By Alan
Caruba
One of the lesser known attempts to
prove that renewable energy, wind and solar power, can replace traditional
energy sources--coal, oil, and natural gas--went belly up in much the same way
current wind and solar companies depend on tapping the taxpayer for government
subsidies in order to stay in business. Google’s Renewable Energy Cheaper than
Coal initiative begun in 2007 and shut down four years
later.
Two members of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Ross Koningstein and David Fork, worked on
the project. Both men have excellent credentials in
aerospace engineering and applied physicals, respectively, but neither had a
clue about climatology. Expertise in one field rarely translates to another
unless it is closely allied.
At the start of the project "we shared the attitude of many stalward environmentalists. We felt that with steady improvements to today's renewable energy technologies, our society could stave off catastrophic climate change. We now know that to be a false hope, but that doesn't mean the planet is doomed."
At the start of the project "we shared the attitude of many stalward environmentalists. We felt that with steady improvements to today's renewable energy technologies, our society could stave off catastrophic climate change. We now know that to be a false hope, but that doesn't mean the planet is doomed."
Environmentalists start off with
several thoroughly incorrect beliefs that are not supported by science. The
first is that climate change has anything to do with human activity such as
carbon dioxide and other so-called “greenhouse gases.”
The Earth is not a greenhouse. It is
always in the process of absorbing and discharging heat via the atmosphere and
the oceans. If it retained heat all life on Earth would die. Even on a hot
summer’s day, it will cool at night. Deserts, too, are often cooler at night.
As for carbon dioxide, it is a trace gas
in the atmosphere at barely 0.04%, but it is also the gas which all vegetation
requires. In turn, vegetation gives off oxygen while we humans and other animals
exhale carbon dioxide.
Secondly, environmentalists mistakenly
believe that carbon dioxide emissions from the use of energy, particularly coal
and oil, are so great that it affects the weather defined as what is happening
now and the climate whose trends can only be determined decades and centuries
from now. The constant claims about carbon dioxide emissions are blatantly
false.
There is no basis in science for
nations to reduce so-called greenhouse gas emissions. Indeed, more carbon
dioxide would be a good thing for the planet’s vegetation, yielding healthier
forests and greater crop yields on farms.
Thirdly, environmentalists believe
that we shall run out of coal, oil, and natural gas at some point. The current
estimates put that point very far in the future and, since new reserves are
being found, they show no indication of not being available for a very long time
to come.
“Trying to combat climate change
exclusively with today’s renewable energy technologies simply won’t work,” said
the two IEEE engineers. They’re right. Of all the forms of energy available wind
and solar are so expensive and so unpredictable that they make no sense based on
the false notion that humans can impact the Earth’s climate now or ever.
The public is never told that wind
turbines and solar farms all require a traditional electrical energy
producer—coal, oil, or natural gas-based—because they don’t function if the sun
is not shining or the wind is not blowing. These days, we can add nuclear plants
to those deemed traditional. Hydroelectrical plants are also traditional.
It is the American taxpayer who is
paying the price for renewable energy that is more costly to produce than
traditional coal-fired plants or those now benefitting from the reduced cost of
natural gas thanks to fracking technology that Is securing more of it, as well
as oil.
A Fox News headline recently reported that the “World’s largest solar plant applying for federal grant to pay off federal loan.” The wealthy investors in a California solar plant, the Ivanpah solar plant, owned by Google and the renewable energy giant, NRG, not only received a $1.6 billion construction loan from U.S. taxpayers, but they are now requesting a $539 million grant to pay off their loan!
A Fox News headline recently reported that the “World’s largest solar plant applying for federal grant to pay off federal loan.” The wealthy investors in a California solar plant, the Ivanpah solar plant, owned by Google and the renewable energy giant, NRG, not only received a $1.6 billion construction loan from U.S. taxpayers, but they are now requesting a $539 million grant to pay off their loan!
William La Jeunesse of Fox News
reported that “In 2013, the Obama administration handed out $18.5 billion in
renewable energy grants, with $4.4 billion going to solar projects.” Now one of
those projects wants the government to give them money to help pay off their
construction loan.
La Jeunesse reported, “the plant produced only about a quarter of the power it’s supposed to, a disappointing 254,263 magawatt-hours of electricity from January through August, not the million megawatt-hours it promised.”
Renewable energy is a huge taxpayer
and consumer rip-off.
Where solar leaves off, wind energy has been tapping taxpayers by means of the wind energy Production Tax Credit, (PTC) a form of welfare for wind energy companies. The Institute for Energy Research released a white paper in November noting that “A two-year extension will cost $13.35 billion, which is enough to pay 124 million Americans’ monthly electricity bills.”
Where solar leaves off, wind energy has been tapping taxpayers by means of the wind energy Production Tax Credit, (PTC) a form of welfare for wind energy companies. The Institute for Energy Research released a white paper in November noting that “A two-year extension will cost $13.35 billion, which is enough to pay 124 million Americans’ monthly electricity bills.”
The PTC “allows wind producers to pay
the grid to take their power and still profit.” This “negative pricing” forced
two nuclear plants to close their doors because they could not compete against
the practice. This would be a good time to let your congressman know that you
don’t want to have the PTC extended any further.
Still think wind energy is a good
thing? Fully 65% of voters think that two decades of tax credits is enough! Wind
energy, like solar, tends to produce more electricity when it is needed least.
To top off reasons to stop throwing money at it, the Institute for Energy
Research has found that “wind energy costs $109 per megawatt hour, which is
twice as much as this year’s average wholesale electricity price of $54 per
MWh.”
To wrap up this look at renewable
energy the Obama administration’s “war on coal” is going to cause utility bills
to surge. As reported on Bloomberg News, according to the Brattle Group, a
Cambridge, Massachusetts-based consulting company, “the loss of the cheaper coal
units will boast power prices by as much as 25% on grids that serve about a
third of the nation’s population. The biggest impact may be in the Midwest and
Northeast, where demand for gas for heating jumps during the cold-weather
months.”
The Environmental Protection Agency
has come up with more ways to shut down the provision of electrical power as its
proposed Mercury and Air Toxics Standards go into effect, requiring coal-fired
plants to install scrubbers or close their doors.
The EPA is not protecting anyone’s
health. It is forcing them to pay more for what should be the most traditional
and affordable sources of electricity in the world. It is putting people's lives
at stake if the power is not available.
© Alan Caruba, 2014
No comments:
Post a Comment