Huhne is no loss

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Image by Josh of cartoonsbyjosh.com

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.

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R. Gates
February 3, 2012 3:12 pm

Vince Causey says:
February 3, 2012 at 12:16 pm
R. Gates,
“…then none of us should pay our taxes…as each of us only makes a very insignificant difference anyway.”
Indeed you are correct Gates. If after paying trillions in tax all we got in return was one ramshackle school, two police officers, three doctors and four soldiers, then we should not be paying those taxes, because the benefit comes nowhere near the cost.
As we all know, this is an analogy of paying trillions into some fantasy climate change levy.
_____
I actually agree with Lord Monckton on this point. When it comes to actually doing something to reduce CO2 emissions (if that is what is desired), I’ve never been in favor of the economic program appoach. Certainly China and the U.S. are the 900-lb Gorillas in the room, and the UK is like a flee in their fur (when it comes to CO2 emissions, it’s just an analogy here- I love the Brits). Not much the Brits do, no matter how much they throw at it will amount to much. Having said this, the Brits would be served the best in the long run to focus on efficiency and energy independence, with CO2 reduction not being the prime focus, but only one of many potential secondary benefits. By focusing on efficiency and independence, there will be real financial benefits and paybacks in the long run, and great grandchildren will thank their great grandparents, not curse them.

Cyclopath
February 3, 2012 3:37 pm

Old Chinese proverb:
A wise man learns from his own mistakes. A fool learns from other people’s mistakes. An idiot never learns at all.
No prizes for guessing which one Wind Farm zealot Huhne is.

Peter Miller
February 3, 2012 3:39 pm

Huhne is one of the principal architects of the rolling blackouts and brownouts the UK is doomed to have by the end of this decade. From deliberately fudging giving the go ahead for a new generation of nuclear power stations to accelerating the building of unreliable, very expensive, windmills all over the countryside, to committing the UK to a decarbonisation policy, which if enacted, will wipe out the country’s remaining industrial base, he has been a complete disaster..
A man as inept as he is in his private life as in his public life, his going will be no loss. Unfortunately, his successor is certain to continue with the same goofy policies.

RS
February 3, 2012 3:50 pm

The real question has always been… does the money and the power go through the RIGHT hands? And will enough of it stick to the fingers there?

Steve Allen
February 3, 2012 4:22 pm

R Gates says:
“…then none of us should pay our taxes…as each of us only makes a very insignificant difference anyway.”
Gates, if you hadn’t noticed, in terms of greenhouse gas emission reductions, currently, noboby IS “paying their taxes”. LOL. Question really is, who is dumb enough to be the first?

neill
February 3, 2012 4:30 pm

“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.”
Not so fast, m’Lord. This seems to me just re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. The lot should be sentenced hard labor — in a saner world. One day, perhaps……
Meanwhile, the inmates still run the asylum.

Pete H
February 3, 2012 4:34 pm

The problem being, if Huhne is found guilty but gets a sentence of less than one year he can continue as an M.P.! Beware!

Steve in SC
February 3, 2012 4:49 pm

OK I’ll ask the question about the elephant.
Just what physical mechanism will be employed by all the increased taxes to reduce the global temperature?????????????????????
I think it will do nothing other than enrich some people.

Joe V.
February 3, 2012 5:08 pm

Pete H. @4.34
“, if Huhne is found guilty …. a sentence of less than one year he can continue as an M.P.! Beware!”
In the meantime that would be at an H.M.P.
Still, he should have no trouble claiming it as a 2nd. Home.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2039462/MPs-expenses-Elliot-Morley-freed-serving-quarter-jail-sentence.html

Phil's Dad
February 3, 2012 5:26 pm

Is Robin Hewitt (February 3, 2012 at 3:11 pm) ex Mayor Hewitt?
I, like you, very much look forward to 2015 and a proper government – but their is still much work to do within “the true party of government” to put this thing in perspective. The good Lord’s figure above of 23:1 cost of stopping it : dealing with it (it being AGW) certainly helps to clarify the situation.
(23:1 for thr UK, 200:1 for the EU)

1DandyTroll
February 3, 2012 5:34 pm

The best part is that most of that money seem to go to German, French, and Swedish government owned corporations building wind and nuclear power in Britain, as in the limey pound isn’t staying with the brit for too long.
No wonder the British diminished isle empire has a shortage of funds but raking up the debts.

