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The Bank of England Is Enslaved By Green Groupthink

The Bank of England Is Enslaved By Green Groupthink

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

What happens to its projections when the taxpayers of the world tire of being milked to subsidise renewables?

I do find it odd that I’m so often having to write about the science of global warming, species extinction and ocean acidification because, though I’ve certainly acquired a pretty useful base knowledge over the years — superior, I’m guessing, to 97 per cent of scientists — it’s really not my main interest. What fascinates me far more is the way the faddish preoccupations of a few green cultists have somehow come to dominate our entire culture, corrupting the intellectual current, suborning institutions, crushing dissent — much as Marxist, fascist and Nazi ideologies did in the 20th century, only with rather more widespread success.

Let me give you a recent example of this: an article from the June Quarterly Bulletin of the Bank of England, titled ‘The Bank’s response to climate change’. Nothing wrong with the premise: it is indeed part of the Bank’s statutory duty to ‘identify, monitor and take action to remove or reduce risks that threaten the resilience of the UK financial system’. The problem, argues energy editor John Constable in a critique for the Global Warming Policy Foundation, is the inexcusably one-sided way in which the bank has handled it. The report’s focus is directed almost entirely towards the risks posed by fossil fuels. So we learn lots about the droughts, floods and storms that may be caused by ‘man-made climate change’. And also — a popular campaign theme with the Guardian and Greenpeace, this one — that the world’s remaining fossil fuel reserves (coal, oil, gas, etc) may have to be left in the ground as ‘stranded assets’, unusable because of the damage that burning them will supposedly do to the planet.

But we don’t hear about the more plausible and immediate economic risks posed by renewables. The most obvious one is what will happen if taxpayers around the world tire of being milked to subsidise bird-frazzling solar arrays, bat-chomping eco-crucifixes, river-polluting anaerobic digesters, electric cars whose batteries alone create more CO2 during manufacture than a petrol car does in eight years, and suchlike, and the Potemkin industry that is renewables comes crashing to a sudden halt? It’s not as if clever people haven’t considered this possibility. Warren Buffett once frankly admitted that the only reason for building wind farms was for the ‘tax credits’ And though it’s true that most western economies from the EU to Australia and Canada are now run by administrations broadly in favour of such green crony capitalism, the gravy train may not trundle on for ever. Look at what is now happening in the US under their new president.

I really don’t expect people who write reports for the Quarterly Bulletin of the Bank of England to share my politics. What I do expect is that people in such important positions should do their actual job. If this report was on, say, the insights of Stormzy, the comparative merits of Stilton and Roquefort, or whether the jam or the clotted cream should go first on a scone, it would, of course, be deeply annoying if they got it wrong. But it would not, I submit, be as socially, economically and politically damaging as one which will influence central bank policy in the world’s fifth largest economy.

Consider the repercussions when the Bank of England fails, as here, to do its due diligence: pension funds misallocate their investments; governments and green campaigners alike weave ‘experts at the Bank of England’ into their propaganda and policy justifications; public debate is distracted from serious issues by chimeras; businesses either misdirect their investments or simply give up the fight and jump on the band-wagon; financial journalists who should know better become unthinking mouthpieces for the climate industrial complex; City departments, from human resources to compliance and marketing, devise new ways to entrench environmental correctness into their philosophy; law firms wonder if there’s any money to be made suing firms that haven’t factored in the relevant risks.

When the Bank of England sneezes, in other words, the whole world catches a cold. (In the private sector there are heavy penalties for producing such false prospectuses. You wonder why similar rules don’t apply to our public institutions.)

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via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

June 29, 2017 at 02:41AM

The Sting: How the Wind Industry Pulled Off the Greatest Con-Job in History

The Sting: How the Wind Industry Pulled Off the Greatest Con-Job in History

via STOP THESE THINGS
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*** The 1973 Paul Newman (Henry “Shaw” Gondorff) and Robert Redford (Johnny “Kelly” Hooker) classic, The Sting – set in the heart of the 1930s Depression – pitted the bright and brazen young con-men against one of Chicago’s toughest mobsters in an effort to relieve him of his ill-gotten gains. The film reveals the protagonists’ … Continue reading The Sting: How the Wind Industry Pulled Off the Greatest Con-Job in History

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June 29, 2017 at 02:30AM

LINK BETWEEN CO2 RISE AND SURFACE TEMPERATURE GETTING WEAKER AS PAUSE CONTINUES

LINK BETWEEN CO2 RISE AND SURFACE TEMPERATURE GETTING WEAKER AS PAUSE CONTINUES

via climate science
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New paper shows that the pause in global temperature rise is real and continues while CO2 continues to rise.  All climate models project that temperatures should not be levelling off, but should be increasing (despite interannual variability).

via climate science http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

June 29, 2017 at 01:30AM

Wind News Update: The Failure of RGGI, Ohio Safety First (June 29, 2017)

Wind News Update: The Failure of RGGI, Ohio Safety First (June 29, 2017)

via Master Resource
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“RGGI proponents want us to believe that the program is delivering on a global environmental promise, but the reality is the nine-state cap and trade system is a colossal failure of resource allocation that should be repealed to leave more efficient market forces.”

