The unsinkable German anti-CO2-Titanic just found its iceberg

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 Nevertheless, there are certain aspects where this cleverness is superseded by an almost fundamentalist doggedness when it comes to certain key points – such as exterminating nuclear power or saving the planet from overheating.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.

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Doubting Rich
December 10, 2014 1:06 pm

Socialism: politics for people who can’t do maths.

4 eyes
Reply to  Doubting Rich
December 10, 2014 2:08 pm

Oh so true. Very droll. It also includes those who flatly refuse to do the maths.

richardscourtney
Reply to  Doubting Rich
December 11, 2014 1:13 am

Capitalism: politics for people who think numbers are more important than other people.

Greg Strebel
Reply to  richardscourtney
December 11, 2014 11:23 am

Au contraire, numbers are essential for informed opinions in any political ideology. Obviously the numbers must be sound and applicable lest we (once again) support the heirarchical categorization “Lies, Damned lies, Statistics.”
Socialism’s antipathy to capitalism is completely misguided, partly through the mistaking of crony corporatism for capitalism, and partly from the lack of recognition that a socialist economy has no means of accounting for valuations at the individual level, and hence the inevitable failures of “Planned economies”.

richardscourtney
Reply to  richardscourtney
December 11, 2014 11:29 pm

Greg Strebel
In your attempted excuse for unrestrained capitalism, you refer to the “crony corporatism” which is encouraged by any non-socialist system. How would you suggest constraining “crony corporatism”, and how would you inhibit corporatists from purchasing politicians as happens in all overly-capitalist countries?
Richard

Matt
December 10, 2014 1:08 pm

This might (or might not) be of interest. They are working on Grid instability.
http://www.rolls-royce.com/news/press_releases/2014/091214_stabilize_power_grid.jsp

December 10, 2014 1:12 pm

What do we want? SYMPATHY When do we want it? NOW < :o) no chance.

ralfellis
December 10, 2014 1:16 pm

Regards the UK government’s absurd Green-Endergy policy, I have been battering ministers and the Department of Energy and Climate Change (sic) into submission with a series of emails. They have elicited some favourable responses from the media.
The latest one is a 30-page epic. There is nothing new for WUWT readers in this, but it is probably a shock to most of our brain-dead politicians. If I have made any obvious howlers in the letter, please let me know.
http://www.pdf-archive.com/2014/12/10/big-email
Ralph

Newsel
Reply to  ralfellis
December 10, 2014 1:52 pm

Thx…Illegitimi non carborundum.

Carbon500
Reply to  ralfellis
December 11, 2014 11:12 am

Excellent, Ralph! A thoroughly professionally presented communication using real data.
I’ve always liked to use the Central England Temperature figures, and the way you’ve superimposed the CO2 increase over the temperature graph for example makes quite an impact.
Can you send this to every single Member of Parliament, I wonder? I’ve written to my MP, and also my former Member of the European Parliament, but it’s like talking to a brick wall. They simply will not acknowledge the validity of the data presented, because (I think) they just haven’t bothered to think about it for themselves, preferring to just go with the party line.
Never give up – someone, somewhere, might realise that a political career could be made by acknowledging that vast sums of money are simply being wasted on this nonsense.
We live in hope!.

ralfellis
Reply to  Carbon500
December 11, 2014 12:25 pm

>>Can you send this to every single Member of Parliament, I wonder?
Done already…… 😉
And to 250 media outlets….. 😉
R

Carbon500
Reply to  Carbon500
December 12, 2014 4:25 am

Ralph: re. your reply to my question: ‘Can you send this to every single Member of Parliament, I wonder?’
‘Done already…… ;-)’
‘And to 250 media outlets….. ;-)’
I can only say – wonderful – well done!

ralfellis
Reply to  A C Osborn
December 10, 2014 1:44 pm

Nice article. I love this quote:
“The price (for wholesale electricity) on the market fell to nothing. A little later before noon, there was so much green power on the market that the German power companies were paying money to get rid of it. By early afternoon when solar power was flowing plentifully, the so-called negative power price rose to (minus) 60 euros per megawatt-hour.”
You know something has gone horribly wrong, when you have to pay the grid to take the electricity you have produced. Who was the beneficiary here? I presume the electricity distributors were picking up the bonus – but I have no doubt that none of that windfall was passed onto customers.
Ralph

Reply to  ralfellis
December 10, 2014 3:16 pm

They pay for getting rid of the electricity because it is cheaper than to stop and the to re-start the coal plants. They use a horrible amount of petroleum to be reheated again. Wind turbine can be shut down, but not so solar plants.

Garfy
December 10, 2014 1:21 pm

what about thorium –
france et reacteur au thorium – Forums Futura-Sciences
forums.futura-sciences.com › … › INFOS › Débats scientifiques
20 févr. 2013 – 7 messages – ‎5 auteurs
dans la lignée du projet de centrale nucléaire au thorium conçue et développée par l’ingénieur français Edgard Nazare dans les années 50
it is a pity we did not listen to professeur Edgard Nazare ……….

Steve in Seattle
December 10, 2014 1:37 pm

and a “link” to the original article by W Weimer, PLEASE !

