Green Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts

Christopher Horner

Pajamas media update: There have been some developments since this was published.  The short version is that a series of coincidences led Gabriel Calzada to believe a package was a bomb threat.  Let’s just review what Calzada was responding to: he received an unsolicited package addressed as from a “green” company. Thermotechnic.  When he called to ask about it, he was told: “It’s our response to your study [on green jobs].”

It didn’t look like, or feel like, a letter or report, so at that point Calzada got a security guard to scan it — and what was inside was a cylindrical object with wires attached.  At that point, the security guard got an expert to examine it, with others in attendance. The contents were a container for diesel of some sort, and some other parts.  The expert saw this as a bomb threat, based on a pattern used by, eg., ETA: “This one is a hoax bomb.  The next one might not be.”

So Calzada took this as a threat based on the experts’ opinions. Remember that Calzada has been viciously attacked for having had the temerity to publish a study that questioned the economic effectiveness of “green jobs” in Spain, including having been threatened personally and professionally.  It was at that point Horner wrote this piece.

Since then, especially following the controversy becoming public in the Spanish press, the company contacted Calzada; what appears to have happened is this:

  • A package containing car parts was swapped for a package containing a report intended for Calzada.
  • The Thermotechnic person Calzada contacted said something that was ambiguous.
  • Calzada, already the subject of threats and intimidation, relied on expert opinion that it was a bomb threat.

As further information became available, it became clear it was a misunderstanding based on several coincidences. Calzada has written an open letter explaining this in detail, and now agrees there was no threat from Thermotechnic.

======================

The author of a damning study about the failure of Spain’s “green jobs” program — a story broken here at PJM — received the threatening package on Tuesday from solar energy company Thermotechnic.

From Pajamas Media

June 24, 2010 – by Christopher Horner

Spain’s Dr. Gabriel Calzada — the author of a damning study concluding that Spain’s “green jobs” energy program has been a catastrophic economic failure — was mailed a dismantled bomb on Tuesday by solar energy company Thermotechnic.

Says Calzada:

Before opening it, I called [Thermotechnic] to know what was inside … they answered, it was their answer to my energy pieces.

Dr. Calzada contacted a terrorism expert to handle the package. The expert first performed a scan of the package, then opened it in front of a journalist, Dr. Calzada, and a private security expert.

The terrorism consultant said he had seen this before:

This time you receive unconnected pieces. Next time it can explode in your hands.

Dr. Calzada added:

[The terrorism expert] told me that this was a warning.

The bomb threat is just the latest intimidation Dr. Calzada has faced since releasing his report and following up with articles in Expansion (a Spanish paper similar to the Financial Times). A minister from Spain’s Socialist government called the rector of King Juan Carlos University — Dr. Calzada’s employer — seeking Calzada’s ouster. Calzada was not fired, but he was stripped of half of his classes at the university. The school then dropped its accreditation of a summer university program with which Calzada’s think tank — Instituto Juan de Mariana — was associated.

Additionally, the head of Spain’s renewable energy association and the head of its communist trade union wrote opinion pieces in top Spanish newspapers accusing Calzada of being “unpatriotic” — they did not charge him with being incorrect, but of undermining Spain by daring to write the report.

Their reasoning? If the skepticism that Calzada’s revelations prompted were to prevail in the U.S., Spanish industry would face collapse should U.S. subsidies and mandates dry up.

As I have previously reported at PJM (here and here), Spain’s “green jobs” program was repeatedly referenced by President Obama as a model for what he would like to implement in the United States. Following the release of Calzada’s report, Spain’s Socialist government has since acknowledged the debacle — both privately and publicly. This month, Spain’s government instituted massive reductions in subsidies to “renewable” energy sources.

Read the rest of the story here:

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kim
June 24, 2010 6:43 pm

The judge who stopped the moratorium has received threats. Zerohedge has an article about Soros.
=======

June 24, 2010 6:46 pm

There is really no other way to look at the situation. The AGW industry has become an organized crime syndicate.
Calzada messed with the Family, and if he keeps it up, he gets to swim wit’ da fishes. Capice?

Ray
June 24, 2010 6:51 pm

And then they wonder why scientist not swallowing the AGW scam are not coming out in the light… those are still dangerous times to speak out, it seams.

gman
June 24, 2010 6:59 pm

Blacklists,bombthreats,these are acts of terror and not a peep from MSM !!

wobble
June 24, 2010 6:59 pm

Yeah, but big oil is worse or something.

Editor
June 24, 2010 7:00 pm

We have laws in these parts to address issues of this sort:
http://definitions.uslegal.com/t/terroristic-threat/
Perhaps Dr. Calzada should consider moving to Arkansas…
http://www.criminaldefenselawyer.com/crime-penalties/federal/Terrorist-Threat.htm

kim
June 24, 2010 7:03 pm

Calzada’s on someone’s blacklist.
============

CodeTech
June 24, 2010 7:05 pm

As someone pointed out in the comments on the original article:
The best way to handle this would be to assemble it and send it back. Oh, and charge a fee.

trbixler
June 24, 2010 7:06 pm

I worry about Anthony and CTM, with their high visibility. We need these people to continue to speak and host. I continue to thank them for all of their efforts.

Curiousgeorge
June 24, 2010 7:08 pm

I can’t imagine why the company would put their return address on this present. Seems pretty stupid to me.

June 24, 2010 7:12 pm

Does nobody see something odd about the claim that a regular commercial firm is sending out simulated bombs in packages under its own name?
This article (on the opinion page, for which Dr Calzada writes) mentions a simulated bomb in the imaginative headline. But the text says it was a fuel (gasoil) filter with a cable. The firm Termotechnics had intended to send a different item.
No mention of police, only Dr Calzada’s own “bomb expert”.

June 24, 2010 7:14 pm

Missing something. Why were the police not called? Why were anti-terrorist officials not involved? Spain’s no stranger to domestic terrorism, so I don’t understand why this was handled “privately” and wasn’t handled through “official” channels. Maybe there’s a good and rational explanation, and if anyone has one I’d be grateful to understand it.

It's always Marcia, Marcia
June 24, 2010 7:16 pm

the green are for the good. the communist are too.
sarcasm off
unbelievable. But which is more unbelievable, that they did it or that they made it so openly known that they are the ones that did it??

It's always Marcia, Marcia
June 24, 2010 7:19 pm

CodeTech says:
June 24, 2010 at 7:05 pm
As someone pointed out in the comments on the original article:
The best way to handle this would be to assemble it and send it back. Oh, and charge a fee.
……….
lol, Cute!

It's always Marcia, Marcia
June 24, 2010 7:27 pm

Ben Santer only got a rat in a box. No threat of explosion. Just inference. That is if that story is true. And I have my doubts it is. No witness to confirm. Convenient that.
http://subversivesoapbox.posterous.com/bay-area-scientists-decry-attacks-by-skeptics#

Dave L
June 24, 2010 7:36 pm

The Obama Administration is in up to its ears with Cap and Trade; the trading of carbon credits on the Chicago Climate Exchange. It has been thoroughly exposed by Glenn Beck in a remarkable investigative series. It involves Goldman Sachs, George Soros, The Joyce foundation, Fannie May, Franklin Raines, etc. It is a complicated scheme which Beck refers to as Crime Inc. It is worth learning about. Here is a very abbreviated introduction:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,592243,00.html

acementhead
June 24, 2010 7:37 pm

Pajamas Media did warn you at the top of the page
“BANNED ON YOUTUBE: We Con the World ”
People who can’t spell “seems” (and their ilk) would be best to read but not comment.

June 24, 2010 7:41 pm

Speaking of ‘Big Oil’ and machinations on the Green/Climate political front, this piece of analysis makes an interesting read. Very familiar names. Names associated with some fairly ugly events. Hopefully not off topic for the thread.

June 24, 2010 7:42 pm

It does sound to me as though a parts shipment box may have been mixed up with a printed material shipment.
I would have had the POLICE bomb squad look at it. Alas, although I despise the “greens”, as an Engineer with oddles of experrence with everything from Pacemakers to Potash making…I think I could tell “spare parts” from a bomb. (It does seem that the professor HAS talked to someone at the company directly who has indicated it was a shipping error and that the parts have a ligitimate/non-weapon function. I would only go on their word on this and trust it.)

