By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
I shall not cease from mental fight,
Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand,
Till we have built Jerusalem
In England’s green and pleasant land.
Thus William Blake, in the coda of the mystical poem that the nation belts out at full if not always tuneful volume on the Last Night of the Proms at the Albert Hall every summer.
England’s g. and p. l. is not what it was when Blake wrote about it. The place is being expensively carpeted with ugly, medieval, lo-tech wind farms.
The governing class still likes windmills. It is making a fortune out of them, at everyone else’s expense.
The Left support windmills because the developers quietly give their parties – “Labor”, the “Liberal” “Democrats”, and the “Greens”, in order of Leftness – huge kickbacks from the massive State subsidies they get.
The center-Left “Conservatives” like them because, like “Dave” Cameron’s pa-in-law, the wind farms are profitably built on their vast estates.
The unspeakable “Tim” Yeo, “Conservative” chairman of the Commons Environment Committee, who came off very much second-best in a tussle with Professor Dick Lindzen at a recent hearing, makes around $150,000 a year (in addition to his fat Parliamentary salary and allowances of $1 million a year) from various soi-disant “renewable” energy boondoggles subsidized by taxpayers.
Yeo’s committee has acted disgracefully, suppressing or sneering at any testimony (such as that from Professor Lindzen) that threatens’ its members’ personal fortunes and the immense donations to their parties from people whom their insane climate policies have made into multi-millionaires.
Johnny Taxpayer, who pays £30 billion a year for the mad climate policies that represent the biggest transfer of power and wealth in human history from the little guy to the fat cat, is heartily sick of wind farms.
Half of all zoning consents applied for by greedy developers supported by members of parliament whose parties hope to profiteer from wind farms are now being turned down, even though the government desperately wants local authorities to grant them because the Brussels junta, whom we do not elect, requires us to generate a fifth of our electricity from “renewables” by 2020.
The proposal that bids fair to bring the entire tottering house of cards crashing down is just about to be submitted for zoning consent.
Britain’s most important coastline – the Jurassic world-heritage coast in Dorset – is about to be ruined irretrievably by the Navitus Bay Wind Array, 194 wind turbines almost 600 feet high, covering six square miles, less than 9 miles out to sea.
The swept area of each turbine is 200,000 square feet. Yet the mean output of 4000 acres of vast 5 MW wind turbines, even at the absurdly optimistic 35% capacity factor claimed by the developers, will be just 339.5 MW. A single modern 4 GW coal-fired power station produces ten times as much output.
Figure 2a. The Navitus array, seen from Durlston Head lighthouse on the Jurassic Coast, will span almost 45 degrees of arc (nearly the entire field of view here).
Figure 3. The sheer size of the proposed Navitus Bay Wind Array wind farm is disproportionate to and intrusive upon the fragile and important landscape of the area. The illustration, kindly supplied by the Poole and Christchurch Bays Association, shows the scale of a 5 MW and a 7 MW turbine set against the Needles Light, one of Britain’s most-loved landmarks (they will not, of course, be this close to the coast). The array of 194 turbines each 581 feet high and sweeping an area of 200,000 square feet will be within 11 miles of the Needles. The UK Government’s minimum offshore distance for wind farms is 12 miles. The wind farms will tower over the neighboring cliffs.
The pathetic 339.5 MW output of this monstrous boondoggle is less than 0.8% of the 43.2 GW mean total UK load. Electricity accounts for 33% of UK CO2 emissions, which, at 142.6 MtC (522 Mt CO2) in 2008, represented 1.72% of global CO2 emissions.
Therefore, Navitus Bay will abate 0.0045% of global CO2 emissions. The annual subsidy for 339.5 MW over 8766 hours, at 1.8 times the Renewable Obligation Certificate price of $82.80 (£46), will be $444 million, or $2.22 bn over five years. The subsidy regime is too uncertain for reliable costing thereafter.
The subsidy is part-paid-for by a Climate Change Levy of about $0.09 kWh–1 on non-exempt consumers of electricity, and a Carbon Price Floor. These two levies brought in about £700 million ($1.2 bn) in 2013. The 2.975 TWh projected to be generated annually by Navitus Bay is equivalent to 7.235% of the 41.132 TWh generated from the renewables subsidized by the levies.
