In the fantasy of wealthy woke environmentalists, the world has recognized that it is on the brink of an existential climate crisis that can only be avoided by rapid elimination of the use of fossil fuels, and the transformation of the world energy economy to be based upon “renewables” like the wind and sun. The generation of electricity will be “decarbonized” by some time in the 2030s, and the world will reach “net zero” carbon emissions by around 2050.
In the real world, anyone with eyes can see that this is not happening. The countries with the large majority of world population (China, India, the remainder of Asia, and Africa) mouth a few platitudes to appease the foolish Western elites, even as they continue to build hundreds of new coal and other fossil fuel facilities. Even the U.S. federal government, under left-wing Democrat control, has had its ambitious “Green New Deal” plans stalled in Congress. Worldwide, fossil fuel usage continues on a steady upward trajectory, pretty much as if the whole decarbonization obsession didn’t exist.
But then there is that handful of very wealthy, small population jurisdictions that have convinced themselves that they can save the planet by eliminating their own fossil fuel use and substituting wind and solar power, even as the rest of the world laughs at them behind their back. Four jurisdictions stand out from the rest, two of them European countries and the other two U.S. states: Germany, the UK, California, and New York. In the aggregate, these four places have population of about 200 million, or about 2.5% or world population. Each of the four has announced draconian targets for net zero carbon emissions by mid-century, with even more stringent interim targets for eliminating carbon emissions from things like electricity generation and home heating.
All these places, despite their wealth and seeming sophistication, are embarking on their ambitious plans without ever having conducted any kind of detailed engineering study of how their new proposed energy systems will work or how much they will cost. Sure, a wind/solar electric grid can function with 100% natural gas backup, if you’re willing to have the ratepayers foot the bill for two overlapping and redundant generation systems when you could have had just one. But “net zero” emissions means no more fossil fuel backup. What’s the plan to keep the grid operating 24/7 when the coal and natural gas are gone?
As these jurisdictions ramp up their wind and solar generation, and gradually eliminate the coal and natural gas, sooner or later one or another of them is highly likely to hit a “wall” — that is, a situation where the electricity system stops functioning, or the price goes through the roof, or both, forcing a drastic alteration or even abandonment of the whole scheme. But which jurisdiction will hit it first, and how will the “wall” emerge?
It’s time for Manhattan Contrarian readers to start placing their bets on this issue. To kick things off, here are a few thoughts from me:
California. I have written several posts highly critical of California’s pie-in-the-sky green energy plans, which include a 2045 “zero carbon” target. For example see here and here. However, California does have a deep secret to help it stave off the possibility of hitting the renewable energy wall: it imports a very high percentage of its power from neighboring states. Some of the imports are fossil fuel based (coal and natural gas from Arizona and Nevada), and some are reliable non-fossil fuel based sources (nuclear from Arizona and hydro from Oregon and Washington).
Here are charts from the California Energy Commission of “total system electric generation” for the state for 2018 and 2020. In 2018 California imported about 32% of its electricity (91,000 GWH out of 285,000 GWH), and in 2020 about 30% (82,000 GWH out of 273,000 GWH). According to data from the EIA, California imports far more electricity from other states than does any other state (although there are a few states that import more on a percentage basis). The ability to import large amounts of electricity from neighboring states means that California has a high degree of insurance against its own energy folly. As long as Arizona, Nevada, Oregon and Washington have some electricity to sell, blackouts can be staved off even though California’s wind and solar generators may be completely quiet. You may say that this is cheating in the game of “zero emissions” electricity, which it is, but don’t count on California’s politicians to level with the voters.
New York. New York’s energy system transformation has been defined by something called the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (Climate Act), passed in 2019. This state website provides a summary of the goals to which this Climate Act has supposedly committed us. The main targets:
- 85% Reduction in GHG Emissions by 2050
- 100% Zero-emission Electricity by 2040
- 70% Renewable Energy by 2030
- 9,000 MW of Offshore Wind by 2035
- 3,000 MW of Energy Storage by 2030
- 6,000 MW of Solar by 2025
Here in New York City, the City Council just this week passed a bill banning natural gas hookups for buildings under seven stories starting in 2024, and for larger buildings starting in 2027. Mayor de Blasio, heading into his last week in office, is expected to sign the bill.