Doug in Seattle
June 24, 2010 7:45 pm

Well, it looks like those stories about the Mafia and wind energy companies in Europe might have some truth in them.

crosspatch
June 24, 2010 7:47 pm

Well, I suppose that if anything happens to the guy we know where the police will make their first stop.

dp
June 24, 2010 7:53 pm

It really is worse than we thought.

jcrabb
June 24, 2010 8:01 pm

Wow, must be the first time a bomb threat has a return address on it.

Wren
June 24, 2010 8:10 pm

Max Hugoson says:
June 24, 2010 at 7:42 pm
It does sound to me as though a parts shipment box may have been mixed up with a printed material shipment.
I would have had the POLICE bomb squad look at it. Alas, although I despise the “greens”, as an Engineer with oddles of experrence with everything from Pacemakers to Potash making…I think I could tell “spare parts” from a bomb. (It does seem that the professor HAS talked to someone at the company directly who has indicated it was a shipping error and that the parts have a ligitimate/non-weapon function. I would only go on their word on this and trust it.)
———–
Are you suggesting skeptics should be more skeptical?

June 24, 2010 8:12 pm

No it’s not worse than we thought, or at least some of us.
I’ve been following this type of thing for two years now.
This gentleman is not the first to be threatened.
Remember the old saying about power corrupting and absolute power corrupting absolutely?????
It appears George Soros is growing perturbed at poeple that know and speak the truth.

Northern Exposure
June 24, 2010 8:16 pm

Obviously there’s billions of dollars at stake here. It’s the only motivation, in my humble opinion, that a corporation would deem as ‘justification’ to acts of terrorism. And the government is right behind them, doling out the pats on the back.
This is just sick. The dogma we’re talkin about here is unfathomable. And the public are blindly following along. Rest assured this is what’s going on in many industrial countries behind the curtains… It seems as though our society is literally going down the toilet.
And for those of us who are not sucked into this dogmatic religion, we’re in the unfortunate position of watching all of this unfold with our eyes wide open and our hands tied behind our back.
It won’t be the oceans that sink us all… it’ll be the eco-fascists squeezing our wallets under the false umbrella of “going green”.
… I need a stiff drink.

Pamela Gray
June 24, 2010 8:29 pm

I smell “staged” stink.

Graeme W
June 24, 2010 8:43 pm

Nick Stokes says:
June 24, 2010 at 7:12 pm
Does nobody see something odd about the claim that a regular commercial firm is sending out simulated bombs in packages under its own name?
This article (on the opinion page, for which Dr Calzada writes) mentions a simulated bomb in the imaginative headline. But the text says it was a fuel (gasoil) filter with a cable. The firm Termotechnics had intended to send a different item.
No mention of police, only Dr Calzada’s own “bomb expert”.

I though similar, but in my case I wondered what made Dr Calzada call in a terrorism expert to scan the package, and then call in a journalist before opening it. It just sounds a little suspicious to me.
Ringing the company to ask what was in it was okay. Then, based on that response, he calls in a terrorism expert?

rbateman
June 24, 2010 9:02 pm

Pamela Gray says:
June 24, 2010 at 8:29 pm
The massive economic failure that resulted from Spain’s Green Energy Policy was apparently enough to make the Spanish Govt. do an about-face.
It should also put a big chill down the spine of similar policies here in the U.S.
As for the credibility of communist forces making threats, one has only to look at what happened to Russia and China under Stalin & Mao. Is this happening in Spain? I don’t know. But I do know that such green job policies are full of Perpetual Motion idealism.

anna v
June 24, 2010 9:07 pm

Sorry to say I m skeptical of the facts and conclusions presented here.
No legitimate company would acknowledge threatening or black mailing packages.
It is either a misunderstanding, a wrong package was sent.
A deliberate use of a return address by a malevolent sender , not the company. In that case when asked they might have said: advertizing material? and that is what made him suspicious.

Ray
June 24, 2010 9:09 pm

They should have sent a picture of a bomb… they would have saved on shipment. Austerity measures.

Björn
June 24, 2010 9:43 pm

I can not find any reference to this in the Spanish msm press, and I do not think they could really ignore this if true , so it´s probably a premature to assume it’s true , until it’s genuinely verified.

Dave Springer
June 24, 2010 9:56 pm


This so-called bomb threat is almost certainly a crock of excrement. Nobody puts a legitimate return address on a bomb.
Examiner.com is about the bottom of the barrel for reliable news too. Go read about it here and think twice about using it as a source in the future.

Dave Springer
June 24, 2010 10:07 pm

Nevermind the remark about Examiner.com. Not sure what link led me to it now and made me think it was connected with this report. It’s still a good idea to know about Examiner’s untrustworthy character though…

June 24, 2010 10:35 pm

Fortunately, the bomb was a do-it-yourself package and they’re incapable to merge the pieces so far.
At any rate, similar terrorists from green companies should be sent to Gitmo.

June 24, 2010 10:57 pm

Great. What next? Will my GE clock/radio explode if they find out I’m a climate realist? Green death squads knocking at my door? The Unabomber named Energy Czar?
I’m glad I wasn’t on the AGW Black List from Stanford. Still, GreenPeace knows where I live, according to them anyway. I throw all the mail in the burn barrel unopened as a precaution – been doing that for years – but maybe I should get another doberman.

Steve Oregon
June 24, 2010 10:57 pm

Like GreenPeace advocating a GreenWar

June 24, 2010 11:01 pm

Actually if a company has big enough people behind them they can act with the belief of impugnity.
The very fact that they were brave enough to send it in their own box and then give an eery explanation to him over the phone, is it really any wonder he called a terrorist expert and a bomb expert before opening it?
I’m not that familiar with Spains companies but I am familiar with the fact that they have a very insidious crime situation and a 21% and climbing unemployment rate and since they decided to be guinnea pigs for Cap and Trade they have had businesses leave the country in droves.

Pelicanman
June 24, 2010 11:07 pm

>The Monster says:
June 24, 2010 at 6:46 pm
>There is really no other way to look at the situation. The AGW industry has become an organized crime syndicate.
Close, but it’s the other way around: the organized crime syndicate that has bought, stolen, brainwashed, terrorised and warred its way into power is the very syndicate that conceived the AGW hoax and has funded its goons in the industry.
I always get a sick chuckle out of statements about people in high positions who love to line their pockets and make endless piles of money. At a certain point, somewhere above the average salary of a Major League ace pitcher or Wall Street credit default swapper, it’s about power. Sure, the institutions fall in line for the money, but it’s the agenda that greases their palms and those promoting the agenda are all about control. With meters on all devices that use energy, taxes on all reproduction and movement of people and goods, and a carbon dioxide derivatives bubble to boot, AGW is a sociopathic control freak’s ultimate dream.

June 24, 2010 11:28 pm

If you travel around southern Spain today, the one thing you notice is the fields of solar panels outside almost every town or village. If you go up into the Sierras, there seem to be wind farms everywhere, although the number of windmills actually working is usually none or just a few – maybe, they have been turned off to save costs.
Most sites have a stated output of 2-8 Megawatts, I have always been intrigued at how quickly these solar power sites sprung up – there were almost none three years ago, so the subsidy trough must have been both deep and wide.
Calzada’s study is an excellent read and a damning indictment of politicians and the incredible waste and job destruction of their “greener than thou” policies.
Spain is a good lesson for all countries, whose political leaders are obsessed by the idea of ‘green’ power generation. Calzada’s paper should be a compulsory read for all these politicians, although I suspect it would be a little difficult for their limited intellects to comprehend.

WAM
June 24, 2010 11:54 pm

Is the company already under criminal investigation? It seems that Spain is a kind of tough on terrorist threats and activities. Any follow up of the story in this context?

Editor
June 24, 2010 11:57 pm

Geez, this story is starting to get legs. There is not enough information out to reliably determine either way the truth. I did bother to check the Thermotech website…. they deal mostly in solar…. so does solar technology require a fuel filter and would they send one to a customer on the day they also sent documents to someone else? Was the thing in pieces as Horner suggests? Even assembled, does it look like a bomb when unwrapped? Would you send it to the FBI field office and be sure they’d recognize the humor and satire? Something happened in Spain this week and it would be good to reserve judgement until we can get a good translation.

