. Resource availability is not necessarily a constraint but easily accessible conventional oil and gas become relatively scarce in comparison to more difficult to harvest unconventional fuels like tar sands or oil shale. Given the overall slow rate of technological improvements in low-carbon technologies, the future energy system moves toward coal intensive technology choices with high GHG emissions.

In fact, we not just use more coal than we do today – more people who are richer etc – we use more coal as a proportion of our energy production than we ever have done as a species. And yet we’re being told that even as the world gets richer coal as an energy production method is dying out. That is, we’re not in an RCP 8.5 world. Thus all predictions based upon it are wrong.

Full post

The post Excellent News: All Climate Change Science Is Now Wrong appeared first on The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF).

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March 28, 2019 at 08:05AM

Blowing the whistle on the climate of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef

A brief overview of on-going climate research. by Dr. Bill Johnston Background Australian taxpayers spend inordinate amounts of money each year on “saving” the Great Barrier Reef and to keep the bucket brimming with cash there is little wonder that the myriad of organizations involved want careful control over the spin and the people who…

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March 28, 2019 at 07:51AM