Britain’s Net Zero Disaster and the Wind Power Scam

By Rupert Darwall

December 20, 2023

“This is not about complicated issues of cryptocurrency,” assistant U.S. attorney Nicolas Roos declared in the Sam Bankman-Fried trial, after accusing the defendant of building FTX on a “pyramid of deceit.” Much the same can be said about the foundations of Britain’s net zero experiment. Energy is complicated, and electricity is essential to modern society and our quality of life, but as with FTX, the underlying story is straightforward: wind power and net zero are built on a pyramid of deceit.

Net zero was sold to Parliament and the British people on claims that wind-power costs were low and falling. This was untrue: wind-power costs are high and have been rising. In the net zero version of “crypto will make you rich,” official analyses produced by the Treasury and the Office for Budget Responsibility rely on the falsehood that wind power is cheap, that net zero would have minimal costs, and that it could boost productivity and economic growth. None of these has any basis in reality.

The push for net zero began in 2019, when the U.K.’s Climate Change Committee produced a report urging the government to adopt the policy. Part of the justification was historic climate guilt. In the words of committee chair Lord Deben, Britain had been “one of the largest historical contributors to climate change.” But the key economic justification for raising Britain’s decarbonization from 80% to 100% by 2050 – i.e., net zero – was “rapid cost reductions during mass deployment for key technologies,” notably in offshore wind. These illusory cost reductions, the committee claimed, “have made tighter emission reduction targets achievable at the same costs as previous looser targets.” It was green snake oil.

During the subsequent 88-minute debate in the House of Commons to write net zero into law, the clean-energy minister, Chris Skidmore, also asserted that net zero’s cost would be the same as the previous 80% target, which Parliament had approved in 2008. Challenged by a Labour MP on the absence of a regulatory-impact assessment, Skidmore misled Parliament, saying that there had been no regulatory-impact assessment in respect of raising the initial 60 percent target to 80 percent.

The regulatory-impact assessment that Skidmore says doesn’t exist gave a range of £324 billion to £404 billion when the target was raised to 80% – an estimate that excluded transitional costs – and cautioned that costs could exceed this range. Unlike today’s political pronouncements, the assessment was honest about the consequences of Britain acting if the rest of the world did not. “The economic case for the UK continuing to act alone where global action cannot be achieved would be weak,” it warned.

The Climate Change Act was passed to show Britain’s climate leadership and inspire the rest of the world to follow its example. How did that work out? In the 11 years that transpired from passing the Act to legislating net zero in 2019, Britain’s fossil fuel emissions fell by 180 million metric tons – a 33% reduction. Over the same period, the rest of the world’s emissions increased by 5,177 million metric tons – a rise of 16%. Put another way, 11 years of British emissions reduction were wiped out in around 140 days by increased emissions from the rest of the world.

Someone who claims that he’s a leader but who has no followers is typically regarded as a fool. It’s different with climate. Politicians parade their green virtue – Skidmore is to quit the House of Commons, and he teaches net zero studies at Harvard’s Kennedy School – while voters get mugged with higher energy bills. Analysis of Britain’s Big Six energy companies’ regulatory filings reveals that fuel-input costs for gas and coal-fired power stations were flat from 2009 to 2020. Still, the average price per kilowatt hour (kWh) of electricity paid by households rose 67%, driven by high environmental levies to subsidize renewable-energy investors. Yet supposedly the cost of renewable energy has plummeted.

During Prime Minister’s Questions earlier this year, Rishi Sunak claimed the cost of offshore wind had fallen from £140 per megawatt hour (MWh) to £40 per MWh, numbers assiduously propagated by the wind lobby and the Climate Change Committee. His claim is flat-out false. The prime minister has been suckered by falling per MWh price bids made by wind investors in successive allocation-round bids for offshore wind subsidies.

The explanation for this is to be found not in falling costs but in a flawed bidding process that rewards opportunistic bidding by wind investors. The government was giving away valuable options that commit the government to honor the prices paid for winning bids but commit investors to nothing. Because investors don’t pay anything for these options, the only way they can get them is by cutting the price they offer – but are not obliged to take – for their electricity unless they choose to exercise their options much later in the process.

