Guest post by the Viscount Monckton of Brenchley
Consider the Oldbury wind turbine, which WattsUpWithThat.com reveals was installed a couple of years ago at a primary school in the Midlands at a cost of £5000 sterling plus Vicious Additional Taxation at 17.5% (US $9694 in all).
In the first full year of the Oldbury White Elephant’s 20-year life it generated a gratifying 209 kilowatt-hours of electricity – enough to power a single 100-Watt reading-lamp for less than three months. The rest of the year you’ll have to find something else to do in bed.
Gross revenue for the year, at 11p (18 cents) a kilowatt-hour, was, um, almost £23 ($40). Assuming that there are no costs of finance, insurance or maintenance, and after subtracting 20 years’ revenue at last year’s rate, the net unamortized capital cost is £5,415.20 ($8,900).
Even this figure understates the true cost. The UK has hidden much of the cost of its climate measures behind a calculatedly complex web of levies, taxes, charges, and subsidies, and – above all – behind a furtive near-doubling of the true cost of electricity to pay vast subsidies (“yacht money”, as we landowners call it) to anyone connected with windmills. The website of the King Canute Department amusingly calls this obscurantist mish-mash “transparency”.
How much “global warming” will Jumbo the Albino forestall? While it is in operation, it will generate 209,000/365/24 or almost 24 Watt-hours per hour on average: just about enough to drive an electric toothbrush.
Mean UK electricity consumption, according to the Ministry of Transparency, is 43.2 GW. Electricity contributes one-third of UK carbon emissions, and the UK contributes 1.5% of world emissions. So the proportion p of global carbon dioxide emissions that the Worthless Windmill will forestall is 24 / 43,200,000,000 / 3 x 0.015, or 2.76 x 10–12, or, as Admiral Hill-Norton used to call it, “two-thirds of three-fifths of b*gger all”. Skip the next few paragraphs if mathematics makes your head hurt.
Today’s CO2 concentration is 390 parts per million by volume (less than 0.04%, though most people think it’s more like 20-30%). Instead of the 438 ppmv CO2 concentration that the IPCC predicts for 2030 on its A2 scenario, thanks to the Wonder Whirligig it will be 438 – p(438 – 390), or seven-eighths of a Hill-Norton below 438 ppmv.
IPeCaC, the UN’s climate panel says 8 Watts (no relation) per square meter of radiative forcing from CO2 and other bad things (p. 803 of its 2007 climate assessment) will cause 3.4 Celsius of “global warming” (p. 13, table SPM.3) from 2000-2100 (progress from 2000-2010: 0.0 Celsius).
That gives the “centennial-scale transient climate-sensitivity parameter”, which is 3.4/8 or 0.425 C/W/m2. Multiply this by 5.35, the coefficient in the CO2 forcing equation, to give the “centennial-scale transient global-warming coefficient” n = 2.274 C°. We don’t need to worry about warming beyond 2100 because, according to Solomon et al. (2009) it will take 1000-3000 years to come through, far too slow to cause unavoidable harm.
Multiply the logarithm of any proportionate change in CO2 concentration by the global-warming coefficient n and you get a central estimate of the warming that will occur (or be prevented) between now and 2100.
The Sandwell Sparrow-Slicer will only run for 20 years, not 100, so our value for n is going to be too big, overstating the warming the thing will actually forestall. But it’s Be-Nice-To-Bedwetters Week, so we’ll use the centennial-scale value for n anyway.
Let’s do it: 2.274 ln[438/(smidgen x tad <438)] is – well, put it this way, even my 12-digit-readout scientific calculator couldn’t do it, so I turned to Microsoft Excess. According to Bill Gates, the warming the Birmingham Bat-Batterer will forestall over the next 20 years will be rather less than 0.0000000000007 Celsius.
As the shopping channels say, “But wait! There’s more!!!” Well, there could hardly be less. How much would it cost, I wondered, to forestall 1 Celsius degree of warming, if all measures to make “global warming” go away were as hilariously cost-ineffective as this silly windmill?
You get the “mitigation cost-effectiveness” by dividing the total warming forestalled by the total lifetime cost of the project. And the answer? Well, it’s a very affordable £8 quadrillion ($13 quadrillion) per Celsius degree of warming forestalled. Remember, this is an underestimate, because our method tends to overstate the warming forestalled.
