Renewable energy – by royal decree – meanwhile, the poor suffer

The St. Louis city council has unanimously passed a resolution decreeing that by 2035 the city will somehow, almost magically be powered by 100% “clean, renewable” electricity. Or at least by paper certificate, as St. Louis city council raises electricity costs for poor families

City of St. Louis skyline in September 2008. Image: Wikimeda

Guest essay by Paul Driessen

In 2016, Missouri generated 96.5% of its electricity with fossil fuel and nuclear power, 1.6% with hydroelectric, and just 1.5% with wind and solar. The St. Louis Metro Area did roughly the same.

But now, by royal decree, the St. Louis City Crown has made it clear, the climate must be perfect all year – and by 2035 the city will somehow, magically be powered by 100% “clean, sustainable” electricity.

The Board of Aldermen unanimously passed a resolution calling for this to happen – via tougher energy efficiency measures and a transition to wind and solar power. The decision was supported by “environmental, advocacy and religious” organizations, which cited “sustainability and climate consciousness” as major concerns, an effusive article noted. The decision was simply “smart business,” they claim, because renewable energy is becoming “cheaper and cheaper,” and businesses want to move to cities that rely on renewable energy.

City officials have promised to launch an immediate “transparent and inclusive stakeholder process,” to develop a “plan of action” by December 2018. Who will actually be included in this “inclusive” process, and who will not be invited to participate, they did not say. However, recent marches, rants, dis-invitations, property destruction and physical assaults around cities and campuses offer helpful clues.

The following observations may help initiate the St. Louis review process – and similar discussions about renewable energy in other communities.

The local utility company (Ameren) already has a Pure Power program that lets St. Louis residents and businesses voluntarily purchase Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs). When a customer signs up for 100% renewable energy, Ameren charges an extra penny for every kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity. That increases utility bills by 10-20% and on average adds about $150 to annual residential bills; $850 to commercial bills; and $20,000 to industrial electricity charges.

However, it does not mean customers are actually getting wind or solar energy. Each REC simply represents “environmental attributes associated with past renewable energy generation” and proof that “renewable energy was generated by an eligible renewable energy source.”

In other words, an REC merely means electricity was generated somewhere, sometime in the past, and sent somewhere, along a transmission line, whether or not it was really needed at the time. It simply pays wind developers for every kilowatt generated – transferring wealth from customers to developers.

All this raises intriguing questions. If wind and solar are getting cheaper, and more affordable than fossil fuels, why does Ameren charge a 1-cent-per-kWh premium for them? Why do they to be mandated? How many times might certain wind operators sell the same certificates? How many counterfeits will con artists sell? How many “certificate cops” will be needed to police the lucrative trade?

Once St. Louis makes renewables mandatory, the involuntary wealth transfers will become huge. Worse, the system will be enormously regressive – falling hardest on poor and working class families, small businesses operating on slim profit margins, and major energy users like hospitals and factories.

Missouri currently has relatively low electricity prices; St. Louis rates are even lower. Imposing renewable energy mandates will send city electricity rates into realms now “enjoyed” in California and Connecticut: 19 cents per kWh for families, 17 cents for businesses and 13 cents for industries. They could even reach the punitive rates now paid in Germany: 35 cents for families, 18 cents for all others!

How might that affect a vital energy-intensive customer like the 635,000-square-foot Barnes-Jewish Hospital Center for Advanced Medicine? At today’s rates, it pays around $1.4 million a year for electricity. A 13% Pure Power REC hike would increase that bill by $180,000. At CA-CT-German rates, that bill would skyrocket to $3.3 million annually – a massive, unsustainable $1.9 million increase.

How many employees would the hospital have to lay off, to make up for that spike? How many services would it have to eliminate or reduce in quality? How badly would patient care suffer?

How will poor and blue-collar families fare if their electricity rates nearly double? United Way recently found that 56% of St. Louis families are already unable to pay their basic living expenses: housing, food, clothing, transportation, taxes, healthcare and child care. How much worse will this situation become?

Then why are the city and its allies (especially religious groups) so intent on implementing these renewable energy mandates? Perhaps because that is easier than tackling real city problems. Missouri high school students as a whole have an 85% graduation rate; in St. Louis only 46% graduate. The city ranks #12 among “worst US cities to live in,” #4 for murders, and #2 for “most dangerous.”

