Category: Uncategorized

Brewing Voter Fury Guarantees End to Australia’s Renewable Energy Target

Brewing Voter Fury Guarantees End to Australia’s Renewable Energy Target

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  Pensioners who can no longer afford power vote. The adult children of those pensioners vote. South Australian businessman, Stephen Scherer – owner of Plastic Granulating Services – who was forced to permanently shut the gates on an otherwise profitable business when his power bill went from $80,000 a month to $180,000 a month votes. … Continue reading Brewing Voter Fury Guarantees End to Australia’s Renewable Energy Target

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July 13, 2017 at 02:31AM

THE GRENFELL DISASTER CAUSED BY INFERIOR EU REGULATIONS PUTTING CLIMATE CHANGE ABOVE SAFETY

THE GRENFELL DISASTER CAUSED BY INFERIOR EU REGULATIONS PUTTING CLIMATE CHANGE ABOVE SAFETY

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This piece from Christopher Booker exposes the whole shambles in a clear concise manner. When will our political masters learn to stop compromising and do the right thing?

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July 13, 2017 at 01:30AM

Solar in Seattle? Not So Fast (clouds, clouds, my Dear Watson)

Solar in Seattle? Not So Fast (clouds, clouds, my Dear Watson)

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“Seattle tops the list with 226 days of heavy clouds each year, or about 62%. Portland is next with 222 days of heavy clouds.”

“It rarely gets real hot in western Washington (most houses don’t have or need air conditioners, and only one of my neighbors has one). But that reduces the rationale for solar panels further, since they are best at cutting peak power demand by supplying electricity and absorbing heat of the sun on hot afternoons.”

The new Administration is shifting federal energy policies and that concerns companies, employees, and advocates of solar power. “Sunset for solar incentives? Panel installers worry about industry’s outlook,” Seattle Times, July 1, 2017) quotes one solar CEO on what may be a solar apocalypse for Washington state’s solar industry:

“Solar energy is looking at 2020 as a critical year,” Jeremy Smithson, CEO and founder of Puget Sound Solar, said last week about the scheduled sunset date for state renewable-energy incentive programs designed to make solar more affordable.

Then the Seattle Times article reports on costs and subsidies:

Cost remains the biggest barrier for solar. Weather is not actually a problem, with long summer days providing enough sun to make up for rainy winters. Despite increasingly efficient technology and declining costs, most customers in Washington still rely on state and federal incentives to make the substantial cost of installing solar pencil out.

Is it true that “long summer days” in Washington state “make up for rainy winters” for solar here? It’s true that winter days are shorter and summer days longer at 47.6 north latitude (16 hours of sun on the summer solstice!). But it’s also true that days in spring and fall days as well as winter are also often overcast and rainy.

Cloudiest Cities in America,” reports:

The west coast cities of Portland and Seattle top the list of cloudiest large cities in the United States.

Overall, nine major American cities have solid overcast for more than 180 days a year. Besides the Pacific Northwest, cities with frequent cloudy weather are mainly near the Great Lakes.

Seattle tops the list with 226 days of heavy clouds each year, or about 62%. Portland is next with 222 days of heavy clouds.

Sperlings “Best Places” Climate overview page for Seattle says:

On average, there are 152 sunny days per year in Seattle, Washington.

The Olympic Rain Shadow website which compares the relatively sunny city of Sequim with Seattle reports for 2010-2011 that Seattle had 88 mostly sunny days, 117 partly sunny days, 137 cloudy days, and 23 “dreary days.” (Sequim, in the shadow of the Olympic mountain range, enjoyed 127, 127, 102, and 9).

Rooftop solar installations in Sequim generate significantly more power than those in Seattle. Unfortunately for the solar installation industry, the population of Sequim is under 7,000 while over 700,000 live in Seattle and 3.8 million in Seattle plus suburbs and nearby cities.

Skeptical of solar power subsidies is “Washington’s Solar Subsidies Cost 13.5 Times The Price Of Power Generated,” (Daily Caller, April 14, 2016):

The Washington Policy Center estimates that the solar subsidies will cost the state government $24.7 million a year by 2020 when the program is scheduled to expire. The state government admits the subsidies program cost $7,980,142 in fiscal year 2015.

The subsidy cash isn’t just coming from the state government, as the program is structured so people can also pick up a 30 percent tax credit from the American federal government.

Consumers benefit as the cost of solar power efficiency increases and the cost of panels continues to drop. But solar installation and maintenance costs remain high and continue to be costly to Washington state and federal taxpayers. At least until 2020.

Still, back to the Seattle Times solar climate claim:

Weather is not actually a problem, with long summer days providing enough sun to make up for rainy winters.