Patagon
June 25, 2010 12:12 am

Spanish police have special anti-terrorist units and a long experience in dealing with domestic terrorism. Any Spaniard would know that. I find Calzada’s response extremely odd.

Claude Harvey
June 25, 2010 12:32 am

Histrionics aside, the numbers are straightforward. You need about 40-cents (U.S.) per kwh at the plant fence, either through subsidies or in the market, to make economic sense of a solar power plant investment. Wind power translates to about 27-cents, The average wholesale electric power rate in the U.S. is about 4-cents per kwh. It really is that simple.
The above numbers do not take into account the capital cost of backup capacity required for both solar and wind for “when the sun don’t shine and the wind don’t blow”.
I built 23 alternate energy plants during my career and I know the economics.

Al Gore's Holy Hologram
June 25, 2010 12:32 am

It is well known that in Italy and Spain local mafias have taken hold of environmental programmes, waste removal services, etc. They have ties to energy companies, government local and national, and to EU ministers.
Gangsters are controlling this racket just like in the days of Al Capone.

Editor
June 25, 2010 12:48 am

I’ll wait to see if this story turns out to be true, but its worth homing in on the renewables aspect, as a number of people seem to be sceptical of their benefits.
There is no doubt that the correct renewables used in the correct place have the potential to be a useful source of power. For example, Britain has a fantastic potential for wave and tidal power, but would not be a good choice for solar energy.
However, most renewables are, in general, hopelessly uneconomic and inefficient at present and they are being promoted because they are green rather than because they work.
The truth is that our current industrialisation and standard of living was built on cheap and plentiful fossil fuel. It is likely that the developing world needs access to the same route to wealth and that the developed world can’t currently afford costly experiments into the alternatives.
However, we need to add to the equation the need for security of supply and continuity of supply. I don’t like the idea of unfriendly countries having their boot on my fuel supplies and for that reason would favour the use of coal and nuclear to generate the base power we need, whilst spending money on seeking viable alternatives.
It is likely that there is a 20 year gap before renewables can deliver cheap abundant energy so it would suggest that we are realistically stuck with existing sources of conventional power for rather longer than Government wants, but they intend to make it highly expensive and scarcer, so we have the worst of all worlds.
All in all its a bit of a mess-Governments have become convinced we need to change to green power but unfortunately the technology is not there yet and we will have to pay more than we can afford on the expensive alternatives. This is going to impact on every walk of life.
Tonyb

June 25, 2010 12:54 am

I don’t speak Spanish but I’m familiar with the language of BS. I will definitely reserve judgement on this story until more verified details emerge. The story itself reeks of a Peter Sellars/Pink Panther-type film comedy rather than anything real thus far.
Return address label on an unassembled bomb? I also understand Spain is all too familiar with bombs and bomb threats and has well-known protocols for dealing with such events and this does not fit.
Nice try, but I remain sceptical of this one.

Alan the Brit
June 25, 2010 1:17 am

Steve Oregon says:
June 24, 2010 at 10:57 pm
Like GreenPeace advocating a GreenWar
Greenpeace = Redwar!!!!!!!!!!!!! Nothing has changed.

TerryS
June 25, 2010 1:26 am

Re: Nick Stokes

The firm Termotechnics had intended to send a different item.

My local garage has a separate spare parts department which would make it very difficult for them to send a spare part when they meant to send a document (the wrong spare part or the wrong document would be easy). I assume Termotechnics is slightly bigger than my local garage. If it has any structure to it then the department dealing with sending out spare parts will be completely separate from any department that would be sending a document to Dr Calzada. This would make it nearly impossible for them to accidentally have sent a fuel filter.

