Don't put your pension into Greens, Mrs Worthington…

Starting at the same price, there’s a 10 to 1 gap in investment performance

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

… Don’t put your pension into Greens. “Greens” are what the City boys in red suspenders with East End accents you could cut with a machete and Porsches you could scratch with a convenient latch-key call renewable-energy stocks.  See the chart:

clip_image002

As Bjørn Lomborg points out in a recent devastating graph, if you had been scared enough by the hockey-stick fable in the IPCC’s 2001 Third Assessment Report to invest $100 in Greens in 2002, you would now be the proud owner of $28, or quite a bit less than that after inflation.

But if you had followed Monckton’s Rule of Merry and Profitable Investment – listen very carefully to what the Government tells you, do the exact opposite, wait a decade or so, then collect in spades – you would have invested your $100 in oil and gas stocks. And you would now have a billfold crammed with $238, or 1000% more than the hapless investor in Greens.

These are remarkable figures. Oil and gas corporations have had to face ever higher taxes and ever tighter regulations in the name of Saving The Planet. Greens have been subsidized to levels so absurd they’re beyond Communist. Even with the millstone of taxation, regulation and ministerial hate-speech, oil and gas stocks have done well. Even with frequent epinephrine overdoses of taxpayer subsidy and paeans of official praise, Greens – as the red-suspenders brigade would put it – are down the toilet.

That is a remarkable contrast. Not the least reason for it is that all forms of so-called “renewable” energy are monstrously, irremediably inefficient. Currently, my favorite example is the sappy UK Government’s subsidies to new electric autos.

Typical gasoline-powered auto engines are approximately 27% efficient. Typical fossil-fueled generating stations are 50% efficient, transmission to end user is 67% efficient, battery charging is 90% efficient and the auto’s electric motor is 90% efficient, so that the fuel efficiency of an electric auto is – er – also 27%. However, the electric auto requires 30% more power per mile traveled to move the mass of its batteries.

CO2 emissions from domestic transport account for 24% of UK CO2 emissions, and cars, vans, and taxis represent 90% of road transport. Assuming 80% of fuel use is by these autos, they account for 19.2% of UK CO2 emissions. Conversion to electric power, 61% of which is generated by fossil fuels in the UK, would remit 39% of 19.2%, or 7.5%, of UK CO2 emissions.

However, the battery-weight penalty would be 30% of 19.2% of 61%, or 3.5%, of UK CO2 emissions. So the net saving from converting all UK cars, vans, and taxis to electricity would be just 4% of UK CO2 emissions, which are 1.72% of global CO2 emissions. Thus converting all UK autos to electricity would abate 0.07% of global CO2 emissions.

But at what cost?

The cost to the UK taxpayer of subsidizing the 30,000 electric cars, vans, and taxis bought in 2012 was a flat-rate subsidy of $8333 (£5000) for each vehicle and a further subsidy of about $350 (£210) in vehicle excise tax remitted, a total of $260.5 million. On that basis, the cost of subsidizing all 2,250,000 new autos sold each year would be $19.54 bn. Though the longevity of electric autos is 50% greater than that of internal-combustion autos, batteries must be completely replaced every few years at great cost, canceling the longevity advantage.

The considerable cost of using renewable energy to bring down the UK’s fossil-fueled generation fraction from the global mean 67% to 61% is not taken into account, though, strictly speaking, an appropriate share of the very large subsidy cost of renewable electricity generation should be assigned to electric vehicles.

By contrast, what is the cost of doing nothing?

The Stern Report on the economics of climate change says 3 Cº global warming this century would cost 0-3% of global GDP. We’re not going to get 3 Cº warming, or anything like it, so make that, say, 1% of GDP.

But the cost of making global warming go away by methods whose unit cost per Celsius degree of global warming abated is equivalent to that of the UK Government’s mad subsidy for electric autos works out at 74% of global GDP. So it is 74 times more expensive to act today than to adapt the day after tomorrow. Oops!

