The economics of the madhouse

The Children’s Coalition’s insane war on natural gas

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

On the very evening when the first October snow in 74 years was falling outside in Parliament Square, the Mother of Parliaments went gaga and nodded through the Climate Change Act 2008 – aptly described as the least justifiable and most expensive law ever to be inflicted on the British people –with only three gallant dissenters. The majority was one of the largest for any Act of Parliament.

Now the red herrings are coming home to roost. The staggering cost of the near-universal scientific illiteracy to which half a century of Marxist State education has reduced even the governing class is becoming all too painfully apparent.

“Ed” Davey, the daftly-titled “Secretary of State for Climate Change”, a “Liberal” “Democrat” [a.k.a. loony-Left] cabinet minister in the Children’s Coalition which – thanks in no small part to its suicidal climate policies – has run up a larger debt in five years than all previous British Governments added together, has just announced the kiddiwinks’ latest certifiable policy.

Beyond-bankrupt Britain – once the world’s economic powerhouse – has become the world’s economic madhouse. For “Ed” is going to abolish the use of natural gas in the industries and homes of Britain. Just like that.

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Target for completion of this latest insanity – less than two decades from today. About half the nation cooks or heats its home with gas. By Government fiat, those households will soon be compelled to switch to far more costly and far less efficient electric heating, whether they can afford it or not.

Naturally, there will also be a huge capital cost to overstretched taxpayers, as the nation’s extensive and expensive gas network is pointlessly ripped up, as the gas-fired power stations that have only recently replaced a large part of our coal-fired power generation network are torn down, and as the nation is carpeted with useless, bird-blending, bat-blatting windmills. Already, 60% of Scotland’s landscape has windmills scarring it.

The tiny tots are going to expand the network of dismal, unstable, loss-making windmills massively. To pay for it, they will charge the average household an extra $400 a year on top of the massive energy price hikes they have already inflicted.

They are also going to install 1.2 GW of new nuclear capacity each year (the equivalent of two nuclear submarines). But – insanity upon insanity – the low-spec, civilian-grade reactors they are going to buy from Hitachi cost six times as much as the high-spec, military-grade Rolls Royce reactors in our Trident submarines.

When I asked Rolls Royce whether, in these circumstances, they planned to enter the thrusting new UK market for civilian nuclear electricity generation, I got a curt – and understandable – No. The pinstripe-suited voice quivering down the telephone conveyed ill-concealed impatience at the increasingly bizarre conduct of the Children’s Coalition.

What is worse, not only gas but also gasoline is to be phased out. All cars are to become electric by the 2040s. Just like that.

On past form, I had anticipated something as half-witted as this. In September’s Energy and Environment, in a paper outlining the many errors of the IPCC, I included a short account of the “economics” of the toddlers’ subsidies to electric vehicles. It has been much repeated, though on the evidence I don’t suppose anybody in the Romper Room at the Department of Climate Madness has learned to read yet, so they won’t have seen it. Here it is.

Deferment of the date of onset of net welfare loss

There has been no global warming this century. If the warming were to resume immediately at the mean rate of 0.14 K decade–1 observed in the past 30 years, by 2035 only 0.28 K warming would have occurred. If the warming rate were to rise by as much as half thereafter and were to persist throughout the remainder of the century, warming of little more than 1.1 K would have occurred by 2100.

Since 0.9 K warming has occurred since 1750 (Central England Temperature Record), the 2 K threshold beyond which we are told a net climate-related cost begins to arise may well not be crossed until the end of this century. A slow rate of warming is less damaging than a rapid rate, so even after 2100 the net disbenefit from the warming may be insignificant.

Should precautions be taken in any event?

Whether mitigation measures should be attempted in any event is an economic question, answered by investment appraisal. The UK’s $8333-per-auto subsidy for electric cars will serve as an example. The two initial conditions for the appraisal are the fraction of global CO2 emissions a mitigation measure is intended to abate, and the cost of the measure.

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

CO2 emissions from domestic transport account for 24% of UK CO2 emissions, and cars, vans, and taxis represent 90% of road transport (DfT, 2013). Assuming 80% of fuel use is by these autos, they account for 19.2% of UK CO2 emissions. Conversion to electric power, 61% of which is generated by fossil fuels in the UK, would abate 39% of 19.2% (i.e. 7.5%) of UK CO2 emissions.