Instead of trying to improve on this dismal record, the Aldermen & Allies want to be at the forefront on “disastrous manmade climate change” and “sustainability” (or at least “consciousness” about the issues).

Average global temperatures have dropped back to where they were before the 2015-16 El Niño. Harvey was the first major hurricane to hit the US mainland in a record 12 years. Tornado, drought and storm frequency and intensity are on par with historic records. Where’s the disaster or human connection?

As to clean and sustainable, wind and solar are not. The enormous installations require vast amounts of land and raw materials, plus more for ultra-long transmission lines. (The wind installations Anheuser-Busch plans to use for its 100% renewable PR stunt are 350 miles away – in Oklahoma.) Still more land and materials are required for backup fossil fuel power plants or ginormous battery arrays – so that families, hospitals and businesses have electricity when they need it, instead of when it’s available.

For the wind option, just generating the 3.5 billion megawatt-hours of electricity the United States uses every year – and storing power in batteries for just seven windless days – would require some 14 million turbines! That’s because more turbines force us to go to lower and lower quality wind areas, which means instead of generating electricity 33% of the year at best wind sites, they’d only do so half of that time. Using Tesla-style 100-kWh battery packs would require something on the order of 600 billion units!

Have the Aldermen & Allies run those numbers – and costs – for the St. Louis share of all this? Will Gov. Greitens and the state legislature go along with all this – and help pay the costs?

More to the point, all of this would require unfathomable amounts of mining, processing, smelting, manufacturing and shipping: concrete, iron, copper, fiberglass, lithium, cadmium, rare earth metals and more. Since St. Louis and other environmentalist groups generally oppose mining (and foundries, refineries and factories) in the USA, most of those materials will come from someone else’s backyards:

Places like Baotou, Mongolia and the Democratic Republic of Congo – where men, women and even children dig them out and process them under horrific environmental, health and safety conditions. Their risk of dying due to cave-ins or exposure to toxic, carcinogenic materials is intense and constant.

Some claim renewable energy is nevertheless sustainable, and moral. It must be an interesting group of religious leaders who’ve come to the fore in St. Louis (and elsewhere) to reach that conclusion, support major wind and solar energy programs – and denounce fossil fuels and investment in oil and mining companies.

People in impoverished and developing countries have little interest in wind and solar power, except as a stopgap for distant villages. They want abundant, reliable, affordable electricity. That’s why they have built hundreds of coal-fired power plants and have 1,600 more under construction or in planning.

One has to wonder if those who promoted and voted on the St. Louis program (and others like it) ever considered these hard realities. Too often, they seem content just to feel righteous, at least among their peers and certain stakeholders – even if most big renewable energy programs are really just pixie dust.


Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org), and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death and other books on public policy.

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AndyG55
November 6, 2017 4:38 pm

A bit like Canberra ACT Australia.

They say they are aiming for 100% renewables , but I cannot remember seeing a single big wind turbine within the ACT borders. There may be a small solar farm though.

Quilter
Reply to  AndyG55
November 6, 2017 7:10 pm

There are a couple of solar farms, all well to the south of the city and definitely away from where the governing politicians live but nowhere near enough for our “clean energy”. A private business would be prosecuted for such a scam but hey this is the government, would they lie to us? We deplorable south Canberrrans did not vote a majority for the government so we are to be punished by paying for a white elephant tram that we will never get to see but our taxes are required for and a solar farm near Hume that is a road hazard late afternoons as the light bounces off straight into drivers” faces.

Pop Piasa
November 6, 2017 5:19 pm

STL has bigger survival problems than from where they get their electricity, that speaks for itself.

November 6, 2017 5:36 pm

How is it that these ubiquitous mentally ill nut-jobs are in charge of every damn thing in the Western world? What will it take to get rid of the plague? In the remote possibility we ever got out of this intact as a coherent civilisation liberalism will be as illegal post-Renaissance as holocaust denial currently is in Germany. And nowhere will it apply more than Germany.