Accordingly, some $87 million of the annual cost of the levies would be attributable to the Navitus Bay project and, as a market distortion intended to favor renewables at the expense of fossil-fueled generation, is properly treated as additional to the subsidy, so that the five-year gross cost of the project is $22.65 billion, and that is before taking account of the cost of interconnection to the national power grid.
Armed with this information, we can determine whether Navitus Bay will make a useful contribution to cutting global CO2 emissions.
Navitus Bay is to come onstream by 2021. We shall study the first five years of the project, from 2021-2025. Beyond that period, the subsidy regime is uncertain.
CO2 concentration, on business as usual, will increase by 11 pmv from from 412 to 423 ppmv over the five years. Of this 11 ppmv, the 0.0045% abated by Navitus Bay represents 0.0005 ppmv.
The global CO2 forcing abated by Navitus Bay over the period, using the CO2 forcing equation, is 5.25 ln(423/422.9995), or 0.000006 W m–2.
The fraction of global warming abated is 0.000006 W m–2 multiplied by the five-year Planck sensitivity parameter 0.323 K W–1 m2, or 0.000002 Cº. That is approximately 2 millionths of a degree.
The unit mitigation cost, which is the cost of mitigating 1 Cº of global warming by measures of equivalent unit cost worldwide, is the five-year subsidy of £2.65 bn divided by the 0.000002 Cº global warming abated by Navitus Bay over the five-year period, or a mere $1.3 quadrillion.
The global total mitigation cost, which is the cost of mitigating the 0.08 Cº global warming that IPCC (2013) projects will occur over the five year period of study, is 0.08 Cº mutiplied by the unit mitigation cost of £1.3 quadrillion. That gives $109 trillion, which is $15,560 per head of global population or, as a percentage of projected global GDP of $436 trillion, 25%.
The benefit-cost ratio, assuming that adapting to 1 Cº unmitigated global warming over the 21st century would cost 1% of GDP, broadly consistent with Stern (2006) and IPCC (2013) on the assumption that little warming occurs, is 25.
It is 25 times costlier to address global warming with mitigation projects such as Navitus Bay than to allow the projected global warming to occur and meet the costs and damages of adapting to its consequences.
The “Greens” in the Bournemouth area, which will have its tourism industry wrecked by the medieval mechanical triffids visible in the bay less than 12 miles away, are of course backing this environment-destroying project because they, too, benefit from generous handouts from “renewable”-energy corporations.
Never mind the national finances. Never mind the taxpayers’ finances. Never mind the immense environmental damage the wind array will cause. Never mind the world heritage status of the Jurassic coast. Never mind the birds that will be killed. The Greens will profit, and – communists though they be – they are now the most rapacious capitalists on the planet, when it comes to their own bank balances.
Their argument in favor of this nonsensical scheme, which will be visible from the three major centers of Poole, Bournemouth, and Christchurch, as well as from the Needles, one of Britain’s best-loved landmarks and a haven for sailors, and from Durlston Head on the Jurassic Coast itself, is that almost 1.3 million tons of CO2 a year will not be emitted thanks to the turbines.
The calculations we did earlier, showing that it would be 25 times costlier to make global warming go away with offshore wind farms than to let the warming happen and adapt to it, were done on so generous a basis that we assumed it was true.
But it wasn’t true. The problem is that the wind, even offshore, is so fickle that the array will only generate electricity a third of the time. So just as much fossil-fueled capacity as before has to be kept onstream and spinning in case the wind drops. But instead of spinning at full and efficient capacity, it is kept spinning in a fashion so inefficient that there is no CO2 saving from the average wind farm at all.
On this true basis, it is infinitely costlier to make global warming go away with wind farms than to let it happen, because wind farms actually add to CO2 emissions when all is said and done.