Phil's Dad
February 3, 2012 5:34 pm

Joe V. says: (February 3, 2012 at 5:08 pm)
…he should have no trouble claiming it as a 2nd home.
as a mail reader you should know better.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2091245/Chris-Huhne-splashes-1-3m-Grade-II-listed-building-London.html

February 3, 2012 5:54 pm

Steve Allen says at 4:22 PM ….”Gates, if you hadn’t noticed, in terms of greenhouse gas emission reductions, currently, noboby IS “paying their taxes”. LOL. Question really is, who is dumb enough to be the first?”
Steve out here in CA we have been modifying how we allocate costs for electrical energy over the years. Our Independent Service Providers (ISO’s= PG&E, SCE, etc) costs have gone up over the last decade and are expected to continue to increase (partly due to bringing on-line more RE as we move towards our stated goal of 33% RE by 2020). In order to meet our RE targets our ISOs have to pay a premium price (for up to 25 years as that is the way the purchase contracts work) for renewable electrical energy. By law they are allowed to pass their costs on to their customers. So that leads us to the allocation of those costs. In other words who (which ratepayers) pays for the more expensive energy that the ISO’s we required to source to meet the RE goals.
It’s near to impossible to get answer to the who pays question. But, luckily for us the CPUC has weighed in on who paid for the increased costs for PG&E over the years- Tier 3, 4, and 5 customers to be exact picked up all the costs PG&E incurred for years (in the residential market allocation of costs that is). For some history on the subject these comments are rather enlightening-
ftp://ftp.cpuc.ca.gov/OGA/2010%20position%20letters/CPUC%20ANALYSIS%20-%20AB%20413%20(090601)%20-%20090623%20(Sen%20EUC).pdf ) .
A question I have is when is an allocation of additional costs the same thing as a tax? In my mind electrical energy ratepayers in CA are already paying the tax.

Gary Hladik
February 3, 2012 6:06 pm

“Huhne is no loss.”
I suspect his successor is no gain.

Carl Chapman
February 3, 2012 6:43 pm

$17,000 per head over 10 years sounds bad enough, but a lot of people in the 3rd world survive on much less than that. Either the richer countries would pay much more than that under the insane deindustrialisation planned, or people in poor countries would starve to pay their share. Let’s get positive. Let’s develop resources and free people from poverty. Forget the green madness.

John
February 3, 2012 7:00 pm

excuse me; over a speeding ticket.
Speeding ticket = 3 penalty points + a fine of UK£60.00
12 points = 12 month licence disqualification
He had 9 points.
The offence as charged is: conspiring to pervert the course of justice
The penalty upon conviction could be life imprisonment, the average penalty is 24 months for that offence [driving]
The longest sentence has been 30 years, to date.

tokyoboy
February 3, 2012 7:22 pm

Could someone in the know teach me who is succeeding Mr. Huhne, and what is the stance of the successor on AGW?

John F. Hultquist
February 3, 2012 8:38 pm

R. Gates on “pay no taxes” and all those commenting:
Did someone mention Greece?
Some things do have to be paid for.
Others, not so much.

MarkG
February 3, 2012 8:38 pm

“There was a Liberal surge in the polls and the election was hung.”
That and because the Tories picked a second-rate Tony Blair clone as their leader when the country really needed another Thatcher. The election was theirs to lose, and they chose to lose it.
Huhne, I imagine, will either be reinstated after the CPS decide that prosecution ‘is not in the public interest’, or he’ll move on to a fat-cat job as a EU Commissar.

a jones
February 3, 2012 9:36 pm

tokyoboy says:
February 3, 2012 at 7:22 pm
Well his replacement is Davey. An odd fellow in that he is a free marketeer: his orange book and all that.
He is said to be pretty green but how much that is his real view or more or less panders to his political base is unclear. Which base is very green and far from free market.
Certainly he lacks the aggression of Hunhe and is already being placatory over things like energy costs. What he will do, or try to do, only time will tell. It is a cabinet system you understand and in effect we do not know his calibre yet.
Interesting times eh?
As for Hunhe himself he maintains his innocence, the jury will decide, but I wonder what his ex wife’s lawyers have advised her. If she enters a guilty plea, given upon her own public admission that it appears that she did conspire although under duress, she can expect to get off very lightly indeed. Leaving him with a lone cuthroat defence at best: and that seldom works. Jurors can get very funny about these things you know. As can judges once they have verdict.
Hope this helps.
Kindest Regards

tokyoboy
February 3, 2012 9:58 pm

a jones says: February 3, 2012 at 9:36 pm
Thank you Jones. In view of a continual retraction from Green policies in European countries these months, I feel a kind of divine will in this event.

PaulID
February 3, 2012 10:21 pm

I hate to say it but for once I agree with R. Gates with one small change he says Co2 shouldn’t be the primary concern I think it could and should be ignored altogether, let it rise it will not harm us and will only benefit us in terms of food production, helping every person on the earth.

Steve Garcia
February 3, 2012 10:58 pm

ROFL –
I can’t pass this one up… it is too no-brainer:
So, what exactly did he ask his then wife? “Huhne, would you please take the hit on this and say you were driving?”

the_Butcher
February 4, 2012 12:56 am

How is that money (tax) going to help stop/slow ‘global warming’ ?

Scott
February 4, 2012 1:11 am

Is it true that Professor David Mackay is a professor of natural philosophy???