However, the battery-weight penalty would be 30% of 19.2% of 61%: i.e. 3.5% of UK CO2 emissions. The net saving from converting all UK cars, vans, and taxis to electricity, therefore, would be 4% of UK CO2 emissions, which are 1.72% of global CO2 emissions, abating 0.07% of global CO2 emissions of 2 ppmv yr–1, or 0.00138 ppmv. Assuming 400 μatm concentration at year end on business as usual, forcing abated by the subsidy for converting all UK cars to electricity would be 5.35 ln[400/(400-0.00138)], or 0.00002 W m–2, which, multiplied by the Planck parameter λ0 = 0.31 K W–1 m2, gives 0.000006 K warming abated by the subsidy.

The cost to the UK taxpayer of subsidizing the 30,000 electric cars, vans, and taxis bought in 2012 was a flat-rate subsidy of $8333 (£5000) for each vehicle and a further subsidy of about $350 (£210) per year in vehicle excise tax remitted, a total of $260.5 million. On that basis, the cost of subsidizing all 2,250,000 new autos sold each year (SMMT, 2013), would be $19.54 bn.

Though the longevity of electric autos is 50% greater than that of internal-combustion autos, the advantage is more than canceled by the very large cost of total battery replacement every few years. No allowance for this extra cost is made. Likewise, the considerable cost of using renewable energy to bring down the UK’s fossil-fueled generation fraction from the global mean 67% to 61% is not taken into account, though, strictly speaking, an appropriate share of the cost of “renewable” electricity generation should be assigned to electric vehicles.

Dividing the $19 bn annual cost by the warming abated gives a unit abatement cost of $3400 tn K–1. Abating the 0.013 K projected warming over the study period by global methods of equivalent unit cost would thus cost $45 tn, or approaching $6500 a year per head of global population, or almost two-thirds of $71 tn global annual GDP.

Stern (2006) wrote that the cost of allowing the then-projected 3 K warming to occur over the 21st century would be 0-3% of global GDP. IPCC (2013, WGII) puts the cost at 0.2-2% of GDP. Assuming that 1 K 20th-century global warming would cost as much as 0.5% of GDP (in fact so small a warming would cost nothing), global mitigation by methods of equivalent unit cost to the UK’s subsidy program for electric vehicles would be 128 times costlier than adaptation.

In general, the cost of mitigation is 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than that of adaptation (Monckton of Brenchley, 2013). Affordable measures are ineffective: effective measures are unaffordable. Too little mitigation is achieved at far too great a cost. Since the premium is 10-100 times the cost of the risk insured, the precaution of insurance against any net-adverse manmade global warming is not recommended.

Footnote: When I visited the Department of Climate Change in 2010 to meet the House of Lord Minister, Lord Marland, I asked him and his chief number-cruncher, Professor David Mackay, to let me see their calculations demonstrating how much global warming the Department’s insane policies would prevent in the coming decades, and at what cost per Kelvin abated.

There was a strangled, aghast silence. The Permanent Secretary looked at his watch and then fiddled with his tie. The Minister tossed a cricket ball up and down in aimless embarrassment. Professor Mackay said, “Er, ah, mphm …” [I’d never heard that 19th-century Scottish playing-for-time interjection before] “… mphm, er, that is, well, we, ah, ugh, mphm – um, oof, we’ve never done any such calculation.”

I turned to the Minister and said, “Can I take it, Minister, that your policies are based on blind faith alone?” Seems they still are.

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pat
December 22, 2014 3:28 pm