But is there any reality to any of this? My prediction is that, rather than our hitting some kind of wall of a failing energy system or sudden price spikes, these ridiculous targets will just be abandoned and forgotten as they get closer and it becomes obvious that they cannot be achieved. The prototype was a matter involving the natural gas utility in Long Island, National Grid, in 2019. National Grid was running out of natural gas capacity for new customers, particularly in Brooklyn and Queens (parts of New York City that are on Long Island and served by National Grid). National Grid wanted to build a pipeline under New York Harbor to bring in the gas, but Governor Cuomo blocked it on fake environmental grounds (supposedly, threats to water quality). When the existing pipelines hit capacity, National Grid began refusing new natural gas hookups. Within a few weeks, some 3000 people had been refused, and the political blowback began. Facing pressure from actual voters, Cuomo did not relent on the pipeline, but instead threatened to pull NG’s license unless it figured out some other way to bring in the gas. NG began to bring in the gas by truck (much more expensive and dangerous than the pipeline), and as far as I know that is what it continues to do. Here is a New York Times account with more details.
My strong bet is that this scenario repeats itself in 2024 when the City Council’s supposed natural gas ban kicks in. Right now the public is only dimly aware of the coming ban, and paying no attention. But natural gas is hugely superior to electricity for home heat, particularly an area like this where winter temperatures regularly go into the 20s and below, a range at which electric heat pumps basically don’t work at all. People building and renovating homes are acutely aware of this difference, and will push back forcefully when told that they can’t have gas.
Similarly, the goals of the Climate Act for enormous numbers of wind turbines and solar arrays are completely unrealistic, and nobody has even started building any meaningful number of them yet. Moreover, the amount of storage proposed is not even stated in relevant units (should be MWH instead of MW), and storage to last the months that would be needed has not even been invented. These targets are so ridiculous that, I predict, we will never even start very far down the road before they are either dropped or just ignored. Sure, we will spend a few tens of billions first, and everybody’s energy bills will go up substantially, but not to a degree that it will be recognized as a crisis.
Germany and UK. So I’m putting my money on one or the other of Germany or the UK to be the first to hit some kind of wall.
- Compared to California, they don’t have any good Plan B when the new wind/solar system doesn’t work. Both have banned fracking for natural gas within their own borders, as have most of their near European neighbors. That leaves Russia as the principal backup supplier, and let’s say that the Russkies are somewhat less reliable than Nevada and Arizona.
- Compared to New York, Germany and the UK have so far actually taken seriously the task of building wind turbines and solar arrays. Germany has gotten its percent of electricity generation from wind and solar up to around 50% for some periods of time (although it fell back to 43% for the first three quarters of 2021 due to lack of wind). Germany’s new coalition government has grand plans to further ramp of the building of wind turbines particularly, while continuing to phase out both nuclear and all fossil fuels, with only Russia to catch them when they fall. In the UK. PM Boris Johnson has become completely obsessed with his “net zero” ambitions, even as low wind has put pressure on limited natural gas supplies and caused prices to spike dramatically.
A prolonged period of unfavorable weather (calm and overcast) could cause a serious energy crunch to hit one or both or Germany or the UK as soon as this winter.
Good points about UK, but California has my vote.
I say the Golden State because:
1) It already has had blackouts imposed by system operators
2) Populations in the states that export electricity to California are growing
3) California keeps doubling down on EV nonsense – banning gas lawnmowers and ATVs in favor of electricity.
Yep! We’re already dependent upon outside suppliers – since we can’t supply our own. And to top it off – we pump nearly as much oil as Alaska! We have massive fossil fuel reserves here in California, and we’re trying to ban their use altogether.
If it wasn’t for the peakers (I live in Ventura, so near two – Mandalay Bay and Ormond Beach) burning natural gas – LA would be blacking out a LOT more often.
2) Populations in the states that export electricity to California are growing
Also, THOSE states are also changing their generation mix, so will have less to sell to others as time moves on and more and more states adopt the policies that California is pushing.
A big high-pressure system could cover California and the surrounding States, who supply California’s electricity shortfall. They better not be depending on windmills.
About heat pumps (air to air): My heat pumps here in Norway are actually very effective even when outdoor temperature falls to -20 deg C (-4 F). No problems with heating 240 sqare meters indoor area.
What is the efficiency at that outside temp? And what is the price per KWH electricity, I assume it is hydro-generated?
750 square feet? That’s all?
I think 1 sq metre is 10 sq feet, so 2,400 sq feet?
To convert square meters to square feet, multiply the number by 10.76391041671 or else divide the given number by 0.0929030
This is a very realistic asssement of the facts. People have to start thinking about the rhetoric they are being fed, verses the true reality. Uk is going to be one the first places in the world where this reality hits home. (no pun intended) If the Brits had any sense they would be marching in the streets demanding an end to the nonsense, but people can be subborn and do not want to admit they are being fooled.
Antway, it’s their country and they are the ones who must either pay or freeze. As I have said before, you can lead a horse to water but . . .
ps I am an ex Brit living in Australia, we have our issues also.
“If the Brits had any sense they would be marching in the streets demanding an end to the nonsense”
They probably will be marching in the streets eventually. They will probably have to get real cold first.