Kate
June 25, 2010 1:48 am

The Mafia Loves AGW
Much like the late 19th century produced plenty of sordid stories and crime in the development of the oil industry, there’s a lot of organised crime rushing to get involved in renewable energy. We can either praise the Mafia’s newfound sense of ecological correctness or note the large amount of government subsidy being thrown around rather carelessly.
Lord Oxburgh is chairman of Falck Renewables, a wind farm manufacturer that is a subsidiary of the troubled Falck Group in Milan, Italy. The projects that Falck Renewables build seem to follow a pattern:
Their project in La Muela, Spain, was associated with the arrest of 18 people on organised crime issues. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/22/la-muela-renewables-spain-corruption]
“Powerful wind turbines churned the air above La Muela last week but the stir in this small Aragonese town was caused by the arrest of the mayor and 18 other people on charges that reveal a new phenomenon in Spain: eco-corruption.”
And at Falck’s windfarm at Buddusò – Alà dei Sardi: “Four people arrested [http://gruppodinterventogiuridico.blog.tiscali.it/2009/11/10/arresti_di__signori_del_vento___2018496-shtml/], seven wind farms and 12 companies under sequestration, and “that’s the outcome of the operation” Gone With the Wind “for which the magistrate court of Avellino has issued arrest warrants for Oreste Vigorito, 62 years Naples lawyer, administrator and president of IVPC Benevento Calcio; Vito Nicastro, 52 years of Alcamo, Ferdinand Renzulli, 42 years of Avellino, and Vincent Dongarra, 46 years of Enna. Another 11 people were investigated in various capacities for accountability in organized fraud for receiving government grants for the construction of wind farms. Nine of the seized companies are based in Avellino, the other 3 in Sicily.”
As for Falck’s windfarm at Minervino Murge,”the Anti-Mafia prosecutor in Trapani gave life to operation “Aeolus”, with 8 arrest warrants issued at the time of men linked to local clans, public administrators, municipal officials and entrepreneurs “for allowing the association called La Cosa Nostra mafia, and in particular the Mafia family Mazara del Vallo control of economic activities, permits, contracts and public services in the production of electricity through wind turbines and the exchange of vows with the political mafia. “Identification of persons and companies involved in the investigation Sicilian revealed disturbing links with the construction of wind farms in the territory of Puglia: Minervino Murge, Spinazzola and Poggiorsini municipalities in whose territories some companies have shown interest and in some cases initiated installations without the necessary concessions.”
As for their wind farm near Palermo, Petralia Sottana, what do “Puglia, Sicily, Mazara del Vallo-Minervino Murge have in common? Nothing but an interest in wind power. Companies interested in plant wind turbines in Apulia are committed to the same plant in Sicily.
Italian and EU subsidies for the building of wind farms and the world’s highest guaranteed rates, €180 ($240, £160) per kWh, for the electricity they produce have turned southern Italy into a highly attractive market exploited by organised crime.
As story in 2009 by the Financial Times put it, “Multinationals are starting to find out something that is well known to Italian investors: that concealed beneath Europe’s most generous system of incentives – supported by “green credits” that industrial polluters have to purchase – there exists a web of corruption and shady deals.
Rossana Interlandi, recently appointed head of Sicily’s environment department, explains that project developers – she calls them “speculators” – were also lured by the appeal of a law that obliges Italy’s national grid operator to pay wind farm owners even when they are not producing electricity.”
The number of Italian cities with a wind-farm nearby has doubled within a year, thanks to EU subsidies. It would be astonishing if the Mafia hadn’t gotten involved. The situation has deteriorated in Italy to the point that they are moving to residential solar to cut carbon dioxide emissions, in large part to minimize Mafia involvement.
Wind energy has become big business and it’s growing in a hurry. Lots of shady people are getting involved, in no small part because of government subsidies for both construction and feed in tariffs for so-called “green electricity”.
The parent group of Oxburgh’s Falck Renewables is the Falck Group of Milan. As with so many Italian businesses, it’s a complicated maze of cross-holdings and interlocked ownership that makes it almost impossible to decipher. However Falck’s sister company Actelios was the target of an anti-Mafia investigation.
Nobody from Falck Renewables or its parent company has been arrested, although Achille Colombo, its former head, has resigned, and news reports of questionable dealings with a Sicilian incinerator project that was canceled have arisen. The deal, which was canceled and is still under investigation, was worth an estimated €4 billion. Falck Group is a Milan based company that has built wind-farms in Calabria and Sicily that have been part of an anti-Mafia investigation. Some of the wind-farms, including one near Corleone, were completed quite some time ago, but haven’t been connected to the grid. However, generous EU subsidies were forthcoming nonetheless.
Falck’s sister company Platani Energia Ambiente was part of an anti-mafia investigation regarding a controversial land deal that lasted from 2002 to 2007 and involved the removal from office of the contract administrator, Gioacchino Genchi.
Just about the last thing they needed was news that wind energy wasn’t crucial to the planet’s survival and that news that the research unit which told the world that current warming was “unprecedented in the past 1,000 years” was probably wrong. The recession had hammered stock prices in green technology. The failure of COP15 in Copenhagen, the collapse of carbon pricing and various scandals about trading permits had not helped.
A quick investigation focusing on internal interviews and a review of papers selected (it seems) by a committee on which one of the targets of the investigation served, and pointedly did not review any of the papers that had been criticized by skeptics, left the CRU smelling like a “slightly disorganized but committed” rose.
The reaction of major media sources and governments to the Oxburgh results show that his findings were more than welcome – they may well have been necessary to continue the momentum for widespread conversion to green energy.
I’ll repeat here that I have no evidence linking Oxburgh or his company to the mafia – even honest companies in Italy can’t get far away from the mafia and can be surprised when they are linked in an investigation.
But the pressure Lord Oxburgh’s company was under due to general financial conditions and being enmeshed in legal difficulties in Italy make it inevitable that someone would raise the question of whether he could have been impartial.
More importantly, the flood of new government money, new deals and new partnerships for projects in faraway countries makes due diligence difficult, if not impossible. This is a Wild West frenzy of renewable building and carbon trading, and there have been scandals for years–and there will be more. What was the thinking behind choosing someone (even one so respected as Oxburgh) to sit in judgment on issues that affected his company’s health – even survival? I’ll repeat I’m not questioning Oxburgh’s integrity – but could anyone from the renewable sector have escaped some kind of association of this sort? In 2009 alone, 19 were arrested in Spain in connection with corruption surrounding a wind farm, there was a scandal regarding recycled carbon trading permits in Hungary, a regulator in Maine accepted an ownership interest in a company he regulated and which he went on to lead, a Washington biologist is accused of steering wind farm funding to his organization, Canada is investigating lobbying violations by green lobbyists, the list literally goes on and on.
And now a company with so many controversial ties to scandals in renewable energy comes up with a verdict that provides needed breathing space for renewable energy companies in general, and his own and his sister companies to boot.
It was a most convenient finding, this exoneration of the CRU.
======================================
Carousel fraud plagues European carbon trading markets
Why are mysterious UK businesses registering to trade carbon in Europe?
It is a building site, formerly a derelict car park, in a deprived part of West London, where the neon glow of curry houses and late-night grocery stores could not be further from the wealth and glamour of London’s financial markets. Described as a “consulting” business, this is the address of a UK company that has signed up to trade carbon permits under the European Emissions Trading Scheme in Copenhagen. But there is no trace of its existence on the Companies House database. At the newsagent next door, nobody has ever even heard of ”emissions trading” – the system where companies buy and sell the right to emit carbon dioxide – and there has not been a building there for many years.
It is not the only oddity to emerge from the Danish Carbon Registry. All the expected big players are on the list – utilities, oil and heavy industry – the only sectors obliged by law to own permits to cover emissions.
Quite a few investment banks are also signed up, on behalf of industry or trading to make a profit. But outnumbering these familiar names, hundreds of UK companies selling anything from hair loss treatments to electronics have mysteriously registered to buy and sell carbon permits in the Scandinavian nation – mostly in the last 18 months.
Many give addresses in the regions such as Yorkshire, Lancashire, Essex and other places not known for their links to the world of finance. The appearance of these obscure British companies – among them businesses with unreachable addresses and Hotmail, Gmail or Yahoo email accounts for company representatives – has recently come to the attention of the Danish authorities. While many are bound to be genuine individual private traders playing the carbon markets, investigators are examining the possibility that some of these unknown UK-based companies have used the system to commit “carousel” fraud linked to VAT.
The Danish registry may be at the heart of Europe’s problems with carbon trading fraud. Local media has repeatedly raised the fact that few, if any, checks are done on new traders and approval can be much quicker than in other countries.
Criminals profit by importing goods VAT-free, selling them through a series of companies, each liable to VAT, before exporting them again. Then, the first link in the chain often goes missing without accounting for the VAT and the final link reclaims the VAT it has paid from the state before disappearing.
It might sound like the tin-pot scheme of local small-time crooks, but fleecing the tax man can bring in big money.
Just a few weeks ago, Europol, the cross-border police force, said that carbon trading fraudsters may have accounted for up to 90% of all market activity in some European countries, with criminals mainly from Britain, France, Spain, Denmark and Holland pocketing an estimated €5bn (£4.5bn). “It is estimated that in some countries, up to 90% of the whole market volume was caused by fraudulent activities,” Europol said.
Figures from New Energy Finance show the value of the global market falling from $38bn (£23bn) in the second quarter to $30bn in the three months to the end of September after several countries cracked down.
The London platform, the European Climate Exchange, where banks and energy companies tend to trade, is not affected by the fraud because it does not offer the spot contracts on which VAT was payable. But British traders can still defraud authorities by buying and selling permits on other European exchanges. This organised criminal activity has even “endangered the credibility” of the current carbon trading system, according to Rob Wainwright, the director of Europol.
So why have fraudsters particularly targeted carbon trading? And what is being done to iron out problems in Europe before other areas – such as the US – start to trade carbon in the next few years?
Carousel fraud has been a known scam for years among mobile commodities, such as phones, computer chips and cigarettes. But the attraction of carbon permits is their intangible nature, so there is no need physically to ship goods across borders. All is done at the click of a mouse.
The very nature of carbon credits makes them “an incredibly lucrative target for criminals”, Rafael Rondelez, who was involved with the Europol investigation, has warned. His message is clear: other types of carbon fraud could soon spring up because there are “no strong regulations or checking principles as there is in banking to prevent such activities as money laundering.”
This has to be the ultimate vehicle for fraudsters; turning thin air into hard cash on the basis of the biggest scientific fraud in history.
The whole carbon trading apparatus has become the biggest racket on the planet on a par with the worst excesses of the bankers. The whole thing is a sinners charter which allows rich countries to do what they like. They make money by switching operations to low-cost foreign subsidiaries in developing countries These guys then claim carbon credits for selling back to their principals. The transaction show up as costs in the profit and loss accounts and reduce exposure to corporation tax.
Carbon trading fraudsters in Europe pocket €5bn
Carbon trading fraudsters may have accounted for up to 90% of all market activity in some European countries, with criminals pocketing an estimated €5bn (£4.5bn) mainly in Britain, France, Spain, Denmark and Holland, according to Europol, the European law enforcement agency.
The London platform, the ICE European Climate Exchange, where the big banks and energy companies tend to trade, is not affected by the fraud because it does not offer spot contracts – the only form of emissions trading on which VAT is payable. But British traders can still defraud HM Revenue and Customs by buying and selling permits on other European exchanges.
Europol said it had reason to believe the sophisticated techniques developed in the carbon market could soon “migrate” to the gas and electricity sectors. It is estimated that in some countries, “up to 90% of the whole market volume was caused by fraudulent activities,” a Europol spokesman said.
———————————-
Thinking of investing?
Here is who you go to if you need to run a fraud check on the trader with whom you are chatting about playing these particular ponies:
http://www.environmentalmarkets.org/
If the firm with which you are working is not a member of said group, then don’t pay them a penny. Carbon reduction offsets are a registered security like gilts, and regulated just as strictly, if in fact they are real offsets.
If you are in need of a genuine registered broker in the existing infrastructure compliant with NASD and other licencing schemes, in London the two major houses are Evolution Markets at http://www.evomarkets.com and CO2e at http://www.co2e.com

jaymam
June 25, 2010 2:35 am

There are only two possibilities:
1. The story is wrong or a hoax, or
2. Someone at Thermotechnic is going to go to jail.

alex the skeptix
June 25, 2010 3:08 am

It was in the news a few weeks ago: 90 % of all green business in the EU was found to be fraudulent. But the main stream media, of course hides such news in a little corner of an inside page of their news paper

Alex the Skeptic
June 25, 2010 3:20 am

http://www.greenleft.org.au/node/42996
“…..the EU’s law enforcement agency Europol estimated up to 90% of all market volume was fraudulent in some countries.”

