Obama misleads students about climate and energy

Climate change actually has little to do with energy choices – Bill_Nye_Barack_Obama_and_Neil_deGrasse_Tyson_selfie_2014-998x665[1]

Guest essay by Bob Carter and Tom Harris

In his October 2 address on the economy at Northwestern University, President Barack Obama told students, “If we keep investing in clean energy technology, we won’t just put people to work assembling, raising and pounding into place the zero-carbon components of a clean energy age. We’ll reduce our carbon emissions and prevent the worst costs of climate change down the road.”

But what does climate change have to do with energy supply? Almost nothing.

Climate change issues involve environmental hazards, whereas energy policy is concerned with supplying affordable, reliable electricity to industries and families. So where is the relationship to climate?

Until the 1980s, there was none. That one is now perceived testifies to the effectiveness of relentless lobbying by environmentalists and commercial special interests towards the idea that carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from hydrocarbon-based power-generation will cause dangerous global warming.

So far, that has not happened. It has now been 18 years with no measurable planetary warming.

However, this warming disaster idea has become so entrenched that even prime ministers and presidents now misuse “carbon” as shorthand for “carbon dioxide,” and often call this plant-fertilizing gas a pollutant. For example, during his 13-minute address at the UN’s Climate Summit 2014 in New York City September 23, Mr. Obama referenced “carbon pollution” seven times and “carbon emissions” five times. That’s almost one misnomer per minute.

In reality, CO2 is environmentally beneficial. It is the elixir of life for most of our planetary ecosystems. Without it, life as we know it would end. No evidence exists that the amount humans have added to the atmosphere is producing dangerous warming or, indeed, any climate or weather events noticeably different in frequency, duration or intensity from human experience over the past couple of centuries.

Many negative consequences flow from wrongly connecting energy and global warming issues. Foremost among them has been a lemming-like rush by governments to generously subsidize what are otherwise uneconomic sources of energy, solar and wind power in particular.

The International Renewable Energy Agency reports that worldwide investment in renewables (not counting large hydropower) amounted to an incredible $214 billion in 2013 alone! IRENA insists that these expenditures need to more than double by 2030, to achieve the impossible goal of restricting average global temperature rise to 2 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.

However, results to date show that those investments have brought few benefits, and much harm. European studies have found that expensive, unreliable wind and solar power kills two to four jobs for each “renewable” energy job this heavily subsidized industry creates.

Mr. Obama paints alternative energy sources as environmentally virtuous, because they supposedly reduce CO2 emissions and provide renewable and clean sources of power. This too is highly misleading.

Wind and solar energy are certainly renewable – when the wind blows and the sun shines. But there is no power otherwise, so it’s tough luck if that’s when a hospital needs electricity for emergency surgery. Such intermittency also makes these sources entirely unsuitable as major contributors to national energy grids, to power factories, schools, businesses and families. The use of wind and solar power also increases the cost of electricity dramatically.

Moreover, these sources are assuredly not renewable when you consider the enormous amounts of land, mining, energy and raw materials required to build the wind and solar facilities, the extremely long transmission lines required to carry their electricity to urban centers, and the backup fossil-fuel generators needed the 80-90% of the time the renewable sources aren’t working.

Alternative energy sources are also far less environment-friendly than the President would have us believe. Wind turbines kill millions of birds and bats every year, and some rare species will undoubtedly be vulnerable to extinction if wind power continues to expand near important wildlife habitats. Massive solar installations have a disastrous effect on desert ecosystems and incinerate important bird species.

And yet the wind and solar generators are typically exempt from environmental laws that are used to block many other activities.

These problems are becoming apparent even to the European Union, once the world’s green energy leader. EU Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger recently said European energy policies must change, from being climate driven to being driven by the needs of industry, and job preservation. He could have included families, because millions of European households can no longer afford to heat their homes properly, due to soaring energy prices.

All nations need to return to the historic separation that previously existed between energy policy and climate policy. They must analyze and plan for both, in accord with their own distinct requirements and resources, and based on defensible environmental, technological, and economic analyses.