The developers’ claims, parroted by the Greens, about the amount of CO2 emissions that the wind farm will “save” are entirely without foundation, as are their claims that the wind farm will help to meet the UK’s CO2 emissions targets laid down by our unelected masters in Brussels. The array, like all wind farms, will actually increase our CO2 emissions.
But it’s going to create jobs, right? The developers’ website proudly says there will be – wait for it – 140 permanent jobs keeping the turbines running. At a project subsidy of $0.53 bn a year, that works out at getting on for $4 million per job, per year.
The developers also claim the project will increase the UK’s “energy security”. Er, no, it won’t. There will be many tons of extremely scarce and expensive neodymium in each windmill, and that comes almost entirely from China, at enormous environmental cost in the shape of acid pollution of the water table for thousands of square miles via the process to leach the neodymium out from the ore. Not that you’ll hear much from the Greens about that. Wonder why not.
And how is the Royal Navy, with more admirals than rubber ducks, going to defend these and other offshore wind farms against sabotage? Security? Schmecurity.
Finally, the developers claim – and this is heroically insane – that the project will “stabilize electricity prices for the future”. Try telling that to the average energy user, who is paying at least twice what he was paying for electricity just a few years ago. A substantial fraction of the increase is attributable to subsidies for wind farms.
You would be forgiven for thinking that this proposal, like the regime of subsidy that has attracted it, is bonkers. So it is – and that is how it is going to be stopped.
Zoning consents for large projects like Navitus Bay have been taken out of the hands of local authorities. Too many of them, elected by the voters who might have to live next to these monstrous arrays, were saying No when Ministers and civil servants could only profiteer if they said Yes.
So Ministers now decide the bigger proposals themselves – or, at least, a vast bureaucracy decides on Ministers’ behalf. However, it is a Ministerial decision, and it is accordingly subject to judicial review in the Administrative Court in London.
The law is clear. If a decision is irrational, it is unlawful. Ministers are given very wide discretion, but, if a Minister takes a decision which, coldly dissected by a court, makes no sense whatsoever because no reasonable or sane Minister could possibly have taken it, the court is obliged to set that decision aside.
Watch this space. Navitus Bay could well prove to be the straw that broke the camel’s back. Show Fig. 1 to a court and it will start to question very carefully everything said by the developers, the Greens, and the government. And, as with the case against Al Gore’s movie in 2007, once the court starts to ask questions there is nowhere for the Forces of Darkness to hide.
Some 50 residents’ associations have already banded together to fight this poisonous scheme. Let us hope they fight it all the way, and let us hope they win. Otherwise, we shall all be singing a new version of Jerusalem:
… till Socialism’s builded here
In England’s Green, unpleasant land.
Figure 6. Views of the Jurassic World Heritage Coast, as it is for now. Enjoy it while you can.
Figure 7. The last Great Bustard in the Spanish province of Cadiz, killed by a wind farm.
Thank you Lord Monckton, a most interesting piece again. I did also appreciate the commenter’s discussing the UK grid mangling that goes on. Thats apart from the DECC type mangling of the country and abuse of diesel generators. I remember the use of Diesel Generators in the Middle East for new housing (way back). That was those with the intensely glowing exhaust manifiolds and sudden seizures. For as usual nobody gets it right….it was the money. Its now most definitely the money with added massive lack of brainware.
So really I need another scrapyard ready and waiting in Dorset. I mentioned to the guys driving around locally (any old iron) that they may need a marine department fairly shortly?
Cheshirered has summed it up nicely. The points he makes are the arguments central to the case demonstrating the irrationality of the UK Government’s approach. No one has made a systematic attempt to challenge the “renewables” policy in the courts before. The Navitus Bay proposal, however, is so entirely without merit that it will make an excellent choice if ministers are foolish enough to permit it.
Stephen Richards @ur momisugly 2:34am & 2:36am
I am building a presentation on turbines in france and need to find as much data as possible. If you can help please post here.
Great stuff but I missed any detail on nuclear baseload of which we have a lot in france. Any info?
Maybe this can help you; http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/france/ …in ‘near as we speak’ terms, nuke & hydro are supplying 90+% of France’s power (53.12GW), wind on the other hand is producing 1.3% or 0.76GW.
