James Delingpole12 Jul 2019
The Prince of Wales has warned global leaders that if we don’t tackle climate change in 18 months the human race will go extinct.
No, really. Here are his actual words, in a speech in London yesterday to foreign ministers from the Commonwealth.
I am firmly of the view that the next 18 months will decide our ability to keep climate change to survivable levels and to restore nature to the equilibrium we need for our survival.
OK. So assuming, for a moment, that the Prince of Wales isn’t just spouting gibberish, what kind of measures might we need to adopt in the next 18 months to “keep climate change to survivable levels”?
Happily, we have a good idea courtesy of Lord Deben, chairman of the government’s Climate Change Committee. Writing in the Prince of Wales’s favourite magazine Country Life, he says:
It simply demands that we live more sustainably – that we stop wasting water, become really energy efficient, cut food waste, eat 20 percent less meat, take all our energy from renewable sources and ensure our homes are properly insulated and ventilated.
That word “simply” is doing a lot of work there.
If you’re a carnivore like me, for example, you might not take too kindly to the notion that some dodgy peer who has made at least part of his fortune by promulgating green hysteria has the right to issue directives on how many bacon sarnies or burgers you can reasonably consume per week.
But I have an even bigger red flag waving over that glib suggestion that we should “take all our energy from renewable sources”.
All of it? Really??
The late Professor David Mackay, a Cambridge engineer and chief scientist at the UK government’s Department of Energy and Climate Change once looked at what decarbonising the economy by going 100 per cent renewable might look like for the British landscape. Needless to say, it wasn’t pretty.
It would involve:
Building 61,000 wind turbines.
Covering 5 per cent of the UK landmass — the equivalent of Cambridgeshire, Gloucestershire, Lancashire, and Staffordshire combined — with solar arrays. (That would be 100 x more solar PV than his been installed in the whole world to date.)
Damming most of the rivers in the West Highlands of Scotland to generate hydropower.
Building huge barrages across rivers such as the Severn, destroying intertidal mud flats and devastating bird and fish species.
Using the entirety of Britain’s agricultural land to grow biofuels.
David Mackay was by no means a climate change sceptic. But he was honest enough a scientist to be able to tell his government employers what they didn’t want to hear: that the idea that the UK could power itself by 100 per cent renewable energy was an “appalling delusion”.
Though it’s claimed that 14 per cent of the world’s energy is renewable, this is misleading. The majority of this — three quarters — comes from burning what is euphemistically called ‘biomass” — most of it what you and I call wood.
In other words the environmental movement is claiming as a triumph something that actually is a disaster: millions of people in the Third World are still reliant on the same inefficient, environmentally destructive, health-damaging energy technology that was used by cavemen.
As for wind turbines — ugly and seemingly ubiquitous a nuisance though they are — these currently provide less than one per cent of global energy.
Global energy demand, meanwhile, has been growing at about two per cent per year for the last 40 years. So, just to provide sufficient wind power to cover that increase in demand, how many wind turbines would need to be built?
Matt Ridley answers that question here:
If wind turbines were to supply all of that growth but no more, how many would need to be built each year? The answer is nearly 350,000, since a two-megawatt turbine can produce about 0.005 terawatt-hours per annum. That’s one-and-a-half times as many as have been built in the world since governments started pouring consumer funds into this so-called industry in the early 2000s.
At a density of, very roughly, 50 acres per megawatt, typical for wind farms, that many turbines would require a land area [half the size of] the British Isles, including Ireland. Every year. If we kept this up for 50 years, we would have covered every square mile of a land area [half] the size of Russia with wind farms. Remember, this would be just to fulfil the new demand for energy, not to displace the vast existing supply of energy from fossil fuels, which currently supply 80 per cent of global energy needs.
Apart from the obvious visual blight, the environmental cost of building so many wind turbines would be enormous.
As Andrew Montford notes in a report for the Global Warming Policy Foundation called Green Killing Machines, nothing damages the environment quite like a wind farm.
The impact on bats is thought to be particularly serious, with turbines causing pressure waves that make their lungs implode. One recent study raised the possibility that whole populations of some bat species might be threatened. Birds, and particularly raptors, may collide with turbines: direct collision might cause 20 avian fatalities per turbine per year although considerably higher numbers have been mooted.
By coincidence, yesterday I found myself driving past the Prince of Wales’s country house near Tetbury in the Cotswolds, a strong competitor for the most beautiful area of England.
I drove through valley after valley of idyllic, unspoiled countryside, interrupted only by the occasional chocolate box village of honey-coloured stone with ducks and moorhens being photographed by Chinese tourists who clearly couldn’t believe somewhere quite so perfect-looking could actually exist.
This is the kind of place where you choose to live if, like the Prince of Wales, you are very, very rich. His net worth has been estimated at around $400 million — not unusual for a climate change alarmist.
From multimillionaire Leo Di Caprio to multimillionaire Al Gore, multimillionaire Sir David Attenborough to multimillionaire Tom Steyer, from multimillionaire Sir Richard Branson to multimillionaire Emma Thompson, environmentalism is a hugely attractive religion which enables you to achieve two perfectly wonderful things simultaneously.
