Stop These Things’ Weekly Round Up: 22 June 2025

Donald J Trump made it very plain that he hated the wind industry and he is making good on his promise to destroy it, piece, by subsidised piece.

Founded on myth, built on lies and running on subsidies the great wind power fraud has truly met its match.

Which brings us to this week’s roundup.

The team from Jo Nova takes a look at the deliberate destruction of Australia’s once reliable and affordable power generation systems. The object of providing massive subsidies to wind and solar is to render reliable coal-fired power generators unviable. The consequences include crushing power prices and, ultimately, a total collapse of the grid. Just like Spain.

Australian coal plants falling apart due to neglect, Wind power useless — “We nearly saw widespread outages”
Jo Nova Blog
Jo Nova
19 June 2025

In this cracking little video documentary, Steve Cortes provide an in-a-nutshell report on why wind power represent the greatest economic and environmental fraud, of all time.  This is definitely one made for sharing  among those who need a refresher or an introduction to the great wind scam.

Blown Away: Exposing the Wind Scam
Cortes Investigates
Steve Cortes
2 June 2025

Paul Driessen provides some more critical details about the Spanish energy devolution, recounting how, on 16 April this year, Spain’s wind and sun cult were crowing about running on nothing but sunshine and breezes (for a few minutes) and then a fortnight later Spain and Portugal running on household generators and candles.

Spain’s impossible dream of ‘green’ electricity
CFACT
Paul Driessen
18 June 2025

Parker Gallant

Provides another snapshot of the utter chaos being caused to Ontario’s power grid by the haphazard, and occasional, delivery of wind power. No real surprise!

Industrial Wind Turbines Ups and Downs fully on Display June 19th, 2025
Energy Perspectives
Parker Gallant
20 June 2025

The team from Jo Nova takes the stick to Ruin-economy for yet another monstrous abuse of the English language.

Liars and wordsmiths don’t demolish and rebuild wind farms they “repower” them
Jo Nova Blog
Jo Nova
21 June 2025

STT welcomes Ben Dobbin to the battle front. Ben is a Queenslander who has entered the fray with a series of cracking podcasts. Tap in, starting with the link below, as Ben reveals every insidious aspect of the great wind power fraud.

Wind farm stats 
Spotify
Ben Dobbin
18 June 2025

Stay tuned, STT will be back next week with more.

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June 22, 2025 at 02:35AM

Spain’s Govt Blames Everything But The Real Culprit For Blackouts

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c62d8k8edgxo

So that’s alright then! Nothing to worry about.

Nothing to do with the Spanish government’s obsession with renewable energy! Just blame it all on bureaucrats and capitalism.

Except, of course, it was solar power which was at front and centre of the blackouts, a fact which even the whitewash report could not disguise.

The catalyst for the blackout was a sudden loss of 2.2GW of electricity at Granada substation in southern Spain. The report does not appear to address why this happened, which you might have thought was crucial! But it is believed that one or two solar farms stopped transmitting because of negative prices – these resulted from too much solar generation for too little demand, and this is exactly how the market is supposed to work; negative prices lead to less generation, thus bringing the system into balance.

However solar power now makes up such a large part of Spain’s electricity (about 60% at the time of the blackouts), that the very system of negative pricing is a threat in itself to the grid.

As soon as that 2.2GW disappeared, voltages in the local grid plummeted, leading to a complicated chain reaction of grid disconnections. Within 30 seconds the entire Iberian peninsula was experiencing a complete blackout.

The Government whitewash tried to put the blame on the grid operator Red Eléctrica not making sure enough gas power was on the system at the time, which might have provided enough inertia to provide the crucial seconds needed to stabilise the system.

The report, by the way. was presented by Sara Aagesen, Spain’s minister of “ecological transition and demographic challenge” – I suggest that in future, the Spanish Government makes sure its energy system is run by an energy expert, rather than a climate activist. According to Grok:

Aagesen graduated from the Complutense University of Madrid with a degree in chemical engineering, specializing in environmental affairs. Since 2002, she has worked extensively in climate action and energy transition, starting at the Spanish Office for Climate Change (OECC)

But it is Spanish government policy to minimise and eventually get rid of gas power. It was only two weeks before the blackouts that they were bragging that Spain’s grid ran entirely on renewable energy for the first time ( a claim, by the way, which was fake!).

You can hardly overload your grid with intermittent renewables and then complain that there was not enough gas power to deal with those problems of intermittency. Neither can you mandate those renewables and then blame the grid operator for failing to deal with the problems created.

Despite the BBC’s distortions, the facts are very, very simple. If Spain had been running their grid with considerably more gas power and considerably less solar power, those blackouts categorically would not have occurred.

What is noticeable is that since the blackout, Spain has kept much more gas power running. Just before the blackouts, only 2GW of gas power was being produced, 7% of the total load.

In the last day or two, gas power has not dropped below 5GW.

