By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Today’s resignation of Chris Huhne, the UK Minister for Climate Change, offers the prospect of a belated return to sanity at the former Ministry of Agriculture in Whitehall. Huhne now faces prosecution for an alleged attempt to pervert the course of justice by asking his then wife to say that she was driving at the time when one of Britain’s thousands of speed cameras caught him going faster than the law allows.
Under Huhne, the Climate Change Department has been indistinguishable from a lunatic asylum. I first came across him – or, rather, didn’t come across him – when he and I were due to debate the climate at the annual jamboree of a massive hedge-fund in Spain three years ago. Huhne only found out that I was to be his opponent when he reached Heathrow Airport. He turned straight around and went back to London.
When I visited the House of Lords’ minister, Lord Marland, at the Climate Change Department a couple of years ago, I asked him and the Department’s chief number-cruncher, Professor David Mackay (neither a climate scientist nor an economist, of course) to show me the Department’s calculations detailing just how much “global warming” that might otherwise occur this century would be prevented by the $30 billion per year that the Department was committed to spend between 2011 and 2050 – $1.2 trillion in all.
There was a horrified silence. The birds stopped singing. The Minister adjusted his tie. The Permanent Secretary looked at his watch. Professor Mackay looked as though he wished the plush sofa into which he was disappearing would swallow him up entirely.
Eventually, in a very small voice, the Professor said, “Er, ah, mphm, that is, oof, arghh, we’ve never done any such calculation.” The biggest tax increase in human history had been based not upon a mature scientific assessment followed by a careful economic appraisal, but solely upon blind faith. I said as much. “Well,” said the Professor, “maybe we’ll get around to doing the calculations next October.”
They still haven’t done the calculations – or, rather, I suspect they have done them but have kept the results very quiet indeed. Here’s why.
The UK accounts for 1.5% of global business-as-usual CO2 emissions. At an officially-estimated cost of $1.2 trillion by 2050, or $834 billion after inter-temporal discounting at the minimum market rate of 5%, the Climate Change Act aims to eradicate 80% of these emissions. So just 1.2% of global emissions would be abated even if the policy were to succeed in full.
Business-as-usual CO2 concentration, as the average of all six IPCC emission scenarios, would be 514 ppmv in 2050. A full and successful reduction of UK emissions by 80% over that period would reduce that concentration to – wait for it – 512.5 ppmv. This dizzying reduction of 1.5 ppmv over 40 years would have the effect of abating 0.008 K of the 1.05 K of warming that the IPCC would otherwise have expected to see by 2050.
The UK policy’s mitigation cost-effectiveness – the cost of abating just 1 Kelvin of warming if every nation pursued the UK’s policy with the same cost-ineffectiveness – works out at $108 trillion per Kelvin abated.
The policy’s global abatement cost – the cost of abating all of the 1.05 K warming that would otherwise occur over the policy’s 40-year lifetime – would be $113 trillion, or $16,000 per head of the global population, or almost 7% of global GDP over the period.
To determine how much better it would be to do nothing than to try to abate that warming, it is necessary to agree on how much damage the warming might abate. The Stern Report on the economics of climate change produces some of the most extreme and exaggerated cost estimates, so we shall use it for the sake of being as fair as possible.
Stern agrees with most sources that if there is 3 K warming this century (which the IPCC predicted at the time), it will cost 0-3% of global 21st-century GDP (actually, he says “now and forever”, but that is one exaggeration too many). However, the IPCC’s current central estimate is that the CO2 we emit between 2000 and 2100 will cause little more than 1.5 K of warming. So let us assume that this 1.5 K of CO2-driven warming will cost us 1.5% of global 21st-century GDP.
Yes, I know that anything less than 2 K will probably be beneficial, but we have to bear in mind the already-committed warming of 0.6 K that the IPCC says is already in the pipeline on account of our past sins of emission, and the warming from the non-CO2 greenhouse gases that is not addressed in the UK’s CO2-reduction policy.
