Unpleasant encounter with hard facts
Guest opinion by Fred F. Mueller
Until just a few days ago, the determination of the German government to halt the presumed Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming (CAGW) seemed to be absolutely imperturbable. The main driver behind the German resolve to hammer down CO2 emissions both domestically and abroad while at the same time finishing off its last remaining nuclear power generating units is Chancellor Angela Merkel. The daughter of a clergyman socialized in the formerly communist east of the country, she is known for her outstanding political cleverness and flexibility in avoiding conflicts she feels she can’t win. Nevertheless, there are certain aspects where this cleverness is superseded by an almost fundamentalist doggedness when it comes to certain key points – such as exterminating nuclear power or saving the planet from overheating.
Only a few weeks ago, Germany engaged in a new initiative to revitalize the ailing international effort to reverse the course of constantly increasing worldwide CO2 emissions by replacing the vintage Kyoto protocol by more stringent and binding reduction targets at the UN conference that will be held in Paris in November/ December 2015. To this effect, Germany convinced the other European Union states to agree to a 40 % reduction scheme by 2030, sweeping across opposition from negatively affected member countries using a combination of compromises, financial incentives and sheer politico-economic pressure. As a result, the EU came out with bold CO2 reduction commitments. These in turn were meant to be used as a political lever during the preparatory meetings taking place in the current run-up to the big show.
The push for increased CO2 sobriety…
In order to underscore its ambition to shine out as a beacon of climate saving efforts, the German government additionally decided to further strengthen its position by renewing domestic efforts aimed at achieving its own commitment of reducing national CO2 emissions by 40 % (compared to 1990) until 2020. This target had at first seemed to be easily attainable since the country benefitted from the opportunity to decommission the ridiculously inefficient and energy-squandering industry it inherited from the former communist DDR. But in the past years, this special effect waned and the CO2 emissions even reversed course and climbed again. This countertrend was further underpinned when in the wake of the Fukushima events; the German government ordered to halt eight out of 17 existing nuclear power plants and decided to phase out the remaining ones by 2022. The share of nuclear power was largely taken over by lignite- and coal-fired units, with the result that in the field of power generation, Germany was unable to achieve any reduction since 2000. During the same time period, the electric power markets were flooded with heavily subsidized “green” power, causing prices to collapse to a point where conventional power utilities were unable to generate sufficient revenues. Share prices collapsed and more than ten thousand qualified jobs disappeared. In the centers of political power in Berlin, the grievances of the sector went unnoticed and even the most urgent submissions fell on deaf ears. To add insult to injury, just a few weeks ago, the sector was confronted with tough additional regulations requiring it to further reduce its CO2 emissions, while signs of mounting albeit muted unease in a growing number of industrial sectors heavily burdened by skyrocketing energy prices were ignored.
This resulted in the rebellion of vital players…
In this situation, the frustration felt by a number of foreign investors in the sector – in the first place those involved in the energy giants E.ON and Vattenfall, a subsidiary of a Swedish state-owned energy producer, culminated. The background is highlighted in a recent article written for the renowned German financial newspaper “Handelsblatt” by Wolfram Weiner, former chief editor of several leading print media. In his item, he used unusually drastic language to chastise the current state of the sector: “In reality, E.ON is capitulating. Faced with wrong decisions and impositions instigated by the German energy policy, the power generation industry is giving up in despair because political leaders have narrowed down their maneuvering space to such an extent that they are choking to death. For too long a time, the political class naively believed that E.ON and RWE (the second in rank of the sector) could be indefinitely squeezed just as a lemon – but now it is dawning to some that there simply is no more juice left…the “Energiewende” (Energy U-turn) resembles a communist command economy…(the policy) has within a short period of time achieved what the communists had been dreaming of for decades: Power generating groups are being dismantled, market rule is supplemented by command economy. But the question remains – who will in the future care about Germany’s power supply, who will invest? Is the state willing to take over these activities too in order to finalize energy-socialism”?