Oceanlinx/Energetech is mentioned in this billion dollar failure of CAGW policies:
5 Dec: Bloomberg: Louise Downing: Marine Power May Suffer More Casualties After Siemens Tidal Sale
The downfall of two leading marine-energy developers is damping hope that the emerging industry, which has already lost almost $1 billion, will ever get the technology to market…
Pelamis Wave Power Ltd., once a client of EON SE, Germany’s biggest utility, said last month it had run out of money. Days later Siemens AG (SIE) announced it’s selling Marine Current Turbines Ltd…
Already the top 20 wave and tidal-stream businesses have amassed losses of $903 million over their lifetimes, according to BNEF data…
“This is the capitalist survival-of-the-fittest process working as normal in any new market area,” McCrone said by e-mail…
As other renewables such as solar and wind have reduced cost to become commercially viable, waves and tides remain the most expensive sources of power, costing four times more than coal, BNEF estimates…
Oceanlinx Ltd. and Wavebob Ltd. both failed in the past 18 months, and Ocean Power Technologies Inc., one of the only listed marine energy businesses, canceled a project inAustralia. Aquamarine Power Ltd., which is working with SSE Plc in the U.K., said this week it planned to cut jobs. Pelamis had been looking for a partner since 2011.
“The industry is looking at the wrong place for funding,”said Matthew Clayton, executive director of Triodos Renewables Plc, which sold a share in MCT in 2012 because it was too risky.“People are looking to the renewables sector for it, and it in many respects remains pure venture capital.” ..
***Taxpayers Step Up
While financiers get cold feet, governments have stepped in to support the industry through grants, guaranteed power prices and research and testing facilities. They are excited by the potential scale of marine energy.
In the U.K., it’s estimated to be capable of delivering as much as one-fifth of current power needs, and the government has set a guaranteed price of 305 pounds ($478) a megawatt-hour, more than double that of offshore wind…
Ed Davey, the energy secretary, said at a conference onNov. 26 that the government believes post-2020 marine energy will have a much bigger role to play in meeting low-carbon targets…
In Australia, marine energy could provide more than 35 percent of power, according to the Australian Clean Energy Council, a renewables industry group. The Australian Renewable Energy Agency has provided about A$43 million ($36 million) in grants since 2012…
The industry and especially wave power remains “some years” away from commercialization, and while governments are doing what they can, they can’t be expected to bear the whole cost of development, said McCrone. That means technologies are dependent on winning over venture capitalists and engineering companies that have grown “skeptical,” he said.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-05/marine-power-may-suffer-more-casualties-after-siemens-tidal-sale.html

December 22, 2014 4:07 pm

They are also going to install 1.2 GW of new nuclear capacity each year (the equivalent of two nuclear submarines).
You greatly overestimate the power output of nuclear sub plants.

Reply to  M Simon
December 22, 2014 4:34 pm

Ah. I see it was already noted: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/12/22/the-economics-of-the-madhouse/#comment-1819498
Figure roughly 60,000 SHP or about 50MWe.

Rick K
December 22, 2014 4:24 pm

What means of power will the British military be using?
Wind-powered tanks?
Solar powered submarines?
The mind boggles…

Terry - somerset
December 22, 2014 4:27 pm

Lord Monckton should be ashamed of so factually weak an article. Whilst he is right to question the wisdom and feasibility of policies to reduce emissions by the amount aspired, he does the sceptic case no favours by adopting the tactics of climate change protagonists and politicians – selective half truths designed only to support a predetermined conclusion. To further the argument he should avoid confusing aspirations with actual legislation, and report timescales accurately
It is also clear that over the next 20 – 50 years there may be major changes in technology which could deliver substantial reductions in both:
consumption – eg led lamps, more efficient vehicles, better building insulation etc
generation – eg more efficient PV, heat recovery, tidal and wind generation, increased nuclear
This is not to suggest the aspiration is capable of delivery solely through technological change, but would present a more balanced point of view.

Reply to  Terry - somerset
December 22, 2014 4:36 pm

You don’t have to do it by mandate if it makes economical sense.

Reply to  M Simon
December 23, 2014 2:21 am

M. Simon, correctomundo! Concise and to the point.
Terry, listen up, please…
1. Government is force

2. Good ideas do not have to be forced on others

3. Bad ideas should not be forced on others

4. Liberty is necessary for the difference between good ideas and bad ideas to be revealed
You could pay $100,000 for an Econ education and never learn the above.
ur welcome. ☺

Reply to  Terry - somerset
December 22, 2014 6:47 pm

“It is also clear that over the next 20 – 50 years there may be major changes in technology which could deliver substantial reductions in both: consumption – eg led lamps, more efficient vehicles, better building insulation etc generation – eg more efficient PV, heat recovery, tidal and wind generation, increased nuclear ”
Mere hand-waving with nothing behind it but a maybe. “Maybe” is not exactly a factually strong argument, is it, Terry?

