Why windmills won’t wash

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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Roger Carr
April 30, 2011 3:54 am

Neil Jones replying to me (April 30, 2011 at 2:19 am)
      This is a sign of the north/south divide in the UK. etc.. (Norse King Canute)
Thank you, Neil! That is a clear explanation of the dichotomy I have encountered — and makes a whole lot of sense.

Galvanize
April 30, 2011 4:04 am

edmondson
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.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
There are interesting times ahead with circa 3GW of gas recently shutting down or being mothballed in the UK, and various coal sites that opted out of LCPD starting to shut down from 2012. Under the LLD (limited life derogation) that they opted for, they were expected to last until 2015, but the market has resulted in a favourable running regime for coal, and they have used up their hours quicker than anticipated.
A few more coal sites will also opt out of selective catalytic reduction too.

Blade
April 30, 2011 4:07 am

“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.

Pffffffttt! Sprayed soda over my nice LED monitor. That is instant classic funny. God I love this guy (you know, in a manly kind of way 😉
Mr. Monckton, please stay involved now more than ever. I have this gut feeling that the Warmie cult is more vulnerable at present than at any other time. Their exaggerations and over-reach is becoming obvious to more laymen I encounter every day.
Good people like you and Sarah Palin tend to drive them (and all liberal socialists) mouth-frothing bat-crazy, which is in reality is a very good thing because they then make even more mistakes.
Keep up the great work!

gary
April 30, 2011 4:11 am

what about all the co2 produced during the construction stage???, isn’t the producion of concrete one of the worst emitters of this trace gas, and i’m sure the base for this monstrosity would be huge??

EternalOptimist
April 30, 2011 4:37 am

Wind, an overly expensive, draconian, divisive and unimaginative solution to a problem that doesn’t exist
EO

April 30, 2011 4:37 am

It isn’t just the utter stupidity of wind farms it’s also the blatant corruption that goes with it, and when its your local council involved, its the end of democracy. Take a look at the contract we unearthed in our battle down under.
http://www.palmerston-north.info

R. de Haan
April 30, 2011 4:37 am

As for the bigger picture listen to this interview with Lord Monckton
The end of the Magna Carta

EternalOptimist
April 30, 2011 4:38 am

And much as I hate to disagree with the good Lord, that should be a pig in the photo , not a cow. And give the subject matter, it should be a squadron leader to boot
EO

April 30, 2011 4:38 am

Yay! Monckton’s back!
Seems to me the most persuasive non-numerical fact is that wind usually blows when you don’t need it. It’s the same here in Washington, where Bonneville Power has maintained a huge wind farm for a long time.
You need the most power in the coldest and hottest periods, and those are almost always calm high-pressure times. The wind blows when fronts are coming through, and fairly steadily in spring and fall. Those are times of less extreme temperature, and Bonneville has had to ‘dump’ lots of electricity because it’s not needed then. (Can’t simply shut down all the bat-killers because California contracts require a certain amount of the power to be from wind.)
Thus the wind power, supposedly a “peak helper”, is actually a “peak nuisance.”

Colin
April 30, 2011 4:41 am

Matter: “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 cannot substantiate any of this. Please demonstrate how “its growth is exponential”.
And no, the price is not declining relative to other forms. Even a trivial glance at steel and concrete price indexes shows the falsity of this statement.

Mike Fowle
April 30, 2011 4:43 am

Marvellous! Excoriating, witty and devastating.

April 30, 2011 4:57 am

I think Lord Monckton forgot something else to calculate
1) there is some radiative warming caused by Co2 (deflection frm earth 14-15um)
2) there is some radiative cooling caused by CO2 (deflection frm the sun at various places between 0-5 um)
3) there is also cooling caused by CO2 by taking part in the photo synthesis. There is evidence that earth has become greener the past 50 years or so. I mean, did you ever see a forest grow where it is very cold? Greenery and forests take a lot of energy from their surroundings.
It appears that the IPCC (and most other scientists) never considered either 2) or 3).
My question was: what is the net effect of 1) and 2) and 3)?
I suspect 3) is considerable compared to 1)?

Roger Longstaff
April 30, 2011 4:58 am

My Noble Lord,
You are well aware that the science is settled, yet you continue to obfuscate using facts, logic and common sense. Please get back to what you were elected to do – fiddling your expenses, feathering your nest and getting your snout stuck into the globull warming gravy train.
What, you weren’t elected….? OFF WITH HIS HEAD!