However, Stern’s calculations are all based on an inter-temporal discount rate of just 1.4%, which is far lower than the minimum rate of return on capital, which is 5%. Correcting the Stern-based 1.5%-of-GDP cost of taking no action to allow for the minimum market discount rate brings that cost down to 0.3% of GDP.
Accordingly, the 6.85%-of-GDP cost of taking action to mitigate the warming would give an impressive action/inaction ratio of 22.8. Bottom line: it is almost 23 times more expensive to pursue the policies outlined in the Climate Change Act than to sit back, do nothing, enjoy the sunshine, and adapt in a focused way to the consequences of what little warming the IPCC predicts may occur.
Just one problem with this entire calculation. It depends upon the assumption that the $1.2 billion spent by Mr. Huhne’s former department to 2050 would actually achieve an 80% reduction in Britain’s CO2 emissions. And that may not be a justifiable assumption. Real-world climate-mitigation policies are proving far more costly than government estimates.
The United Kingdom is no longer a democracy. We still have all the trappings, but in reality it no longer matters who we vote for. Five-sixths of our laws, including overall policies on environmental matters, are set by the unelected, unaccountable, unsackable Kommissars (that’s the official German name for our new and hated masters) of the failed European Union. For the seventeenth year in a row, the EU’s own court of auditors has declined to sign off the Kommissars’ annual accounts as a true and fair record of how they have squandered the $3 million an hour we pay them. It is these Kommissars who dictate that we must have carbon trading.
So let us compare the pie-in-the-sky cost estimates in the Climate Change Act with the actual, real-world cost of the EU’s four-times-collapsed carbon trading scam – er, scheme. The calculation is similar to that which we did for the UK alone.
Over the ten-year timeframe of the EU’s scheme, CO2 concentration will have risen to 413 ppmv, or 412.4 ppmv if the scheme is fully successful, abating 0.004 K of “global warming”. The cost of the scheme, according to Bjorn Lomborg, is 2.5 times the cost of the trades actually executed: call it $230 billion a year, or $2.1 trillion after 5% discounting over the ten years.
The mitigation cost-effectiveness of the EU scheme is $535 trillion per Kelvin abated; its global abatement cost over the period 2010-2020 is $117 trillion, or $17,000 per head of global population, or 22% of global GDP over the ten-year period. And that is 72 times more costly than the 0.3%-of-GDP cost of the climate-related damage that the policy is intended to forestall.
This, too, understates the true cost-ineffectiveness of trying to tax, trade, regulate, reduce or replace CO2. For the predicted rate of warming is not occurring. By many methods, the climate literature demonstrates that the models are over-predicting CO2-driven warming at least threefold. If so, then the true cost of the EU’s mad policy, of which Mr. Huhne and his party are such enthusiastic supporters, could be at least 200 times greater than the cost of climate-related damage from doing nothing at all.
Will Mr. Huhne’s successor get the sums done and scrap the Climate Change Act? Will the EU come to its senses? Don’t count on it. Gradually, though, reality is breaking through. Desubsidization of solar and even of fashionable wind energy has now begun in the UK, Denmark, Germany and Spain.
The sheer cost of these pointless, environment-wrecking “alternative” energy sources is so crippling that European governments, already near-bankrupted by their incompetent management of the mickey-mouse Euro, cannot any longer afford these self-indulgent indulgences. The removal of Mr. Huhne from the scene will at least take Britain one step nearer to sanity, scientific reality and economic common sense about climate change.
I wonder if Huhne was ordered to speed and lie so that they can appoint a new guy to bury all this nonsense. Isn’t “huhne” German for hen – appropriate for a chicken little.
@steveta_uk
We’ve all been on a caution for that last one at one time or another, just not to the tune of $30b per year.