Weather is a problem for those of us irritated by Seattle’s many cloudy, rainy, and sometimes dreary days. We benefit however from Seattle moderate temperature. It rarely gets real hot in western Washington (most houses don’t have or need air conditioners, and only one of my neighbors has one). But that reduces the rationale for solar panels further, since they are best at cutting peak power demand by supplying electricity and absorbing heat of the sun on hot afternoons.

Providing power at periods of peak demand is a huge benefit to electric utilities, since it reduces their peak load and highest-cost electricity.

But again, we don’t have much of those hot, hot afternoons in Seattle. The Best Places link above gives the numbers:

The July high is around 75 degrees. The January low is 37. Sperling’s comfort index for Seattle is a 79 out of 100, where a higher score indicates a more comfortable year-around climate. The US average for the comfort index is 54. Our index is based on the total number of days annually within the comfort range of 70-80 degrees, and we also applied a penalty for days of excessive humidity.

So, three cheers for solar power in sunny places where can deliver true cost-savings for consumers and electric utilities.

My Solar Moment

Here in Seattle I continue to enjoy my solar-powered water fountain. Long summer days benefit this small solar installation. It’s not running this evening even though the sun is shining because of another Seattle solar problem: trees. Lots of lush green trees here. They are wonderful and their shadows shade our homes. But those shadows also stop nearly solar panels from time to time as the sun travels the sky each day.

Here though is picture from another day when the sun was aligned to hit the little solar panel powering the little pump to launch my solar fountain. (Here is a similar model for $89 on Hayneedle.com.)

 

The post Solar in Seattle? Not So Fast (clouds, clouds, my Dear Watson) appeared first on Master Resource.

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July 13, 2017 at 01:06AM

The Conversation: Private Home Ownership May Not Be Viable Because Climate

The Conversation: Private Home Ownership May Not Be Viable Because Climate

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Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Western Sydney University Researcher Louise Crabtree, writing for The Conversation, thinks in a world torn by climate disasters ownership of private property may have to be sacrificed, to be replaced by a system of housing cooperatives or a roaming right to reside.

Can property survive the great climate transition?

Property is under threat, physically and conceptually, from climate change.

July 13, 2017 6.06am AEST

Author
Louise Crabtree
Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University

As we become an increasingly urban species, urban resilience is emerging as a big deal. The idea is generating a lot of noise about how to develop or retrofit cities that can deal with the many challenges before us, or consume less energy in the transition to post-carbon economies.

If our cities are to become more resilient and sustainable, our systems of property need to come along for the ride.

Models that allow for change

These are live questions. There are no easy answers, but there are places where we might start.

Models such as rolling easements offer one way to handle property that is in flux. Rolling easements are a form of property that recognises that the coast is a dynamic landscape and allows for the coastline of wetlands to migrate inland as sea levels rise.

These sound promising in their capacity to balance private and public interests in property, but their potential has not yet been tested in areas of urban development, such as housing.

Echoing the potential mobility and flexibility of rolling easements are diverse housing tenures that can dislocate the right to reside in place from exclusionary, proprietary title to an individual, speculative housing “asset”.

Examples include housing co-operatives and community land trusts. So far, these have proven effective in delivering a range of affordable and flexible housing options, but still ultimately rely on an understanding that property is static.

We might also need to start thinking about our claims not being static but dependent on the web of relationships we are entwined in, including with non-humans. Some say that First Peoples might have a grasp of property dynamics that is more suited to the times we are entering.

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I would have thought the current system of paying more insurance if you want to live somewhere desirable but vulnerable, like low lying beachfront property, works pretty well. But apparently this solution is not good enough. People who believe they own their own house can’t easily be relocated if some rare species of slime mould is discovered lurking in their back garden.

If you assume the author is an inconsequential fringe academic, think again. According to her university bibliography, in 2009, the author of the article Louise Crabtree received the following recognition from then Federal Minister for Housing Tanya Pilbersek.

… Louise’s work on resilience and governance in community housing was the basis for her receipt of the inaugural Housing Minister’s Award for Early Career Researchers in 2009; in announcing the award, the Hon. Tanya Plibersek described the work as ‘crucial’.

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Louise’s reference to the wisdom of the first peoples being “more suited” to surviving the future is also worth a read. The following quote from that referenced Guardian article caught my eye.

The western idea of private property is flawed. Indigenous peoples have it right

Our capitalist property regime and economic system have succeeded at producing remarkable surplus. But the benefits of this system too often flow to a small fraction of the population, while land, water, air and people pay the long-term price.

Prior generations responded to similar crises by turning to communism. But today, Marx, Lenin and Mao no longer offer a scythe sharp enough to fell the stalks of capitalism.

Another, more cutting-edge possibility is to heed the diverse indigenous voices displaced and drowned out by imperialism. From Standing Rock to Queensland, colonized and indigenous people are demanding new relationships to water that sustains the life and land which provides for the people.

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July 13, 2017 at 12:00AM