RockyRoad
June 25, 2010 4:31 am

So you folks want the POLICE, who are employed by a government that has invested huge sums of money and political capital into going green, to accurately investigate a threat against someone who threatens all that? Umm… I don’t think that’s a good idea.

old construction worker
June 25, 2010 4:49 am

jaymam says:
June 25, 2010 at 2:35 am
‘There are only two possibilities:
1. The story is wrong or a hoax, or
2. Someone at Thermotechnic is going to go to jail.’
Someone at Thermotechnic should go to jail but will be found innocent.

RichieP
June 25, 2010 5:02 am

Springer: “Examiner.com is about the bottom of the barrel for reliable news too. Go read about it here and think twice about using it as a source in the future.”
I take your point about the Examiner but you seem to be asking me to trust Wikipedia. Given their role in manipulating the truth on AGW, that’s a big ask.

Enneagram
June 25, 2010 5:58 am

wobble says:
June 24, 2010 at 6:59 pm
Yeah, but big oil is worse or something.

Is this what you are referring to?:
Watch the latest news video at video.foxnews.com

DirkH
June 25, 2010 6:09 am

Maybe Thermotechnic has intentionally made a mistake in shipping…

PaulH
June 25, 2010 6:10 am

Thermotechnic admitted they sent the threatening package? No wonder they need subsidies – they’re too stupid to function in the real world otherwise.

RockyRoad
June 25, 2010 8:02 am

Enneagram, the gal that’s involved in Gore’s sex scandal won’t prosecute; she refuses to–my guess is that Gore’s “handlers” got to her and either paid her off or threatened her somehow. Considering how this whole movement’s premier spokesman is Al Gore, they have a lot at stake here and it wouldn’t surprise me in the least. We’ve noticed this about their acolytes: It’s their modus operandi.

Enneagram
June 25, 2010 8:11 am

It is really worrisome if “believers” are reaching a “tipping point” where violence begins. Is it behind so much money in play as to reach the point where one man can kill another?.
This madness must be stopped, the sooner the better up there in the first world, where this illness has become more virulent.
It seems quite strange. It seems as there would be another kind of factors in this problem, drugs perhaps?

hunter
June 25, 2010 8:23 am

This should serve as a pretty good evidence that the blacklist has a very specific use.

hunter
June 25, 2010 8:24 am

I am pretty certain that at least in hte US this would still be considered an act of criminal terrorism.

Duncan
June 25, 2010 8:26 am

I have to at least partly agree with Nick Stokes on this one – I don’t think we’re getting an full and unbiased account.
Where are the police?
Where are Spanish the anti-terrorism magistrates?
Something’s missing here.

jaymam
June 25, 2010 8:59 am

It seems that Thermotechnic have come up with a story that a report was supposed to be sent to Dr Calzada, but some spare parts were sent by mistake instead. When Dr Calzada phoned Thermotechnic, Thermotechnic assumed that Dr Calzada was talking about the report. So, problem solved.
All I want to see now is the report from Thermotechnic, and a photo of everything that Dr Calzada received.

RayG
June 25, 2010 8:59 am

Claude Harvey says:
June 25, 2010 at 12:32 am
“Histrionics aside, the numbers are straightforward. You need about 40-cents (U.S.) per kwh at the plant fence, either through subsidies or in the market, to make economic sense of a solar power plant investment. Wind power translates to about 27-cents, The average wholesale electric power rate in the U.S. is about 4-cents per kwh. It really is that simple.
The above numbers do not take into account the capital cost of backup capacity required for both solar and wind for “when the sun don’t shine and the wind don’t blow”.”
Claude, can you point me to any public public sources for the numbers you use? I would like to use them for some local rabble rousing but will need to source my data.
Thanks,
RayG

899
June 25, 2010 9:05 am

It’s just as I’ve always figured: So-called ‘green’ jobs are nought but government subsidies: They are ALL appendages of government gone bad.
They get the manna, and the rest of us are left sucking hind teat — if that.

Mark
June 25, 2010 9:24 am

Pretty good evidence you say hunter. Is Calzada’s name even on the ‘blacklist’?

nathaniel
June 25, 2010 9:28 am

hell man that would piss me off like a mother….. i would send it back with the parts all put together if u get my drift………lol

Grumpy Old Man
June 25, 2010 9:53 am

The EU is a corrupt organisation. It doesn’t matter what it’s doing – there is a profit in there for someone and it’s not the consumer. This is an organisation that has not had its accounts signed off for years. It supports green fuel – windmills or solar power, but to whose benefit? Certainly not the taxpayer. Like Obama, it wants to see fuel bills sky rocket. Plenty of profit for my friends.

Gary Pearse
June 25, 2010 10:15 am

Okay even if the package story needs verification,he did have his summer classes discredited and other classes cut. That should be checkable. And note that the head of the green E association who is also head of the communist labor union weighed in on the prof’s paper by charging him with being unpatriotic (only in a totalitarian state could criticizing the govt be deemed unpatriotic). And don’t forget spain changed its government to socialist to appease the terrorist group who blew up their train a few years ago. I think terrorists, government and green folks are one and the same in Eu and especially in Spain. I note that agw supporters among the commenters were ironically sceptical of the bomb parts story but were unmoved by the university’s sanctions. I guess this stuffis okay.

Wren
June 25, 2010 10:40 am

“Green Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts”
Don’t be suckered by that headline.
Instead of calling the police about a suspicious package from Thermotechnic, Dr. Calzada calls a private security expert, a terrorism consultant, and a journalist. The package, suspected of containing a bomb, is opened in front of the four, and contains only a fuel filter and a wire, which even if connected wouldn’t explode. The owner of Thermotechnic, Pedro Gil, denies responsibility for sending the package, attributing it to either a shipment error or someone intentionally trying to cause him embarrassment.

Wren
June 25, 2010 11:05 am

Claude Harvey says:
June 25, 2010 at 12:32 am
Histrionics aside, the numbers are straightforward. You need about 40-cents (U.S.) per kwh at the plant fence, either through subsidies or in the market, to make economic sense of a solar power plant investment. Wind power translates to about 27-cents, The average wholesale electric power rate in the U.S. is about 4-cents per kwh. It really is that simple….
————–
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?

RockyRoad
June 25, 2010 1:09 pm

Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
Claude Harvey says:
June 25, 2010 at 12:32 am
(…)
————–
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?
————–
…which is offset by the benefits of CO2 in growing crops, revegetating tropical forests, and making the earth a (truly) greener place to live. Besides, the effluent from coal-fired generating plants meets EPA standards; are you saying they’re not strict enough?
Btw, I’ve done more reclamation as a mining engineer re-mining old abandoned mining districts, along with upgrading the environment on deposits mined for the first time, than thousands of members of the Sierra Club put together. All mines are required to file a Mine Reclamation Plan (generally with the state’s DEQ) before the first shovelful of rock or dirt is even turned. A bond is posted that makes sure such remediation is completed once mining operations cease. In many cases, meeting the regs for reclamation requires more planning than extracting the minerals.
In the vast majority of cases, after a few years it is practically impossible for the layperson to detect that there was ever a mine in the area. However, the improved environment, with lakes, wetlands, reforested and reclaimed grazelands, are a welcome benefit. The fauna grows better with the increase in CO2, needs less water, and supports more wildlife. Hard to see a downside to all this.

SteveSadlov
June 25, 2010 1:10 pm

I am losing my faith in republican democratic systems. Universal suffrage has resulted in utter chaos. Radicalism festers in a system where “anything goes” and where mass media marketing is used to brainwash and incite on a huge scale. I think the world now deserves monarchy or “soft conservative fascism” ala Pinochet or Franco.

old construction worker
June 25, 2010 5:12 pm

Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
Histrionics aside, the numbers are straightforward. You need about 40-cents (U.S.) per kwh at the plant fence, either through subsidies or in the market, to make economic sense of a solar power plant investment. Wind power translates to about 27-cents, The average wholesale electric power rate in the U.S. is about 4-cents per kwh. It really is that simple….
————–
‘Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?’
Two can play that game.
Does the 40-cents and (U.S.) 27-cents per kwh include the cost of pollution from the manufacturing windmills and solar panels used to generate the electric power?