The led to an event that can be likened to the proverbial iceberg unexpectedly popping up right in front of the German state ship while it was plowing through the waves on its climate-saving mission at full-steam. With just a 48-hour notice delivered by a personal phone call to Ms. Merkel on a Saturday, the CEO of E.ON, the largest German and European power producer, let it be known that the company had decided to split itself in two, one part grouping fossil and nuclear power generation and a second part encompassing the “politically correct” activities in the field of “renewable” energies. Sort of a “Bad E.ON” / “Good E.ON” move. The intention is to get rid of the “bad” part as soon as possible by putting it up for sale. At the same time, this also means the “good” part will cease to be duty bound to ensure a stable power supply under all circumstances. Obviously, such a liability is not enforceable from an entity whose only power sources are unstable wind and solar power plants. In a nutshell, the message behind this move is that the silverback of the “big four” German energy producers who group the bulk of the country’s conventional and nuclear power production is about to close shop at short notice. The others will probably follow suit.
Inflicting a deadly setback…
A situation where a country’s leadership is left only 48 hours to digest this sort of threat can be likened to the sudden crash of the Titanic hitting its iceberg. Although most of the German public has not yet noticed that something really important has gone wrong, frantic activities can be noticed on the bridge, with both the minister for economic affairs and the chancellor’s office hastily preparing new legislation aiming at enhancing the situation of coal-fired plants by implementing an all-new market design. It will most certainly provide for compensation payments for coal-fired plants forced to turn idle or at minimum load when the grid is clogged by an oversupply of wind and solar energy. According to comments in various press articles, the German government seems to have realized its vessel is taking in water and is starting to list. So while the ship’s orchestra composed of green and socialist parties together with assorted NGO’s and the accomplices in the media is doing its best to drown out first anxious noises by playing climato-patriotic anthems at full pitch, the power brokers in Berlin seem to be hammering out a plan B in a desperate attempt to fend off a catastrophic breakdown of the nets. Outlines currently emerging suggest that
A) Nuclear power will remain banned. More than 30 years of demonization of the technology probably cannot be reversed,
B) Plans to rein in the soaring price of electric power prices will be abandoned. A key representative of the ruling CDU party has already warned that price hikes will continue.
C) The hope of the government that highly flexible combined cycle gas-fired power plants can be deployed in large numbers to offset the highly volatile production from wind and solar plants has gone up in smoke since these entities have much higher costs than coal-fired units. They thus were the first to succumb to the market distortions brought about by the heavily subsidized “renewable” technologies.
D) The government now implicitly recognizes that in the years to come, coal and lignite fired plants will play a substantially bigger role in securing the country’s power supply than projected. The obvious hope is that it may be possible to stabilize the vessel without having to explicitly admit the core pieces of the previous strategy have to be scrapped.
On to sweet green dreams
While the German public, lulled by decades of seemingly incessant economic upturn, will probably continue to ignore these harsh realities for some time, the long-term implications for CAGW supporters inside and outside of the country do not bode well. Given the fact that the “renewable” energy lobby remains extremely strong, with millions of people having been misguided to invest their life’s savings and pension claims into “planet-saving” energy projects, resistance to any plans to limit further engagements in the “green energy” sector will be extremely fierce. Together with the need to stabilize the ailing conventional energy sector in order to avoid a total breakdown, all requirements for energy costs spiraling out of control are in place. The government can only hope that the public will continue to accept these hikes without too much resistance. But a major stumbling blocks remains in place: German electric energy prices, already the second-highest in Europe, are increasingly choking off economic growth. More and more key sectors such as the aluminum, steel making and chemical industry are increasingly opting out of investing in the country, turning to regions offering more reasonable energy prices, notably the US. Over time, this will put the wealth of the country and with it the fate of its political leaders in jeopardy.