“During the Ohio debate, safety repeatedly took a backseat to economic opportunity. However, the problem for the wind industry is that safety is increasingly an issue as the incidence of turbine failure appears to be accelerating.”

[Editor Note: A new feature at MasterResource will periodically review important wind-related news in the US and around the world. For proponents of fuel-neutral, let-the-market-decide energy policy, as well as those opposing industrial wind turbines for environmental reasons, the news is increasingly positive. It should be highlighted and shared to motivate grassroots energy activists. MasterResource is indebted to Lisa Linowes for authoring this new series.]

The Failure of RGGI

The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (‘RGGI’) is the darling of regulators in the nine participating states that include New England, New York, Delaware and Maryland. RGGI boosters insist the carbon cap-and-trade program is responsible for precipitous declines in carbon emissions, saving consumers hundreds of millions in energy costs, creating thousands of new jobs and improving public health.

The problem for the boosters is that RGGI’s own numbers do not support their glowing claims.

Citing from the September 2016 report by RGGI.org, (“The Investment of RGGI Proceeds through 2014”), fossil plant owners in the RGGI states, or more exactly, consumers of their energy, forked over $1.79 billion[1] to their state governments in the period from 2008 to 2014 to be spent on programs meant to reduce carbon emissions.

Of these funds, the states seized $93.1 million to meet budget shortfalls, allocated $329.4 for future programs and ‘invested’ the remaining $1.37 billion in projects that by 2014 reportedly trained 7,200 workers[2] and reduced carbon emissions by 1.7 million tons with an expected lifetime carbon avoidance of 15.4 million tons.

Impressed? Don’t be!

In the same period (2008–2014) the free market reduced electric sector carbon emissions in the RGGI states by 43.1 million tons – 25 times more than RGGI’s claim – and at no cost to ratepayers! [3]

But it doesn’t end there.

Since 2008, the clearing price for RGGI allowances has averaged $3.31 per ton. At their highest, the allowances reached $7.50 in December 2015 before tumbling to $2.54 per ton today. But this fact has repeatedly been lost on state regulators who approved spending $1.37 billion to lower emissions by just 15.4 million tons which equates to $89 per ton! In short, RGGI sold allowances for well under $10/ton and then RGGI states built offset projects costing $89/ton. On specific projects, the cost per allowance was often much higher.[4]

RGGI proponents want us to believe that the program is delivering on a global environmental promise, but the reality is the nine-state cap and trade system is a colossal failure of resource allocation that should be repealed to leave more efficient market forces.

Ohio Puts Safety First

Late last month, Ohio State Senator Cliff Hite unveiled a last minute amendment to the Senate’s final state budget bill that, if enacted, would drastically reduce the state’s minimum turbine setback distance from 1300-feet to the property line of adjacent parcels to 1.2 times turbine height.[5]

Big wind advocates aggressively pushed for passage of the Hite amendment claiming the current setback protections were excessive and unnecessary, froze development in the state, and barred billions in wind-related investment in the state.

During the debate, safety repeatedly took a backseat to economic opportunity. However, the problem for the wind industry is that safety is increasingly an issue as the incidence of turbine failure appears to be accelerating.

We were reminded of the 2012 Ohio Supreme court order affirming the Ohio Power Siting Board’s (OPSB) approval for the Buckeye Wind facility to proceed. In her dissenting opinion, Justice Stratton chastised the OPSB staff for accepting Buckeye’s safety claims despite a lack of evidence and closed with this “…’ …even though this appeal represents the final review of the final order of the board, we have no evidence that the project is being built safely away from yards and homes, and we never will. Yet the majority affirms the order.”

The Buckeye project is still in litigation but Justice Stratton’s concerns have already been demonstrated in the field. A month after her dissent, two blades on a Vestas V100 1.8 MW wind turbine sited at an operating project in Ohio shattered under high wind conditions catapulting blade debris up to 1,000 feet from the turbine’s foundation. The Hite amendment would have placed property owners at risk.

But in news this week, worried Ohio residents were pleased to learn that the Hite amendment has been withdrawn from the budget bill.

——————-

[1] In the ensuing years since 2014, RGGI has drained another $1billion from the participating states.

[2] RGGI does not cited the number of jobs created. Workers trained represents the total number of “training seats filled directly by the program from inception through to 2014” without double counting workers who might have attended more than one training course.

[3] U.S. EIA 1980-2014 EIA numbers are converted to short tons using (1.10231 short tons/metric ton) in order to be consistent with RGGI reporting.

[4] The $1.5 million price tag for Sofia’s Plaza in Connecticut to install a 0.5 MW solar PV system (rooftop and ground-based) was funded 100% through RGGI auction proceeds. According to RGGI, the project is expected to annually save 475.2 MWh and avoid 275 carbon tons (5,500 short tons saved over 20 years). Based on these figures, the cost per carbon ton over 20 years is $273.

[5] See Sec. 4906.20 of the Ohio Budget Bill HB 49 as passed by the Senate. The wording also requires turbines to be situated at least 1,225 feet in horizontal distance from the exterior of the nearest, habitable, residential structure if any is located on adjacent property at the time when a project application is approved.

The post Wind News Update: The Failure of RGGI, Ohio Safety First (June 29, 2017) appeared first on Master Resource.

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June 29, 2017 at 01:13AM