Month: June 2024

Green aviation targets driving cooking oil fraud at ‘mass scale’

By Paul Homewood

 

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Net zero targets aimed at encouraging airlines to use so-called green aviation fuel are driving fraud “at a mass scale”, campaigners claim.

Exporters in China and Malaysia are using virgin palm oil instead of recycled cooking fat to make sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), research from lobby group Transport & Environment (T&E) suggests.

This means that rather than reducing CO2 emissions, the drive to adopt SAF may instead be driving deforestation.

SAF accounts for just 0.2pc of total jet fuel use, although the British Government has ordered UK airlines to lift that proportion to 10pc by the end of the decade.

Cooking oil forms the basis for 80pc of the world’s SAF, making old chip fat a valuable commodity.

However, unscrupulous suppliers are seeking to turn a profit by cutting out the kitchen altogether and shipping virgin palm oil to unwary refiners and airlines.

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Malaysia is the worst offender, according to T&E, as campaigners cast doubt over the country’s claims that it exports three times more used cooking oil than it collects.

Last year Britain secured almost 30pc of its SAF from oil shipped from Malaysia.

Cian Delaney, the group’s biofuels campaigner, said: “With Malaysia being one of the world’s largest palm oil producers, it would heavily indicate that used cooking oil is simply a backdoor for palm. Fraud is almost certainly happening at a mass scale.”

China also appears to be engaged in cooking oil fraud, T&E said.

While figures on the collection and export of oil appear to match, China has a large market for “gutter oil” that is illegally resold for cooking.

Taking that into account, there are “strong suspicions” that some exports include virgin vegetable oil mislabelled as waste oil.

SAF production will need to be scaled up 100 times to help airlines reach the 2030 target, according to estimates from Virgin Atlantic, providing a further spur for fraud.

Ryanair alone would need all of the used cooking oil in Europe to reach its target of making 12.5pc of flights sustainable within six years, T&E said.

Activists also fear that the illicit trade of SAF will encourage the expansion of palm oil plantations, one of the biggest drivers of deforestation in the tropics, according to T&E.

Some biofuels – such as rapeseed oil – are produced directly from crops, but mostly in temperate regions where they’re substituted for cereals already being grown.

Europe burns through 130,000 barrels of used cooking oil a day, eight times more than it generates.

China, with a population of 1.4bn people, is the primary supplier of used cooking oil, exporting more than half of its annual production.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/06/18/green-aviation-targets-cooking-oil-fraud-mass-scale/

It’s hard to think of a more stupid idea than this one!

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June 19, 2024 at 03:36AM

Terrified Wind & Solar Rent-Seekers Drive Crazed Anti-Nuclear Stance

Over the last 20 years, the energy narrative has been owned by those profiting from the grand wind and solar scam. These days, not so much.

Now that a raft of countries around the world have embraced nuclear power, crony capitalists have recognised ever-reliable nuclear as a clear and present danger. Because (unlike wind and solar) nuclear plants generate power around-the-clock and they don’t generate carbon oxide gas emissions in the process.

The wind and sun cult have built their entire case on the spurious claim that wind and solar are the only way of generating power without generating CO2.

Trouble is that wind and solar are lucky to generate power around 30% of the time (on average) and, even then, their operators struggle to tell their customers when that might be.

Which is why when Australia’s PM, Anthony Albanese and his witless Energy Minister, Chris Bowen start talking about this country being a “renewable energy superpower”, and pooh-poohing nuclear as “expensive” it’s difficult not to laugh.

That the punchline for Australia’s economic future is deadly serious, is not lost on The Australian’s Chris Kenny.

Too often the energy debate comes across like a badly scripted movie
The Australian
Chris Kenny
15 June 2024

Some of you might have seen a 1980s Cold War film, White Nights, starring ballet legend Mikhail Baryshnikov and tap-dance master Gregory Hines. It was a shocker.

The premise was clever, as was the dancing, but the script was diabolical. When the Hines character says of his wife (played by Isabella Rossellini): “That woman is the best thing that ever happened to me in my life”, I wondered how such a cliche could spring from someone’s mind on to a keyboard, make it through script editing, be tested in rehearsals, come out of the actor’s mouth during the shoot and yet still escape the cutting-room floor to make it on to our screens.

Look, I am certain worse films have been made. But, perhaps because we were both in caustic moods, when I saw with a dear friend we turned our cringe into laughs that have lingered.

I mention it now because we are being treated to similar hate-watching hilarity in contemporary public affairs.

The climate and energy debate, the so-called climate wars, provide the same mirth in the here and now. With so many of the leading actors seemingly oblivious to the inanity of the lines they spout, it comes across as a badly scripted movie, providing unintended giggles. And they dance not to the rhythm of reality but to the stumbling beat of petty political imperatives.

Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen was asked on the ABC this week (where else would he grant an interview?) about the reason his government was determined to meet its 2030 emissions reduction target under the Paris Agreement.

“I mean it’s partly about Paris, of course, and it’s partly about emissions reduction,” said Bowen, “and it’s partly about seizing the opportunity for Australia as a renewable superpower.”

Yep, a “renewable superpower” – these words came not from some kid in the sandpit with a Buzz Lightyear action figure. They came from an adult elected official who is charged with delivering this “renewable energy transition”.

Even the Prime Minister uses these same juvenile and meaningless phrases. “We can be a renewable energy superpower for the world,” Anthony Albanese told Guardian Australia in a podcast this week. ‘

Talk about preaching to the converted – “To infinity and beyond!” This is gibberish. Unscientific, irrational, laughable political rhetoric.

Energy superpowers have abundant energy, they have it in dense forms (such as oil, coal, gas and uranium) and they can exploit and export it efficiently and affordably. Think Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, the US and Russia. Australia could and should be an energy superpower, exploiting our bounty as one of the leading exporters of coal, gas and uranium.

But Labor, the Greens and the teals want us to turn our backs on using all three energy resources at home and are working to demonise these exports worldwide. They are deliberately saddling our industry, businesses and residents with less reliable and affordable forms of sparse, intermittent renewable energy. They are deliberately turning us from a cheap energy powerhouse to an energy basket-case. Some transition.

Renewable energy cannot be exported. The SunCable project promised to build a transmission line from Northern Territory solar farms to Singapore and it’s going about as well as the numerous wave power generators rusting out around our coastline.

So-called green hydrogen, more of a slogan and a pipedream than an actual commodity, is not commercial anywhere. Proposing it is a great way to win government subsidies – just ask Andrew Forrest – but it remains an obtuse way to produce hydrogen when reliable energy from a nuclear reactor or coal-fired plant could to it better. And that overlooks the minor issue of ensuring there are machines and vehicles running on hydrogen to provide a market.

There is so much bunkum flying around that the so-called climate wars are laughable; they are more about sanctimony than science. This is what happens when you focus on cutting emissions and signalling virtue instead of producing energy.

Back in 2018 Jacinda Ardern, the Labour prime minister of New Zealand who became the instant poster girl of global green-left politics, banned offshore gas exploration. With plentiful hydro-electricity and geothermal generation, the Kiwis rely on fossil fuels for less than a quarter of their electricity generation so Ardern probably figured the gas ban was a bit of painless grandstanding.

Not so. When demand surged, hydro was a little dry and the wind didn’t blow, the Kiwis were left without power on cold nights. The current National government is scrapping the ban and ensuring they have enough gas in future.

Ideology too often trumps engineering; sanctimony is preferred over reality. We have seen this many times in many places, until power prices and shortages deliver a reality shock.

Australia can avoid all this, we have had enough warnings at home and abroad, but Albanese and his Greens and teal accomplices are not for turning.

“My vision for Australia is one where you have solar and renewables creating green hydrogen, which is then used to power advanced manufacturing to produce green steel, green aluminium,” he told Guardian Australia.

Green all right. They get away with this mindless banter only because most of the media is culpable, feebly accepting nonsensical lines and amplifying rather than interrogating them. Albanese (and his Greens and teal playmates) has tried to link the scientifically inconsequential debate about whether Australia meets a 43 per cent emissions reduction goal by 2030 to climate outcomes.

If a politician talks absolute tosh about climate change, will anybody in the press gallery even notice? No, because most journalists also are trying to pretend Australia’s emissions profile over the next five or six years is a matter of substance.

“We are a country that is prone to extreme weather events and climate change is making those extreme weather events more intense and more frequent,” the Prime Minister fantasised at a Sydney press conference.

“The idea that we will just walk away from any action on climate change is an abrogation of the responsibility that I have and that the Australian government has, not just to this generation but to future generations as well.”

This intergenerational climate hero cannot point to scientific evidence that any weather events or natural disasters in Australia have become more intense or frequent; all he has is rhetoric.

Furthermore, no matter what is happening to the climate, all of science and rational thought will tell him the additional 17 million tonnes reduced over each of the next five years to meet the 2030 target can have no discernible impact on any climate, anywhere, good or bad, when global annual emissions are more than 35,000 million tonnes and growing at a rate of more than 400 million tonnes a year.

Call it hard luck, call it Armageddon or just call it reality; those are just the facts about our emissions and their insignificance. It is not for nothing that former chief scientist Alan Finkel had to admit the effect of taking all of Australia’s annual emissions out of the atmosphere would be “virtually none”.