Falling prices in successive allocation rounds are thus an artefact of moral hazard hardwired into the allocation mechanism; they reveal nothing about the trend in the costs of offshore wind. Analysis of audited financial data of wind farm companies undertaken by a handful of independent researchers comprehensively debunks the falling wind costs claim. The unavoidable move to deeper waters offset any cost reductions and operating costs per MWh of electricity for new offshore wind projects; the prices for the move are around double those assumed in the subsidy bids.

Preeminent among these researchers is Gordon Hughes, a former economics professor at Edinburgh University and adviser to the World Bank on power plant economics. Hughes’s analysis shows that by the twelfth year of operation, rising per MWh operating costs of deep-water wind turbines exceed their government-guaranteed prices, squeezing out their capacity to repay their capital and financing costs.

The intermittency and variability of wind and solar led the government to create a capacity market to pay for standby generation. In any economic appraisal of renewables, the costs of running the capacity market should be allocated to wind and solar as their intermittency and variability create the need for it. Electricity procured from the capacity market is not cheap. In 2020, German-owned Uniper’s thermal power stations obtained an average price of £224 per MWh, around four times the typical wholesale price.

Confirmation that offshore wind has huge, likely insuperable, cost and operating difficulties came in June, when Siemens Energy issued a shock profits warning and saw its shares plunge by 37 percent, in part because of higher-than-anticipated turbine failure rates. According to Hughes, the implication is that future wind operating costs will be higher, and output significantly lower, shortening the turbines’ economic lives. His conclusion is crushing:

The whole justification for the falling costs of wind generation rested on the assumption that much bigger wind turbines would produce more output at lower capex cost per megawatt, without the large costs of generational change. Now we have confirmation that such optimism is entirely unjustified . . .  It follows that current energy policies in the UK, Europe and the United States are based on foundations of sand – naïve optimism reinforced by enthusiastic lobbying divorced from engineering reality.

The British government has been conned into placing a massive bet on offshore wind and is forcing electricity consumers to spend billions of pounds on a dead-end technology.

The falling cost of wind deception contaminates official assessments of the macroeconomic consequences of net zero. The Office for Budget Responsibility claims that the cost of low-carbon generation has fallen so fast that it is now cheaper than fossil fuel generation. Similarly, the Treasury erroneously took falling prices in wind subsidy allocation rounds as indicating falling wind costs. Both see the economy riddled with multiple layers of market failures, while not recognizing the real danger of government policy being captured by vested interests, as, indeed, it has been. Taken to its logical conclusion, theirs is an argument for switching to central planning and a command-and-control economy.

The Treasury argues that “other things being equal,” the added investment required by renewable energy “will translate into additional GDP growth.” Other things, of course, are not equal. As recent history shows, there’s a world of difference between investors and politicians making capital-allocation decisions. The centrally planned economies of the former communist bloc squandered colossal amounts of capital, immiserating their populations. Few now believe that investment in those economies boosted growth.

We don’t need to hypothesize. Government data disprove the Treasury’s contention and demonstrate that increasing deployment of renewable capacity reduces the productivity of Britain’s grid. In 2009, 87.3 gigawatts (GW) of generating capacity, comprising only 5.1 percent of wind and solar, generated 376.8 terrawatt hours (TWh) of electricity. In 2020, 100.9 GW of generating capacity, with wind and solar accounting for 37.6 percent of capacity, produced 312.3 TWh of electricity. Thanks to renewables, 13.6 GW (15.6 percent) more generating capacity produced 64.5 TWh (17.1 percent) less electricity.

Those numbers are damning for renewables and demonstrate why they make electricity more expensive and people poorer. Before mass deployment of renewables, 1 MW of capacity in 2009 produced 4,312 MWh of electricity. In 2020, 1 MW of capacity generated 3,094 MWh, a decline of 28.3 percent. It’s as clear as can be: investment in renewables shrinks the economy’s productive potential. This is confirmed by the International Energy Agency’s net zero modelling. Its net zero pathway sees the global energy sector in 2030 employing nearly 25 million more people, using $16.5 trillion more capital and taking an additional land area the combined size of California and Texas for wind and solar farms and the combined size of Mexico and France for bioenergy – all to produce 7 percent less energy.