First, it enables you to parade your moral virtue by showing that even though you are disgustingly rich you are still in fact an incredibly caring person.
Second, it means you can lecture the revolting lower orders on how they should live their lives and you can campaign to make everything more expensive and miserable for them, as Sir David Attenborough did earlier this week when he urged that air tickets should be hiked up. Obviously, people like Attenborough will go on flying regardless because they’ll still be able to afford it whatever environmental levies are imposed. But stopping other people from doing it will mean that airports and holiday destinations will be less crowded, just as Mother Gaia intended.
While Prince Charles babbles his nonsense, there is 17 times more deaths from cold snaps than from heat waves in the World, according to The Lancet (2015) :
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150520193831.htm
The article you cite is nonsense, just like Prince Charles babbles.
Then, show why The Lancet article is wrong :
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(14)62114-0/fulltext
I must be missing something. The only objection I have to that article is that it is telling us something we’ve known for years. Cold is more life-threatening than warmth.
Nothing but bloviations from people that don’t know what they’re talking about. Even if they were successful in massive cutting back of fossil fuels in a short period of time it wouldn’t take long to figure out the mistake. Take something as ‘simple’ as everyone going vegetarian. How long before they realize there isn’t enough productive farmland, what it would take energy wise to convert to that productive farmland, grow and harvest the food, get it to the market, in order to feed everyone. Typical shoot, read, aim spouting.
An excellent article once again by Mr Delingpole. What concerns me is the manner in which The Prince Charles promotes his outrageously stupid ideas, and expects the world to take him seriously simply because he was born into the royal family. He is not a climate scientist, he has not had a scientific upbringing, but he still thinks himself as a world authority on a subject on which half or more of the worlds population do not agree, and which he himself does not have a grasp. Who puts these ideas into his head, and why does he not have a balanced view on such a subjective subject rather than come out with groundless statements that have no foundation in fact? He will live in time to reflect with great embarrassment on his scaremongering, but I worry about the damage he can do to the world in the meantime. Where is the press reporting to take him to task as indeed the Daily Telegraph did last week on the recent, equally stupid, Attenborough outpourings?
It’s the politics of populism, the Royals are detested by the left, so suck up to them. Hence the tremendous heart-felt ignorant baloney continually issuing from Prince Wacko.
I’m right wing and I abhor the royals, always have.
A well written, well thought out article. There are a couple of things I would like to add:
1) If it is possible to blanket the UK with these monstrosities (which I very much doubt, that have to be manufactured by emitting huge amounts of CO2 anyway). What is going to be the result on the environment? The Law of Conservation of Energy (basic physics) is being ignored, surely the weather and climate will both change if energy is removed from the atmosphere? Sticking my neck out, I think the results would be unpredictable, but most definitely negative both to humans and other species.
2) Are there enough raw materials in the Earth’s crust to build them? I doubt that very much!
Wasn’t it March 2009 when Prince Charles predicted that we had “less than 100 months to alter our behavior before we risk catastrophic climate change?” What ever happened to that countdown? Does he have a reason for this latest extension? Maybe we could get him to give us all another extension? And another? I would of course feel so much better to know we had that extension.
Prince Charles ought to go on a world-wide speaking tour (fly private jet, a big one) and lecture us little people to stop using fossil fuels. The hypocrite.
HRH won’t allow a bird mincer on his property. Says it all, really.
What are the connections between Charles and Epstein? Prince Andrew is involved in the Epstein atrocities? Is Charles manufacturing distractions?
While acknowledging the good points of the author and many commenters, here’s a question:
Has anyone calculated the area of the UK occupied by:
– sun-facing rooves?
– sun-facing walls on office towers & buildings (south, west & east)?
– carparks?
– railway stations?
– …?
Do they equal 5% of the area of the British Isles? How much Solar electricity could be generated by covering that area with Solar panels?
Let’s leave aside the important issue of economic, aesthetic & environmental costs for the moment.
Let’s also leave aside the development of both Storage technologies (which have risen from ~5 to ~50+ as reported by USA Dept of Energy), and Conservation, the cheapest form of new electricity.
This is just an exercise in calculating how much Solar electricity could be installed & generated in/on the existing urban heat island.
The Province of Ontario has some interesting problems in the next few decades as we either
Refurbish the 3 CANDU Nuclear plants’ zirconium boiler tubes which generate 60% of our electricity at great cost
OR
Retire them and somehow store the radioactive waste for 10,000 years (steel & concrete) and 300,000 years (spent fuel) at great cost.
(New Nuclear technologies are touted but not available until at least 2035, and current new Nuclear builds are unable to compete -often bankrupt- in most markets worldwide.)