The sheer cost of these pointless, environment-wrecking “alternative” energy sources is so crippling that European governments, already near-bankrupted by their incompetent management of the mickey-mouse Euro, cannot any longer afford these self-indulgent indulgences.
I don’t mean this as a glib comment; I’m quite serious. My understanding was that the whole point (according to Maurice Strong, founder of the UN Environment Programme) was to bring on the “collapse” of the “industrialised civilisations.” In this they seem to be succeeding.
It has been for some time been politically incorrect to challenge anything, or to express an opinion of any sort that differs from the official viewpoint. That’s not democracy. It’s EU-driven communism, bolstered by 13 years of misrule under the previous Labour government.
Let’s not forget that it was the socialist government in the UK that gave us the infamous dossier of WMD. Given that it was the same government that also gave us the Stern Report, why is this document still considered by the Coalition to be a work of reference with regards global warming?
But with Davey as the replacement for Huhne (or any other LibDem) there’s no way the Coalition will see sense and restore traditional conservative values to this country.
Taxing the public left, right and centre in a disingenuous and pseudo-scientific attempt to reduce emissions of a beneficial gas is a sure way to plunge this country into economic ruin – finishing the job that Labour started – and resulting in a frighteningly distorted energy market that only the wealthy will be able to afford to heat and light their homes, these folks who will, in fact, be subsidised by everyone else through higher bills and the egregious compensation payments enjoyed by the almost exclusively foreign-owned energy companies.
What’s in it for us Brits? In what way do we as individuals, or our businesses and our economy benefit from the crazy belief that the utterly trivial levels of man-made carbon dioxide emissions in the UK are worth spending such mind-blowingly huge sums of money?
The Coalition needs to wake up!
It seems my fears were misplaced… Anyone know much about the new boy, Ed Davey? How much of a “believer” is he?
FD
Bob Kutz says:
February 3, 2012 at 9:31 am
excuse me; over a speeding ticket.
He was one speeding ticket away from an automatic ban from driving, he got his wife to say she was driving as her license was clean. Trouble was he got caught later anyway and got the ban later. His crime was perverting justice as he was the driver but did not carry the can.
No loss, but no change. Ed Divvy Davey’s first comments on taking over were about wanting a ““green economy” and growth in “green jobs”. Green in the sense of naive, or green in the sense of underdeveloped, I wonder?”
Green in the sense of “rotten” and “decomposing”
Frederick Davies (9:57 am) asks:
Anyone know much about the new boy, Ed Davey? How much of a “believer” is he?
Watch this and weep:
Your Lordship, I respectfully suggest that it will be a case of “Here’s the new boss, same as the old boss”!
Whichever government is in power, they’ll be hanging onto those green tax revenues, for grim death!
Michael Palmer says:
February 3, 2012 at 8:54 am
Another problem with the calculation above – it assumes that the UK’s share of global energy consumption would still be at 1.5% in 2050. Considering that the UK, as an industrialized nation, is going nowhere fast, it will probably be more like 0.15% at that time.
Hate to be pedantic but UK manufacturing output is higher than at any time in history (at least it was in 2009, inflation adjusted, according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Wiki might disagree of course). It’s just that far fewer people are needed and the rest of the economy is far larger. Those are not necessarily bad things. The share of world manufacturing is bound to decline in future for the same sorts of reasons but our share of global energy will take a while to get to 0.15% (now that Huhne’s gone at least). This is all the result of everybody else is sharing in the fruits of the Industrial Revolution that we started.
“The speeding incident at the centre of the allegations is said to have occurred on March 12, 2003. Mr Huhne, who was then an MEP, had returned from the European Parliament, catching a flight from Strasbourg to Stansted which landed at 10.23pm.”
Still, it’s only poetic justice, for a man who has sold his country to be covered with worthless windfleets.
Congratulations will be due to the Brits when they listen to Nigel Farage and have a referendum right now on England’s membership in the EU. Just leave and save 50 million pounds a day.