In fact, the cost-benefit ratio may be even worse than this. Now that both RSS and UAH have reported their satellite-derived monthly temperature anomalies for February 2014, the monthly Global Warming Prediction Index can be determined, based on the simple mean of the two datasets since January 2005.

clip_image004

The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report last year backdated the models’ projections to 2005, and reduced the central estimate of the next 30 years’ global warming by almost half from the equivalent of 2.3 Cº per century in the pre-final draft to the equivalent of 1.3 Cº per century in the final draft.

Even this much-reduced projection continues inexorably to diverge from the unexciting reality that global temperature has stabilized.

The brainier and more honest advocates of the official story-line know that events have rendered their demands for near-zero CO2 emissions no longer tenable.

Yet they continue to make their strident demands that the West should, in effect, shut itself down. They do so for the following interesting reason. They know that the high-sensitivity theory they said they were more sure about than anything else is nonsense. They know the world will warm by perhaps 1 Cº this century as a result of our activities, and that is all, and that is not a problem.

They also know that within not more than seven years the mean of all five global-temperature datasets may well show no global warming – at all – for 20 years. They know that if CO2 concentration continues to rise at anything like its present rate it will become obvious to all that they were spectacularly, egregiously, humiliatingly in error.

They have concluded, unsurprisingly but furtively, that their only way out is to insist that the science is even more settled than ever and that CO2 emissions must be cut even faster than before.

Then, when global temperature fails to rise as they now know it will fail to rise, they can say that the Pause has happened because CO2 emissions have been stabilized by the policies they so profitably demanded, rather than because the Pause would have happened anyway.

Indeed, one or two of the more flagrantly dishonest global warming crooks are already beginning to claim that the Pause is their doing. One has only to look at the ever-rising gray CO2 curve on the graph to see there is no truth in that.

However, the day of judgment is at hand. A fraud case is being quietly, painstakingly assembled, spanning three continents. When the last pieces of evidence have been carefully collected, half a dozen people will face trial for the serious, imprisonable offense of fraud by misrepresentation.

When that day comes, watch the rats who have over-promoted this profoundly damaging scare scurrying for cover in case they are next. Then, and only then, the scare will be over.

[ALL: Be aware that replies WILL ALMOST CERTAINLY go into the “Review” bin for specific moderator review IF they contain the word “fraud” … (or meet certain other criteria.)

Since, on this thread, it is VERY LIKELY that the “fraud” word will be used or referenced in many replies, EXPECT DELAYS for your replies until they are accepted. Mod Team]

The climate data they don't want you to find — free, to your inbox.
Join readers who get 5–8 new articles daily — no algorithms, no shadow bans.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
155 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Bonanzapilot
March 6, 2014 12:59 pm

Subsidies to “Big Oil” in the context of these debates usually refer to the fact that you can write off a depletion allowance as a reservoir is, well, depleted. It’s the same as saying a building owner is “subsidized” because he can write off depreciation.

rogerthesurf
March 6, 2014 1:10 pm

Great stuff Lord M!
You are so right about that Stern character.
Yes I know he is a Lord and all that, but when I started to read his famous treatise on the economics of global warming protection it became obvious that he would get, as he must very well know himself, a resounding D minus if he submitted it as an Economics 101 essay.
As I myself studied economics to a somewhat higher level than the first year, I say that he should be among the fraudulent offenders that you mention.
All the best,
Roger
http://www.thedemiseofchristchurch.com

Bonanzapilot
March 6, 2014 1:10 pm

Anyone aware of a data source which would show the hypothetical performance of the RENIXX with Tesla stripped out? And to be fair, for the STOXX as well, if it also holds Tesla.

D.I.
March 6, 2014 1:23 pm

There are ‘More Irons to the Fire’ regarding efficiency of I.C.E. versus Electric Vehicles.
The I.C.E. Vehicle uses ‘Waste’ heat for demisting and heating the Interior whereas the Electric Vehicle has to consume battery power.Maybe 2-3 Kw.