Tom Harley
April 30, 2011 5:01 am

Spotted here on Google ads:
Australian Windmill
Ornamental Garden Windmill A piece of Australia’s Heritage
http://www.mailmaster.biz/catalog/c
Probably a copy of the schoolyard one…

Richard B
April 30, 2011 5:46 am

Excellent article by the Lord M. and without pushing the fact that there is no evidence of any cAGW. I would much rather put my money in this system but main stream media will not touch this for some reasons – in operation in 97 locations in 4 countries 24hours/da­y – one been running for 6 years – 400 watts in – 15Kw out –
http://Ros­siColdFusi­on.com

Sheumais
April 30, 2011 5:47 am

As we in Scotland are still inclined to use light bulbs when it’s not sufficiently windy to turn a bat botherer/sparrow slicer, shouldn’t you add the cost, both financial and in terms of CO2 output, of the conventional generator required to ensure a reliable supply as back-up?

Bhanwara
April 30, 2011 6:03 am

“trying to stop “global warming” that isn’t happening anyway and won’t happen at anything like the predicted rate”
Make your mind up!

Nik
April 30, 2011 6:07 am

As metalworkers say, a file is the tool of tools because it can make another file.
Can a windmill give enough energy to make another windmill?
Nik

Mariwarcwm
April 30, 2011 6:14 am

Thank you your Lordship, very very amusing and much appreciated by the denier footsoldiers in this household.

Matthew W.
April 30, 2011 6:17 am

Just a little confused about the numbers:
“it generated a gratifying 209 kilowatt-hours of electricity – enough to power a single 100-Watt reading-lamp for less than three months. ”
For the past 5 years, I’ve averaged almost 400 KW of usage a month (1000 sq ft home, gas heated, near Chicago).
is the 209 KWs really the correct number ?????????????

Brent Matich
April 30, 2011 6:24 am

Thanks Lord Monckton for putting things in perspective as usual!
Brent in Calgary

Sal Minella
April 30, 2011 6:32 am

Lord Monckton:
“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”
It may well drive your toothbrush but, will it be available to drive your tooth brush when you want to brush your teeth?

Rod Everson
April 30, 2011 6:47 am

Sean says:
April 30, 2011 at 1:26 am
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.

Ah, but that’s the problem with all this. The subsidies obscure the money angle.
If you just trust the market, and leave the market alone, it will add up all those costs you mention, including the maintenance cost of the “repeated visits”, the “laying cables” wherever, the “install” and the “manufacturing” costs as well as any other unseen out-of-pocket costs. It will then balance those costs against the price of the output times the amount of the output and yield a profit or a loss. And on that basis, investors will be able to decide whether to invest or not invest.
The reason we get all these subsidies, and these unending discussions about the economics, is because of external costs like dead birds, obscured views, CO2 reduction considerations, etc., so “government” feels the need to intervene. Better that those interventions come in the form of explicit prohibitions, or tax levies, than subsidies, for with subsidies comes all this mass confusion about the basic economics of the issue.
The national government that bans subsidies forever will save its taxpayers considerable expense and those savings would commence immediately, and be not just due to the savings in the form of the subsidies. All the other economic damage that subsidization yields, in the form of wasted and misdirected resources, would also be eliminated.

Alan D McIntire
April 30, 2011 6:56 am

I’ll believe wind power and solar power are sustainable energy sources when the factories BUILDING windmills and solar panels are able to rely solely on wind and/or solar power to operate. Until that point comes, you’ve got to factor in all the CO2 produced in building windmills and solar panels- making them even bigger white elephants than Monckton suggests.

Rod Everson
April 30, 2011 6:56 am

To add to my previous comment on the problem with subsidies, imagine if governing bodies everywhere took it as givens that:
1. Subsidies are stupid policy and are to be avoided
2. All capital investments have the potential to create external costs not borne by the investor, such as dead birds, noise pollution, eventual abandonment of a derelict structure, safety issues, etc.
3. The best way to incorporate those external costs (really social costs) is to levy a tax on the investment sufficient to mitigate the costs or satisfy those affected by the external costs.
Governing bodies could then collect taxes from the proceeds of the capital investment’s income to: restock birds?, reimburse those who objected to the noise in some way, build a sinking fund for eventual removal of the abandoned investment, etc., and the investor would price these into the project and be able to decide whether it still made sense to continue with it. Mistakes would certainly be made in the process, but it would make far, far more sense than the world created by subsidies.