Good job Lord Monckton.
One more Crackpot down, many to go. Good riddance Huhne you and your insane policy’s have hurt many people and the economy.
Ed Davey’s creed is no different from the idiocy preached by his down-fallen predecessor. The madness continues unabated, as do the taxes.
“I’m determined to work to follow on Chris’s priorities, the Liberal Democrats’ priorities, the coalition government’s priorities and make them my priorities.
“I want us to have a green economy with lots of green jobs to grow our economy.”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-16875525
Christopher Monckton wrote
“When I visited the House of Lords’ minister, Lord Marland, at the Climate Change Department a couple of years ago, I asked him and the Department’s chief number-cruncher, Professor David Mackay (neither a climate scientist nor an economist, of course) to show me the Department’s calculations detailing just how much “global warming” that might otherwise occur this century would be prevented by the $30 billion per year that the Department was committed to spend between 2011 and 2050 – $1.2 trillion in all. ‘Eventually, in a very small voice, the Professor (Mackay) said, “Er, ah, mphm, that is, oof, arghh, we’ve never done any such calculation.”
I can equal that. Last year I helped write an article whose purpose is in the title;
http://judithcurry.com/2011/05/26/the-futility-of-carbon-reduction/
After working out the effect the emissions reduction would have on UK temperature (notified in advance to Prof Mackay who replied ‘Well that’s the tragedy of the commons’) I wrote to around 18 of the worlds leading climate scientists asking exactly the same question.
As you rightly observe it was perfectly obvious that none of them had actually bothered to work it out, let alone knew the answer. Extraordinary. I think if the politicians knew the answer they might start to think a bit more about the consequences of their actions, which in Britain are sky high energy prices and other ‘green’ measures such as punitive flight taxes.
tonyb
Mr Huhne is now charged with a criminal offence and is thus innocent until proven guilty.
What he is guilty of is crass ignorance in the face of overwhelming evidence that the UK government is wasting billions on measures to mitigate global warming. If only he had got up to speed on this subject he then could have placed the UK in the fast lane in the fight against global warming alarmism.
Here’s one more Brit who was smirking all through the BBC news items about Huhne resigning. Unfortunately, as others have said above, I doubt whether this will produce any significant change – but maybe just a slight movement towards sanity.
Apparently Huhne has been pushing his agenda hard in the EU and the various climate jamborees as well as in the UK. With any luck his replacement will be less persuasive.
It is the same in California. Our Kommissars are called the California Air Resources Board. They are not elected. They can’t be sacked by anyone but the governor. When Governor Brown first created that organization, he was promptly sacked from office but the Board remained. The woman running it is the same person he initially appointed when he created the board decades ago. Now he is back. We have several of these in California. The Coastal Commission is another. It’s job is to rule over the land between State Hwy 1 and the coast. The problem is that in some places, Hwy 1 curves considerably inland and now farmers can’t get a bridge rebuilt for access to their land because the Coastal Commission and its Commissioners (the English for Kommissars) ruled that such a bridge might encourage greater use of the land, and they can’t have that, while they cheerfully approved a multi-million dollar Ritz Carlton Hotel at Half Moon Bay and its accompanying golf course. The farmer doesn’t have millions to dump into political campaigns in order to grease the wheels of the Commission.
The whole country is becoming like this with various unelected boards, bureaus, and commissions replacing the elected representatives of the people in the regulation process. Take a look at your own local “planning commission” and see how their Kommissars are implementing the UN’s “Sustainable Development” objectives under Agenda 21 of the Rio Declaration. Chances are the only ones active at their public meetings are the “watermelon” groups.
So Tweedle-Dumb will be replaced by Tweedle-Dumber. Don’t imagine “it couldn’t get much worse”. The Fates love to implode such illusions.
As for the costs, to Troo Greenies it doesn’t matter. The money will all be well-spent, you see, creating monster projects employing half as many (at most) of the people they displace, and committing the planet to a starvation energy diet. It’s all good!
