Month: July 2025

“Solar champion” the Netherlands has the highest prices on a summer day?

Came across this tweet by Martien Visser questioned the very high electricity price in the Netherlands just past noon on a summer day translated from Dutch:

Quite remarkable: tomorrow afternoon, July 23rd, in the middle of summer, ‘solar champion the Netherlands’ will have the highest electricity prices in all of Northwestern Europe.
#graphoftheday
Source: http://epexspot.com

Tweet BM_Visser 20250722

It is accompanied by this image showing the prices on the day-ahead electricity market (I colored the borders of the Netherlands in blue):

Tweet BM_Visser 20250722 image

The Netherlands was forecast to have the highest electricity price (€54/MWh) of Northwestern Europe on July 23 in the 14:00 – 15:00 time slot. For those who looked a bit closer to this image, Austria has an even higher price (€73.10/MWh), but Austria is generally considered a Central European country. Just for those who were wondering.

I can understand what Visser is trying to convey in this tweet. Because the marginal cost pricing system of the spot market, the (day-ahead) prices are generally low in summer because solar production is then at it highest. Especially around noon when there is an abundant production and in countries with a large solar capacity. But now “solar champion” the Netherlands somehow managed to have the highest prices just past noon in the heart of summer?

The next day, there was this follow-up tweet emphasizing this point even more (translated from Dutch):

This is particularly special because this afternoon the Netherlands will be able to generate more than 100% of its own electricity demand from solar and wind power. Source: Energieopwek.

Tweet BM_Visser 20250723

It has this graph of the situation on July 23 on the energieopwek.nl app attached to it:

Tweet BM_Visser 20250723 image

It was initially not clear what the graph shows exactly. It seems to show renewable electricity production of the Netherlands, but that doesn’t make much sense. There is unfortunately no clear explanation on the website itself.

Looking deeper, Energieopwek (“Energy production”) is an app conceived by Visser. It receives data from weather stations every ten minutes and then calculates how much electricity could be provided by solar and wind.

That makes sense. That is why the second tweet mentions “will be able to generate” and not “generates”. What is shown in that graph is therefore not actual production, but the potential electricity production by solar and wind based on weather data. A pity that this is not stated on their website.

Basically, the graph shows that the potential renewable electricity production (largely solar) was 18 GW in the 14:00 – 15:00 time slot on July 23. From what I understand of the tweet, this is more than the demand.

Sure, but then why the high price when electricity production by solar (and wind) could potentially exceed demand? Shouldn’t the price then be pretty low, maybe even negative? That question was unfortunately not answered in that tweet and also not in its comment section. I now want to make an attempt to explain how this could be possible.

Let’s start on Tuesday July 22. It had been sunny, but there have been (sometimes heavy) showers in the past couple days. The forecast was changeable weather until at least Friday.

Electricity producers need to trade on the day-ahead market what they can provide every hour of the next day. Because the weather at that moment was forecast as changeable, the solar electricity providers were probably not that sure of their production in that time slot. I think that therefore they only bid small volumes and left the rest of the expected demand to be filled in by other providers. These however have higher marginal costs and this will drive up the day-ahead price.

The next day, it is very sunny in the 14:00 – 15:00 time slot and solar (plus wind) energy could potentially produce more than demand. Leading to the situation where there was plentiful of generation after all, but the day-ahead price was set high.

That is what I think is (one of) the reason(s) why “solar champion” the Netherlands ended up with the “highest day-ahead prices in all of Northwestern Europe” during a time when its potential was at its peak.

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July 30, 2025 at 02:45PM

The Climate Change Cult Is Encountering More Resistance These Days

By Gary Abernathy

This article was originally published at The Empowerment Alliance and is re-published here with permission. 

The devastating Texas flooding over the July 4 weekend was a natural disaster of immense proportions. The lives lost brought unthinkable heartache for families. Especially difficult to fathom is that so many victims were young children.