For a time earlier today all of the UK’s subsidy farms were generating just 63 MW.
http://www.bmreports.com/bsp/bsp_home.htm
I hope the Navitus Bay monstrosity can be stopped.
This is one reason why I no longer vote Conservative.
Chris
Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:
Once we finally admit how stupid this is, who will clean up the mess?
BruceC says:
April 29, 2014 at 4:37 am
Stephen Richards @ur momisugly 2:34am & 2:36am
I’ve been following this site for sometime and get all the same information, averaged over the period of the bill, from my EDF electricity bill. On average French nuclear supplies 82.5% of electricity in france but also supplies ALL other neighbouring countries inc. the UK.
Our socialist government wants to cut nuclear in half by 2025 which will be curtains for the UK and Spain but the germans are building dirty coal stations as fast as they can.
Chris Wright says:
April 29, 2014 at 4:56 am
VOTE UKIP. It is your only chance for change. Don’t worry about the news media comments on their ‘loonies’ all UK parties have their fair share of loonies.
This wind farm “IF” built.
Will be know as The Cameron Folly.
It will be like ten pin bowling for ships in a storm.
Who builds a reef in a shipping channel?
Some prat!
On April 29, 2014 at 3:14 am, Flydlbee said:
The seabed belongs to the Crown Estates, from which the Queen draws a proportion of the profits as her income, so be aware of whom you are up against.
I don’t understand your post – are you saying the fishermen weren’t entitled to be there in the first place?
richardscourtney: “I hope that is now clear.”
Well, not really. To me it seems that you said no to what I said but then repeated that very thing in different words. Be that as it may, I’m now realizing that the real answer involves issues of blade width and profile that I’ve never really dealt with before, so I shouldn’t have asked the question, because this isn’t a particularly good venue for straightening that kind of thing out.
But thanks for trying anyway. Your paper is quite helpful in other ways.
To write of conventional power stations having to occasionally ‘back up’ the wind turbines implies that the wind turbines usually front up. They do not. And they never will or could supply either the base load major part of supply, or the rapid response additional, and dependable, supply that consumers at times require. They are legally privileged offspring of our rulers who must be permitted to take center stage to perform their ugly and embarrassing party piece as and when they feel up to it.
It’s time for some turbine manufacturer to design a city size and/or home size, natural gas fired turbine generator.
@steven richards:
Try http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/france/
“fhhaynie says:
April 29, 2014 at 5:44 am
It’s time for some turbine manufacturer to design a city size and/or home size, natural gas fired turbine generator.”
I’d go for a “micro-reactor” or whatever. Self-contained, clean (waiting on tech here, I know), and generating enough power (and reserve) for heating, cooling, lighting, cooking, etc. With the gas prices here in Germany (and the uncertainty of supply right now) natural gas-powered generators wouldn’t break even financially…
“Dudley Horscroft says:
April 28, 2014 at 9:50 pm
The disappearing coast – remember Dunwich, Old Kilnsea and Eccles (him?) and the Isle of Goodwin. English towns and countryside swollen beneath the sea.”
I thought Eccles had been “struck down by a batter pudding”…:)
Pity we don’t have the “Goon Show” anymore….all that’s left are goons siphoning up money from these cronyistic subsidies….
I imagine the lyrics “There’ll be Windmills over the white cliffs of Dover”… would be music to their ears…might need something that shocking to make people see what’s going to happen if this doesn’t stop soon…
clivebest: Thanks for the link. I haven’t teased apart its results yet, since the author makes a lot of assumptions regarding replacement of the fossil-fuel-plant mix, but it’s certainly a good data point.
Good Lord!
I hope you’re right about the politics of this, but you’re wrong about the 2 millionth of a degree. Coun t CO2 produced by the standby power needed to make sure the air conditioners don’t stop when the wind does, and the project is roughly at breakeven on CO2 productions vs continuous operation for a modern coal plant. A fission plant would, of course, be much clearner..