Based on Lord Monckton’s calculations of how much the effect the small greenhouse contribution from the UK is, and how much a waste of money it would be to try to abate any warming that might come from that contribution, and what little difference it would all make anyway…then none of us should pay our taxes…as each of us only makes a very insignificant difference anyway.
On the confusion between billion and trillion, CM is probably of an age when the UK used the longer billion, of a million million (10¹²), rather than the US billion, of a thousand million (10⁹, aka a “milliard”). Similarly, a trillion would be a million million million rather than a million million. These older “long” forms have died out in economics, but they still cause confusion.
The sooner economists use SI prefixes the better? Right! I’m off down the shops to spend a few decastirling.
R. Gates says:
February 3, 2012 at 11:07 am
“Based on Lord Monckton’s calculations of how much the effect the small greenhouse contribution from the UK is, and how much a waste of money it would be to try to abate any warming that might come from that contribution, and what little difference it would all make anyway…then none of us should pay our taxes…as each of us only makes a very insignificant difference anyway.”
Come on, you can do better than that. I cite in my post above about Prof Mackay calling it the ‘tragedy of the commons’ when we told him the figures. The UK is spending £30bilion a year we havent got in order to solve a hypothetical problem which, if true, can only be ‘solved’ by everyone joining in.
As ‘everyone’ has no intention of joining in and the developing world now emits a greater proportion of the emissions than the developed world (and no one intends to stop them doing so) this s a complete waste of our money. People are dying here because they can’t afford the fuel for heating, and our petrol (gas) is some $10 a gallion. In return we are having our finest landscapes littered with useless wind turbines whilst the solar industry is making hay on the back of absurd Govt subsidies. Solar power in Britain! Have we gone mad!
tonyb
I’m delighted Huhne is going, but as others have said above, I fear Davey will be from the same liberal mould.
From his website:
“The Climate Change Bill has been debated by MPs this week.
As a result of a lot of hard campaigning by the Liberal Democrats, campaign organisations such as Friends of the Earth, Tear Fund and Christian Aid and members of the public, we have been able to strengthen the climate change bill in a number of important respects.
the target for CO2 cuts by 2050 has been increased from 60% to 80%; this was an amendment tabled by the Lib Dems which the Government has accepted;
all greenhouses gases are going to be included, not just CO2;
the targets will have to ‘take account’ of aviation and shipping
More needs to be done
There are still aspects of the Bill where we would like to see further strengthening.
The interim target for 2020 has not been increased, and given the urgency of early cuts in emissions, this is a source of concern.
The Bill says nothing about how far Britain has to ‘de-carbonise’ its own economy in order to meet these targets and how far it can simply ‘buy in’ carbon credits from elsewhere.
Green backbone
Most importantly of all, we want to see the whole of Government taking climate change seriously.
At the same time as the Climate Change minister is announcing tougher targets, other departments are working against him, whether by announcing massive airport expansion or preparing to give the go-ahead for new coal-fired power stations.
Our view is that there needs to be ‘green backbone’ running through all government policy if we are to achieve these vital goals on tackling climate change.”
Good to know that FoE are helping to decide our energy policy. Mr Davey did PPE at Oxford, so he knows all about energy, of course.
ozspeaksup asks: “who will they replace this fool with??”
My money is on Oliver St.John-Mollusk.
http://www.blinkx.com/watch-video/monty-python-upper-class-twit-of-the-year/xov0FSL8pT9N8zx9DgJ3UA
But where is this “pipeline?” How big is it? How many photons will it hold? Does it require magnets? Is it insulated?
Liberal Democrat policies for the environment
http://www.libdems.org.uk/siteFiles/resources/PDF/Election%20Policy/Liberal%20Democrat%20Environment%20Manifesto.pdf
But there’s always anotherone to take his place