June 25, 2010 5:35 pm

Well, it seems that Dr Calzada now agrees that Thermotechnic sent some spare parts instead of the intended report. And there never was a “dismantled bomb” as this post so ridiculously proclaims. And no threat.
Retraction?

June 25, 2010 6:27 pm

Nick, the CAGW crowd started with the threats. Maybe you should be emailing Greenpeace and Hansen, and showing them how jumpy people can get after they’re subjected to repeated threats against their life and liberty.
Retraction? Your side first. Show us how it’s done.

Wren
June 25, 2010 8:19 pm

RockyRoad says:
June 25, 2010 at 1:09 pm
Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
Claude Harvey says:
June 25, 2010 at 12:32 am
(…)
————–
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?
————–
…which is offset by the benefits of CO2 in growing crops, revegetating tropical forests, and making the earth a (truly) greener place to live. Besides, the effluent from coal-fired generating plants meets EPA standards; are you saying they’re not strict enough?
Btw, I’ve done more reclamation as a mining engineer re-mining old abandoned mining districts, along with upgrading the environment on deposits mined for the first time, than thousands of members of the Sierra Club put together. All mines are required to file a Mine Reclamation Plan (generally with the state’s DEQ) before the first shovelful of rock or dirt is even turned. A bond is posted that makes sure such remediation is completed once mining operations cease. In many cases, meeting the regs for reclamation requires more planning than extracting the minerals.
In the vast majority of cases, after a few years it is practically impossible for the layperson to detect that there was ever a mine in the area. However, the improved environment, with lakes, wetlands, reforested and reclaimed grazelands, are a welcome benefit. The fauna grows better with the increase in CO2, needs less water, and supports more wildlife. Hard to see a downside to all this.
========
Pollution = prosperity? Good luck trying to sell that one.

Wren
June 25, 2010 8:46 pm

old construction worker says:
June 25, 2010 at 5:12 pm
Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
Histrionics aside, the numbers are straightforward. You need about 40-cents (U.S.) per kwh at the plant fence, either through subsidies or in the market, to make economic sense of a solar power plant investment. Wind power translates to about 27-cents, The average wholesale electric power rate in the U.S. is about 4-cents per kwh. It really is that simple….
————–
‘Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?’
Two can play that game.
Does the 40-cents and (U.S.) 27-cents per kwh include the cost of pollution from the manufacturing windmills and solar panels used to generate the electric power?
==========
Well, that wouldn’t amount to much. Once you make windmill or solar panel, it’s made. They have long working lives.
And don’t forget the question of where the money spent to make the windmills and panels would be spent if they weren’t made. Spend it on any making any other good, and you have some cost of pollution from making that good too, don’t you?
Looking ahead, although coal is cheap and plentiful now, it’s not always going to be that way, since we are using it faster than new coal is being formed . So developing sources of energy that don’t deplete(wind and solar) is a good thing to do for future generations of Americans.

TomRude
June 25, 2010 10:56 pm
June 26, 2010 12:58 am

According to the Spanish news item, Calzada had been sent the disassembled motor from a car. Not a bomb
Unless I’m missing something.
It bears no relationship to the unmasking of the extraordinary cost of Spain’s green folly by Calzada.

Jeff B.
June 26, 2010 1:23 am

When they panic and start mailing bomb parts, you know you are doing the right thing. Calzada is a hero.

Kitefreak
June 26, 2010 2:37 am

I recently came across the UK Government figures for what they will pay for renewable energy fed into the national grid.
http://impactrenewables.com/ESW/Files/FITsconsultationresponseandGovdecisions%5B1%5D.pdf
The tariffs can be found on page 27 of the PDF.
Sure is a lot of money (i.e. tax-payer funded subsidy) to be made from ‘green’ energy.
You can earn 40 pence per kilowatt hour for the right type of installation! That’s a LOT more than electrity currently ‘costs’ the UK consumer.
As we say in Scotland, it’s just no right…

June 26, 2010 3:27 am

Calzada says now it was a simple shipping error. Calzada told the truth about the package, and deserves hero plaudits for that.

Gneiss
June 26, 2010 11:18 am

It was an obvious hoax that fit this site’s narrative, so it received no skepticism but a screaming headline instead. Then an outraged crowd reaction, it’s their narrative too.
Now the hoax is unmasked. But no retraction from WUWT.

old construction worker
June 26, 2010 3:28 pm

Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 8:46 pm
old construction worker says:
June 25, 2010 at 5:12 pm
Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
————–
‘Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?’
Two can play that game.
Does the 40-cents and (U.S.) 27-cents per kwh include the cost of pollution from the manufacturing windmills and solar panels used to generate the electric power?
==========
‘Well, that wouldn’t amount to much. Once you make windmill or solar panel, it’s made.’
You seem to forget, it takes more then just electricity to produce windmills and solar panels.
‘They have long working lives.’
Not really. Windmills are high maintenance and solar panel don’t pay for themselves before they have to be replaced.
‘Looking ahead, although coal is cheap and plentiful now, it’s not always going to be that way, since we are using it faster than new coal is being formed . So developing sources of energy that don’t deplete(wind and solar) is a good thing to do for future’
We have been subsidizing wind and solar since the Jimmy Carter days (40 years). Now subsidy is 50 cent or higher on the dollar and it is still an in-suffocated way to produce electricity.

899
June 26, 2010 4:02 pm

Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 8:46 pm
[–snip–]
Well, that wouldn’t amount to much. Once you make windmill or solar panel, it’s made. They have long working lives.
And don’t forget the question of where the money spent to make the windmills and panels would be spent if they weren’t made. Spend it on any making any other good, and you have some cost of pollution from making that good too, don’t you?
Looking ahead, although coal is cheap and plentiful now, it’s not always going to be that way, since we are using it faster than new coal is being formed . So developing sources of energy that don’t deplete(wind and solar) is a good thing to do for future generations of Americans.

Your whole post rests with the corrupt ‘broken window’ fallacy.
http://bastiat.org/en/twisatwins.html#broken_window
See also:
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2010/03/22/rat-falls-back-on-the-broken-window-fallacy/

old construction worker
June 26, 2010 6:17 pm

899 says:
June 26, 2010 at 4:02 pm
‘In Sunday’s “Pearls Before Swine” comic strip, the nefarious Rat is now a PR flak. And when his client accidentally blows up downtown, he comes up with a solid economic defense:’
That put a smile on my face.

Wren
June 26, 2010 7:39 pm

old construction worker says:
June 26, 2010 at 3:28 pm
Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 8:46 pm
old construction worker says:
June 25, 2010 at 5:12 pm
Wren says:
June 25, 2010 at 11:05 am
————–
‘Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Does the 4-cent per kwh include the cost of pollution from the mining and burning of coal used to generate the electric power?’
Two can play that game.
Does the 40-cents and (U.S.) 27-cents per kwh include the cost of pollution from the manufacturing windmills and solar panels used to generate the electric power?
==========
‘Well, that wouldn’t amount to much. Once you make windmill or solar panel, it’s made.’
You seem to forget, it takes more then just electricity to produce windmills and solar panels.
‘They have long working lives.’
Not really. Windmills are high maintenance and solar panel don’t pay for themselves before they have to be replaced.
‘Looking ahead, although coal is cheap and plentiful now, it’s not always going to be that way, since we are using it faster than new coal is being formed . So developing sources of energy that don’t deplete(wind and solar) is a good thing to do for future’
We have been subsidizing wind and solar since the Jimmy Carter days (40 years). Now subsidy is 50 cent or higher on the dollar and it is still an in-suffocated way to produce electricity.
=====
Fossil fuel interests see wind and solar power as threats. So they want people to think these sources are impractical. Buggy whip makers probably felt the same way about cars.

Wren
June 26, 2010 8:43 pm

Gneiss says:
June 26, 2010 at 11:18 am
It was an obvious hoax that fit this site’s narrative, so it received no skepticism but a screaming headline instead. Then an outraged crowd reaction, it’s their narrative too.
Now the hoax is unmasked. But no retraction from WUWT.
——–
Give it time. Maybe WUWT is waiting for a retraction from Pajama Media’s Chris Horner, the author of the article “Green Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts.” The article was WUMT’s source. I just checked the Pajama Media site, and there is no retraction or correction yet.
Horner must be red-faced over this. His headline embellished the hoax.
This just goes to show if something doesn’t sound right, it probably isn’t right.