John Pilcher
December 10, 2014 1:38 pm

Bet they are praying Putin doesn’t shut off the gas supply. What will they do if he does, apply more sanctions?

Patrick Bols
December 10, 2014 1:45 pm

so, a PhD in physics succeeded in first destroying the EU economy through implementing teutonic austerity (reminiscent of old fashioned communist behavior) and is now doing the same thing for her own country. I am sure that dear Angela will be remembered for her great endeavors. GERMANY WAKE UP!

Javert Chip
Reply to  Patrick Bols
December 10, 2014 3:48 pm

Whoa. Before you call everybody a commie and accuse Germany of forcing other nations into financial purgatory, remember Greece (to pick an example) did not end up in financial trouble because of what Germany did to them.
(1) Greeks have a well established history of defaulting on their debts
(2) Greeks lied and cheated like crazy to qualify to enter the EU
(3) Greeks lied and cheated like crazy once they entered the EU
(4) Greeks to this day reject the concept of matching tax rates with their desired standard of living
Greeks worked very hard to ruin their economy long before the Germans got involved. Financial rescue conditions imposed by Germany didn’t cause the original problem, and is a separate topic of conversation (basically, Germany and France simple simply saved their own banks that owned Greek debt).
As an American taxpayer, I have zero desire to “lend” any money to Greece (yea, I know we fund some IMF lending), and I have no desire to continue my own country’s deficit spending.

Zeke
Reply to  Javert Chip
December 10, 2014 3:52 pm

Greece was then forced to accept a German-appointed government, along with the bail-outs, to oversee austerity.
That may or may not be of some significance to the discussion.

ConTrari
Reply to  Javert Chip
December 10, 2014 4:35 pm

Greeks can only be united as a nation as long as they have an external enemy to hate. Used to be the Turks, now it’s the Germans, the EU and in general every institution that has helped them in their economic disaster. Don’t bite the hand that feeds you, bite it off!
Without a common eneny -and the wilder the claims, the better for domestic unity- Greece would be reduced to warring factions, even more than they are today.

Chip Javert
Reply to  Javert Chip
December 10, 2014 10:42 pm

Zeke
I don’t know what happened thru the end of WWII, but since that time, Germany has never imposed a government on Greece. For better or worse, all Greek governments have been selected thru the normal Greek election process.
However, you are correct that Germany imposes strict conditions for the Greek financial bailout. My personal opinion is this seems appropriate for a debtor who defaults on loans owed you, while at the same time asking for more loans.
Greece (pop about 11million) without all the spending supported by defaulted debt would probably have amounted to little more than a small developing country with a primitive economy.

Zeke
Reply to  Javert Chip
December 11, 2014 10:49 am

“However, you are correct that Germany imposes strict conditions for the Greek financial bailout.”
This goes to the heart of the matter. There were not only Greek bailouts, but there were bailouts for Portugal, Italy, and Ireland. The bailouts come with strings. They come with German strings. Yet the money comes from all of the European Union members.
Why should the other members – and in particular the UK – be strapped with the massive failures of the green energy politics and social programs of these countries? And why should Germany be sending these bureaucrats and troikas to these countries? Once this process begins in a country, the ministers are regarded as puppet ministers, and I think this view is correct.
I do not trust companies here, such as GM, that have received bailouts either. I know this is part of the destruction of the car industry by mandating electric cars. And that will also destroy the grid. This is enough to think about for now. An excellent and brief analysis: ‘Bailouts’ are a means for total subjugation of nation states – Nigel Farage on youtube.

Robertvd
December 10, 2014 2:11 pm

Every BIG GOVERNMENT will eventually run out of other people’s money. The question is ‘ did they do it on purpose ?’. No Government knows how to run industry at a profit. They will always ruin the economy and bring misery to the people they in theory represent. Germany and the rest of the EU is a dictatorship were the people have no voice.
The one thing Europe could do without is a long cold winter. Winter is no fun if you can’t heat your house.

Scott
December 10, 2014 2:16 pm

The Germans are a special people, they are able to generate 50% of their electricity demand by Solar. The trouble is, it has to be a sunny Sunday around the end of June, when every person turns off their lights, TV’s etc etc etc for a few minutes around noon. We have seen what they have done against overwhelming odds in WW1+2, they wont give up easily, not like the Spanish.

Jack
Reply to  Scott
December 11, 2014 3:29 am

There is a solution to get the solar panels illuminated during the cloudy days and the nights: Put lighting spots upon the panels.

Mike G
December 10, 2014 2:47 pm

Sadly, this situation is not going to be rectified until after a few thousand or tens of thousands of people freeze to death in the dark. I’m given to understand this very nearly happened last winter in the US midwest.

Javert Chip
Reply to  Mike G
December 10, 2014 3:25 pm

Assuming you can believe the MailOnline (probably a big if), this happened to an estimated 24,000 elderly Britains last winter.

