Month: September 2024

Live at 1 pm Eastern: It’s Climate Week in NYC – The Climate Realism Show #128

It’s climate week in New York City, yet another expensive and carbon-intensive gathering of global chicken littles clucking about the end of the world. More than 6,000 attendees from more than 100 countries converged on the Big Apple to coincide with the United Nations General Assembly Meeting, all the better to coordinate efforts to stop climate change by taking your freedom and money. But is Climate Week losing its cache and are there cracks in support for achieving goals like Net Zero?

The Heartland Institute’s H. Sterling Burnett, Anthony Watts, Linnea Lueken, and Jim Lakely will investigate on Episode #128 of The Climate Realism Show. We will also cover Hurricane Helene, how foolish it would be to have an electric car in the path of that storm, the United Kingdom depending on the same kinds of flawed temperature stations the US does, how climate change is not threatening your daily cup of coffee, and more.

Join us LIVE at 1 p.m. ET so you can leave your questions and comments for the show in the chat.

This show will be archived in WUWT Climate TV, a collection of over six hundred videos, featuring new interviews and analysis, and covering dozens of media sources discussing, debating and analyzing the latest in climate science, climate politics, and energy policy, including topics concerning temperature, sea level, polar bears, ocean acidification, extreme weather, censorship, wild fires, and more.

via Watts Up With That?

https://ift.tt/etmB7Hz

September 27, 2024 at 11:33AM

It’s time to go nuclear, America

Gabriella discusses her successful first dove hunt and why America is on the verge of a nuclear renaissance.

via CFACT

https://ift.tt/RBTtX0h

September 27, 2024 at 11:06AM

Britain paying highest electricity prices in the world

By Paul Homewood

 

A reminder to John Penrose and the CPS that they are shutting the door after the horse has bolted.

Shame on both of them for failing to challenge the policies that have been leading us to this for more than a decade now:

 

 

 image

British companies are paying the highest electricity prices of anywhere in the developed world, official data has shown.

The cost of power for industrial businesses has jumped 124pc in just five years, according to the Government’s figures, catapulting the UK to the top of international league tables.

It is now about 50pc more expensive than in Germany and France, and four times as expensive as in the US.

The figures will fuel concerns about the future of UK industry amid warnings that high energy prices are crippling domestic manufacturers.

They underline the challenge facing Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, who wants industrial businesses to switch away from gas to electricity-powered processes.

Frank Aaskov, the director of energy at lobby group UK Steel, said: “High industrial electricity prices have for too long damaged the competitiveness of UK steelmaking, and many in the wider manufacturing sector will be feeling the same pressure our steel companies do.

“The Government should tackle steep electricity costs and make the UK a fruitful place to invest, while enabling growth and improving competitiveness.”

The electricity price paid by UK industrial users per kilowatt hour rose to 25.85p in 2023, the data show. That compares to 10.43p as recently as five years earlier and 8.89p a decade ago.

It also far outstripped European rivals and allies such as the US and Canada. The equivalent price was 17.84p in France, 17.71p in Germany and 6.48p in the US.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/britain-paying-highest-electricity-prices-165226525.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

https://ift.tt/WPiOn9B

September 27, 2024 at 10:59AM

Competitive decarbonisation is the only way to save our industrial communities-John Penrose

By Paul Homewood

 

The idea that John Penrose might have offered an objective assessment of Net Zero policies was always an absurdity:

 

 

 image

Today, we are launching a cross-party and cross-industry commission to explore how the United Kingdom can reach net zero without undermining the competitiveness of British industry.

We are a cross-party group, which means we follow the proud tradition of pursuing climate action by consensus. From introducing the 2008 Climate Change Act, to being the first developed nation to put the net zero transition into law in 2019, as well as hosting COP26, successive governments of all political stripes have sought to lead international action to tackle climate change.

But reaching our net zero goals requires more than summits and legislation – it requires rapid changes across the whole economy, which poses potential challenges as well as opportunities. We must make the transition at a minimum cost to society, the economy, and the public purse. 

https://www.politicshome.com/thehouse/article/competitive-decarbonisation-way-save-industrial-communities

No, John, the only way to save our industrial communities is to drop Net Zero in its entirety.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

https://ift.tt/8hYyHQp

September 27, 2024 at 10:28AM