Yet, inexplicably, green-left politicians are in constant denial about any or all of these facts and seek to lead the world in their climate piety, perhaps hoping for a UN honour. Ardern, remember, was lauded for trying to save the planet by tinkering with her nation’s 0.1 per cent of global emissions.

If you wrote this script, you could never finance the film. Unless maybe Baryshnikov played Albo, and Rossellini, Ardern (yes, yes, yes, they would have to bring in Rowan Atkinson for Bowen).

When you try to point out some of these salient facts in public debate the retort from the left is predictable and binary. To question their approach is to be a “climate denier” who just wants to “let it rip”.

The reality, of course is much more nuanced and sensible. If we agree the world needs to target net zero by 2050 and that as a nation we must play our part, then we need our leaders to consider the best way to achieve that while maintaining our economy, society and lifestyle.

When we are talking about the fundamentals of our economy over a decades-long timeframe we ought to get it right. There is no need to rush. It does not mean being the fastest or the most virtuous for the sake of politics or plaudits. It should not mean running a world-first experiment to transition a major industrialised nation with a reliable fossil fuel-based electricity grid to an untried renewables-plus-storage model two decades ahead of deadline.

On the contrary, because we make up just over 1 per cent of global emissions that cannot materially impact on the global climate, and we have vast amounts of land for abatement, we should take our time to map the best route. Blind Freddy could tell us now that we should have begun to implement a nuclear strategy 20 years ago, centred on the industrial sites and transmission hubs of the existing coal-fired generators.

Just because we have already wasted decades and hundreds of billions of dollars while alienating thousands of hectares for intermittent renewable infrastructure is no reason to bet the lot on this same foolish plan. We have the time to get it right.

We could build two major nuclear reactors for less than the cost of the Snowy 2.0 pumped hydro project and in a similar or shorter timeframe. We could have built four or five reactors for the money spent on renewable subsidies over the past 15 years, or 10 reactors for the cost of the tens of thousands of kilometres of transmission lines yet to come.

The lines about cost and delay do not stack up. Like White Nights, the anti-nuclear mob is stuck in a Cold War-era ideological battle.

It is time we cut the political and partisan dancing. It is time for a rational debate about energy options to set us up for the next century.
The Australian

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June 19, 2024 at 02:30AM

Will “Green New Deal” Failures Elect Trump?

“A Clean Energy Transition should be occurring but not with the RECKLESS STUPIDITY enhancing the possibility of Trump Again!” (Robert Bibbo, below)

Robert Bibbo, self-described environmental energy analyst and observer, lamented a while back on the growing popularity of Trump relative to President Biden. He stated:

This New York Times Poll Shows Trump Leading in 5 Battleground States. A Point In Time Not Election Day Certainty. Nevertheless! Never Ever Trumpers Should be Concerned.

Bibbo then brought in some historical analysis:

In 2016 The Democratic Brain Trust saddled Hilary with a Clean Power Plant 1 War on Coal. Krugman opines 2x (NYTs) that CPP 1 delivered PA, MI & WI (46 EC votes) to elect Trump45. In 2020 those 46 votes elected Biden. Heading into 2024 the Brain Trust has saddled Biden with a Clean Power Plan 2 War on Fossil Fuels. Add the reasonable chance of midwest grid failures Trump Again is much too real. A Clean Energy Transition should be occurring but not with the RECKLESS STUPIDITY enhancing the possibility of Trump Again! And just like CPP1, CPP2 has no chance to become law.

There is a bit of a civil war with some climate alarmists warning to go slow for political reasons. But doesn’t Bibbo know that the climate is in crisis and the emergency is HERE? Biden, Kerry, and Gore said it. The United Nations said it. Scientist Andrew Dessler said it….

But maybe climate politics is about more that just ‘saving the planet’. Maybe it is about money and power, the Climate Industrial Complex, bleeding prosperity but at a pace that the subjects do not rebel.

I responded:

Ending the transition with an apology would be the best course of action for the Democrats. After all, wind, solar, and batteries are hardly environmental, not only uneconomic.

Joseph Toomey added:

There is no way your “Clean Energy Transition” can occur without “reckless stupidity.” … Add in the fact that the economy will be in FAR WORSE shape one year from now, together with the fact that pollsters like Times/Siena routinely over-sample Democrats in their raw data adjustment process, and these polling disadvantages will likely only grow.

No response from Bibbo, but I think he is on to something that will fully germinate in November.

The post Will “Green New Deal” Failures Elect Trump? appeared first on Master Resource.