ralfellis
March 6, 2014 1:26 pm

Actually, my large diesel saloon does 45 – 50 mpg, so it is more like 40% efficient, and therefore much more efficient then an electric car.
.
What i did not like was Professor David Mackay, the UK government advisor on energy, saying that electric vehicles were FIVE TIMES MORE EFFICIENT THAN FOSSIL FUELLED CARS. See page 127 of his briefing notes to ministers:
http://www.withouthotair.com/download.html
I called him out on this a couple of years ago. He got hot under the collar, threatened legal action, but then apologised (to the Sunday Times, who had repeated his deliberate misinformation). The Sunday times then printed a retraction, that was so small you needed a magnifying glass to see it.
However, the professor has never corrected the misleading paragraph in his booklet, that says electric vehicles are 5x more efficient. So ministers probably still think electric vehicles are the best thing since sliced bread.
I am left wondering – was this government subsidy for electric cars made on the basis of this deliberate lie by David Mackay? Did ministers take this 5x more efficient claim, hook line and sinker? Has the government wasted £millions, because of deliberate misinformation? Should Mr Mackay be forced to pay all of that subsidy money back, out of his own pocket?
Silver Ralph

Gail Combs
March 6, 2014 1:28 pm

David Wells says: March 6, 2014 at 12:57 pm
Most IC engines petrol or diesel will happily exceed 250k miles….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
My 1982 Diesel Pick-up is happily running just fine, well better than new, at 3/4 million miles. (Thank you Jim Jessup)
I think that truck will out last me!

Reply to  Gail Combs
March 7, 2014 7:46 am

@Gail Combs – “I think that truck will out last me!”
Naw, we will shoot it and bury along side you. 😉

Cheshirered
March 6, 2014 1:44 pm

Bravo, Lord Monckton, bravo. Truth is on your side and like class, will out.

jarro2783
March 6, 2014 1:50 pm

What’s the efficiency of getting petrol out of crude oil?

ralfellis
March 6, 2014 1:53 pm

This was Professor David Mackay’s apology to the Sunday Times, regarding his absurd claim that electric cars were five times more efficient than fossil cars. But even this apology was disingenuous, as my bog-standard car is more efficient than the example he used here.
More importantly, the paragraph that caused this confusion for the Sunday Times, still has not been amended. And one suspects that this lack of change is deliberate.
Electric cars’ efficiencies , compared with petrol and diesel , today
18 Feb 2011
Dear ********,
Ralph Ellis has mentioned your article and his correspondence with you (pasted below).
I’d like to confirm that Mr Ellis is right to assert that what I wrote
appears to have been misinterpreted. I apologise for the lack of clarity on my part.
To be clear: when I said electric vehicles use about 15 or 20 kWh per 100 km
measured at the socket, and petrol vehicles use about 80 kWh per 100 km
measured at the petrol pump, this should not be taken as implying
that today’s electric vehicles use 4 or 5 times less fossil fuels
than petrol cars. The electricity in the UK is largely generated from
gas and coal, and the efficiency of that elec generation is about 42%,
so electric vehicles are only about 1.7 times more efficient (assuming 20 kWh electric
is compared with 80 kWh of fossil fuel, and neglecting the upstream energy costs of
fossil fuel production in both cases).
The above statement is consistent with the emissions associated with the two
vehicle types which I estimated in my book on page 131
http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/withouthotair/c20/page_131.shtml
– I explained there that with today’s UK grid mix, elec vehicles have a footprint
of roughly 100g per km whereas the average UK car bought today rolls in at 168 g (p 122)
http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/withouthotair/c20/page_122.shtml
which is a ratio of about 1.7 to 1 in favour of the electric vehicle.
The best fossil fuel vehicles are in the 100 g range so if we compare the
best fossils with the typical electric car, they are level pegging today.
An increase in nuclear power or other low-carbon electricity will in due
course change these answers so that electric vehicles will look increasingly
good by the carbon emissions metric.
I hope this helps, and again apologies if the exposition in my book
was not sufficiently clear.
yours
David Mackay
Email from Sunday Times:

Crispin in Waterloo
March 6, 2014 1:59 pm

@TerryS
“The battery is effectively the engine so if you replaced the engine of an internal combustion engine every few years I’m sure it would last longer.”
There is a device that you can install on your engine that runs up the oil pressure before the engine is started. This will triple act the engine life in most cases. That is why it is not included in any car – only large very expensive engines like bulldozers etc.