November 6, 2017 5:38 pm

An additional item to ponder. Let’s say it costs 12 cents/kwh off peak as it does where I live. 5 cents of that is generation cost. 7 cents is utility overhead: trucks, crews, poles, wire, equipment, etc. Every kwh the utility does not sell, but is required to deliver, costs the utility 7 cents. For a 1000 kwh/month home, the utility loses $70 in unreimbursed overhead. Their only option is to either raise customer rates to cover that loss or send a bill for $70 to each “solar/wind” generating home. The only value of the alternative power sources is to offset generation costs. The overhead costs still exist, no matter how that power was generated. If the renewable people want to be honest, they either need to pay for that lost overhead cost or disconnect their home from the grid and live with their choices. Bear in mind it takes 25 KW to start a 4 ton air conditioner/heatpump, and their rooftop solar produces 5-7 and their inverter is capable of maybe 10. Without the utility connection for motor load startup, they are in a pickle. These are reasons why I like synchronous, reliable, affordable, robust, utility supplied energy. It works. All this other stuff is fantasy.

November 6, 2017 5:40 pm

I assume that the council, churches and other advocates who support this suicide pact are comprised of the 50% of residents who never graduated from HS.

Sara
November 6, 2017 6:04 pm

Just a question, because I don’t think it’s been addressed. Or maybe it has, and I missed it.
Is there any acknowledgement in any of these that these wind turbines and their related stuff are subject to severe weather impacts, or that the migratory birds on the flyways (Mississippi River, et al.), which include whooping cranes (endangered) and several other endangered species will be endangered by this utter nonsense?
Or are these proposals mostly just politicians talking through their hats, with no intention of putting these things up anywhere near St. Louis proper?
Thanks for the feedback.

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Sara
November 6, 2017 7:16 pm

The only big wind turbine in STL is at the Alberici Construction building by I-170 between Page and Woodson. I haven’t seen it operating much.

Reply to  Sara
November 6, 2017 9:00 pm

Sara,
Watch this only if you have a strong stomach.

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
November 8, 2017 6:08 am

Meanwhile, in Puerto Rico:

Sara
Reply to  Sara
November 7, 2017 5:03 am

Thank you. I’ve seen that video some place else. It is just plain worrisome, that anyone is dependent on something like that for electricity.

Ironically, I got my electric bill yesterday in the mail, so I’ve checked the per KWh charge, which doesn’t vary a whole lot at $0.05798/KWh. The rest of the charges are what change the most from summer to winter and back again.

There IS a renewable portfolio charge of $0.00189/KWh, which started showing up a very long time ago, and I don’t know if it means that the ComEd is outsourcing to a wind power company, or just investing its bazzillions of gross income dollars in companies like that, as it is not defined and was never announced. Nor do I know, since it showed up with no notice, what this “renewable portforlio” consists of, but as long as the charge remains low, at less than one cent per KWh, but it is listed under “Taxes and Fees” with no defining reference. For one month’s “tax/fee” charge, $0.45 is not unreasonable. $0.45/month from a network of 8.5 million households is +/- $4.25 million, never mind what the company gets from businesses and highrises in Chicago proper. Note: the “renewable portfolio:” tax/fee may be higher in the city itself, and probably is. I could look back through my old bills. I still have a pile of them.

I don’t think there is a wind or solar farm anywhere around here, although I do know that a lot of cell towers outside the big cities (e.g., Chicago, Milwaukee) in farmland rented from farmers is powered by solar cells, not propellers. Or it was the last time I drove through the cornfields. But those are individual setups, not part of a power grid. I’ll see if I can get some time over the winter to get that far out of town and get some pictures of that.

What the article does not say is that St. Louis, Missouri, is separate from St. Louis, Illinois, directly across the river, and not a particularly pleasant place to live. However, there is absolutely nothing barring the Missouri residents from moving across Ole Miss to Illinois, where their electric rates may be a lot cheaper.

Missouri’s other large city is Kansas City, MO, which is across the state line from Kansas City, Kansas. Same thing: if KCMO becomes untenable, the residents can move out of state to some place else not run by #—–#. (Anthony gets mad at me if I use terms like blithering idiots, so I’ll avoid that.)

This is just an excuse to scam money out of people without really accounting for it, and not much else.

Barbara
November 6, 2017 6:06 pm

“Religious organizations”. Just how much religious organizations money has been invested in renewable energy through their pension funds and/or church endowment funds? Vested interest?

