We Don’t Need No Stinking French Fry Grease

A legal setback for the Crazy People;

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) cannot impose a mandate for a non-existent product and then punish companies for failing to use said non-existent product, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled.
That non-existent product? Cellulosic biofuels, a type of ethanol made from non-food sources such as wood chips, switchgrass, and non-edible feedstock.
The court ruled that the EPA can set renewable fuel production standards as a means to stimulate economic development, but it cannot punish companies who fail to meet those standards.
“Do a good job, cellulosic fuel producers. If you fail, we’ll fine your customers,” the judges wrote.

Deepcorp – SaskPower Deal?

We get letters…

It occurs to me this is something you might want to investigate. [Saskatoon based Deepcorp] is proposing to build a geothermal generating plant in the far southeast corner of Sask., beyond Estevan. Supposedly the principals in this deal have an agreement in place with Sask Power to designate it as a “hydroelectric” facility, thus permitting a 40-year electricity supply contract, and a price several cents per kWh above the wholesale price of power from coal plants.
Apparently, exploratory drilling for gas/oil has disclosed the presence of a large volume of hot water (118C) in a formation just above the basement rock. They propose to pump this hot water to surface, use it as a heat source for turbines using a low-boiling point working fluid, and returning the now-cooled water to a disposal well in a higher formation. The proposal calls for a 5 mW pilot plant, growing ultimately to 500 mW.
Calling it a “hydro” plant does not make it so, even if Sask Power goes along with the deception, and further, that we both know schemes of this nature would never even be considered if the AGW fraud with its spurious demands for “carbon-free” power were not being peddled by the usual suspects. Also, I have serious doubts that they will ever get their pilot plant up and running. I foresee several potential problems:
1. The water will lose heat as it comes up the wellbore, and will arrive at
less than the formation temperature, so less heat to be exploited.
2. Low-temperature heat engines are inherently inefficient.
3. The source water is probably laden with dissolved salts. It’s fossil
ocean after all. As temperature and pressure are reduced as it comes up the
wellbore, some of those salts may precipitate out, and clog the wellbore or
the tubing. And the hot saline water will be exceedingly corrosive to the
tubing and well casing, and pumps.
4. It’s also quite possible that the hot water will deplete fairly quickly,
and if the formation has good permeability, it will soon be replaced by
cooler water from updip in the formation, again reducing the possible heat
recoverable.
Maybe there will be something on Sask Power’s Web site? I don’t think there is anything actually crooked going on here. But mis-designating this proposal as a “hydro” project stinks to high Heaven. Otherwise, it’s just another pie-in-the-sky wish-project, seeking to capitalize on the carbon scam, and the Wall government should not be touching it.
By the way, it just occurred to me that the way this deal is structured, the
company could run a completely worthless generating plant, buy coal power
from the power plants near Estevan, and resell it at a profit to Sask Power.
Not that I’m accusing them of planning this, but temptation might overtake
them if they had endless trouble with their project.
Hope you found the above interesting.

Emphasis mine. Why the hell an energy rich province would use stuff that works to subsidize stuff that doesn’t, all at the expense of SaskPower customers is anyone’s guess, but it’s the type of scheme known to get previous provincial governments in deep, deep trouble. But when it comes to politicians meddling in the private sector, there’s no such thing as a “lesson learned”, I suppose.
Any and all feedback on this is welcome.

“When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal”

National Journal;

Sen. Ron Wyden has spent two years demanding that the Obama administration share its legal opinions justifying the targeted assassinations of suspected American terrorists abroad. After all, as a member of the Intelligence Committee, the Oregon Democrat is entitled (and cleared) to know. How can his panel provide oversight if officials won’t say what legal authority they have, let alone in which countries it applies? The White House has spent those two years stonewalling. “The administration’s position is basically, ‘Trust us,'” Wyden tells National Journal. “Nowhere in the charge to the committee does oversight get defined as trusting the executive branch of the United States.”