Germany’s anti-CO2 policy is poised to fail
With their naïve two-pronged approach to abolish nuclear and fossil fuel powered electricity generation in parallel, the German political leaders have maneuvered themselves into an impasse and now find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place. The “renewable” sector propped up with at least half a trillion € in subsidies has reached proportions making it too big to fail, while conventional generation will now call in the same favors that had hitherto been granted to the “good ones”, threatening to cut supplies if they are not treated likewise. Embittered by more than a decade and a half of injuries “sweetened” by insults, one can expect that they will probably be pushing for fulfilment of their demands with little regard as to whom it might hurt. With the door to nuclear generation firmly shut and welded tight, German CO2 emissions are set to increase as naïve expectations of falling electricity demand will dissipate. Especially since no-one seems to have taken into account the power requirements of e.g. the many million electric cars that are supposed to crowd German streets in the coming decades. While arrogantly claiming the role of a vanguard policy-maker with respect to climate-saving measures, German politicians have entangled themselves in a maze of conflicting interests and harsh realities restraining their actions to near-immobility.
At some point, when the populace will finally realize it has been fooled and plundered, politicians will refrain from CAGW aspirations when it becomes evident they will not be favorable for their future prospects to be elected. And if and when Germany fails in full focus of the spotlights they themselves asked to be turned upon them, the CAGW theories will suffer a major blow on a worldwide scale. This might hopefully turn out as an important contribution to the demise of the whole CAGW scam.
6 or 7 years ago, when I was a bright, keen & eager young thing and all excited about this Global Gassing lark, I bought myself a little windmill. In fact, I finished up 2 – my good lady-friend bought me one for Christmas and I got her a laptop, in sort-of exchange, as you do doncha?
I was ever so chuffed, thinking how clever I was and what a good deal I’d got.
I Could Not Have Been More Wrong.
Despite having a 35 mile clear vista into the prevailing wind, the thing sucked. It produced diddly squat electricity, I couldn’t even trust it to warm up a pot of water.
A weather bomb came past 15 months from new, it threw off its tail and blades (one of them went 120+ yards) and jumped down off its tower into 12″ of mud.
If only our elders, betters and political leaders had had such experience…
It was actually quite a good weather vane while it lasted, but That Was It. Period.
Good one Pete. We should not allow the windmills to be removed once it is realized how useless they are just to remind us how stupid we were to pay for the things in the first place.
My area has several small windmills, forever frozen and too costly to remove. I could have some fun and make a few bucks with some dynamite and det cord removing these eyesores for the owners; but I think they are more valuable as testiments to ideas that sound good in theory but failed in practice.
Paul, maybe you’re on to something there. A windmill removal service. Any ideas out there for a name?
“The Marines. When it absolutely has to be destroyed overnight.”
Getting themselves in dutch there, ain’t they?
As a Dutchman I resemble that remark.
At 3:18 PM on 10 December, asybot responded
to a comment that the Germans were getting themselves in dutch.
Gotta remember that when these United States had been receiving large influxes of immigrants from the Germanies in the 1800s (notably in the wake of Europe’s failed 1848 uprisings), the newcomers stated their national origins as “deutsche,” which naturally struck the Yankee ear as “dutch” (see the “Pennyslvania Dutch,” whose antecedents actually came to America from the Palatinate).
So the Americanism “getting in dutch” is very much a 19th Century reference to Germans, not Netherlanders.
As ye sow, so shall ye reap.
Righto. And don’t forget to add some CO2 and warmth…
Check, NN!
Adding another split of douglas fir firewood to the wood stove right now, here in the Great NorthWet. I find the radiative and convective heating from natures renewable resources to be quite heart (and bun) warming!
And a Merry Christmas to ya!
Mac
No singing… 🙂
I always wonder how such a intelligent, diligent and educated people like the Germans have such a stupid politic cultur
The reason, I believe, is that below the intelligence and education lies an emotional strata, which can be whipped up by the right signals. Americans seem to have something of the same.
Every nation will get the government which it deserves – think about O Bummer… and beforehand Bush…
I’ll take Bush any day…at least I know where his loyalties were established.
Thus the myth of German ingenuity and engineering expertise is crushed.
Don ‘t confuse engineering with politics
“At some point, when the populace will finally realize it has been fooled and plundered…”
You can’t fix stupid. Maybe we can send Gruber to Germany to tell them the truth too.