Worse, everyone forgets that transmission loses express as heat. Generate 10MW at source in one hour on/off cycles, and fifty miles down cable you get an average of 9MW delivered – and a cylinder of warm air enroute. If I guess the parameters at about 23% production (i.e. the generators run within power production range 23% of the time) in six hour increments and they use 24,000 volt transmission lines, I make break even (using the absurdly high ipcc CO2 multiplier) on CO2 vs electrial heating at somewhere in the 80 – 100 mile range.
Maybe the Good Lord should have used Wells Cathedral some 45 miles to the west of Salisbury Cathedral in his illustrations as this happed today:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-27203276
– – – – – – – – –
Christopher Monckton,
Your economic argument is reasonable.
Your political argument is reasonable.
Your legal argument is reasonable.
Your technical argument is reasonable.
Your scientific argument is reasonable.
Your logical argument is reasonable.
Your philosophical argument is reasonable.
Your ethical argument is reasonable, but should be emphasized a little more in the mix of all of your other above reasonable arguments. People respond deeply to clearly stated and concise moral stands. The success of individualism needs more moral emphasis in its support.
John
The title of the post being Gone With The Wind, it is of interest to see real data as the wind comes and goes. Along the Columbia River in western North America the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) balances the Load (red line in the link) with Hydro (blue) and the wind (green). BPA is a net exporter so Hydro appears high than the regional Load seems to demand. This region has just experienced 3 atmospheric energy passages (wind) with the last one having ceased by early this morning (Apr 29).
The chart shows the result:
http://transmission.bpa.gov/business/operations/wind/baltwg.aspx
Read the list below the chart for perspective on how the Thermal (brown line) power is generated.
Mr Murphy says I’m wrong about the Navitus project preventing 2 millionths of a Celsius degree of global warming, on the ground that spinning reserve and transmission losses would cancel it. He should read the head posting with more care. I worked the math on the assumption that the claimed CO2 savings would occur, but later pointed that because of spinning reserve more CO2 would be emitted with than without the wind farm it was an infinitely costly way to make global warming go away.
Bearing in mind the area concerned is very big for sailing two questions come to mind;
Firstly, will there need to be large exclusion zones around these large pylons?
Secondly, will the turbine ‘steal’ wind from the yachts?
Tonyb
{all bold emphasis mine – JW}
– – – – – – – – – – –
Christopher Monckton,
A theme of the 1939 movie ‘Gone With The Wind’ does indeed apply to the situation faced by England in the struggle against the Navitus Bay Wind Array.
When England stands up against the enslaving CAGW culture to assert its protection of liberty, it bodes well for England.
For emphasis, I have paraphrased the most famous lines from the movie ‘Gone With The Wind’. They are enlightening:
John
“…The law is clear. If a decision is irrational, it is unlawful. .. the court is obliged to set that decision aside.
… Show Fig. 1 to a court and it will start to question very carefully everything said by the developers, the Greens, and the government….
Some 50 residents’ associations have already banded together to fight this poisonous scheme. Let us hope they fight it all the way, and let us hope they win. ”
While sharing your hope, I feel it’s a very faint one. Here in Canada, where legal tradition is based on the same common law as in the UK, and British case law is often cited in court rulings, the highest court has often refused to even review patently irrational decisions and laws. And when it has deigned to scrutinize such, has generally endorsed them.
And how could one expect it to be otherwise? Do judges not share the interests and ideology of the dominant corporate and political classes?
Perhaps if one could identify the lifeboats these profiteers are planning to board once the U.K. has been thoroughly plundered, the courts, police, and military (or at least their lower echelons) could be persuaded to take action. But I imagine such a research project could be perilous for the researcher.
” Jeff says:
April 29, 2014 at 6:13 am
…
I’d go for a “micro-reactor” or whatever. Self-contained, clean (waiting on tech here, I know), and generating enough power (and reserve) for heating, cooling, lighting, cooking, etc.”
Don’t forget recharging your hybrid motor vehicle..(make mine a biodiesel hybrid). OTOH, can you imagine calling customer support, and trying to claw your way up to the next support level from the CSR on the other end somewhere in SE Asia while wondering whether your reactor is about to explode?