December 22, 2014 4:30 pm

To believe that 23m UK households will drop gas in favour of renewable heating is a fantasy that could only be dreamed up but the same loons who came up with the Green Deal. A very basic understanding of thermal math smashes the argument that the UK’s ageing housing stock can switch to renewable heating. Unfortunately, the DECC will stick to its unloaded guns.

WalksOnDirt
December 22, 2014 5:05 pm

No natural gas.
No petrol.
Good, that is where we need to go. I doubt they can make the time frames stick, though.

Reply to  WalksOnDirt
December 23, 2014 11:33 am

in maine here and it often hits -15 F (not talking wind chill either) and I often lose electrical power.
glad to see you want me to freeze.
you’re a true pal….but since I do use gas and oil my generator can power me well enough (furnace is 110v forced air) to keep me alive. sorry buddy.

December 22, 2014 5:06 pm

I think UK industry should go on strike. I know many EU companies are moving units to USA because of the low cost of energy. A major item not considered in the ‘economics’ is the cost of things, especially energy intensive things. A jar for putting mayonaise, jam, beverages… in used to cost about 35 to 50cents 10-15yrs ago. What do they cost today in places like UK – maybe 3 times that? This might tax the average household as much as it costs them for heat and light.

higley7
December 22, 2014 5:41 pm

It should not be overlooked that their destroying the economy, impoverishing the people, and getting rid of cars and gasoline fits the needs of Agenda 21 perfectly. This is what they want. There will be massive deaths as winters get worse, starvation to follow, seriously decreased standard of living, and poverty for all. Yes, the UN’s Agenda 21 is being actively pursued in the UK! The massive die-off should be those who are pushing this evil agenda, as they are executed for crimes against humanity.

F. Ross
December 22, 2014 6:04 pm

Please excuse me for shouting MADNESS!

Reply to  F. Ross
December 22, 2014 6:51 pm

There’s probably an EU diktat that bans yelling “Fire” in an inferno.

December 22, 2014 8:27 pm

I think the inefficiency (weight penalty, etc.) of electric cars is overstated here. The Tesla Model S, with a large curb weight of 4,637 pounds, has an equivalent fuel efficiency of 89 MPGe. With 50% generating efficiency and 67% combined transmission/distribution efficiency, this works out to 29.8 miles per gasoline gallon equivalent of fossil fuel energy used at power plants for charging the car’s battery. One thing electric cars tend to have is regenerative braking, which non-hybrid gasoline and diesel cars do not have.
Since the EPA MPGe figures are “wall to wheel” rather than “battery to wheel”, the charging efficiency does not matter for MPGe.
The overall numbers largely make sense, but I think the lack of advantage of electric cars is somewhat overstated by considering charging losses and neglecting recovery of braking losses by regenerative braking.

MarkG
Reply to  Donald L. Klipstein
December 22, 2014 9:39 pm

But modern gasoline cars turn off the gas when braking, so regenerative braking wouldn’t help that much. Unless the light changes right as I approach it, I’m normally rolling to a stop with my foot hovering over the brake pedal, during which time I’m burning no gas at all.

trafamadore
Reply to  MarkG
December 22, 2014 10:08 pm

“the advantage is more than canceled by the very large cost of total battery replacement every few years.”
But total battery replacement has never happened for the now old Prius. They are running just fine. And they are are more than a “few years” old.

trafamadore
Reply to  MarkG
December 22, 2014 10:09 pm

“But modern gasoline cars turn off the gas when braking”
Huh? I have a Fit, and it idles when braking. It does not “turn off the gas”.

MarkG
Reply to  MarkG
December 23, 2014 5:39 am

“I have a Fit, and it idles when braking. It does not “turn off the gas”.”
Uh, yes, it does.
At least, the Civic does, so I’d be amazed if the Fit doesn’t. When you’re braking, the engine keeps turning because it’s connected to the wheels, so the ECU turns off the fuel injectors.

F. Ross
December 22, 2014 10:20 pm

“…
What is worse, not only gas but also gasoline is to be phased out. All cars are to become electric by the 2040s. Just like that.
…”
May one also assume that all snow plows, all ambulances, all emergency utility repair vehicles, police cars, government vehicles, etc. will be electric? If not, why not?