And that’s before we politicians ask any questions about whether IPeCaC’s estimates of climate sensitivity are wanton, flagrant exaggerations [cries of “No!” “Shame!” “Resign!” “I beg to move that the Noble Lord be no longer heard!” “What did I do with my expenses claim form?”].
Suppose it was just as cost-ineffective to make “global warming” from other causes go away as it is to make “global warming” from CO2 go away. In that event, assuming – as the World Bank does – that global annual GDP is £36.5 trillion ($60 trillion), what percentage of this century’s global output of all that we make and do and sell would be gobbled up in climate mitigation? The answer is an entirely reasonable 736%, or, to put it another way, 736 years’-worth of worldwide income.
This is an inhumanly large sum. So how much would each of the seven billion people on the planet have to cough up over the next century to forestall the 3.4 C global warming that IPeCaC hopes will happen by 2100? It will cost each of us more than £3.8 million ($6.3 milllion), and that’s probably a large underestimate. I’m going to have to sell the Lear ad go commercial. No – wait – what did I do with that glossy brochure about how many tens of millions I could make from the 30 250ft windmills I could put on the South Beat? Ah, here it is, under my expenses claim form.
“The Noble Lord,” the Canutists might say, “is deliberately taking a small, absurd and untypical example. Shame! Resign! Expenses!” etc. So here are the equivalent figures for the £60m ($100 million) annual 20-year subsidy to the world’s largest wind-farm, the Thanet Wind Array off the Kent Coast – that’s £1.2 billion ($2 billion) for just one wind-farm. KaChing! I think I’ll have another Lear. And a yacht, and a Lambo, and a bimbo.
The “global warming” that the Thanet wind-farm will forestall in its 20-year lifetime is 0.000002 Celsius, or two millionths of a degree, or 1/25,000 of the minimum global temperature change that modern methods can detect. The mitigation cost-effectiveness, per Celsius degree of warming forestalled, is £578 trillion ($954 trillion), or almost 6000 times the entire 296 years’-worth of UK peacetime and wartime national debt as it stood when Margaret Thatcher took office. That’s more than 1.7 million years’ British national debt, just to prevent 1 degree of warming.
Making IPeCaC’s predicted 3.4 C° of 21st-century warming go away, if all measures were as cost-ineffective as Thanet, would take more than half of the world’s gross domestic product this century, at a cost of more than £280,000 ($463,000) from every man, woman and child on the planet.
“The Noble Lord is still cherry-picking. Resign! Moat! Duck-island!” etc. So look at it this way. All of Scotland’s wind farms, which can in theory generate 10% of Britain’s electricity (actual output in that cold December when we needed them most: 0.0%), will forestall just 0.00002 degrees of warming in their 20-year lifetime – about the same as all of China’s windmills.
So there you have it. After the biggest and most expensive propaganda campaign in human history, leading to the biggest tax increase in human history, trying to stop “global warming” that isn’t happening anyway and won’t happen at anything like the predicted rate is the least cost-effective use of taxpayers’ money in human history, bar none – and that’s saying something.
The thing about gesture politics is that the politicians (that’s us) get to make the gestures and the proles (that’ll be you) get to get the bill. I think I’ll have another moat. Torquil, don’t you dare put that expenses claim form on the fire. Think of the carbon footprint!
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Viscount Monckton of Brenchley; world at large: My last, desperate try to restore Kind Canute to his rightful place as a realist.
Viscount Monckton notes: “The website of the King Canute Department amusingly calls this obscurantist mish-mash “transparency”.”
This implies the King was a fool. My reading of history was that King Canute understood the tide would not obey him and used seating himself on the beach below the highwater mark as proof to his foolish followers that he was man, not god.
Take it away, Sam…
Uncle Latimer’s Helpful Hints about Wind Power for Investors, Politicians and The Public
1. It does not do what its supporter’s claim and it will never do what its supporters claim. It is a waste of money.
2. Do not give money in any form to anyone who tries to sell you wind power. Not for anything. They are charlatans
Thank you for reading.
You now know all you need to know on the topic. Do not spend any more of your valuable time considering the subject.
Regardless of the Canutean History Details, and even if Lord Monckton were even 90% wrong, it’s still an impossibly high sum to save a degree that may or may not ‘warm’. Time to hire a Llama and go fishing for freshwater sardines, methinks.
I wonder what is going to happen when the ageing coal and nuclear power stations in this country are decommissioned in the next few years? That is the problem.