Newsel
Reply to  Mike G
December 10, 2014 4:32 pm
pat
December 10, 2014 3:25 pm

realiity keeps kicking in…
(behind paywall)
Paris and Berlin seek to delay cuts in EU car emissions standards
Financial Times‎ – 3 days ago
France and Germany have moved to stave off another round of carbon emissions cuts for vehicles sold in the EU, setting the stage for a fresh stand-off with Brussels…Carmakers have ploughed billions of euros into clean technologies in an attempt to meet stringent targets …
am sure i saw something yesterday about Mercedes reduction claims were not quite what they seemed, but can’t locate the article today. still, given the delay now being requested by
France & Germany, the following might have been too positive about European vehicles:
May 2014: Blue&GreenTomorrow: Seven carmakers set to miss EU emissions target
Seven of the biggest 15 carmakers are set to miss EU carbon reduction targets with a deadline of 2021, according to organisation Transport & Environment (T&E). A report finds that European companies are better prepared than their competitors in the US and Japan…
Honda is lagging behind most and if it continues at its current rate of progress will not meet the target until 2027. General Motors, Mazda, BMW and Hyundai are also falling behind and Fiat and Suzuki are expected to fall just short…
***The T&E report also points out that unreliable emission test data means that the improvements in fuel economy reported have been exaggerated…
http://blueandgreentomorrow.com/2014/05/27/seven-carmakers-set-to-miss-eu-emissions-target/

Darwin Wyatt
December 10, 2014 4:23 pm

Don’t they round up all the guns next?

ConTrari
December 10, 2014 4:29 pm

@PainoMan:
“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?”
No, that was ChrisTolso, not me, claiming the 70%.

JimTech
December 10, 2014 5:25 pm

Obama is working to save the Germans by tripling our energy costs with new pretend science EPA regulations.

December 10, 2014 5:54 pm

Reblogged this on Norah4you's Weblog and commented:
Please note:
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. in the article….
Because that’s what IPCC:s and all CO2-believers so called scholars done – a scam!
That some politicians in UN also intended to put forward a world-taxation in order to become leaders of a world goverment, that hasn’t been proved no matter that such a conspiracy has been suggested and, I hope, studied by some? Never the less a scam is a scam.
Where have all the Money gone?

phlogiston
December 10, 2014 6:16 pm

Germany’s energy policy has echoes of Versailles.

Amber
December 10, 2014 9:45 pm

Germans are not about to sink their economy and return to East German lifestyles . However they are well on their way to getting a very expensive wake up call from politicians who put ideology ahead of the public interest .
Germany has a world renown reputation in manufacturing. It’s erosion and demise will be the exit of foolish
save the world global warming policies and the politicians promoting them .

Mr Green Genes
December 11, 2014 1:19 am

Hmm. What’s the German word for schadenfreude?
😀

ConTrari
Reply to  Mr Green Genes
December 11, 2014 11:55 am

Kindergarten?

richard
December 11, 2014 2:07 am

HIstory has shown us that the trouble with the Germans is even when the fat lady is singing loudly they won’t give up on a lost cause.

Roland Müller
December 11, 2014 2:53 am

Don´t be afraid, we Germans will reduce our CO2 output, we have just to follow the suggestions of our ministry of environment. In this clip they let you know, 5 minutes more of darkness, and you can shut down another coal power plant.

Newsel
Reply to  Roland Müller
December 11, 2014 10:06 am

🙂

george e. smith
Reply to  Roland Müller
December 11, 2014 2:57 pm

Well Roland,
Her Excellency Angela Merkel is now officially a genuine “Rangatira”.
She was thus adorned during her Maori official welcome at the University of Auckland, where she stopped over on her way to Brisbane (Brisbin) for the G-20 summit.
Dunno how you Germans really think about your current leader; but I happen to think she casts a big shadow. She strikes me as a fine lady. But as a Physicist and a refugee from the Eastern bloc, she certainly has an interesting set of credentials.
But I’m not expecting anything to hold the German people down for any great length of time. You have a long history of notable achievement.
Maybe your new Rangatira Merkel can yet help in that regard.

newsel
Reply to  george e. smith
December 11, 2014 4:17 pm

Don’t hold your breath. I was in Germany last year. On leaving the hotel I started the car (freezing my butt off) to load directions. Could not have been more than a min or two before some green freak had to knock on the window to tell me to turn the engine off. Get a life bozzo. Some appear to have absorbed the cool aid and lost any sense of perspective. Have we been here before?

Jack
December 11, 2014 3:15 am

The politicians are crass ignorant about the climate and GW theories. They have no scientific culture and they are led nose-tied by the ayatollahs of the ideologic ecology lobby. When they are speaking about the climate warming it is as if they were teaching catechism without having once opened a Bible.
Now they are in the crap up to the neck. It will be very useful they remain so for the next 5 years so that the citizens might open their eyes on the lies they have been fed up until now.
Hopefully we in France have built the strongest nuclear energy supply in the world with about 3/4 of the electric supply produced by the nuclear plants. The ecolo lobby thanks God is less powerful than in Germany and though the socialist govt made some vague promises about beginning to stop and dismantle the oldest nuclear plants, no beginning of fulfillment was endeavoured.
Thus France will be in position to supply again huge amounts of electric power to Germany like it did during the last winter 2013.

December 11, 2014 3:23 am

Once again Germany sets an example to the world….
…of how not to do things.