Tim
December 22, 2014 10:36 pm

As a wise Germany retreats, others press onwards with suicide attacks on their own economies.
http://northeastwindmills.com/germany-joins-countries-retreating-from-expensive-green-energy-revolution/

David Cage
December 22, 2014 11:13 pm

The staggering cost of the near-universal scientific illiteracy to which half a century of Marxist State education has reduced even the governing class is becoming all too painfully apparent.
I would suggest that instead of making pollitical points Viscount Monckton of Brenchley faces the truth that it is actually the social snobbery of the aristocratic classes controlling the three main UK parties that is to blame.
One needs to look no further than Churchill and his Blenheim palace forbears with his “engineers should be on tap not on top to see why the case against the climate scientists is ignored and to understand Britain’s stupidity.”
Sadly the case for climate change can readily be made with verbal diarrhea but the case against requires understanding that is both specialised and mathematical to a degree that it is clearly well beyond that of climate scientists.
Whether there is change is a function not of climate science understanding but of signal analysis and a true grasp of the underlying trends which if there is any cyclic component cannot be predicted by a linear extrapolation as we see continually in this field.
The original data accuracy and limits is purely an engineering function with little or no climate expertise needed so again we are taking the word of untrained amateurs against professionals out of pure class warfare.
The compute modelling is capable of being assessed by professionals from half a dozen spheres who are all agreed that it is sadly over simplistic and totally dishonest to claim anything but a vague possibility as the true value of its predictions. Sadly all these are associated in some way with trade so a “scientist” outranks them even when proven wrong.
It is time to face up to Britain’s real problem.

Nigel S
Reply to  David Cage
December 23, 2014 1:46 am

Is the Green party contolled by the filthy aristos too? How else do you explain their particular brand of madness?
Margaret Thatcher’s life story contradicts you at nearly every point.

James Abbott
Reply to  Nigel S
December 23, 2014 1:27 pm

“Is the Green party contolled by the filthy aristos too?
No.

David Cage
Reply to  Nigel S
December 23, 2014 11:11 pm

The green party is simply a fringe party of no relevance whatever in mainstream politics on a par at best with the monster raving loony party. the green’s power is dominantly in hidden financial controllers. As for Margaret Thatcher she was a maverick that has always been present in politics but as long as she wanted the same as the aristocratic ruling class was presented as the open face of politics. The moment she started to question the green agenda that among others Goldsmith was promoting and wanted a fair deal for the Nottingham miners she was stabbed in the back as far as politics was concerned. I think history will however put her among the greats of 20th century politicians if not the very top as other potential great ones did more harm in the long term than they did good.
She won me over when i had to deliver something to Westminster and she was firstly totally sober and secondly went out of her way to show me where I needed to go so i admit to bias in her favour. A lovely person.

Larry
December 23, 2014 12:04 am

The climate conspirators at the UN are actually demanding immunity from prosecution worldwide now. From this story, it’s obvious why. The evidence of their criminal fraud is so plain now that they fear for their freedom.

mickgreenhough
December 23, 2014 12:06 am

Dear Sir, I can see two immediate problems with banning gas and diesel. When the wind doesn’t blow Windmills need a diesel generator in the base to turn the mill. If they remain at rest for any time the blades distort and the bearings damage due to the weight. There also needs to be backup gas turbines to supply the grid when the mills cannot. How will this be overcome without diesel and gas? Mick G   From: Watts Up With That? To: mickgreenhough@yahoo.co.uk Sent: Monday, 22 December 2014, 18:47 Subject: [New post] The economics of the madhouse #yiv2998490307 a:hover {color:red;}#yiv2998490307 a {text-decoration:none;color:#0088cc;}#yiv2998490307 a.yiv2998490307primaryactionlink:link, #yiv2998490307 a.yiv2998490307primaryactionlink:visited {background-color:#2585B2;color:#fff;}#yiv2998490307 a.yiv2998490307primaryactionlink:hover, #yiv2998490307 a.yiv2998490307primaryactionlink:active {background-color:#11729E;color:#fff;}#yiv2998490307 WordPress.com | Guest Blogger posted: “The Children’s Coalition’s insane war on natural gasBy Christopher Monckton of BrenchleyOn the very evening when the first October snow in 74 years was falling outside in Parliament Square, the Mother of Parliaments went gaga and nodded through th” | |

Jeff Mitchell
December 23, 2014 2:20 am

I would like to see the name calling abated. We can’t do much about the warmists and alarmists doing it, but I’d like it much better if we didn’t follow suit. We would be in a much better position to help them make the bridges to cross when their boat sinks.