899
June 26, 2010 9:10 pm

Wren says:
June 26, 2010 at 7:39 pm
Fossil fuel interests see wind and solar power as threats. So they want people to think these sources are impractical. Buggy whip makers probably felt the same way about cars.
In the same way that you’re afraid of nuclear power?
Why all the pretenses with wind and solar?
Why not just cut to the most obvious chase?

Wren
June 26, 2010 11:17 pm

899 says:
June 26, 2010 at 9:10 pm
Wren says:
June 26, 2010 at 7:39 pm
Fossil fuel interests see wind and solar power as threats. So they want people to think these sources are impractical. Buggy whip makers probably felt the same way about cars.
In the same way that you’re afraid of nuclear power?
Why all the pretenses with wind and solar?
Why not just cut to the most obvious chase?
—–
Where did you get the idea I’m afraid of nuclear power?
BTW, if anyone tells me wind power doesn’t work, I know better. We used a windmill to drive a pump on the farm where I grew up. It worked just fine.

Alex Heyworth
June 27, 2010 12:50 am

Maybe there was an old fashioned watch in the parcel – it was probably a wind up.

Gail Combs
June 27, 2010 2:52 am

Nick Stokes says:
June 24, 2010 at 7:12 pm
Does nobody see something odd about the claim that a regular commercial firm is sending out simulated bombs in packages under its own name?….
____________________________________________________________
I though similar, but in my case I wondered what made Dr Calzada call in a terrorism expert to scan the package, and then call in a journalist before opening it. It just sounds a little suspicious to me.
Ringing the company to ask what was in it was okay. Then, based on that response, he calls in a terrorism expert?
_______________________________________________________________
Dr Calzada acted in a reasonable manner considering the “authorities” are not skeptics. Also we do not know what other thing happened before this to make Dr Calzada “twitchy” and distrust the “authorities”

Marge
June 27, 2010 9:52 am

1. The “dismantled bomb parts” consisted of a fuel filter and wire, nothing else. No timer, fuse, explosive, fuel, accelerant. Nada.
2. The courier service, Tourline Express, took responsibility for delivering a package, intended for a garage, to Dr. Calzada.
3. The “security expert” called by Dr. Calzada, was a security guard.
4. An employee of Thermotechnic assumed that the package, mentioned by Dr. Calzada in the phone call, was a written response to his study.
Isn’t a retraction or update indicated, given these facts?

old construction worker
June 27, 2010 10:57 am

Wren says:
June 26, 2010 at 11
‘BTW, if anyone tells me wind power doesn’t work, I know better. We used a windmill to drive a pump on the farm where I grew up. It worked just fine.’
When the wind was blowing or did you have a storage system when didn’t blow? Plus, your own windmill wasn’t supplying water to 50 other farmers. I’m sure you neighbors didn’t subsidized your windmill to the tune of over $.50 on the dollar.

Gneiss
June 27, 2010 11:40 am

Marge wrote,
“1. The “dismantled bomb parts” consisted of a fuel filter and wire, nothing else. No timer, fuse, explosive, fuel, accelerant. Nada.
2. The courier service, Tourline Express, took responsibility for delivering a package, intended for a garage, to Dr. Calzada.
3. The “security expert” called by Dr. Calzada, was a security guard.
4. An employee of Thermotechnic assumed that the package, mentioned by Dr. Calzada in the phone call, was a written response to his study.
Isn’t a retraction or update indicated, given these facts?”
Apparently not on this site. Three days later and they’re still letting it run.

899
June 27, 2010 12:24 pm

Wren says:
June 26, 2010 at 11:17 pm
Where did you get the idea I’m afraid of nuclear power?
BTW, if anyone tells me wind power doesn’t work, I know better. We used a windmill to drive a pump on the farm where I grew up. It worked just fine.

Well, since you seem so enamored of wind power, one may gather that you’re for it over other energy production sources.
Now, insofar as windmills go, you’re talking about a small-scale machine well-fitted to the application.
How many birds did your windmill manage to slaughter whilst you used it? I will wager that there were none, if only that the thing was both low enough to the ground and the blades were neither large enough nor spaced such as to have suffered bird strikes.
My problem with wind power is that there are people whom are given to think that if a little is good, then a lot must be better, and that just isn’t so.

June 27, 2010 12:37 pm

Wren (#899), got a study or two on birds hitting wind power generators? Is this more serious than their problems with radio towers, or power lines?
Why wouldn’t a lot of wind power be a good thing? I was in Corpus Christi, Texas, yesterday; from I-37 you can see — how many, 100? — windmills churning away to the north, through the piping and effluent from the oil refineries. Heck of a visual commentary on our energy needs, uses and future.
Why do you think one of Texas’s most promising new industries won’t work? How many thousands of generators have to be in place before your change your mind?

899
June 27, 2010 1:34 pm

Marge says:
June 27, 2010 at 9:52 am
1. The “dismantled bomb parts” consisted of a fuel filter and wire, nothing else. No timer, fuse, explosive, fuel, accelerant. Nada.
2. The courier service, Tourline Express, took responsibility for delivering a package, intended for a garage, to Dr. Calzada.
3. The “security expert” called by Dr. Calzada, was a security guard.
4. An employee of Thermotechnic assumed that the package, mentioned by Dr. Calzada in the phone call, was a written response to his study.
Isn’t a retraction or update indicated, given these facts?

Why issue a retraction? Why did the senders mail the package with the contents to begin with?
You seem to be glossing over the facts here: A package was sent with questionable materials for an express purpose. Are you implying that such an act is quite okay?

899
June 27, 2010 2:20 pm

Ed Darrell says:
June 27, 2010 at 12:37 pm
Wren (#899), got a study or two on birds hitting wind power generators? Is this more serious than their problems with radio towers, or power lines?
Why wouldn’t a lot of wind power be a good thing? I was in Corpus Christi, Texas, yesterday; from I-37 you can see — how many, 100? — windmills churning away to the north, through the piping and effluent from the oil refineries. Heck of a visual commentary on our energy needs, uses and future.
Why do you think one of Texas’s most promising new industries won’t work? How many thousands of generators have to be in place before your change your mind?

Got a ‘study,’ you say?
Do tell: Compared to the large windmills, how many radio stations are spaced that closely together?
What about power lines? It ~is~ possible to bury those power lines, albeit it would be a bit more expensive, but it is eminently doable, and I reckon that such might be done in the future.
So then, about that cluster of windmills: Who pays them to stay in business when the wind isn’t blowing? And why are they being paid for doing nothing?
I can’t begin to recall the last time I got paid for doing nothing …

June 27, 2010 3:09 pm

899 says: “Why issue a retraction?”
Because it just isn’t true that:
“Green Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor”
and there never was a “Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts”.
The source, PJM, has now issued a retraction. But no, I don’t expect to see one here.

carrot eater
June 27, 2010 4:27 pm

First, I’ll congratulate all those WUWT readers who exercised scepticism on this story, as it just didn’t make much sense.
Second, I wonder if WUWT will feature a follow up, now that it is slowly becoming more clear what happened, and what didn’t happen?

old construction worker
June 27, 2010 4:42 pm

says:
June 27, 2010 at 12:37 pm
Wren (#899)
‘Why do you think one of Texas’s most promising new industries won’t work? How many thousands of generators have to be in place before your change your mind?
If they are so great, they can do it without $.50 on the dollar subsidy.
And, it is still an inefficient way to product energy.

June 27, 2010 4:46 pm

So then, about that cluster of windmills: Who pays them to stay in business when the wind isn’t blowing? And why are they being paid for doing nothing?

Donwtime for wind at Corpus Christi is less than the down time for maintenance at any coal-fired plant. You’ve never been to Texas, I gather (nor Idaho, California, Oklahoma, Iowa or other windy sites) and no, I’m not surprised that you don’t have any study backing any of your claims. I doubt one exists that would pass the Tenderfoot Scout ethics tests.

Wren
June 27, 2010 8:25 pm

carrot eater says:
June 27, 2010 at 4:27 pm
First, I’ll congratulate all those WUWT readers who exercised scepticism on this story, as it just didn’t make much sense.
Second, I wonder if WUWT will feature a follow up, now that it is slowly becoming more clear what happened, and what didn’t happen?
=====
Not yet, but this is still the weekend.
I hope when WUMT does set the record straight, it does better than Pajama’s Media, which kept the article and it’s headline “Green Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts,” only adding a note at the end explaining this actually never happened. Readers who do not get to the end of the article would think it did happen.

