Category: Alternative Subsidy

Y2Kyoto: There’s No Such Thing As Clean Energy

JoNova;

In short: The world spend $3.6 trillion dollars over eight years, mostly trying to change the weather. Only a pitiful 5% of this was spent trying to adapt to the inevitable bad weather which is coming one way or another. Both solar and wind power are perversely useless at reducing CO2, which is their only reason for existing in large otherwise efficient grids. Wind farms raise the temperature of local area around them which causes more CO2 to be released from the soil. Solar and wind farms waste 100 times the wilderness land area of fossil fuels, and need ten times as many minerals mined from the earth. Biomass razes forests, but protects underground coal deposits.
 
The role of large wind and solar power in national grids is to produce redundant surges of electricity at random or low need times, they are surplus infrastructure designed in a religious quest to generate nicer weather. They always make electricity more expensive because the minor fuel savings are vastly overrun by the extra costs of misusing and abusing perfectly good infrastructure, which has to be there to provide baseload and backup, and yet is forced to run on and off, sitting around consuming capital, investments, labor and maintenance. It is simply impossible to imagine a situation where unreliable generators have some productive purpose on major grids other than to generate profits for shareholders or their mostly Chinese manufacturers.
 
Despite the extortionate, futile mountain-of-money paid to wind and solar parasites, they produced a pitiful 3% of all the energy needed on Earth, while fossil fuels produced 85%.

h/t Another Ian

We Don’t Need No Stinking Giant Mirrors

Sacramento Bee;

The manager of California’s power grid said a third night of rolling blackouts Monday was a near certainty, taking in millions across the state as the West continues to swelter and electricity supplies dry up.
 
Steve Berberich, the chief executive of the California Independent System Operator, told reporters that an estimated 3.3 million homes and businesses are likely to be blacked out.
 
[…]
 
Berberich said the state is facing a fundamental problem: California is heavily reliant on solar and other renewable energy sources, and in the evening the solar power vanishes even as more customers switch on their air conditioning. He said the ISO has been sounding the alarm for some time that shortages were coming, to the point that it’s been trying to persuade environmental regulators to postpone the shutdown of some badly polluting power plants in Southern California that are scheduled to be mothballed at year’s end.
 
Berberich blasted regulators at the Public Utilities Commission for exacerbating the supply problem. He said the ISO has warned the PUC for years that grid problems were looming — and has been badgering the PUC to do a better job of forcing the big regulated utilities to line up a lot more power ahead of time, a concept known as “resource adequacy.”
 
But he said the PUC ignored those warnings and the ISO system has often been forced to rely on last-minute imports to avoid blackouts — imports that are in short supply this week because neighboring states are baking.
 
“The situation we are in could have been avoided,” Berberich said. “The resource adequacy is broken.”

It could be worse. It could be -40.

Subsidy Fraud KABOOM

Full thread here.

And another: The thing that absolutely blows my mind: Any engineer in college should be able to figure this out. And any rigorous industry would do root-cause analysis and determine a reason for all these continued failures is low quality (both in worksmanship and material selection).

Related: He promised life-saving ventilators. He delivered sleep apnea machines.

We Don’t Need No Stinking Giant Fans

Manhattan Institute;

When electricity comes from wind or solar machines, every unit of energy produced, or mile traveled, requires far more materials and land than fossil fuels. That physical reality is literally visible: A wind or solar farm stretching to the horizon can be replaced by a handful of gas-fired turbines, each no bigger than a tractor-trailer.
 
Building one wind turbine requires 900 tons of steel, 2,500 tons of concrete and 45 tons of nonrecyclable plastic. Solar power requires even more cement, steel and glass—not to mention other metals. Global silver and indium mining will jump 250% and 1,200% respectively over the next couple of decades to provide the materials necessary to build the number of solar panels, the International Energy Agency forecasts. World demand for rare-earth elements—which aren’t rare but are rarely mined in America—will rise 300% to 1,000% by 2050 to meet the Paris green goals. If electric vehicles replace conventional cars, demand for cobalt and lithium, will rise more than 20-fold. That doesn’t count batteries to back up wind and solar grids.

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