Mac the Knife
March 6, 2014 2:10 pm

M’Lord,
“However, the day of judgment is at hand. A fraud case is being quietly, painstakingly assembled, spanning three continents. “
Details to follow? Film at 11:00????
Mac

Dave_G
March 6, 2014 2:16 pm

The £70/month rental charge for the Nissan Leaf battery pack equates to approximately 54 litres of petrol (gasoline) at the ridiculous UK prices of £1.30/litre ($2.08/litre) and, used in an average petrol vehicle doing 45mpg will take you 6,500 miles annually.
If petrol was priced more realistically then the £70/month battery hire charge would be the equivalent of petrol consumed in a normal car – therefore the electric option, taking battery charging costs into account at £0.20/kwhr, would in no way save you money.

glenncz
March 6, 2014 2:21 pm

Here is more green stupidity. Look at the Oregon electricity mix output/demand graph.
http://transmission.bpa.gov/business/operations/wind/baltwg.aspx
March 1st – 2200 MW of wind (at nt when not needed), negligible decrease of fossil fuel use
March 2nd – literally no wind production until about 11:30pm at night, again when not needed.
March 3rd – wind production with minimal decrease in fossil fuel reduction
March 5th/6th – again wind production late evening, spikes at midnight, not needed.
March 6th – peak of 4000MW of wind, but it looks like it may have replaced 500MW of fossil.
But who cares if the wind replaces any fossil anyway. Tally up the output and they’ll be the % contribution to the grid, even if they are essentially wasted electrons spun off by the wind.

Bonanzapilot
March 6, 2014 2:27 pm

It appears RENIXX included Tesla early this year, still can’t find the weighting. YTD Tesla is up 68% and RENIXX is up 21%. It wouldn’t surprise me to find that its entire gain was due to one moment driven stock; but I can’t prove it, yet.

D.J. Hawkins
March 6, 2014 2:57 pm

Michael J. Dunn says:
March 6, 2014 at 12:54 pm
…Oh, and the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere is controlled by the chemical equilibrium with the CO2 and carbonate in sea water, so human contributions make no difference. (Carthage must be destroyed!)

“Carthago delenda est!” …If my 40-year old Latin is accurate. Cato’s punch line to every speech he made, or so Sr. Loretto told us. Sorry for the detour.

D.I.
March 6, 2014 2:58 pm

Jarryd Beck says:
March 6, 2014 at 1:50 pm
What’s the efficiency of getting petrol out of crude oil?
About 99.14321400322%.

Paul - Nottingham
March 6, 2014 3:07 pm

One question that interests me is this. In the UK motorists who pay £1.30 for a litre of unleaded fuel will be paying 80p of this in duty and VAT, electricity bears nothing like the same amount of tax. So, if we convert a significant portion of our vehicle fleet to electric, where’s the government going to get its money from?

Another Geologist's Take
March 6, 2014 3:22 pm

clipe and Mac…I wasn t trying to argue that the green energy industry isn’t a subsidy hog, but if a comaprison is made then the subsidies that are and have gone to the fossil fuel industry need to be in the equation to make it a fair comparison.
A quick look and I found this….jeez guys you’re acting rabid.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2013/012813.pdf.
The point is oil, natural gas and coal companies have gotten lots of breaks over the years. I’m sure that a lot of the lobbying money spent by them in Washington has been fruitful. No value judgement here. Hell, you don’t think the oil companies are now raking in money from the green subsidies too?

steverichards1984
March 6, 2014 3:40 pm

Another of Professor David Mackay’s poor ‘misinterpreted’ statements….
where he suggests that solar panels on an electric car roof will supply 800W which will be sufficient to run a car air conditioning compressor.
However, ‘Fuel Used for Vehicle Air Conditioning’, by Johnson 2002 of NREL, state that car AC consumes 5 to 8 kW.
Again, the real figures change arguments greatly.

D.J. Hawkins
March 6, 2014 3:43 pm

Another Geologist’s Take says:
March 6, 2014 at 3:22 pm
clipe and Mac…I wasn t trying to argue that the green energy industry isn’t a subsidy hog, but if a comaprison is made then the subsidies that are and have gone to the fossil fuel industry need to be in the equation to make it a fair comparison.
A quick look and I found this….jeez guys you’re acting rabid.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2013/012813.pdf.
The point is oil, natural gas and coal companies have gotten lots of breaks over the years. I’m sure that a lot of the lobbying money spent by them in Washington has been fruitful. No value judgement here. Hell, you don’t think the oil companies are now raking in money from the green subsidies too?

