Month: May 2023

New Puritans On the March

Andrew Doyle writes at Spiked The New Puritans must be stopped.  Excerpts in italics with my bolds and added images

A regressive, authoritarian ideology is cannibalising public life.

My book, The New Puritans: How the Religion of Social Justice Captured the Western World, is my attempt to grapple with this disturbing new reality. A new paperback edition has been published this week, and I had hoped that by this point, it would already have started to seem out of date. In truth, the problems I describe in the book are accelerating. Novels by Roald Dahl, PG Wodehouse and Agatha Christie have since been rewritten by ‘sensitivity readers’ (newspeak for ‘censors’). The Irish government is currently passing new hate-speech laws that are similarly draconian to those passed by the Scottish government in 2021. Prestigious scientific journals are publishing pseudoscience in order to uphold this new ideology, too. Only this week the Scientific American ran a piece entitled ‘Here’s why human sex is not binary’, illustrated with an image of the male and female gametes that prove that it is.

It’s difficult to keep up with these baffling developments. Most of us have noticed the rise of this new ideology that is now dominant in all of our major cultural, educational, political and corporate institutions. We can see that its impact is divisive, regressive and illiberal, and yet it describes itself using progressive-sounding terminology, such as ‘social justice’, ‘anti-racism’ and ‘equity’.

When language becomes unmoored from meaning,
we are all at risk of mistaking change for progress.

We have seen that the disciples of this new religion are pushing for more and more censorship, whether that be through the cancellation of comedians, the deletion of potentially offensive scenes in old television shows, or stronger ‘hate speech’ laws. We have seen women physically assaulted for standing up for their sex-based rights. We have seen how anyone who questions the new orthodoxies jeopardises their career prospects and risks being publicly shamed. The existence of what we now call ‘cancel culture’ is often denied by those who indulge in it the most, but its list of casualties expands by the day.

Those of us who are taking a stand against these cultural revolutionaries are often told that we should just ignore them. Who cares if a few zealots are demanding that we attend ‘unconscious bias’ training sessions? Who cares if civil servants and teachers and staff at the BBC are being encouraged to announce their pronouns in emails and at the beginning of meetings? Who cares if the Ministry of Defence is holding LGBTQIA+ coffee mornings to discuss pansexuality? If we let them get on with it, the logic goes, all of this will just go away.

But this is very wrong. If we ignore these developments,
the culture warriors won’t fade away – they’ll win.

These activists are promoting an authoritarian creed, and are doing untold damage to our world, while believing they are making it better. If your toddler starts smashing up the crockery, you don’t just politely wait for it to finish. Sometimes you have to intervene in order to prevent further damage.

 

 

 

 

 

 

via Science Matters

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May 7, 2023 at 10:57AM

FERC commissioners tell senators of major grid reliability challenges, with some blaming markets

This article from UTILITY DIVE covers testimony by commissioners at a Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee hearing.

The U.S. grid faces major reliability challenges, according to members of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission who used the word 34 times in their prepared testimony Thursday at a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing.

There is a “looming reliability crisis in our electricity markets,” FERC Commissioner James Danly said.

“The United States is heading for a very catastrophic situation in terms of reliability,” FERC Commissioner Mark Christie said.

FERC Acting Chairman Willie Phillips said, “We face unprecedented challenges to the reliability of our nation’s electric system.”

Growing reliability and resilience challenges from extreme weather and cyber and physical security threats require changes to the U.S. grid, according to FERC Commissioner Allison Clements.

https://ift.tt/m2RN6hZ

and

Christie said the main problem is that power plants are being retired at a faster pace than they’re being replaced, pointing to estimates from the PJM Interconnection.

About 40 GW, or 21% of PJM’s installed capacity, is at risk of retiring by 2030, the largest U.S. grid operator said in a Feb. 24 report. PJM expects only 15.1 GW to 30.6 GW of accredited capacity to come online by 2030.

“The arithmetic doesn’t work,” Christie said. “This problem is coming. It’s coming quickly. The red lights are flashing.”

Increasing transmission capability was discussed.

Also, new transmission could help ease reliability problems, according to Phillips.

“Transmission plays a critical role in facilitating the interconnection of new resources, while ensuring that the electric system remains reliable,” he said.

Phillips said he hopes FERC can issue an interregional transmission planning reform proposal in the “very near term.”

The points made during the commisioners’ testimony was disputed by Environmental Organizations.

Danly’s criticism of subsidies for renewable energy was off base, according to Devin Hartman, director of Energy and Environmental Policy at the R Street Institute, a free market-oriented public policy research group.

“Capacity markets secure sufficient levels of capacity irrespective of subsidy levels, but they cannot procure resources that governments prevent from being built or retained,” he said.

Also, utility integrated resource planning in RTOs can cause reliability problems, according to Hartman.

Read the full article here.

via Watts Up With That?

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May 7, 2023 at 08:43AM

1875 was coldest in 10,000 years, Warming A Good Thing

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‘We made ourselves an extremely poor experiment when we started to observe meteorology at the coldest time in the last ten thousand years.’ – Indeed.

Science Matters

Jørgen Peder Steffensen, of Denmark’s Niels Bohr Institute, is one of the most experienced experts in ice core analysis, in both Greenland and Antarctica. In this video he explains a coincidence that has misled those alarmed about the warming recovery since the Little Ice Age.  And if you skip to 2:25, you will see the huge error we have made and the assumptions and extrapolations based on that error.  Transcript below is from closed captions with my bolds and added images. H/T Raymond

What do ice cores tell us about the history of climate change and the present trend? 

This ice is from the Viking age around the year one thousand, also called the medieval warm period. We believe that in Greenland the Medieval Warm Period was about one and a half degrees warmer on average than today

NorthGRIP the Greenland ice core project is being reopened to drill…

View original post 610 more words

via Tallbloke’s Talkshop

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May 7, 2023 at 07:51AM

Beatrice’s Missing Output–The Plot Thickens!

By Paul Homewood

 

 

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I’ve now got some more information concerning the “missing” 551 GWh of output at Beatrice Offshore Windfarm in their y/e March 2022.

You will recall that their Annual Accounts listed output as 2084.7 GWh, but the amount they declared to the LCCC for CfD purposes was only 1533.6 GWh.

Andrew Montford has provided data on the constraint payments to Beatrice, and for that year they were paid £33.1 million for constraining output of 539.9 GWh. In other words pretty much all of the missing output was constrained, i.e. not exported to the transmission network.

The constraint payment to Beatrice averages £61.42/MWh. Yet their guaranteed strike price via CfD was £164.73/MWh at that time, so they certainly would not have given up that revenue just for the constraint payments.

And, as we know, they did not give it up. Let’s do a few sums.

  • The revenue from the 1533.6 GWh, which was declared for CfD, would have been £252.6 million, at £164.73/MWh
  • The total revenue listed in the Annual Accounts was £392.9 million.
  • Constraint payments were £33.1 million.
  • Therefore other income, that is excluding CfD and constraints, amounted to £107.2 million, and equates to £198.55/MWh, based on the constrained 539.9 GWh.

In short then, Beatrice has not only received £33 million from constraint payments, it appears to have sold all of that output anyway. Worse still, the price they received from that sale was higher than their strike price.

The mystery now is just where that missing electricity went.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

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May 7, 2023 at 06:39AM