Adding to the grief was the irresponsible blame game that almost immediately arose in the wake of the tragedy. Many on the left couldn’t wait to point fingers at Republicans, from President Donald Trump to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

Of course, the climate cult again demonized fossil fuels, global warming and other predictable villains from the days of yore (or Gore). The group Climate Central could only contain itself until July 8 before rushing out to hold a press briefing to reiterate its dogma that “climate change drives more extreme weather,” and that the Texas storms were “made more likely and powerful in a warmer climate.”

Leftwing climate groups often accuse anyone who disagrees as being a “climate denier.” But few actually deny that the climate indeed changes, often dramatically. The archeological record makes clear that the earth has warmed, cooled, experienced flooding and undergone a number of other climate-related upheavals through the centuries, long before human activity could be faulted. But groups like Climate Central identify the manmade practice of burning fossil fuels as the modern culprit.

Any brave soul who dares to challenge the extent to which carbon emissions and greenhouse gases impact climate change is shouted down by the cult and buried under an avalanche of “scholarly” papers produced by “the overwhelming majority of the scientific community.”

The good news is that the same day that Climate Central was regurgitating its tried-and-true rhetoric, the New York Times reported (in what it likely considered an expose), “The Energy Department has hired at least three scientists who are well-known for their rejection of the overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change, according to records reviewed by The New York Times.”

What seemed frightening to the Times and the indoctrinated left comes as welcome relief for millions of other Americans who believe that the war on affordable and reliable energy sources is based more on politics than science.

The extent to which fewer Americans are being successfully propagandized is made clear by recent polling. On July 11, CNN data analyst Harry Enten told viewers that as early as 1989, 35% of Americans were “greatly worried” about climate change, a number that jumped to 46% by 2020. But, as Enten admitted with some astonishment, only 40% of Americans currently feel “greatly worried” about climate change. The reason for growing public skepticism on climate change is probably because most Americans have wised up to how data can be easily manipulated for political ends.

We know from experience it’s not hard to convince “experts” to sign on to a “consensus” opinion to add gravitas to the cause de jour. Back in 2020, more than 50 former intelligence officials famously signed onto a letter claiming that emails found on Hunter Biden’s laptop had “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” That was not true, and it was later discovered that former CIA Acting Director Michael Morell had drafted the letter to help Joe Biden’s campaign. Everyone else just signed on, their devotion to a particular election outcome apparently outweighing the lack of evidence backing their claim.

Similarly, individual treatises on climate science aren’t authored by hundreds of scientists. Each one is written by, at most, a handful of researchers who then circulate their work and ask others to sign on – giving activists the fodder they need to claim that “the overwhelming majority” of the scientific community is in agreement. In fact, scientific papers being published as authoritative when, in fact, they are not is a growing problem.

“Last year the annual number of papers retracted by research journals topped 10,000 for the first time. Most analysts believe the figure is only the tip of an iceberg of scientific fraud,” according to a 2024 report in The Guardian.

Fortunately, there has always been a segment of the scientific community willing to stand up to the mob and interpret climate data independently. The three scientists hired by the Energy Department and targeted by the Times for expressing skepticism on manmade climate change – physicist Steven E. Koonin, atmospheric scientist John Christy, and meteorologist Roy Spencer – are among the brave.

In decades past, a key tenet of science was to question everything, on the theory that raising doubts and concerns was the best path to the truth. As Dr. Koonin wrote in a Wall Street Journal essay, “Any serious discussion of the changing climate must begin by acknowledging not only the scientific certainties but also the uncertainties, especially in projecting the future.”

Instead of natural disasters serving as excuses to launch attacks and place blame using the same tired, lockstep rhetoric, here’s hoping for a new age of climate enlightenment, led by scientists, journalists and others with the curiosity – and courage – to question everything.

Gary Abernathy is a longtime newspaper editor, reporter and columnist. He was a contributing columnist for the Washington Post from 2017-2023 and a frequent guest analyst across numerous media platforms. He is a contributing columnist for The Empowerment Alliance, which advocates for realistic approaches to energy consumption and environmental conservation. The opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Empowerment Alliance.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.


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July 30, 2025 at 12:02PM

WINNING — EPA to end “endangerment finding”

CFACT researched it, CFACT advocated for it, and now it’s happening.

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July 30, 2025 at 10:33AM

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July 30, 2025 at 09:59AM