O please, please, please let it be California! Even with SoCal being a sunny, windy desert and NorCal being a hydropower dreamland, the electricity rates keep climbing up and up. So now the Wise Ones in Sacramento will implement their desired end-game gambit…a refund credit targeted towards “low income” residents. PS Being in lockstep (goose step?) with the commufascists, the LAT has a propaganda piece about Alaska’s oceans “crisis”…plus, for good measure, a complimentary Sunday insert from the Chinese Communist Party, the ever-popular China Watch *All You Need to Know*. God help us.
In what way did Texas not already hit it? Last winter my sister and her husband shivered in the dark for a week in Austin. This happened because wind and solar failed, which, incredibly, shut off the pumps in the natural gas pipelines. Wall Hit
Germany has an out. It can simply halt the planned future decommissioning of the remainder of its coal and nuclear fleet. And it can trade electricity with Norway—renewable surplus to Norway conserves hydro, then extra hydro to Germany covering renewable shortfalls, albeit at great net cost.
UK can do neither. Most of its coal is already gone. It depends already on French interconnectors, and 13% of French nuclear capacity is off line and won’t come back for months. So my money is on UK, maybe even this winter.
A few years ago there was an article about a new company about to mine coal deposits off shore (gas extraction in place, I think, but that aspect was not very clear to me). It seemed to be saying that some such mining on a smaller scale had already been successful for a fairly long time so they were sure of success. This newly permitted operation would be on a much larger scale than any earlier ones. Then, before it could actually get started, coal mining was banned.
Regardless, the article claimed that the amount of coal already determined to exist was so large that if only 1% of it could be extracted as planned, ALL the UK’s energy needs could be met for the next 300 years.
I wish people would stop talking about hydro as carbon neutral, or other language, that fails to recognize the staggering carbon footprint created by it’s installation.
Yes one heckofalot of concrete to build those dams, but compared to the concrete needed to keep a wind turbine standing and the projected length of time that turbine will last the dam seems the better option. Plus the fact that falling water is much more reliable than the wind.
Spain might be the first. The wholesale cost of electricity has risen from €70 to €320 per MWh in the space of a year. During that time Morocco has cut a gas oleoduct pipeline and Spain is relying on another from Algeria, plus wind.
Spain has closed coal mines and nuclear in the push for net Zero.
The price increases are accelarating and the plebs are not happy.
Germany is shutting most of its nuclear reactors in 2022.
UK has a bit of life left in most of its, and Hinkley point B is on the way
Germany has a far higher dependency on Russian gas than the UK which has a pipeline to Norway and imports from Qatar.
UK interconnectors have been used to feed power to France recently. France is short because Germany is short.
My bet is on Germany being in the deep doggy doo before UK. UK behind the rhetoric has actually been burning coal, wood, gas and anything else this winter.
UK is completely against net zero at grass roots level and Boris will be sacked along with his policy.and green concubine.
Germany is part of the EU and is democratically deficient and is now being run by a red/green left/eco alliance. it’s people actually want windmills!
UK wont go net zero unless with nuclear. Despite the political rhetoric and brain dead guardian readers like griff, the average person is all for net zero cost to him to achieve net zero emissions, but beibg gouged thousands a year to see China ignore UK efforts is not very popular.
I think UK will come close, but Germany will come closer. Nuclear – the power generation that hitherto dared not speak its name, is being discussed seriously in the UK and all over Europe. (Except Germany).
I don’t think we will have issues this winter, but next winter when nuclear capacity in germany and COVID lockdown are nearly all gone, is a different matter…
Leo, that’s how I see the situation too. Germany will be first. When a firm political decision has been made by elected authorities to close a nuclear plant, that decision is next to impossible to reverse.
Here in the US., the upcoming closure of Diablo Canyon is similarly a done deal. That decision will not be reversed regardless of what kinds of crazy things happen with California’s power supply in the next three years.
My prediction remains that here in the US, shortfalls in generation capacity will be made up through quick deployment of portable peaker plants which use aeroderivative gas turbine-generator sets such as the ones manufactured by Rolls Royce and General Electric.
If I were a senior manager in Rolls Royce or General Electric, I’d be standing ready for a quick ramp up of gas-fired turbine production — assuming that the upstream supply chain could support that kind of marketing strategy.
RR sold off their gas turbine power generation business to Siemens in 2014 as it was loss making.
And, this just in – Biden’s Build Lies Better bill is officially dead, thanks to Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia. Thanks, Joe! You’re the best.
,,,and NPR is having a hissy fit.
Why should they? It’s single party government running the entire show and has been for decades.
All of California’s energy policies and rates are approved by the CPUC and all CPUC members are appointed by the governor.