I’m not a green or something. Anyways I believe Germany is acting cleverly in the energy section. This guest opinion is welcome, but it is one-sided (as an opinion can maybe be). The other side of the story is that Germany is doing a revolution in the energy producing area, reducing their dependancy on external resources and big centralized power plants and trying to get a kind of energy that they can produce on their own ressources (sun and winds mainly) and which is much more decentral (with a whole lot of new options). If this is working out Germany will be several steps ahead of most of the other countries, also regarding the economic advantages of not needing external resources. Of course such a huge project is no easy task but up to now it works out quite well (if you mind the fact that at sunny days up to 70% of the energy in germany is produced by winds and solar cells already now and millions of people got to micro-energy-producers). Please notice that I did not use CO2 arguments at all here (and I’m quite sure Germany does not act on the base of AGW mainly but alot more on economical and strategical long-term considerations).
Just think about the brand-new coal plant Moorburg in Hamburg, the second largest city in Germany.
“Once commissioned, the Moorburg plant – with a capacity of 1640 MW – will generate approximately 11 terawatt hours (TWh), which equates to around 90 per cent of the electricity demand of the city of Hamburg.”
http://powerplants.vattenfall.com/powerplant/moorburg
Is this what you mean by “decentralized”? Wind and solar are extremely dependant upon constant back-up power, and there is no way that these energy sources can take over a large part of the country’s supply.
Meanwhile, brown-coal strip mining is making an unwelcome comeback in East Germany:
“Atterwasch may soon be gone. Vattenfall, a Swedish energy company, hopes to relocate the village and its residents in order to strip-mine the ground underneath for lignite, or “brown coal.””
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/energy/2014/02/140211-germany-plans-to-raze-towns-for-brown-coal/
Look at this chart to see how small wind and solar are in the total picture, not much more than hydro and biomass:
https://www.energy-charts.de/energy.htm
Forgot about the Russian gas.
Putin shuts down the western pipelines and sells it to the chinese, thanks to those idiots in the so called “EU”.
Unfortunately the costs of this success story have pushed up energy prices to such a level that German industry can now only compete by ensuring that its EU competitors are forced to follow similar policies, hence making European industry, particularly energy intensive industry, uncompetitive in world markets.
Essentially Germany now has its private energy providers shouting “uncle”, carving out unprofitable (non subsidized) business sectors which are to big to fail (read Government (Tax Payer) bailouts – GM anyone) hence the term “Energy Socialism”. Yep, if one considers the possibilities, Germany is being very clever. (Not)
I suggest that you read the book by David MacKay “Sustainable Energy – without the hot air”, which will inform you of the elementary physics and also the economics of “sustainable” energy sources. MacKay used to be a high official in the British energy establishment, but is also a well qualified scientist. He shows just how much would be involved in attempting to rely on sustainables. In a nutshell, they can’t ever work in the real world.
So in your explanation why would they shutter the nuclear plants? If they were going for reduced dependency of external energy keeping them would be a no brainier.
I think you need to redo your comment.
Chris,
That sounds wonderful. But I question what happens on winter nights when the wind doesn’t blow. Some distance underground (~70 m.) the temperature is great for red wine and deeper still it begins to warm. Hope living underground works for you.
Well, you see, in Germany they drink more white wine and beer, which are best enjoyed at a much lower temperature than red wine. Power failure? Pop the Riesling!
Is there a link to back up the claim of “almost 70 % of the energy ” being supplied by wind and solar?
Color me very sceptical ……
No, these are exceptional hours of exceptional days. And remember that when greenies speak of renewable, they include also hydro and biomass, without specifying this, giving the impession that all renewable energy in Germany comes from wind and solar.
Frauenhofer has good info on this:
https://www.energy-charts.de/energy.htm
Even in Contrari’s chart linked below, I’ve not seen anything that points to more than 50% for a couple of hours on exceptionally good days.
So ConTrari, if as you say below that “No, these are exceptional hours of exceptional days,” then why did you first say, “if you mind the fact that at sunny days up to 70% of the energy in germany is produced by winds and solar cells already…” when you obviously know that this is not even close to the truth?
ConTrari did not make that claim; concern troll Chris Tollso did.