This means abandoning Mr. Obama’s naïve mantra that our energy choices affect global climate.

__________

Dr. Bob Carter is former professor and head of the School of Earth Sciences at James Cook University in Australia. Tom Harris is Executive Director of the Ottawa, Canada-based International Climate Science Coalition.

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David Ball
October 8, 2014 3:31 pm

Nice work Bob Carter and Tom Harris !!!

Zeke
October 8, 2014 3:50 pm

“However, results to date show that those investments have brought few benefits, and much harm. European studies have found that expensive, unreliable wind and solar power kills two to four jobs for each “renewable” energy job this heavily subsidized industry creates.”
Not to mention the wanton waste of all that beautiful, lovely, wonderful, useful cement.
For example, in a wind farm in Texas, a cement pad for a 350′ worthless wind turbine is 80′ in diameter, and 8′ deep. (Audit needed for these figures? How can 8′ of cement support 350′ of moving weight?). These have been known to crack easily from the tremendous force.
And the area of perfectly good land needed, to bury all of this perfectly good cement and rebar, is 10,000 acres.

more soylent green!
October 8, 2014 3:51 pm

Do we even need a climate policy? What would an intelligent, practical climate policy look like?

H.R.
Reply to  more soylent green!
October 9, 2014 6:44 pm

What’s a good climate policy?
Southwest Airlines had the answer. “You are free to move about the country.”

Zeke
October 8, 2014 4:19 pm

All nations need to return to the historic separation that previously existed between energy policy and climate policy. They must analyze and plan for both…based on defensible environmental, technological, and economic analyses.

This is an admirable goal, and well-laid out. But the good of a society also includes other values. Other values include the protection of private property, personal responsibility towards our families, individual liberties, and how about the ability to live without being smothered under a catastrophic black mat of bureaucratic structures and employees.
Lately as we have gone into tremendous debt for a nationalized health program, the emphasis on physical health in society has gotten far out of ratio with the other priorities of society. The same can be said of the emphasis on “technological, economic, and environmental” approaches. These are important to analyze and address, but they are not the be-all and end-all for society. Where did we ever say we institute governments to manage technology and the environment? No, we institute governments in order to protect and facilitate the usual human pursuits of raising children, having a home, growing crops and cattle, and freely engaging in various commercial activity – which naturally rewards responsible behavior and hard work, and does not reward drug use and unemployment.

beng
October 9, 2014 6:02 am

That top pic reeks of smugness.
Do what we say, not what we do.

Coach Springer
October 9, 2014 6:03 am

I recall that the historic separation between energy and climate policies was that there was an energy policy and that climate policy was limited to weather watching. Then there was smog (not climate) and we managed it. And now they tell us that the world will burn unless they are allowed to control the climate and the weather. A leap of fear and then some.

J. Philip Peterson
October 9, 2014 7:21 am

We seem to have a climate policy. We need a real energy policy – case in point:
Recent NY Times article: “As Energy Boom Ends, a Political Identity Crisis in Alaska”
In the New York Times article by KIRK JOHNSON OCT. 8, 2014, there is not one mention of ANWR and the 10,000,000,000+ barrels of oil reserves available there (to keep the Alaska pipeline filled among other things):
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/09/us/as-energy-boom-ends-a-political-identity-crisis.html?_r=0

J. Philip Peterson
Reply to  J. Philip Peterson
October 9, 2014 9:15 am

“People of earth” or at least people of the USA: Alaska is not a national park. It is being treated as such. It has many resources.
They should be made available in a responsible way…

cadet31
October 10, 2014 2:45 am

Whether they know it or not, those who talk simply about “carbon” are following a usage devised to make the listener think of the soot in their chimney or their exhaust pipe. (Or are plain lazy, or both.)
“Carbon dioxide”, on the other hand, is the bubbles in my champagne.

rogerknights
Reply to  cadet31
October 10, 2014 7:02 am

Oh, they know it. They are probably following the advice of sophisticated communications specialists (spin doctors) like Fenton.