This report should be profoundly embarrassing to the government of Justin Trudeau
Peter Foster November 22, 2018 12:40 PM EST
Amid hundreds of graphs, charts and tables in the latest World Energy Outlook (WEO) released last week by the International Energy Agency, there is one fundamental piece of information that you have to work out for yourself: the percentage of total global primary energy demand provided by wind and solar. The answer is 1.1 per cent. The policy mountains have laboured and brought forth not just a mouse, but — as the report reluctantly acknowledges — an enormously disruptive mouse.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has in recent years become an increasingly schizophrenic organization. As both a source of energy information and a shill for the UN’s climate-focused sustainable development agenda, it has to talk up the “transition to a low-carbon future” while simultaneously reporting that it’s not happening. But it will!
This report should be profoundly embarrassing to the Liberal government of Justin Trudeau, which has virtue-signalled itself to the front of a parade that is going nowhere, although it can certainly claim genuine leadership in the more forceful route to transition: killing the fossil fuel industry by edict.
The WEO report, yet again, projects that global fossil fuel use — and related emissions — will grow out to 2040, as oil, gas and coal continue to dominate the energy picture. But it also struggles to put a positive spin on wind and solar. Solar had a “record-setting” year in 2017. The Chinese solar business is “booming.” New wind and solar additions “outpaced those of fossil fuels in 2017, driven by policy support and declining costs.
“Policy support” means subsidies worth hundreds of millions of dollars. As for declining costs, solar is at least twice as expensive a generator as coal and almost twice as expensive as gas.
Finally, and most significantly, the report confirms what should have been obvious from the start: the more “variable” wind and solar are introduced into any electricity system, the more they make it both more expensive and less reliable.
The term Variable Renewable Energy, VRE, could more accurately be described as Unreliable Renewable Energy, URE, due to the terribly obvious fact that the sun doesn’t shine at night, and sometimes not during the day either, while the wind doesn’t always blow. Thus the more that wind and solar are part of your system, the more technical contortions they demand from backup power and the structure of the grid. The efficient part of the system has to twist itself into a technical pretzel to accommodate the inefficient part. Accommodating unreliability has led to outright perversity. The widespread adoption of wind and solar under Germany’s Energiewende (“energy transition”) has resulted in rising overall emissions, mainly from coal-fired backup facilities. Meanwhile the green Godot is battery storage, which is always on the point of turning up, but never quite does. Still, the IEA has a scenario for that: “What if battery storage becomes really cheap?”
Supply isn’t the only area where expensive and unreliable wind and solar need to be accommodated. There is also “demand flexibility.” This includes having solar panels installed on your roof, or adopting — or being forced to adopt — “smart meters,” which can monitor a household’s electricity usage in minute-by-minute detail. According to the report, “The spreading of rooftop solar PV (photovoltaics) and the falling costs of digital technologies, combined with affordable wind and solar power options, are creating a host of new opportunities that enable consumers to take a more active role in meeting their own energy needs.”
But wind and solar are not “affordable,” and few people want to take a “more active role” in meeting their energy needs (That is, unless they are being heavily “policy supported” to stick solar panels on their roofs). They just want to flip a switch.
As for smart meters, the IEA notes that many countries “have successfully rolled out smart meters on a large scale, such as Canada, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Norway, Spain and Sweden.” Would such success be like the smart meter program in Ontario, which was panned by provincial auditor Bonnie Lysyk for costing an extra billion dollars and not working as advertised, while several thousand meters were found to represent a fire hazard?
Although it mentions nothing of the absurdities attached to Ontario’s Green Energy Act, the WEO report confirms that Canada has the most stringent emissions pricing program in the world, at least out to 2025, at $35 a tonne (in 2017 U.S. dollars), thus cementing its competitive disadvantage. Others, such as the EU and Korea, are prepared to make marginally more self-damaging commitments out to 2040 (at US$43 and US$44 respectively), but these levels nowhere near approach that allegedly required by the beyond-fantasy “Sustainable Development Scenario,” which, for developed countries, is US$63 in 2025 and US$140 in 2040. In fact, those figures, like most of the IEA’s projections, are not worth a solar fig.