Britain’s energy-policy disaster has lessons for America. The physics and economics of wind power are not magically transformed when they cross the Atlantic. Whenever a politician or wind lobbyist touts wind as low-cost or says net zero will boost growth, they become accessories to the wind power scam. The data lead ineluctably to a decisive conclusion: net zero is anti-growth. It is a formula for prolonged economic stagnation. Anyone who wants the truth about renewables should look at Britain and the sorry state of its economy. For the last decade and a half, it has been going through its worst period of growth since 1780.

Unlike in business and finance, there are no criminal or civil penalties for those who promote policies based on fraud and misrepresentation. Rather, net zero is similar to communism. Like net zero, communism was based on a lie: that it would outproduce capitalism. But it failed to produce, and belief in communism evaporated. When the collapse came, it was sudden and rapid. The truth could not be hidden. A similar fate awaits net zero.

Rupert Darwall is a senior fellow of the RealClear Foundation and author of  The Folly of Climate Leadership: Net Zero and Britain’s Disastrous Energy Policies.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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2hotel9
December 24, 2023 6:11 am

The entire climate catastrophe hoax is falling apart. Time to start prosecuting and jailing all those responsible.

Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 6:46 am

They’ll probably never be jailed- I’d be satisfied with them being deeply humiliated.

2hotel9
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 24, 2023 6:52 am

They have no shame so they cannot be humiliated. Prison is where they have to go. Thing is their disruption of energy production and agriculture is causing widespread problems to people, and once the mobs are in the streets they will beg to be put in prison.

John Hultquist
Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 7:54 am

Wishful thinking. Won’t happen.
Try not to be disappointed. 🙂

Bryan A
Reply to  John Hultquist
December 24, 2023 8:46 am

Bring back the old Stocks and Pull pillory
For Unlawful Climate Knowledge

Bryan A
Reply to  Bryan A
December 24, 2023 8:48 am

That’s weird after posting “Pull” was added. I’m almost certain it wasn’t there prior

Reply to  Bryan A
December 24, 2023 11:17 am

Doesn’t matter it’s still funny 😂

Rich Davis
Reply to  Bryan A
December 24, 2023 11:20 am

Auto-corrupt does that to me all the time

Reply to  Rich Davis
December 24, 2023 12:46 pm

Seems to affect Climate Science too

2hotel9
Reply to  John Hultquist
December 25, 2023 10:36 am

Oh, yea, going to happen. And it is going to get real, REAL ugly. People who have never known hunger and privation are going to go feral very quickly. Hell, the precursors have been popping up for last 5-6 years. Leftists think they are riding the tiger when all the have their hands on is the cub.

MiloCrabtree
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 24, 2023 8:21 am

I would be satisfied if they were publicly caned, tarred and feathered, and then banished to the Ross Ice Shelf.

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 25, 2023 7:27 am

Exile a couple of hundred thousand of them to some of those abandoned islands off the west coast of Scotland.
There will be plenty of wind and rain for them to look at for the rest of their lives.

A very low-cost solution their so-called global warming.

The UK would finally begin to solve its abundance of festering problems, having nothing to do with energy.
  
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/biden-30-000-mw-of-offshore-wind-systems-by-2030-a-total-fantasy

Reply to  wilpost
December 25, 2023 7:38 am

Excerpt from URL

During 2020/2021, the wind industry, affected by COVID, received orders for projects, including from the US, but, the prospect of losses on new projects, caused the industry to walk away from many new projects, and pay cancellation fees, instead of completing the new projects, with no prospect of a profit, unless subsidies were increased to exorbitant levels (as shown below), which likely would be politically impossible with the 2024 Election coming up.