” If this is working out Germany will be several steps ahead of most of the other countries, also regarding the economic advantages of not needing external resources. Of course such a huge project is no easy task but up to now it works out quite well”
No it doesn’t. If Germany were to continue with the same policy it will become a Polish province.
When I lived in Germany back in the late ’70s, it really didn’t strike me as a place conducive to solar energy, winters were cloudy for weeks on end. They were extremely chilly due to high humidity, rainy and cloudy weather. Presently our winters in North America remind me more of the ’70s than the ’90s, so my suspicion is Germany may be overly optimistic about solar energy durring their winters. I remember how frequently the Germans would apologise for the miserable dark, chilly wet, muddy weather.
Chris Trollso, thank you for your nice comments. I’m a German green somehow, but not a believer in AGW. But what they are doing makes no sense at all. Wind and solar power will produce up to 100% on some days, 5% on some others. With full power we have to sell electricity cheap or for free to our neighbors, because we cannot throttle our coal power plants.
Decentralized communities we have some few, but they are just small villages with biogas and wood chip power plants plus wind/solar. But this will not work on a large scale.
Actually you PAY them to take your excess power.
http://www.energypost.eu/case-allowing-negative-electricity-prices/
In 2011, there were over 200,000 3 minute plus power outages.
Problems with grid stability continue:
http://www.quora.com/Should-other-nations-follow-Germanys-lead-on-promoting-solar-power-1
Through all of history progress has been powered by finding more compact and controllable sources of energy. Wind, solar and almost any “renewable” are the opposite of this, and doomed to fail expensively and catastrophically.
But when the wind dont blow you need a plant to cover it. Thus to generate a megawatt you need two plants, one wind, one something else. but then the efficiency of the something else is halved. So your total costs go through the roof. It really cannot be that hard to understand.
“[In] a personal phone call to Ms. Merkel on a Saturday, the CEO of E.ON, the largest German and European power producer, let it be known that the company had decided to split itself in two,…, etc.”
This phone call, all by itself, ought to put to rest forever the notion that governments are slavishly in the pockets of big corporations.
Here we have a huge corporation threatening suicide because of relentless governmental oppression.
When governments are honest, corporations are good citizens. When they’re tyrannical (as now in Germany) corporations fall into line. When governments are corrupt, corporations grease palms to survive. And in socialist/fascist and crony-capitalist states, governments and corporations are indistinguishable.
We as people, not to say civil society itself, not to say science, thrive only under condition number 1.
So Germany is shutting down their nuclear capacity on one hand while whining about CO2 emissions and building coal-fired power plants on the other. The sheer idiocy of this is breathtaking. When one throws in the limited usefulness (or near-uselessness) and cost of solar and wind energies and rising energy bills into the mix, it goes beyond idiocy and into the realm of insanity.
For the rest of Europe and the wealthy industrialized world, one can’t help but wonder what will happen if Germany’s economy goes into an eventual tailspin because of this and what it will mean for the global economy if it does. We in the U.S. should consider ourselves fortunate that are not yet as near the edge of the energy and economic cliff as Germany appears to be. And it’s a long drop to the bottom. Obama sure seems to be pushing us there however with his policies that are causing the shutdown of both nuclear and coal-fired power plants in the U.S.
All of this represents what can happen when we humans allow our seriously faulty thinking, ideologies and belief systems to trump science, facts, clear level-headed thinking and reasoning. Those who demonstrate a problem with the latter (I believe) suffer from allowing their emotions of fear, hate and mistrust to the muddy the waters of and sabotage their ability to think and reason clearly. When they are large enough in number and agitate and yell loud enough to influence those in power, we all suffer the consequences.
To use a Star Trek analogy, I am not holding my breath waiting for the day when we humans ALL learn to think more like Mr. Spock and less like the emotional Dr. McCoy. Did Spock ever lose an argument with McCoy?
As I have said in a previous comment here at WUWT, wanting to make the world a better place is one thing. HOW one goes about doing it is something else entirely.
Not a prediction, but the world-wide depression of 1929 started with a bank failure in Germany.