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June 19, 2024 at 01:12AM

Climate Propaganda Cabals Ramp Up the Heat for Summer

News Brief by Kip Hansen — 19 June 2024

Covering Climate Now [CCNow], the Columbia University-based climate propaganda outfit, which claims the ability to reach over 2 billion people worldwide with its ready-to-use, ready-to-share and content-directed climate alarm stories, is ramping up and issuing directives to climate journalists around the world

Here are the main points that they insist that journalist around the world make in each and every story about Summer.

“Reporting Guidance: 2024’s Extreme Heat

Climate change is making extreme heat more frequent and more severe. Here are resources, sample copy, and tips to help you meet the moment.”

Now, I am a climate journalist myself and I admit that I am not entirely sure exactly what they mean by “tips to help you meet the moment”, nonetheless, I will share those tips with readers here.  Why?  So that when you see them repeated in your local newspapers, hear them on the radio, or watch some TV weatherman rattle them off, you’ll know the true source of the exaggerated statements and general misinformation.

Tip 1, quoting:  “It’s already been a record hot year, and dangerous heat is forecast to continue in many countries around the world. Deadly heatwaves across Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and Mexico so far this year have been linked to climate change. And climate change has made the extreme heat expected across much of the US this week four times more likely.”

The cute “four times more likely” comes from another “independent” climate propaganda outfit, Climate Central: “Intense, persistent heat wave across Midwestern and Eastern U.S. influenced by climate change”. 

The Climate Blame Game: Are We Really Causing Extreme Weather?” by William M Briggs [Note 25, The Global Warming Policy Foundation, .pdf] exposes the statistical shenanigans used to produce such non-scientific pronouncements.

The go-along-to-get-along climate journalists must use the above because: “Now more than ever, journalists have to help audiences understand its climate connection: Climate change is making the planet hotter; climate change is caused mainly by burning oil, gas, and coal; therefore, temperatures will keep going up until oil, gas, and coal are phased out.”

That’s right, journalists, don’t let your readers think that it is hot because it is summer.  That’s just so old-fashioned ….

Tip 2:  Use the following:

“Connect extreme heat to climate change and fossil fuels. Adding a few words to your coverage is all it takes to make these connections. Here’s some sample language you can use:

    Scientists agree that climate change drives extreme weather like today’s record-breaking high temperatures.

    Heatwaves like this one are now more common and more intense as a result of human-caused climate change.

    Climate change is mostly caused by burning fossil fuels such as oil, gas, and coal, which releases greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, warming Earth.”

Tip 3:

“Share safety information. People with disabilities, older adults, children, pregnant people, unhoused people, incarcerated people, and outdoor workers are some of the groups most vulnerable to extreme heat. When reporting on extreme heat, help audiences by sharing safety tips.”

And sharing safety tips for hot summer days is important but using them as part of a propaganda message with the intention of scaring people instead of informing people is a nasty business.

Tip 4:

Choose visuals carefully. While it may be tempting to make light of heat by using “fun in the sun” photos, such as people eating ice cream or crowded pools, it’s more accurate to use images that reflect the seriousness of the situation. Opt for photos that show people struggling with heat (like crowded cooling centers or workers struggling under heat conditions) or signage warning of high temperatures. You can see some examples here.

The helpful ‘examples’ link leads to this Getty Images collaboration page a collaboration collection helpfully provided by Covering Climate Now, last edited 16 hours ago[note:  diligently kept up to date by some Junior Climate Warrior – kh]Extreme heat is the most obvious consequence of climate change. Journalists have to help audiences understand its climate connection.

Tip 5:  Oh, and don’t forget to use the free data and images from the independent “climate scientists” at Climate Central:

“Use Climate Central’s reporting tools. The scientists at Climate Central have an attribution tool called Climate Shift Index that journalists around the world can use to help audiences understand how much more likely climate change is making extreme heat episodes. Enter your city to find out how much climate change is influencing temperature there on a particular day. For US reporters, see Climate Central’s 2024 Summer Package with customizable graphics (available in English and Spanish).”

I just know you are dying for that link, aren’t you?  Here it is

Climate Central’s 2024 Summer Package

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Author’s Comment:

Don’t say I didn’t warn you.  They will be pumping this junk out all summer – telling us that summers are hot. 

We already know that.   If you can tell the difference between a 90°F day and a 91°F day without a thermometer, or without a “climate journalist” to tell you that that “one more degree” is caused by driving your classic ’55 Chevy to the summer car show, you are a better person than I.

They are collaborating, they are conspiring — both in the open and behind closed doors — and they are will say anything they think the public will swallow. 

Thanks for reading.

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June 19, 2024 at 12:01AM