Tom Halla
November 6, 2017 6:13 pm

Is anyone on the City Council receiving campaign contributions from the green blob, with major donors like Tom Steyer?

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Tom Halla
November 6, 2017 7:52 pm

They just want to show the world that they can keep up with what’s popular in the rest of civilization (where a wikipedia picture from 2008 would be too old to be current).

November 6, 2017 6:28 pm

In South Australia I am paying 38c/KwH and getting 60.3c/Kwh feed-in tariff (therefore a profit over the year – unfortunate for all those without solar panels but the Government made me do it).

November 6, 2017 6:33 pm

As they are finding out in South Australia, the ‘clean energy’ State, industries & businesses are closing and people are hurting with the most expensive electricity in the world.
“Food handouts increasing with skyrocketing power bills in South Australia”:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-16/sa-electricity-prices-blamed-for-more-food-handouts/9053426

Robert of Texas
November 6, 2017 7:40 pm

Politicians are rarely the brightest lamps in the house – local politicians are often more like broken bulbs. To even pretend they understand the issues with energy or climate change is silly. They will have convictions, faith, and certitude – but no understanding.

I have no problem with cities declaring they are going to achieve 100% sustainability – as long as the federal tax payers are not stuck with the bill of the messes they create. If St. Louis ends up bankrupt over this ridiculous decision, then it should be left to fail utterly. The reason progressives keep trying this stuff over and over is because there are no consequences for failure – the feds always bail them out.

Same with ridiculous government retirement benefits – if California ends up bankrupt over it then let it fail. Maybe the other states will start seriously looking at their own bank sheets.

Any government official involved in policies that result in bankruptcy should be permanently barred from office. Oh wait, I guess you can’t ban an entire political party…

Barbara
Reply to  Robert of Texas
November 6, 2017 7:28 pm

Wikipedia: Detroit bankruptcy

Chapter 9 bankruptcy July 18, 2013

Largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history by debt estimated at $18-20 billion.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit_bankruptcy

Detroit, Michigan, USA

Retired Kit P
November 6, 2017 7:54 pm

Paul D and the St. Louis city council have something in common. It is all about agenda.

Seattle also claims claims to be 100% renewable. First off Seattle City Light is a small utility. The city of Seattle is a small part of the larger metropolitan area. Their hydro production can meet the demand on average.

Second, the large coal plant south of Seattle is still pumping out power the last I checked. While the city of Seattle sold their interest, they did not close the plant.

Fourth, the mayor of Seattle like to come to eastern Washington State to protest the nuke plant and hydro on the Snake River.

Finally Seattle City Light has not partnered in any new renewable energy projects.

The bottom line is that it is only about addenda.

There are things that make places a better to live. It is mundane things like good schools, well managed sewage treatment, low taxes, and public safety.

November 6, 2017 8:36 pm

“Why do they to be mandated?”
should be:
Why do they have to be mandated?
Just sayin…
(good article though..!!)

November 6, 2017 9:45 pm

The answer is to build a nuke underground and plant a big propellor on top as a virtue signalling device.

The greens are stupid enough to believe that.

Reply to  Leo Smith
November 6, 2017 10:06 pm

+97% in accordance with IPCC

November 6, 2017 10:05 pm

Why delay this only after their elected mandate is over? There seems to be plenty of interesting choices already. http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/nuclear-fuel-cycle/nuclear-power-reactors/small-nuclear-power-reactors.aspx

Admin
November 6, 2017 10:24 pm

Hands up!

Don’t heat!

Bruce Cobb
November 7, 2017 7:31 am

Renewables are definitely for the terminally math, physics, and reality-challenged.

Coach Springer
November 7, 2017 8:31 am

Sounds like rationing coupled with punitive prices, punitive taxation and pretend sustainability. Because that’s what is smart and what businesses (that sell power, wind turbines, solar panels, and “smart” meters) and Big Government control obsessives want.

Barbara Skolaut
November 7, 2017 12:56 pm

“One has to wonder if those who promoted and voted on the St. Louis program (and others like it) ever considered these hard realities”

They. Don’t. Care.

Tony Murtha
November 7, 2017 5:02 pm

Be interesting to see the power drain on the proposed system by the dc transit LRT.

Snarling Dolphin
November 7, 2017 8:48 pm

When did urban renewal morph into urban renewables?