What history book you are using?… The wall street is not in Germany..
Delphi = wall street
Creditanstalt was Austrian, if that’s what you’re referring to.
Economical Green Energy? Unicorns much?
Reblogged this on SasjaL and commented:
The EU CO2 reduction commitments are nothing but a economical kamikaze mission … Congrat’s China!
E.On and E.Off
And who will buy the E.Off (fossil) part? Some hardnosed capitalists who are not so sensitive towards political niceties as the old main energy companies in the German market? Threatening to shut down coal plants if they don’t get more subsidies, because without coal Germany stops? There can be a lot of drama coming soon in the energy sector.
For me it’s like a thriller here in Germany: What’s next? Even the media have now different views and optional theories. If something changes they can say: We have mentioned this long before.
There are two theories spinning around:
a) the fossil E.ON. will only run with guarantees from the government or the government has to take it over.
b) nobody will buy the fossil (plus nuclear) E.ON, so the govenment will support it. Later the renewable E.ON will collapse bc. of missing income
Btw. Wind Power Plants from E.ON are only a tiny fraction of the renewable energy market and the general energy market. The subsidies for new renewable plants are declining steadily. I guess E.On renewable to E,on fossil is 1:10. So they cannot live from that alone.
It seems to be like a chess game: E.ON has taken now a step and is looking what’s next. It is always clever to have other irons in the fire.
Obviously the German government will have to “nationalize” E.Off to keep the power flowing.
Rule of thumb: voter’s figuring out politicians have screwed up energy policy speeds up immeasurably once they notice their children are freezing to death.
The very same ilk that bought greek bonds when they were cheaper than firewood. And they made good profit out of that. Ask Warren.
“With their naïve two-pronged approach to abolish nuclear and fossil fuel powered electricity generation in parallel, the German political leaders have maneuvered themselves into an impasse and now find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place.”
In today’s world, it seems that everything successful gets demonized and shutdown, while everything that is unproven, or has actually failed, gets hailed as a solution for the future. What is it about people on the left that always seems to cause them to see success as a problem and failure as the solution? It is a type of upside-down thinking that is totally foreign to me.
“With their naïve two-pronged approach to abolish nuclear and fossil fuel powered electricity generation in parallel, the German political leaders have maneuvered themselves into an impasse and now find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place.”
It’s a shame that citizens have to suffer badly for the mistakes of their elected leaders, but they did elected ’em. I wonder how many ‘greens’ are retired and living on limited pensions where a 25%-50% increase in the cost of electricity means the choice between eating or freezing. Didn’t England attribute 20k to 30k deaths last winter to increased energy costs?
Even though we’re on the same track, hopefully, we’re still far enough behind that we can avoid the train wreck that seems imminent for at least parts of Europe. Sometimes it’s nice to have leaders you don’t have to follow.
It’s not so bad in Germany. The German social insurance system has a higher level as e.g. ObamaCare. And nobody will freeze or starve as long he gets the Hartz 4 payments. But there are some who are too proud or unwilling to ask for it, and they have problems.
It will take more such train wrecks (UK and California grid imstability from renewables without adequate backup are good candidates) to put the lie to renewable electricity. That plus the pause are putting the warmunists into quite a tither. The shrillness is increasing.
Lima isn’t going well. No $100 billion per year ‘trivial’ ponied up to the Green Climate Fund. No binding commitment language as EU wanted. China refuses audit inspections. India won’t agree to anything except taking its share of the non-existent $100 billion. Another Copenhagen coming.
What are those poor UN bureaucrats to do? They are as effective at this as they have been with Syrian chemical weapons, Bosnian ethnic cleansing, and the WHO evola response.
Rud, Lima is going to plan. Surely the EU knew the other players wouldn’t agree on anything workable. Now they can return home and blame China, India, and the USA.
Well, they can always continue to wreck the Peruvian cultural heritage. It’s man-made, after all…
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=no&sl=es&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Futero.pe%2F2014%2F12%2F09%2F9-fotos-que-demuestran-que-los-genios-de-greenpeace-si-danaron-las-lineas-de-nazca%2F
“What are those poor UN bureaucrats to do?” Hopefully they have to dig into their own pockets for the next boondoggle and stop having the tax payer funding their BS conferences that achieve SFxA.