The industry encountered:

1) High interest rates. The Secured Overnight Financing Rate, SOFR, a base rate at which banks borrow from each other, was 5.32% on Dec 18, 2023. Banks usually add 2 to 3% to that rate for their business loans. See Image and URL

2) High inflation, which likely will persist, because of greater than $trillion dollar federal deficits 

3) High prices of transport, energy, materials, components and labor

4) Increased costs, due to a lack of timely availability of specialized ships for erection

5) Increased cost of insurance/ installed MW; 2023 pricing is at least 2 x 2020 pricing 

6) Increased costs and delays, due to litigation

7) Losses on existing orders; part of those losses are due to design deficiencies 
https://about.bnef.com/blog/soaring-costs-stress-us-offshore-wind-companies-ruin-margins/

Reply to  wilpost
December 25, 2023 9:33 am

Here is the answer for folks who still think, battery systems are the answer to counteract variable wind and solar and store electricity for later use.

BATTERY SYSTEM CAPITAL COSTS, OPERATING COSTS, ENERGY LOSSES, AND AGING
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/battery-system-capital-costs-losses-and-aging
 
EXCERPT:
Batteries Far from an Economic Alternative to Power Plant Fleets
 
Turnkey capital costs of large scale-battery systems are $575/installed kWh; based on 2023 pricing of Tesla-Megapack systems. See article

With 6.5% money on a 50% bank loan, and 10% for owner return on a 50% investment, and 19% loss from HV grid to HV grid, and 15-y life:

At 10% throughput, the delivered electricity cost is about 183.8 c/kWh, no subsidies, about 91.9 c/kWh with 50% subsidies, on top of the 6 c/kWh cost of the electricity drawn from the HV grid to charge the batteries

At 40% throughput, about 23 c/kWh, on top of the 6 c/kWh

Excluded costs/kWh: 1) O&M; 2) system aging, 3) HV grid to HV grid loss, 3) grid extension/reinforcement to connect battery systems, 5) downtime of parts of the system, 6) decommissioning in year 15, i.e., disassembly, reprocessing and storing at hazardous waste sites.
 
NOTE: The 40% throughput is close to Tesla’s recommendation of 60% maximum throughput, i.e., not charging above 80% full and not discharging below 20% full, to achieve a 15-y life, with normal aging

NOTE: Tesla’s recommendation was not heeded by the owners of the Hornsdale Power Reserve in Australia. They added Megapacks to offset rapid aging of the original system, and added more Megapacks to increase the rating of the expanded system.
http://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/the-hornsdale-power-reserve-largest-battery-system-in-australia
 
THE PHYSICAL AND ECONOMIC FUTILITY OF W/S/B HAS BEEN CLEAR TO INDEPENDENT ENERGY SYSTEMS ANALYSTS AND ENGINEERS SINCE ABOUT 2000.

Neil Lock
Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 7:02 am

Sunak is sunk. But I think we’re going to have to do a lot more than just jail them. We need to make them compensate the people, whom they were supposed to serve, for what they have done to us. The criminal punishments should be on top of all that. Making them live in an enclave where use of energy and all other products from fossil fuels are banned, for example.

2hotel9
Reply to  Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 7:21 am

Just as with FTX and Enron the money is gone, punishment is all that is left. Seizing what little personal assets they have will not come close to making those injured by their criminal activities whole.

Neil Lock
Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 7:42 am

It isn’t just the protagonists. All those that promoted, supported, made or enforced these policies deserve to be brought to justice too.

Reply to  Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 8:57 am

All of the people that pay attention to ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, NPR, New York Times, Washington Post, Scientific American, National Geographic and any other subscriber to Covering Climate Now and have been educated in the nation’s public schools since 2000 constitute a problem.

It’s going to take time for them to realize that the weather isn’t significantly different from when they were kids. If you have a WWII date of birth you already know it, or at least you should.

Joe Crawford
Reply to  Steve Case
December 24, 2023 10:49 am

Just to see what they’re feeding their readers I followed your pointer to Covering Climate Now. As an example, in their Resources Section they had an article by what they call “Climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe” titled Climate Science 101. In it she wrote:

“Each of the last five decades has been successively warmer than the decade before, and the Earth is now warmer than any time in at least 12,000 years.” (my underline)

She must be one hell-of-a scientist to be able to fine tune the historic data to that point :<)

Reply to  Joe Crawford
December 24, 2023 12:34 pm

Another unsubstantiated assertion by Katherine Hayhoe. It’s what she does.