The Sustainable Development Scenario not only solves the climate issue, but also takes care of universal access to modern energy and air pollution, too. Even more amazing, it achieves all this via imposing swathes of expensive and unreliable energy, but without the slightest impact on economic growth. How? By simply assuming so.
The report’s solution to policy mayhem is inevitably to call for more — and more complex — policy. “Can an integrated approach spur faster action?” it asks. Since governments have screwed up so badly, might they screw up less if they try to do much more?
At least they are assured of firm support from the IEA.
HT/Cam_S, Willis, Willie Soon, Marcus
The part of the cost of wind turbines that you never see attributed to wind are all the transmission line upgrades that are being put in. These are easily in the hundreds of millions. The company I work for recently put in a 180 mile line to a neighboring power company “to ease congestion” at a cost of $1 million per mile. Claiming they were cost efficient due to being below the national average. Never once in the write-up was anything mentioned that this congestion was due to the large increase in the number of wind turbines that have been put on the grid in the last decade.
I’ve been having trouble getting people to read and comment on my 2016 letter to (candidate) Trump. Maybe it’s the heat.
Any dispatcher at any electric utility could tell you 15 years ago that Unreliables are the bane of reliable electrical delivery.
Another thing, Why do they call them “Smart Meters?” The majority of them simply shut off non essential electrical loads, like a hot water heaters or Air Conditioners, to reduce load when Wind turbines or Solar unexpectedly quits providing power.
“The majority of them simply shut off non essential electrical loads”
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Nope. You obviously do not have a clue as to what a “smart” meter can, or cannot do.
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Please learn about them before displaying how ignorant of them that you are.
Tell me Mr. Usurbrain, suppose I have a “smart meter” installed. How does it shut off my air conditioner, but leave my refrigerator running? My fridge is not “smart” so how does this work?
PS, my air conditioner is pretty stupid also.
When they tried ‘smart’ meters in a Johannesburg suburb some years ago, they tied a relay into the hot-water geyser line at the distribution board. theoretically, they could switch off just geysers in the case of insufficient power. Didn’t work! Also the Bluetooth transmission for meter reading went blooey, and began jamming all of the Bluetooth frequencies in the area. So all kinds of ‘remotes’ (car, garage, alarm system, weather station) stopped working until the meters were reprogrammed.
This article reminds me of the housing bubble got started and we all know how that worked out.
This article reminds me of the housing bubble got started and we all know how that worked out. All because of a computer model that assumed that the masses moved up to a newer home every 5 years. Who ever assumed that was wrong.
Another problem with wind farms is in changing wind. I live in Czech Republic and precipitation last 5 years is much lower than decades before. Precipitation came to CZ mainly from west and wind farms were there build. Yet it’s a short time to determine if they are the cause of a wind farm, but if yes. It could be huge problem for whole middle Europe.
This is a stream of fundamentally imbecile comments.
Save for a few ones. Those of you who who can’t tell left from right and essentially see the world in B&W, should travel a bit to see countries with excellent power grids that are essentially green.
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What a rubbish and politically motivated article. Countries vary widely in their use of renewable energies. Spain is over 70% from renewables as is Portugal. Renewables are certainly the future, but it takes time to change. This article is too far from reality to really change people’s minds.
Here are some facts that don’t require consensus because they are plainly obvious; Justin Trudeau is a nitwit, an academic flyweight with no business being where he is. Solar power is good for helping heat swimming pools, charging cell phones and other light weight relatively unimportant uses, similarly wind power is great for supplementing highway signage and yet more lightweight tasks where battery power can actually provide useful backup. The heavy lifting can only be done by reliables consisting of hydro, nuclear and fossil fuels. Anything else is a fantasy and a gargantuan waste of perfectly good money.
One of my neighbours, now retired, used to be high up until recently in Hydro One, the Ontario electricity supplier and he told me that Ontario was in a ridiculous position of having the highest electricity prices but actually generated too much and had to sell the surplus at incredibly low prices (he might have even said give it away) to Quebec and the USA, the surplus coming from nuclear and hydro of course not the wind turbines etc.
“The report confirms what should have been obvious from the start:
the more “variable” wind and solar are introduced into any electricity system,
the more they make it both more expensive and less reliable.”
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natural born Ponzi schemes – natural born economy killers!