Most likely the UK will be short by 10GW at least. Not good.
It seems reasonable to wonder if wind power is a net power consumer when you allow for manufacturing costs, install, laying cables in rural areas plus the repeated visits presumably by car to keep it going. Just in the power budget, not money.
I think it is worth noting that the supply of energy and power are in the available wind, the turbine is simply a conversion device. The challenges of matching this supply to the desired load are also noteworthy. This Poyry Consulting report is worth a read:
“The challenges of intermittency in North West European power markets”
http://www.poyry.com/Projects/Management_consulting.html?ReferenceId=221
http://www.poyry.com/linked/services/pdf/143.pdf
Hilarious! I propose we all adopt the Bimbo measure of Climate Subsidies!!! 🙂
Well’s…. It’s been war…But will we win? ‘The War of the Whirls’, coming to a field near you soon….
http://fenbeagleblog.wordpress.com/
I may have missed it but I did not read any mention of the co2 ouput during the production of the amove said windmills. C02 output will will also be incured during maintenance call outs.
In regards to the Scottish example: Scotland purchased nuclear generated electricity from France this past winter because its windmills could not cope. I agree with Dr. James Lovelock and George Monbiot that we can’t avoid using nuclear power.
Nice one, your battleship. Most entertaining.
You might also mention Professor Mackay’s argument that even if Britain used every scrap of land and sea to generate wind power, this would still only equate to about 25% of UK energy demand. Plus, this wind energy would give up during the very time we most need it most, like all of January 2010, as you point out. The good professor went on to claim that we could store energy for windless days, but rather ignored the fact that he had just proven that such storage systems would only cover generation for a day or two, and not the month without wind-power that we experienced in 2010.
Just one thing – did you mean to say “7.36 years’-worth of worldwide income” rather than “736 years’-worth of worldwide income” ??
.
Oh, and one other thing. Where was the Health and Safety Executive when that child-mincer was erected? To comply with UK law, it should have a 25m exclusion zone around it, comprising a 5m fence and razor wire. And the blades, which might fly off at any moment, should be shrouded in a cage using 7mm gauge steel. Plus, all children within 100m of the fan should wear a hard hat and safety goggles.
Now re-cost the entire project…
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I hope the Viscount has informed HMG of these facts!
They’re cutting down all the trees I planted near Aberfeldy 30 years ago to make a bloody windfarm. Can one of you warmists out there tell me the sense in that?
“Digging in the Clay” carried a guest post back in February that showed some great graphics on why trying to limit emissions is a waste of time: http://diggingintheclay.wordpress.com/2011/02/24/the-futility-of-trying-to-limit-co2-emissions/
Ed has sent me a couple of updates and I’ll try to add them as downloads.
@Fenbeagle
Very clever! I happened to drop by your site last night. How do you think of them?
A humorous and light-hearted essay which cloaks a more serious and, in my view, accurate, underlying message.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again:
The cAGW hype has never really been about science. After an initial honeymoon of ‘consensus’ based on a cadre of so-called scientists who either had an agenda or were just plain gullible, it is becoming increasingly clear that it is about political revenue, personal greed and false testimony.
Meanwhile, the planet just trots along…
Reply to Roger Carr says:
April 30, 2011 at 12:27 am
This is a sign of the north/south divide in the UK. In the Anglo/Viking north the story is of a wise Norse King Canute and his sycophant followers. In the Norman dominated south it is Canute the egomaniac who thought he was a god.
When I did Thermodynamics at university the tutor told us that this study was so when some smart inventor turns up trying to sell us some invention we would be armed with enough knowledge to tell if said invention was a load of rubbish.
Wind power falls within the rubbish bracket, as does wind power, solar panel, hybrid cars, electric cars,—-.
The estimate above of the UK’s output of CO2 does not state that the 1.5% is of the total output from fossil fuel use not the total CO2 production. The total from fossil fuel use globally is but 3-4% of the total production, the 96-97% being from natural producers over which we have no control.
It is also good to note that since the theory of CAGW and the Greenhouse Effect violates the laws of thermodynamics so all the above math is meaningless I am afraid.
Instead of Canute (or Knut, properly spelt), maybe he meant Knut the polar bear, who died in Berlin Zoo of aggravated global warming brought on by Al Gore’s lifestyle.