2hotel9
Reply to  Steve Case
December 25, 2023 10:38 am

Once they have been sitting in the dark and hungry for a while they will figure it out.

Richard Page
Reply to  Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 9:25 am

Sunak may well be sunk but Starmer will be equally as bad, arguably much worse.

Reply to  Richard Page
December 24, 2023 12:49 pm

He’ll have Ed Miliband doing the heavy lifting on Climate Change.

Reply to  Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 9:51 am

What about for crimes against humanity for the (mainly) Democrat billionaires in the WEF command center who have masterminded the policies for Western governments. It ain’t even about stopping fossil fuel burning. It’s about getting rid of 6-7 billion people. It’s about a small group of elites controlling 100% of the economy. I hope these evil cynics are vulnerable to global class actions for damages can bleed their fortunes to zero. Ditto the phalanx of enabler fraudulent sciency-polysci-types in academe and other corrupted institutions. Treason probably fits for the big guys.

Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 7:56 am

That, in the UK, could amount to 10+ million folks – we are dealing with The Blob here.

It is The Blob that would enable every last one of ‘them’ to escape conviction because they’d endlessly assert:

  • I followed expert advice
  • I have/had no personal interest ##
  • The Science was clear
  • etc

## This one is the killer. Certainly while working as Members of Parliament they have to (be seen to) be cleaner than clean but UK Parliament is really only a Finishing School for Cronies
They go there to make friends & contacts within The Permanent Staff plus deep understanding of how government works.

So when they are de-selected, those things are pure gold dust for large companies.
They can use those contacts to ‘see into the future’ and thus give their new employers huuuuge advantage when it comes to making investments and bidding for contracts

That is probably where/why the UK offshore wind scam is falling apart.
Those ‘in the know’ got a foot firmly in the door, shutting out their competitors, at the very very start and once they were ‘inside’ were free to run amok (in the nicest possible way) and ransack the entire house.
= Exactly why ‘travelling salesman’ got such a bad name for themselves

Reply to  Peta of Newark
December 24, 2023 9:14 am

I haven’t complained about referring to the BLOB for some time now. The “Blob” isn’t some unthinking entity, It’s a coordinated Mob. You don’t have to look much further than Mark Hertsgaard’s Covering Climate Now propaganda mill. Most of those media outlets mentioned in my post above are subscribers. The western civilized world is being spoon fed propaganda by well funded government and nongovernment organizations.

Rich Davis
Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 11:33 am

I regret to inform you, but as the system collapses it will be us “climate deniers” who will be jailed. Revealing state secrets, suspicion of sabotage, spreading dangerous propaganda that misleads voters and leads to the ‘regrettable’ need to suspend democracy.

Reply to  Rich Davis
December 24, 2023 12:55 pm

Where are the renewable enthusiasts now?
1. Enthusiasm
2. Disillusionment
3. Panic
4. Search for the Guilty
5. Punishment of the Innocent
6. Praise and Honors for the Non-Participants

I’d guess some at 2., with a few at 3, and the majority still at 1.

2hotel9
Reply to  Rich Davis
December 25, 2023 10:40 am

And you are wrong.

Rich Davis
Reply to  2hotel9
December 26, 2023 8:37 am

I hope you’re right. Otherwise it’s the gulag for me.

Reply to  2hotel9
December 24, 2023 1:02 pm

Nah, just exile them to an isolated island. An island free of fossil fuels and the products derived from fossil fuels. There they can live a carbon-free existence.

Tom Halla
December 24, 2023 6:12 am

Enron type accounting?