Coincidence? I think not!

https://www.energymonitor.ai/power/live-eu-electricity-generation-map

Engineering & Technology have a much more factual review of the report than the BBC’s propaganda here.


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June 22, 2025 at 12:03AM

Watch: Morano on Fox on how Iran conflict may impact U.S. energy prices

‘Energy markets do not like war — they particularly do not like war in the Middle East’

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June 21, 2025 at 11:16PM

Natural Gas Projects Reboot After Officials Wake Up to Stark Realities

By Gary Abernathy

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

When the government abuses its powers in pursuit of far-left political goals at the expense of commonsense policies, entire states and regions often suffer.

Such was the case in recent years when numerous projects centered on traditional energy were derailed by environmental extremists who leveraged the tools of government to erect roadblock after roadblock. Most famously, the Biden administration canceled the Keystone XL project in 2021, which was designed to carry 830,000 barrels of oil sands crude per day from Alberta to Nebraska.

Rather than play losing hands dealt from stacked decks, frustrated energy companies eventually began pulling the plug on one project after another, all to the detriment of businesses and families. Meanwhile, the government artificially propped up wind and solar projects, promoting energy sources that raided taxpayer wallets and were more expensive, less reliable and less efficient than traditional sources of energy.

Among the natural gas pipeline projects that ground to a halt were the Constitution and the Northeast Supply Enhancement (NESE) pipelines, both designed to transport natural gas to New York. Activists agitated against the projects, often centering their arguments on supposed clean water concerns and the alleged dangers of fracking. Even though the fracking was happening in Pennsylvania – and the projects had received approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission – New York state officials ultimately caved to the pressure from the far left and denied permits.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) was a leader among the anti-pipeline forces. In 2019, Cuomo had “signed into law the state’s goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050,” as NPR previously reported. Of the pipeline efforts, Cuomo pledged that “any way that we can challenge it, we will.”

After years of costly battles – and in the face of New York regulatory officials and politicians determined to stand in their way – company officials threw their hands in the air and gave up on the Constitution project in 2020, doing the same just a year ago in regard to the NESE pipeline.

Environmental groups were ecstatic. When the Constitution project shut down, Earthjustice staff attorney Moneen Nasmith said, “At this critical moment for our climate, we cannot afford unnecessary fossil fuel projects that will lead to more fracking and exacerbate our climate crisis.”

As evidenced by increasingly frequent blackouts and faulty grid performances, the so-called “alternatives” favored by self-labeled “environmental groups” have proven to be poor substitutes for affordable and reliable traditional energy resources. Among those resources, natural gas leads the way in both cost effectiveness and cleanliness. Natural gas has become increasingly “green” with a low carbon footprint compared to other fossil fuels.

Shutting down the natural gas pipeline projects led to predictable consequences – a shortage of gas in New York and New England, leading to understandable worries about sustaining reliable energy. As demonstrated by the blackout that hit Spain, Portugal and parts of France in late April, natural gas is essential to producing electricity and rescuing residents from grid failures caused by the weaknesses of wind and solar.

But there’s renewed hope for New York and the surrounding region. Because of the Trump administration’s posture favoring traditional energy sources, the Williams Companies – owners of the Constitution and NESE pipeline projects – announced in late May that they are working with government officials to revive both projects.

The news came after some savvy maneuvering by U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and a less severe attitude by current Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul. Burgum had issued a stop-work order on an off-shore wind project near New York. He lifted that order last month – a move that Hochul requested – saying he was encouraged that Hochul “will allow new gas pipeline capacity to move forward,” according to Reuters.

For her part, Hochul “did not specifically endorse the gas pipes but said in a statement that New York would work with the U.S. administration and private entities on projects that meet the legal requirements under state law,” Reuters reported. If not an expression of full-throated support, Hochul’s position is a far cry from Cuomo’s previous pledge to oppose the project “any way that we can challenge it.”

A Williams official said the company has submitted a petition to federal regulators to get started again, and “has begun working through state permitting matters with environmental regulators in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York and will be promptly filing applications with those agencies to secure the necessary permits for advancing both the NESE and Constitution Pipeline projects.”

Time and again, opposition to traditional energy collides with stark reality, too often only after disaster strikes and officials are forced to turn to tried-and-true resources. The proactive measures by the Trump administration, and the tempered responses from some officials on the left who choose to acknowledge reality, just might be happening in time to avert the pending energy disasters facing the U.S. and other countries.

The New York pipeline saga is a microcosm of the challenges facing the country, thanks to the misguided priorities of the climate cult. Local government officials from coast to coast would be wise to acknowledge what New York officials seem to be realizing: Building the delivery system for natural gas is delivering on the promise of affordable and reliable energy for all.

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. Abernathy’s “TEA Takes” column will be published every Wednesday and delivered to your inbox!

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


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June 21, 2025 at 08:01PM