You really don’t get it, do you? A subsidy is when someone writes you a check, and you have money you wouldn’t otherwise have possessed. Usually someone else’s money. A tax break is when I hit you in the head with a brick (called the IRS) and decide to take only 20% of your money instead of 35%. Understand now? Tax break does not equal subsidy.

Reply to  D.J. Hawkins
March 7, 2014 9:10 am

@D.J.Hawkins – BINGO! Succinctly and 100% accurately stated!

Tom J
March 6, 2014 3:54 pm

‘Typical gasoline-powered auto engines are approximately 27% efficient. Typical fossil-fueled generating stations are 50% efficient, transmission to end user is 67% efficient, battery charging is 90% efficient and the auto’s electric motor is 90% efficient, so that the fuel efficiency of an electric auto is – er – also 27%.’
Oh ye, of little faith. The world’s largest piston engines, the massive 2 cycle, turbocharged, modular marine Diesels of the Wartsila Co. of Finland, achieve a phenomenal 50% efficiency level – all the more impressive considering they’re converting heat energy into mechanical energy. And, also all the more impressive since, just a few years ago they were 40% efficient. I have little doubt, with such things as DLC (diamond like carbon) coatings, graphite coated pistons, direct electronic fuel injection, computer controlled solenoid operated variable intake and exhaust valves, new formulation synthetic oils, and of course, human ingenuity and creativity, the venerable reciprocating IC engines in automobiles will be inviting those Wartsila’s to dinner. Moreover, some of those electric cars need radiators with electric fans to dissipate some of the heat generated in those electric motors – heat that’s clearly not being put to productive work.
The future is bright – if we ever learn to leave each other alone to live, thrive, and survive. If…

garymount
March 6, 2014 3:58 pm

D.I. says:
March 6, 2014 at 1:23 pm

There are ‘More Irons to the Fire’ regarding efficiency of I.C.E. versus Electric Vehicles.The I.C.E. Vehicle uses ‘Waste’ heat for demisting and heating the Interior whereas the Electric Vehicle has to consume battery power.Maybe 2-3 Kw.

D.I. has a very good point that is missed in Christopher’s analysis.
I once got a ride to work with my brother in his Volkswagen Beetle that did not have interior heating. it was not a pleasant experience.

Unmentionable
March 6, 2014 4:06 pm

Got a pleasant surprise this morning, I have stated several times since early January that North Queensland is having a much cooler and drier than normal Summer. I said this only in response to the ‘extreme’ heat wave reports in a line from SE South Australia to eastern Victoria.
Well this morning I came out to make my coffee and overnight the wattle trees had flowered their bright-red pipe-cleaner flowers again. I was stunned as this usually happens from mid October to early December, and no other time.
This summer has been so cool and dry that the plants apparently think it’s still Spring, so are throwing flowers and fruit again. So I walked down the street to check on this, sure enough, more trees, not just wattles, have begun to bloom as well (don’t know what they are, no botanist).
So it’s been so unusually cool that the plants don’t know what part of the year this is. Now the that sun has reached the same approximate incident angle again as Spring, they’re flowering again
We had a warmer and milder winter that preceded this spring and summer so the biannual temperature range has flattened. So for all the BOM and ABC hype of excess heat this summer, at least the wattle trees are telling the whole truth. One the BOM’s dodgy daily max T statistics can not get around.
Any in coastal QLD have a look around and report if you’re seeing similar flowering where you are. Check for new buds as well. You can even smell the flowers walking past the trees. As far as I know this has not happened in March during my life time, and it was unusual coolness that has done it.

clipe
March 6, 2014 4:21 pm

Another Geologist’s Take says:
March 6, 2014 at 3:22 pm

jeez guys you’re acting rabid

One finger pointed at me leaves four fingers pointed back at you.

clipe
March 6, 2014 4:24 pm

three fingers