Here’s a picture of Ontario on 2019-07-13:
http://www.gridwatch.ca at noon hour EDT:
Generated 18.5GW Demand 17.0GW
60% Nuclear
21% Hydro
10% Wind
8% Gas
1.5% Solar
0% Biofuel
Lorne
I live in the sunniest part of the uk and we only get some 1700 hours of sun per year. Many areas get much less. We need energy the most during the coldest period roughly November to march when we get the least sun because of cloud, sheer number of hours in a day and not of course at night.
David McKay referred to in the article wrote a book alled ‘hot air’ where all the calculations are made. It is a non starter and you don’t save the environment by trashing the countryside or our heritage do you?
In the unlikely event that the silly Prince has either a spine or a brain, I would strongly recommend against eating either one.
Chuckie’s Mum has more smarts in her little finger than he’s ever had.
He’s less useful than a gum wrapper. I sincerely hope that when the times comes, he abdicates and lets one of his sons, who are miles ahead of him in the World of Reality, take his place. He can then go back to talking to plants and doing watercolors.
A modest proposal if ever there was one;-)
Their ideas of building windmills everywhere reminds me of the Easter Island heads sitting all over the place — monuments to a failed civilization.
Strikes me the good Prince is in desperate need of what the old-timers called “a physic.”
A case of Ex-Lax might do the trick.
Despite all the claims of these rich people they never include any evidence.
These rich people wanting to tax everybody and change their lifestyles, then it’s them that should mainly pay for it. The normal working person can’t afford these ridiculously radical changes that these rich want to occur, but don’t themselves do as they say.
If the UK could cut CO2 emissions tomorrow down to zero, nobody would notice in future any difference in climate with this change.
I always knew that this climate change religion was about controlling people life’s and nothing else because they don’t care if the evidence is true or false. They also seem to take the media’s point of view and not the scientists.
Well they would care more towards evidence if to pay for this they had to contribute millions towards it every year themselves and do away with most luxuries they rely on now.
How would they like it if climate was changing and southern England’s climate become like northern England’s and northern England’s climate become like southern Scotland’s?
Colder is lot more scarier than the beneficial little warming the planet has had over recent decades. The climate zones of the planet are more friendly to humans over recent decades then had been for a very long time.
The elitist are becoming an hinderance to society on the whole.
Comments on Prince Chuck:
1) What must it be like to wake up every day of your 70+ year life wondering if you’ve been promoted to king…
2) Didn’t prince Chuck already fall on his sword 10-15 years ago with a prediction giving the world 6 months to save itself?
3) Does this fool even know how to count to 18?
I don’t want mad cow disease
” … The impact on bats is thought to be particularly serious, with turbines causing pressure waves that make their lungs implode. … ”
>>
This seems really over the top to me, “lungs implode”? It’s a mere pressure wave, not a shock wave. I thought these wind turbines made noise, and the bats had keen ears and innate pressure change sensitivity? They can’t hear and avoid with experience?
As for the useless bloviating big-ears … /eye-roll
More clear evidence Australia should become independent and ditch the royal dead-wood, they are playing politics because they know the left detest the royals. And now the Center and Right detest them too. Good job!
“The majority of this — three quarters — comes from burning what is euphemistically called ‘biomass” — most of it what you and I call wood.”
I recently heard a CBC radio environmental expert suggest that every household should have a ‘biomass conversion unit’ installed in the basement. It took me a few mintes to realize that he was merely referring to a fireplace.
It is even worse than Matt Ridley predicts. He has forgotten to add in the energy required to build these renewable energy resources. Considering that a solar panel takes more energy to produce than it generates through its working life, in the short term all we would see is a massive spike in emissions from fossil fuel generators to produce the renewables. However that would shortly come to an end as the world known reserves of cadmium, indium, neodymium and other rare earth minerals are depleted, bringing the whole scam crashing down. Then in a decade or so as these “renewable” come to their effective end of life we would be back to square one, but unable to any longer produce any future technology that might have depended on those rare earth elements.
Queen Elizabeth is a very smart and pragmatic leader/ figurehead of the British Isles. To think that in the very near future she will be replaced by this dolt is very disturbing.
“I am firmly of the view that the next 18 months will decide our ability to keep climate change to survivable levels and to restore nature to the equilibrium we need for our survival.”
Does this mean 18 months from now the Alarmists will finally give up? When we all completely ignore Prince Charles for the next year and a half it’s going to be too late anyway.
Eat Prince Charles? No thank you, he looks like he’d be stringy and bitter tasting.
Seems like a perfect candidate claim for a wager. Put up or shut-up. Unless the maker of these claims is willing to lose something of value (not sure reputation has much value at this point), so that it hurts at least a little with the wager loss (and OH My, anyone making that claim Will lose), why would anyone care about such a claim? Wolf!
Exactly. Go off grid and stay there within 18 months Charles. – or do you want someone else to do it first?
Empty words from an empty head along with your buddy Attenborough. So easy for the ”elites” to look down and shake their fingers at everyone demanding this and that. George Clooless, Emma Toxin, Leonardo Di-craprio, and all you other virtue signalling bastards.
Delingpole has a wonderful way of misinterpretation! He’s truly brilliant in that regard, if in nothing else.