June 27, 2010 9:10 pm

If they are so great, they can do it without $.50 on the dollar subsidy.
And, it is still an inefficient way to product energy.

As they are doing it. Wind is free, you know. No miners have to die to pull it out of the ground. No one’s water table is ruined, no wells made useless, no pools of tar to kill migrating birds. Trees are left standing to hold water in the ground. No waste products to have to bury at the FutureYuccaMountain. No mountain tops are moved, no streams turned to acid.
There are ways to measure efficiency other than miles of land destroyed.
Or, perhaps, calling it “inefficient” was just a silly joke.

Marge
June 27, 2010 11:06 pm

899 says:
June 27, 2010 at 1:34 pm Why issue a retraction?
Because the package contained a fuel filter and wire, not bomb parts?
Because the courier service made the error, not Thermotechnic, and publicly acknowledged the error and apologized?
899 “Why did the senders mail the package with the contents to begin with?”
Which contents? The fuel filter / wire were intended for a garage or similar auto related business.
899 “You seem to be glossing over the facts here: A package was sent with questionable materials for an express purpose.”
You’re ignoring the facts which have emerged since Chris Horner posted his now debunked article at Pajamas Media….An update was attached to the end of the article. Of course, they didn’t feel obliged to change the headline so people still may think that dismantled bomb parts were sent to intimidate Dr. Calzada.
899″ Are you implying that such an act is quite okay?”
For auto parts to be sent to businesses via courier? Yes. How else would it be done?
For the courier service to send the package to the wrong address, with the wrong return address? No.
Are you implying that it is okay to falsely accuse someone of sending bomb parts to someone as an act of intimidation?

Marge
June 27, 2010 11:14 pm

Me “Isn’t a retraction or update indicated, given these facts?”
Gneiss says:
June 27, 2010 at 11:40 am
“Apparently not on this site. Three days later and they’re still letting it run.”
What’s up with that? Falsely accusing someone of making a threat is cool, if they’re a “greenie”? Very sad, this tribal stuff.

old construction worker
June 28, 2010 6:26 am

Ed Darrell says:
June 27, 2010 at 9:10 pm
‘As they are doing it. Wind is free, you know. No miners have to die to pull it out of the ground. No one’s water table is ruined, no wells made useless, no pools of tar to kill migrating birds. Trees are left standing to hold water in the ground. No waste products to have to bury at the FutureYuccaMountain. No mountain tops are moved, no streams turned to acid.’
Wind is free, Yes; To harness the wind is not. It take raw materials, which are done either by “evil’ open pit or underground mining, then that raw material has to be turn into the finished product through that “evil” manufacturing process. Oh, I forgot, this is pollution “free”process when it comes to windmills and solar.
‘Or, perhaps, calling it “inefficient” was just a silly joke.’
A typical commercial turbine needs a wind speed of between 6-10mph to start operating – and automatically stops when the wind is more than around 55mph, to protect its mechanisms. Even when the wind is blowing between those speeds, it – and therefore the amount of electricity generated – is variable, and usually below the turbine’s full theoretical capacity.
According to government figures, the average wind turbine operates to just 27 per cent of its capacity – even the industry only claims 30 per cent – and there are some grounds for suggesting that even this is a significant exaggeration. Professor Michael Jefferson, of the London Metropolitan Business School, says that in 2008 less than a fifth of onshore wind farms achieved 30 per cent capacity.
One analysis of the government figures, albeit commissioned by wind farm opponents, suggested that Britain’s biggest wind farm – the 140-turbine installation at Whitelee, near East Kilbride – operated to just 7.3 per cent of its capacity that year.
http://www.telegraph.couk/earth7823681/Does-money-grow-in-wind-farms.html

899
June 28, 2010 7:49 am

Ed Darrell says:
June 27, 2010 at 9:10 pm
If they are so great, they can do it without $.50 on the dollar subsidy.
And, it is still an inefficient way to product energy.
As they are doing it. Wind is free, you know. No miners have to die to pull it out of the ground. No one’s water table is ruined, no wells made useless, no pools of tar to kill migrating birds. Trees are left standing to hold water in the ground. No waste products to have to bury at the FutureYuccaMountain. No mountain tops are moved, no streams turned to acid.
There are ways to measure efficiency other than miles of land destroyed.
Or, perhaps, calling it “inefficient” was just a silly joke.

And aren’t you being just a wee bit selective there? What of all the energy and resources that were mined, burned, refined, transported, etc.?
Now again: You haven’t directly answer the question put to you, and that would be why the rest of us have to pay to subsidize a private enterprise operation?
Do you have a vested monetary interest in the matter?

June 28, 2010 8:38 pm

Now again: You haven’t directly answer the question put to you, and that would be why the rest of us have to pay to subsidize a private enterprise operation?

From the prospectus I read, I saw no subsidy. Subsidies aren’t suggested in most of the stories on Texas wind farms. You haven’t offered any evidence there is a subsidy. If you have some evidence there is one, instead of just your S.W.A. assumption, offer it up, will you?
There’s no evidence you’re subsidizing this stuff that I can see.

Wren
June 28, 2010 9:11 pm

The most recent updated headline at Pajamas Media is as follows:
“UPDATED: ‘Green’ Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts (Updated: No Threat)”
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/breaking-green-energy-company-threatens-economics-professor-with-package-of-dismantled-bomb-parts/

899
June 28, 2010 10:37 pm

Wren says:
June 28, 2010 at 9:11 pm
The most recent updated headline at Pajamas Media is as follows:
“UPDATED: ‘Green’ Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts (Updated: No Threat)”
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/breaking-green-energy-company-threatens-economics-professor-with-package-of-dismantled-bomb-parts/

So do tell, Wren: If this matter had involved a so-called ‘green,’ what are the chances that the ‘green blogs’ would have issued a retraction?
Oh, and how many posts by complaining Skeptics would be summarily removed as ‘unacceptable’ by the ‘green’ blog owner?
I’ve a feeling that over at ‘RealClimate,’ any voice of dissension would have been snuffed out in a heartbeat. But then, that’s SOP for ‘green’ blogs, isn’t it?

Wren
June 29, 2010 7:10 am

899 says:
June 28, 2010 at 10:37 pm
Wren says:
June 28, 2010 at 9:11 pm
The most recent updated headline at Pajamas Media is as follows:
“UPDATED: ‘Green’ Energy Company Threatens Economics Professor … with Package of Dismantled Bomb Parts (Updated: No Threat)”
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/breaking-green-energy-company-threatens-economics-professor-with-package-of-dismantled-bomb-parts/
So do tell, Wren: If this matter had involved a so-called ‘green,’ what are the chances that the ‘green blogs’ would have issued a retraction?
Oh, and how many posts by complaining Skeptics would be summarily removed as ‘unacceptable’ by the ‘green’ blog owner?
I’ve a feeling that over at ‘RealClimate,’ any voice of dissension would have been snuffed out in a heartbeat. But then, that’s SOP for ‘green’ blogs, isn’t it?
====
Why speculate about whether “the ‘green blogs’ would have issued a retraction,” if you can cite examples of them not issuing retractions?
All blogs I have seen occasionally snip and delete posts. So what ?

899
June 29, 2010 1:48 pm

Ed Darrell says:
June 28, 2010 at 8:38 pm
Now again: You haven’t directly answer the question put to you, and that would be why the rest of us have to pay to subsidize a private enterprise operation?
From the prospectus I read, I saw no subsidy. Subsidies aren’t suggested in most of the stories on Texas wind farms. You haven’t offered any evidence there is a subsidy. If you have some evidence there is one, instead of just your S.W.A. assumption, offer it up, will you?
There’s no evidence you’re subsidizing this stuff that I can see.

Maybe you should be looking in the right places?
http://blogs.chron.com/lorensteffy/WindandSchoolsreport_rev_7-08.pdf
http://www.metaefficient.com/renewable-power/the-largest-wind-farm-in-the-world-horse-hollow.html
http://www.texaspolicy.com/commentaries_single.php?report_id=2821