Paul Stevens
December 24, 2023 6:31 am

Christmas Eve day and I am reading Watts Up With That. Why? Because it gives me hope for a better future. Thank you, everyone, Anthony most of all but all of the other contributors, commenters, and to those who send in the tips that often lead to the publication or sharing of great stories. This site and it’s contributors give me hope for the future. May I live long enough to see it blossom into what it could be and the majority of humanity living out a better and flourishing existence.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Paul Stevens
December 24, 2023 6:52 am

Don’t hold your breath Paul,
in the pursuit of ‘Nut Zero’ governments are throwing OUR money like confetti at the next best thing since sliced bread … the ‘New Hydrogen Economy’ scam,
where you take ‘green electricity’, use it to turn water into Hydrogen, put that Hydrogen into fuel cells to make … ‘green electricity’.

The system is so efficient that for every 6 kW you get out, you only have to put 27kW in;
there’s a ~77% loss of energy !!!
A bit like going to the bank withdrawing £400 putting £100 in your pocket & shredding the other £300

Denis
Reply to  1saveenergy
December 24, 2023 8:23 am

Its worse than you think. Hydrogen is hard to compress and even harder to liquify. It has a low energy content per cubic foot, much less than methane. It tends not to be “containable.” That is it leaks readily through valve packings and gaskets and it gradually embrittles most metals meaning it cannot be distributed by existing natural gas distribution networks. That leaves trucking. To deliver as much energy to a “gas” station as does a single tractor trailer of gasoline, as many as 12 trips by tractor trailer compressed hydrogen tankers is needed. And once at the gas station, a hydrogen compressor is needed to transfer it to station tanks – you can’t just hook up a hose and let it flow. Add up the energy requirements of these processes and I suspect you will have another kind of net zero.

atticman
Reply to  Denis
December 24, 2023 9:50 am

And only a few weeks ago I saw a report that some minister in the House of Commons had claimed in a speech that hydrogen was a good thing because it has “high energy density” (his words, not mine!).

Is he stupid for believing that to be true or stupid for thinking we’ll believe it? I’m getting tired of being taken for a fool by these people…

Merry Christmas, everyone.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  1saveenergy
December 26, 2023 7:30 am

Here in the UK the magazine ‘Rail Engineer’ looked at Scotland’s plan for hydrogen trains and concluded if the hydrogen was not produced on site a depot with a hydrogen fleet would require 14 times as many road tanker deliveries than a depot with the same sized diesel fleet of trains.

https://www.railengineer.co.uk/scotlands-hydrogen-train-supporting-the-hydrogen-economy/

Ian_e
Reply to  Paul Stevens
December 24, 2023 11:33 am

Yes – but I fear that few, if any, of us will live to see that better future. My personal hope is just to keep my head above the bread-line for my remaining days.

December 24, 2023 6:45 am

“Britain’s fossil fuel emissions fell by 180 million metric tons – a 33% reduction”

But does that account for exporting industries- meaning having to import those same products- thus importing any responsibility for the emissions? Not that I think there is a problem with CO2.

Wokeachusetts now brags about very low “carbon pollution” from the state now that it’s exported most of its industries- forgetting about its imports.

Ian_e
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 24, 2023 11:39 am

Indeed – and, since most of the export destinations are much less efficient (and clean) than we were, I would guess that in reality it is at least a +33% change. Good news for the world as a whole of course (on the CO2 side at least) but not so good for our economy (or for the added real pollution of course).

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 24, 2023 12:55 pm

Coal burnt in China is virtuous. It is blessed by the UN so is not pollution; rather plant food. How would the west be woke if China did not make all the woke stuff like wind generators, solar panels, batteries and just about everything else the west needs for its transition to poverty.

And China needs to pump out all the CO2 it can to stay warm.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/chinas-cold-snap-reaches-shanghai-with-chilliest-year-end-in-40-years/ar-AA1lOXUB

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Shanghai was set to record its chilliest period in December in four decades with weather warnings for low temperatures and wind issued on Thursday, as the Chinese financial capital entered a days-long cold snap.