David Cage
Reply to  Jeff Mitchell
December 23, 2014 11:19 pm

We would be in a much better position to help them make the bridges to cross when their boat sinks.
Who wants bridges when their boat sinks. Some of us want compensation for green taxation and heads to roll for the the criminal deception involved in the claims made for the science being beyond question. Possibly even for manslaughter charges for the unnecessary deaths from energy poverty. These “scientists ” and their front men had not qualms about shredding their superiors who disagreed when they had the whip hand and they must pay for that with interest. I don’t believe in turn the other cheek.

richard verney
December 23, 2014 2:46 am

“Though the longevity of electric autos is 50% greater than that of internal-combustion autos, the advantage is more than canceled by the very large cost of total battery replacement every few years.”
////////////////////////////
i do not know where Lord Monckton gets the idea that the longevity of electric autos is 50% greater than that of the internal combustion autos, and I would question the accuracy of that statement, although I fully agree with the last part of the sentence about longevity being more than cancelled out by the need to replace batteries.
My dad was one of the early pioneers in electric cars in the UK, having had an electric car back in the 1980s. It had an aluminium body so it did not corrode but the batteries had to be replaced every 3 to 4 years. Mechanically, it had no serious problems but then again because it had no range, it did no mileage. Maximum 2000 miles a year (probably less), just popping in to town to do a bit of shopping or to the pub for a drink or to a restauraut for something to eat (my dad always got a free charge even from high street shops, it was such a novelty to see electric cars in those days, and this was before health & safety would have prevented running a power lead over a pavement – in those days people could be relied upon to pick up their feet and not trip over a cable on the foot path).
In contrast I have a couple of oldish internal combustion cars (45 and 41 years old ,one of which I have owned for over 35 years). mechanically they are fine, notwithstanding one having driven a few hundred thousand miles, the other is a little fickle having a race engine so it has not done that many miles, but I can see no substantial reason why either of these cars cannot go on for another 50 or so years (petrol willing).
Most people change cars because of fads, or as a social status, not because the car is in some way unreliable. If one wants to go green, this is best achieved by keeping a car running rather than scrapping and replacing. The cash for bangers was environmentally a very poor policy.
The Climate Change Act is madness, it should be repealled ASAP.

johnmarshall
December 23, 2014 3:08 am

I encourage everyont to sign the gov-petition to repeal the CCA.
Most atmospheric CO2 is volcanogenic. How is Davey to stop that?

Volcano Accident
Reply to  johnmarshall
December 28, 2014 2:52 pm

Stand near the crater’s edge whilst wearing slippery shoes, Mr. Davey.
Then whilst chanting the Mantra “Save us from a 2 degrees rise”,
dance the “Hokey Cokey” at the crater rim. Cape Verde’s “Fogo”
might be most convenient to the United Kingdom.

December 23, 2014 4:10 am

In a substantial part of the world heatpumps are still the most efficient en cost-effective ways of heating/cooling. It baffles me why this system isn’t more widespread in Europe. All that need to be done is get rid of the idiotic stranglehold regulations caused by the ‘manmade’ ozone-hole hoax in order to use high-yield refrigerants again instead of low-yield combustible gases such as butane.

Gamecock
December 23, 2014 4:58 am

It’s not about energy. It’s not about money. It’s about aligning the citizenry on the common task of saving the planet. An aligned citizenry can be controlled absolutely.

December 23, 2014 5:44 am

Bankrupting wealthy nations is part of the strategy to move towards one world government. The economic issue is not what things “cost” in monetary terms, but the fact that we still allow central banks to print counterfeit currency and charge interest on it.
The global warming scam is deliberately designed to increase the speed of national debt accumulation so that the middle class can be wiped out in Western Nations and only an elite are left to dictate global policy through the U.N. and similar bodies.