Since all of California’s recent governors are from Dynasty families that control ALL oil imports into California from Indonesia and Ecuador, do not ever expect unbiased energy policy from any of them or their appointees.
Add South Australia to the nominees.
At 12 noon on Sunday, solar provided 79% of demand, wind 51%, gas 5%, with the surplus exported to Victoria. And the spot price was negative $99.90/MWhr.
However, at 7.30pm on Saturday, solar provided 5% (long summer days), wind 16%, gas 50%, with the balance of 29% imported from Victoria where coal was providing 81% of demand.
” 20s and below, a range at which electric heat pumps basically don’t work at all. “
Actually, systems can have electric resistance heaters for such times.
The serious problem is the need for a secondary non-electric source of heat. I have a modern catalytic burner wood stove and I have a wood lot.
Others have propane. Systems have to function when the power lines go down. Having a battery fan is a good idea, to move the warmth to other rooms. A 2022 purchase, perhaps. But for now, the fan on the air-handler works on a 15 minute on/off cycle.
Hey! Don’t leave Texas out of this… Texas ERCOT is at least as stupid as the U.K. government and regulators.
It is a mistake to consider UK and Germany as isolated nations when it comes to renewable energy (not least because Angela and Boris this year signed the agreement for the UK/Germany HVDC link).
The western European energy system and market is a highly interconnected and interdependent entity: electricity prices are set by the Europe wide day ahead market on the basis of predicted renewable availability.
It is intended that all nations will use electricity generated by renewables in other nations.
for the UK specifically, the next ten years will be marked by massive expansion of offshore wind, with 30GW of new capacity firmly embedded in a planning pipeline. This will be more widely distributed and further offshore – and I note a similar expansion in the waters around Eire.
a whole range of new UK energy solutions is just kicking off and entering the trial period, with more investment in tidal turbines, hydrogen generation and grid injection, carbon capture, pumped storage and really large grid scale batteries.
This should certainly see us through the shut down of our last, now tiny, coal power usage and the first reactor retirements.
and in the 20 years after 2030 we should move on from the wind/gas/links model to Net Zero.
Oh…. watch out…Grifters off to the promised land…
#fingerscrossed
Somebody sent me this.
Its not US or UK in crisis, its the whole EU
Those wholesale prices are 8-9× those in the U.S.
Has anybody seen any media reports on the current cost of LNG in the U.K., the E.U. and East Asia??
LNG at the National Balancing Point in the U.K., the Title Transfer Point (E.U.) and East Asia is well over $30.00/MMBTU.
I haven’t heard or seen a peep out of NPR, the Associated Press, Pravda (a/k/a the New York Times), ABC, MSNBC, CNN, CBS, the WaPo, NBC, the La-La Times, PBS, et al.
Re: Darwin
I would like to suggest two books that I found informative – at least from a laymans perspective.
“The Beak of the Finch” by Wiener which I think illustrates the capacity for adaptation within a species rather than “full” evolution.
and
“The Kingdom of Speech” by Thomas Wolfe which seemed to provide a lot of material about the
controversies associated with Darwins acceptance – even if his conclusion leaves you wondering?
all IMO.
I think it is a race between the UK and Germany.
The race to the bottom.
Who’s bottom is largest has always been a problem especially when it comes to assessing the emissive outputs of Biden and Bojo.
The UK; and the sooner the better. It’s going to take thousands publicly freezing to death very publicly for the electorate to come to its senses.
In fact it very much looks like what is at risk is not the UK, but the whole of NW Europe, as the UK continues to supply France with electricity.
The UK. It has no gas storage, because it always produced its own, and is very exposed to short term price variation.
We are screwed basically. We dont have anywhere near enough pumped storage, although we have the ideal geography for it, to store wind when we have it.
I can see coal plants being reopened in spring when this really starts to bite, and when the energy price cap is revisited, and raised, massively.
Thirty Five years ago I moved to Nebraska. The City I live in was 15 miles away from a nuclear power plant and another was only 60 Miles away, for over 25 years. outages were rare, very rare. I even had to get out the manual to set my digital alarm clock after we lost power. Ten years ago they shut down the closer NPP – To sell Green Energy . Since that date I have had an outage on the average of once a month since then. Two years ago the local Electric Utility announced that they were now receiving 30% of their electrical power from “Renewable Green Sources. And since that time I have had at least 3 momentary outages every month.
I don’t care who wins this race but that they win it sooner rather than later. The only science that politicians understand is where the data cannot be manipulated to suit their agenda and that is when the voters realise they have been dudded and start voting for people who will give them what they want or need. A run of severe winters with blackouts and cold houses will speed up the transition to reliable fossil and nuclear power.In the current competition Boris will win easily. He was conservative but then married a rabid leftist.