Imagine how much colder China would be if they did not have that thick plume of CO2 aver them retaining all the heat.

bobpjones
December 24, 2023 7:13 am

It’s all well and good, us, seeing excellent reports like this. But as long as the gov’t and media keep pushing the narrative, it will come to nothing. I’m not an expert, on any of this subject, but having attended college for electrical and electronic engineering (50+ years ago), I do have at least a reasonable understanding of the issues and implications. However, the ‘lay man’ will have no idea, that ‘he’ is being lied to and scammed by the system.

Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 7:33 am

That link to the regulatory-impact assessment: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukia/2009/70/pdfs/ukia_20090070_en.pdf, deserves to be circulated to all friends of humanity. Even I hadn’t seen this report before. And even on a quick skim, it contains things which are… suggestive, at least, of fraud by the UK government against the people they are supposed to serve.

I’ll check it over tomorrow. There goes my Christmas! 🙂

Reply to  Neil Lock
December 24, 2023 1:12 pm

There are very few Australians who understand the Renewable Energy Target.

The scheme sets up electricity retailers as the bagmen for the subsidy farmers building wind and solar generators. Currently, every virtuous MWh of “renewable” electricity garners government sanctioned theft of $50 from consumers to be handed over to the subsidy farmers. The level of theft peaked at $90/MWh before 2020. But the 20% target by 2020 was achieved. That meant that only 20% of the electricity was virtuous. The updated 2030 target is 40%. So consumers will have to fork out the $50/MWh or more for 40% of their electricity by 2030. It goes up to 80% by 2050.

Large numbers of Australians who own a roof have joined the Ponzi scheme so they are now thieving from poorer consumers who do not own a roof.

Without substantial storage, the “renewable” market in Australia is already saturated. More capacity just leads to lower capacity factors. This will be the case for some years. So the current $50/MWh of sanctioned theft will rise astronomically as the Renewable Target departs from what is possible.

December 24, 2023 7:38 am

An excellent, well-reasoned, well-written article revealing the massive deceptions underlaying “green, renewable energy” . . . technically and politically.

Thank you, Rupert Darwall, RealClearEnergy, and WUWT!

I would give you each +42 intergalactic credits if I could.

Fran
December 24, 2023 8:28 am

This is about protests regarding an industrial scale solar park in northern England, latitude 52.7.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12889043/eco-developers-ruin-peak-district-giant-solar-farm-disgrace.html

mleskovarsocalrrcom
December 24, 2023 8:36 am

And another “conspiracy theory” is slowly proving to be true. AGW was never about temperature but instead all about defeating Capitalism.

barryjo
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
December 24, 2023 10:32 am

By whatever means necessary.

John V. Wright
December 24, 2023 8:48 am

Firstly, thank you to Rupert Darwall for an an amazing piece of investigative journalism. Secondly, please can we all be aware that, outside of Rupert’s thoroughly-researched efforts, there is a failure of journalism in the uk not just about this story but about Net Zero generally. Not even the ‘serious’ newspapers have investigated this issue properly.
The domestic gas boiler story is another shocking failure of uk journalism. Domestic gas boilers provide 80% of all uk homes with reliable hot water and central heating. That’s 80%. Most people in Britain get up get a shower and come home to a warm house because they have a gas boiler. It’s not just a technology, it’s basically a way of life for most Britons. Because of its commitment to Net Zero, the Government is going to rip out all of these gas boilers and replace them with heat pumps. Yet nobody has done the maths, certainly not the government and shamefully not the journalists. Because, co2 emitted from uk domestic gas boilers amounts to 0.000002% of the earth’s atmosphere. This is not only not capable of heating anything it is not even measurable. So when those wonderful boilers are forcibly ripped out it will achieve nothing for Net Zero. That is actually nothing. Zilch. Carrying out this policy is actually pointless.
Rather like Rupert’s story, no national journalists in the uk are researching or writing about this astonishing scandal. Are there no national journalists reading WUWT?

Drake
Reply to  John V. Wright
December 25, 2023 11:07 am

Are there no national journalists reading WUWT?

You are correct.

terry
December 24, 2023 9:11 am

Canada under the feckless Justin Trudeau and his cabinet of folks appointed for DEI flag waving is in the same dismal state. The OECD has predicted that our economy will be at the bottom of the group until 2060. The good news is that it seems to be dawning on Canadians that maybe we shouldn’t be leading the race to the bottom.