December 23, 2014 6:53 am

European nations that have already committed massive investments to Renewable Energy.
Conservatively in capital costs alone this amounts to at least ~$0.5 trillion to provide ~2.9% of European Generating capacity.
Renewable Energy costs are about 16 times more than gas fired generation and it has 5.7 times less productive capacity i.e. only about ~17.5%.
For the full data see:
https://edmhdotme.wordpress.com/a-comparison-of-both-the-capital-cost-and-energy-production-effectiveness-of-the-renewable-energy-in-europe/
This investment has resulted in a “nominal” ~30Gigawatts of electrical Generating Capacity from an installed Nameplate Capacity of ~169Gigawatts. It was installed at ~16 times the capital cost of conventional Gas Fired generation and provides 17.5% of the its nameplate capacity.
As is well proven in France, the most effective way of controlling and reducing CO2 emissions is by the use of Nuclear power for electricity generation. CO2 emissions per head in France are now at 75% of CO2 emissions per head in China.
At the resulting price $16.87 billion/Gigawatt for Renewable Energy, replacement of the 1024GW European Generating fleet would cost about $17.3trillion, a sum close to the whole annual GDP of the European Union.
But the “nominal” 30GW of Renewable Energy production is not really as useful as one would wish, because of its intermittency and non-dispatchability.
These uneconomic investments have been promoted by government subsidies and other government market manipulation.
But the expense of the policies has been loaded mainly on the electrical bills of Electricity customers:
these policies have already caused very substantial hardship to poorer individuals in European society
these policies are severely damaging the competitiveness of European industries.
and further data at
https://edmhdotme.wordpress.com

December 23, 2014 9:26 am

Christopher Monckton,
It has become sort of a tradition over the years here at WUWT for you to post an article very close to the Holiday Season that occurs around NH winter solstice period. You always stimulate vivid and lively discourse for that holiday period; that’s for sure.
Christopher, Happy Holiday Season to you.
I’ll leave you with a humorous thought:
parody on/
Is it ethical to shout ‘Madhouse’ in The world’s most viewed crowded site on global warming and climate change? Doing so might result in Alarmist intellectuals in such chaos that they might injure their associates’ and their own feelings. : )
parody off/
John

December 23, 2014 11:38 am

Christopher Monckton wrote,
“[. . .] the Mother of Parliaments went gaga and nodded through the Climate Change Act 2008 – aptly described as the least justifiable and most expensive law ever to be inflicted on the British people –with only three gallant dissenters. The majority was one of the largest for any Act of Parliament.”

Are there almost 1,500 seats in the UK Parliament? Does this mean that with only 3 dissenters against the Climate Change Act of 2008 that there was approximately a 99.7% consensus on significant climate change by CO2 from burning fossil fuels?
WOW!
Thinking about that, then to me it is a lesson learned on the importance of having a highly diverse non-global culture. Some countries of independent thought might have a good reason to avoid that kind of WOW.
John

James Abbott
December 23, 2014 1:59 pm

richardscourtney
Can I suggest its a bit of leap to say
“Thankyou for your demonstration that you cannot fault the argument of Lord Monckton which explains that UK energy policy is mad.”
just because I choose not to go through his latest article line by line. I could do, but life is too short.
Many times on this site I have suggested that Lord M is not a good cheerleader for the sceptic community and have said why in terms of his claimed status, extraordinary claims on many subjects (check out health issues) and lack of scientific credibility – notably in cherry picking data to suit his case.
But for your satisfaction here are two examples of tosh from the Good Lord in his article:
“Already, 60% of Scotland’s landscape has windmills scarring it.”
That is a wild exaggeration.
“Though the longevity of electric autos is 50% greater than that of internal-combustion autos, the advantage is more than canceled by the very large cost of total battery replacement every few years. No allowance for this extra cost is made”
Electric car batteries do not need replacing “every few years” routinely. The replacement period depends on several factors including the type of battery used, the conditions they are used under and the mileage done. The more advanced batteries under moderate use can last 10 years. Industry reviews point to 5 years typically. So Lord M has chosen to use the very lower end of the range of battery lifetimes to build his case – which is more cherry picking – similar to the way he uses the temperature data set that delivers the smallest warming trend.