Ask, and ye shall have leaked;

The 16-page memo, a copy of which was obtained by NBC News, provides new details about the legal reasoning behind one of the Obama administration’s most secretive and controversial polices […]
“The condition that an operational leader present an ‘imminent’ threat of violent attack against the United States does not require the United States to have clear evidence that a specific attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place in the immediate future,” the memo states.
Instead, it says, an “informed, high-level” official of the U.S. government may determine that the targeted American has been “recently” involved in “activities” posing a threat of a violent attack and “there is no evidence suggesting that he has renounced or abandoned such activities.” The memo does not define “recently” or “activities.”

So simmer down. It’s not like they’re having their phones tapped.

We Don’t Need No Stinking Giant Fans

Keeping track of alternative failures is like drinking from a firehose;

A $2.5-million wind turbine at the Dorchester Penitentiary has stopped working and the Correctional Service of Canada cannot estimate when it will be generating electricity again.
The federal government purchased two wind turbines for Canadian penitentiaries in the last five years but both units have caused problems.
A 600-kW/h wind turbine was installed at the Dorchester Penitentiary in 2009, making it the first federal institution to generate a portion of its electricity from wind.
However, nearby residents say the wind turbine at Dorchester hasn’t been working in months.

h/t Dan T

Math Is Hard

Before they arrived with their implants, an estimated 2-3 billion stray dogs were roaming First Nations reserves.

Dogs With No Names has implanted 155 dogs so far and Dr. Samson-French said they’ve likely prevented 100,000 puppies. The charity is now conducting a full-scale study of the program and plans to publish the results.

I’ll bet it’s a doozy.
Addendum: I blame the White Man, actually. This wasn’t a problem until Europeans arrived and convinced the Red Man to stop eating dog meat.
Addendum #2: Apparently detecting sarcasm is hard, too.

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

“To make this the greenest Super Bowl, the New Orleans Host Committee has partnered with fans and the community to offset energy use across the major Super Bowl venues. The exterior of the Mercedes-Benz Superdome features more than 26,000 LED lights on 96 full-color graphic display panels, designed to wash the building in a spectrum of animated colors, patterns and images. The system draws only 10 kilowatts of electricity — equivalent to the amount of energy used by a small home — and the lights are expected to last for many years before needing replacement.”

Via American Thinker.

We Don’t Need No Stinking Sparky Cars

Reuters;

Despite the promise of “green” transportation – and despite billions of dollars in investment, most recently by Nissan Motor Co – EVs continue to be plagued by many of the problems that eventually scuttled electrics in the 1910s and more recently in the 1990s. Those include high cost, short driving range and lack of charging stations.
The public’s lack of appetite for battery-powered cars persuaded the Obama administration last week to back away from its aggressive goal to put 1 million electric cars on U.S. roads by 2015.
The tepid response to EVs also pushed Nissan’s high-profile chief executive, Carlos Ghosn, perhaps the industry’s most outspoken proponent of battery cars, to announce in December a major strategic shift toward more mainstream gasoline-electric hybrids, which overcome many of the shortcomings of pure EVs.
The move was widely seen as a tacit acknowledgement by Ghosn that his all-or-nothing, multibillion-dollar bet on EVs is falling far short of his ambition to sell hundreds of thousands of battery-powered Nissan Leafs.


More
– Electric car sales plummet in January

What’s The Opposite Of Diversity?

University!

During his testimony Wednesday, Thandiwe suggested that his reason for even purchasing the gun he used in the shootings was to enforce beliefs he’d developed about white people during his later years as an anthropology major at the University of West Georgia.
“I was trying to prove a point that Europeans had colonized the world, and as a result of that, we see a lot of evil today,” he said. “In terms of slavery, it was something that needed to be answered for. I was trying to spread the message of making white people mend.”

Via

The Sound Of Settled Science

Swedish climate scientist Lennart Bengtsson;

The warming we have had the last a 100 years is so small that if we didn’t have had meteorologists and climatologists to measure it we wouldn’t have noticed it at all.
The Earth appears to have cooling properties that exceeds the previous thought ones, and that computer models are inadequate to try to foretell a chaotic object like the climate, where actual observations is the only way to go.

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