The UK will have a feudal economy if the succession of governments we have had continue to believe the warmist claptrap that is currently the prevailing thought. I am currently sat at my computer in Southern Spain where it is p*****g it down with rain and has done for 12 days out of the last 16.The temperature is 17.7 celsius. We were last here in October when, as now, the dried-up river bed near our house was a torrent of water from the Sierra Nevadas. Just after we bought the house in 2006, the headlines in the press were talking about Southern Europe being uninhabitable due to drought caused by global warming. The building of a local desalination plant that was going to provide fresh water from seawater has been put on hold because all the reservoirs are full. Last January when we here, our flight back to the UK was cancelled because Newcastle Airport was closed due to snow. In Newcastle we have had the worst winter for many years with temperatures down to -11 (this is in a city!!) and 2 feet of snow. Meanwhile the lovely countryside in Spain and in the UK is being defaced with lots of hideous, useless windmills that provide minimal electricity when we don’t need it, and zero electricity when we do, at an eye watering cost.
If the above does not satisfy our misguided eco-warriors here is something else for them to think about. The incidence of rickets, osteomalacia and MS is on the increase because badly advised parents are only allowing their children to go out in the sun in full body suits, hats with legionnaire style neck protection and total sun block, due to holes in the ozone layer. As a consequence their vitamin D levels are seriously depleted . Do these parents wonder why their kids are getting fat and getting avoidable diseases because they would rather sit in front of the TV than overheat and look ridiculous in stupid clothes?
I will look forward to summer here when I can get a politically incorrect suntan, plenty of vitamin D and not have to worry about water rationing.
My good Viscount, here you are on very firm ground that every educated person should be able to understand. Your maths is sound and the issue is clear cut.
I believe that the only way to get political change on the scale needed is to make a mockery of each and every politician in the eyes of his or her constituents. Your rhetorical style admirably suits that objective. So how about joining me in a grassroots campaign to relentlessly press home to each political representative just what a stupid course of action the investment in wind farms is? The maths is so straightforward that all but the dimmest of them will be forced to concede the truth. And in the case of the dimmest (and there are many), their constituents will be able to explain it patiently to them – at the ballot box.
In the UK there is practically no distinction between any of the political parties. So at least here a campaign of the type I propose need not even be biased politically – and hence should have much greater power and effectiveness.
Nor need such a campaign engage in the issue of whether the planet is warming dangerously due to mankind’s industrial sins. Whether it is or not, it makes no sense at all to use taxpayers’ money on useless technology that will never have a hope in hell of even scratching the surface of the (supposed) problem.
You have exposed in your principal example, exactly the same economic illiteracy that leads politicians and others to claim more generally that investment in green technology is always good anyway, simply because it creates jobs. You bet it does – at the expense of all the rest of us who earn our living in non-green productive enterprises. No vested interests there then.
So come on, this is a challenge. Let’s get organised!
davidsocrates2010@gmail.com
Am I right in thinking the photo above is of Dale Vince. If anyone has got rich on the back of idiotic government targets it’s him. I’m not sure what it says about him, but with all his millions when he wanted to buy a football team he ended up with Forest Green Rovers.
Another way to look at it is that in a whol year, Jumbo the Albino generated about as much energy as there is in 5 gallons (21 litres) of petrol. About 1/3 of a tank for a normal family car.
Even with UK’s ridiculously high rates of tax and duty, that would set you back a little less than 30 quid (pump price) or about 12 quid pre tax and duty.
Not a very good deal for a £5,000 ‘investment’. A gross rate of return of 0.24%.
You know perfectly well that not all measures are as ‘cost ineffective’ as Thanet, with offshore wind receiving twice the maximum subsidy of onshore wind and the way ROCs work meaning that this is an absolute maximum possible subsidy.
You surely also know that the price of wind is declining relative to other forms of power and that its subsidy will decline markedly as time goes on and with its exponential growth, the average subsidy per unit of CO2 saved over the century will be much, much smaller. You read a lot, you must also know that economic analyses for current planned climate action suggest much smaller figures than you’ve suggested.
So you’ve pulled off another one of your mathemagical sleights of penmanship. I hope some of your audience will be reasonable enough to see through their rage at renewable energy to deal with it properly.
I notice the Huhnatics in charge of UK energy policy have been trying to reframe the argument lately talking more about alternatives to expensive and diminishing oil rather than preventing climate change.