Shades of Atlas Shrugged … after years of being damned for being an evil producer of dirty energy, E.ON just decided to quit being evil … and if the rest of the industry follows suit as suggested, the Germans will find that they’ve committed economic suicide.
Amen….
The good news is, other nations can watch and learn, and hopefully even prevent this silliness on a grand scale.
The only way to avoid going down the same road is to convince your US Rep that going down this same road is economic suicide. Then you have this no brainer idiot Republican (RINO). Seriously, not even in power yet and they are about to commit Hari Kari…..are they really that dumb?
http://www.salon.com/2014/12/09/house_republican_to_introduce_bill_acknowledging_the_reality_of_climate_change/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seppuku
Do you really think so.<:o)
Time will tell but I am 50:50 on this one..stupid is as stupid does. But I did email my US Rep just in case.
1. The Germans dominate the unelected, unaccountable European Commission of the European Union. Merkel appointed the EU Commissioner, Juncker.
2. European countries are shutting down their power sources because of directives from the EU. For example, France is shutting down its nuclear, and England its coal.
3. Now Germany is using coal again.
THEREFORE: European countries will be reliant on purchasing electricity from Germany and gas from Russia.
Looks like a certain generation just reversed everything its parents accomplished.
And now they are grooming the next generation for their crimes, using environmental science to reverse advances in energy, shipping, transportation, and agriculture.
Pretty cold if you ask me.
The parents of Merkel’s generation did accomplish a bunch, it’s true, but first, they entirely trashed the joint.
Hi mebbe, however ineptly and clumsily, I was referring to the Baby Boomer Generation. My thinkin is this: the Greatest Generation arrested Germany’s attempt to dominate Europe, and contained Russian expansion. Their children have now reversed their work, and are about to reverse advances in agriculture, energy, and transportation.
Seems like 1940`s Germany, for some reason the German population always have blind faith in their leaders.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/solar-subsidy-sinkhole-re-evaluating-germany-s-blind-faith-in-the-sun-a-809439.html
Just the goose-stepping ceased.
It’s amazing what $half a trillion can’t buy you now a days.
On the other hand you could say $half-trillion is what it costs to damage a robust national economy.
Fred Mueller presents a very distorted picture of the CO2 emissions from German power production. Sure the power produced from coal and lignite which are heavy emitters of CO2 went up by 7.2 TWh between 2012 and 2013 (http://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/en/downloads-englisch/pdf-files-englisch/news/electricity-production-from-solar-and-wind-in-germany-in-2013.pdf slide 6).
But in 2014 year to date the 11 month comparison with the same period of 2013 shows a reduction of 15.3 TW of coal and lignite generation (http://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/en/downloads-englisch/pdf-files-englisch/data-nivc-/electricity-production-from-solar-and-wind-in-germany-2014.pdf slide 5). And the gas generation has gone down in both 2013 and 2014 by 10.5 TWh and 6.5 TWh respectively.
In other words the 2013 increase in generation from coal was a blip caused by timing factors and has been dramatically reversed in 2014.
Further, current German day-ahead spot power prices are at their lowest for some time – and frequently lower than USA spot power prices. See http://www.renewablesinternational.net/german-day-ahead-power-prices-lowest-since-2002/150/537/81848/ and http://www.eia.gov/electricity/wholesale/xls/ice_electric-2014.xls. Such German spot power prices do not include taxes or the renewables subsidy.
Neither does most German industry pay the renewables subsidy, which is restricted to consumers and therefore 2.5x larger than it would be if everyone paid it.
Germany may well just miss its challenging 2020 targets of a 40% CO2 emission – getting rid of both nuclear and coal at the same time would always be very difficult – although they could readily hit them with a small delay in nuclear shutdowns. But it is still on a rapidly decreasing trend of CO2 emissions and the Frauenhofer reports above show there is plenty of scope for reducing CO2 emissions with further wind and solar installations. And sure, this would mean making some “capacity” payments to coal and gas generators over and above the “energy units” payments.
Oh, and by the way, the recent average German grid reliability has been excellent – around 16 minutes per customer per year outage over the last 5 years compared with hours for the USA grids.
“Oh, and by the way, the recent average German grid reliability has been excellent – around 16 minutes per customer per year outage over the last 5 years compared with hours for the USA grids.”
Yes, becuse when a sudden large solar and wind power production threatens to collapse the grid, the producers are paid full price to keep it off the grid. Just throwing it away. What a great energy policy.
In the meantime, 300,000k people per year are having their power cut off because of extremely high electricity prices.
http://www.n-tv.de/politik/Verbaende-warnen-vor-Energiearmut-article12685471.html#sthash.E4rWuvRq.dpuf
Yeah, who cares about them, anyways?
*300k
Pete
So you’r saying that Germany has built 23 new coal power stations and coal generation is falling? There’s some creative accounting going on here.
Pete,
interesting you cite mostly deep-green sources, such as solar system research oriented ISE. And while 2014 with its warmer weather might eventually result in a small downward glitch in the coal burning records, wait for 2015 when the next nuclear plant will go offline. We will see nearly 100 TWh of nuclear power generation taken off the grid in the next few years. I followed the stats for German CO2 emissions quite closely for the last 10 – 15 years, both for power generation and in general, and the graph has stopped fallling in 2009 and has been heading upwards for the past 5 years. (786 mill. tons CO2 in 2009, 834 mill. tons 2013). A glitch isn’t a trend. Talking about a “rapidly decreasing trend of CO2 emissions” in Germany seems “slightly” wrong to me, see http://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/2275/umfrage/hoehe-der-co2-emissionen-in-deutschland-seit-1990/
Interesting. But plan b. seems like political suicide:
b. Plans to rein in the soaring price of electric power prices will be abandoned.
The common man may like the sound of emissions-free energy as much as anyone else, but when he has no food on the table because energy prices have tripled, revolution will stalk the land. And the first to lose her head, will be Merkel.
Ralph
The EU has its own anthem, flag, and military. Europeans themselves are disarmed.
I am European and I hate the EU.
There used to be a scientific consensus. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists supported it. The president of the American Philosophical Society rejected an alternative view.
But now?
http://mentalfloss.com/article/60481/how-one-womans-discovery-shook-foundations-geology
I know it won’t happen, but I sincerely wish the governor of Washington State would read this article. One gets the impression that he thinks the German approach is a great way forward for his state.
The Germans are setting up a massive carbon-chassis and electric car industry, powered by our Grand Coulee Dam, in Washington. Cheep energy, taken from our grid, to support their future electric car mandates.
For this to happen “the people” vehicles have to be priced, relatively speaking, as you would a 787 Dreamliner. Mass production at a price that equates to affordable (Model T terminology) is impossible with current CF technology.
When I was young I had the largest Audi available: The Audi 100 GL weighing 1100 kg empty, made out of steel. Now the largest Audi is made our of lightweight aluminium. Weighing 2500 kg empty. That’s progress!
Windsong – As I have posted before regarding Jay “I Will Impose a Carbon Tax on my Watch” Inslee – I wish it would be so, as well….but – what is not to like about a Mexican-to-Canadian-border, homogeneous, left-leaning, carbon-taxing, vehicle-use-taxing-by-the-mile-via-GPS-real-time-data-logger society (sarcasm intended, but sadly this may very well become the reality – sooner than later).
See: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/12/09/3533212/pay-by-mile-could-be-tested-on.html#
Also: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/12/09/3533114/inslee-budget-plan-is-in-the-works.html#
Read them and weep, my friends…Moving to Texas starts to become much more appealing….The Hill Country is kinda nice I hear….
Windsong,
Unless the article contained ‘pop out’ characters and scenes to illustrate the green agenda… or ‘acidification of the oceans’, it would not hold Jay Inslee’s attention for even a minute.
It’s ‘sink or swim’ time.
I give odds to sink