December 24, 2023 9:22 am

In the words of committee chair Lord Deben, Britain had been “one of the largest historical contributors to climate change.”

NO. No. No; a thousand times no!

Just in the last eight years alone China is a vastly bigger contributor of CO₂ (though not perhaps climate change).

cumulative-co-emissions.png
cgh
Reply to  quelgeek
December 24, 2023 1:49 pm

I’m confused. Why would anyone believe anything from John Gummer? He was and is a serial liar whose principal claim to fame was to be part of the John Major political coup that betrayed and overthrew Margaret Thatcher in 1990.Gummer was the Minister who was responsible for mishandling so very, very badly the BSE disaster in 1989-90.

Wikipedia attempts to conceal most of this, but there’s a limit to how much even Wiki can polish a turd like Gummer.

But you are entirely right about China. It’s contribution to global air pollution has risen in lockstep with China’s increasing economic dominance in global trade via the World Trade Organization. Perhaps the single biggest step in reducing CO2 emissions might be breaking up the WTO.

December 24, 2023 9:45 am

Lord Deben: There are three possible explanations.

A) He is very, very stupid.
B) He is corrupt and would destroy his country for personal gain.
C) He is a traitor serving a foreign power.

If anyone can think of another explanation for his actions, please let me know.

Personally, I think it is a combination of B and C with a mere coincidence of A.

Neil Lock
Reply to  MCourtney
December 24, 2023 10:24 am

(D) He’s got the green religion, and wants to enforce it on everyone.

Reply to  MCourtney
December 24, 2023 11:03 am

I was tempted to suggest A in my earlier post, but using far more offensive language. So I think it’s mostly A plus a lifetime of being told how clever he is.

kakatoa
December 24, 2023 10:11 am

scvblwxq
 
Thanks for the link to the pew survey!  I hadn’t seen the “alternative energy sources” question(s) before.  I’d be interested in PEW finding what adults think of SMUD’s thoughts on Firm energy sources and cost considerations.  REF- Docket No. 21-ESR-01 SMUD Comments Re: Lead Commissioner Workshop on Senate Bill 423 Emerging Renewable and Firm Zero Carbon Resources December 4, 2023  

I’d also be interested in Pew asking folks if they think it’s time to bring the Paris Agreement to the US Senate for a vote.   

ResourceGuy
December 24, 2023 11:02 am

Is this correlated with reduced defense spending in the face of a land war in Europe?

ResourceGuy
December 24, 2023 11:04 am

I guess this is one reason the UK considered sending museum display pieces to Ukraine for defense assistance.

Richard Page
Reply to  ResourceGuy
December 24, 2023 12:13 pm

There is a mindset among some politicians that we no longer need tanks, or many troops – that drones, one or two planes and a bit of hacking will do the job far better. Amongst those learned and esteemed political idjits there was a feeling that we should have sent every tank we have across to Ukraine as we didn’t really need them.

Editor
December 24, 2023 11:40 am

You would create more jobs more cheaply and do a lot less damage to the UK economy if you simply broke every window in Britain.

ralfellis
December 24, 2023 1:18 pm

No mention of stored backup.
Energy storage doubles the cost of renewables.

Renewables cannot work without backup energy, which is currently gas (methane). The UK needs 25,000 gwh of stored energy, for when gas generators are phased out, and we only have 12 gwh.

Ralph

Bob
December 24, 2023 2:41 pm

Excellent report.

“Unlike in business and finance, there are no criminal or civil penalties for those who promote policies based on fraud and misrepresentation.”

This is exactly why government should never be in charge of the production of anything and if they are they need to be held to the same level of accountability as everyone else.

One more thing all the technical, academic, scholastic, professional or whatever language needs to be toned down. This report was good. The fact that some bureaucrat can tell us renewable is cheaper than conventional generation and feel justified because he uses gibberish that no one can understand and measuring standards that aren’t relevant is unacceptable. There is one standard that everyone can understand concerning cost of generation and that is did my power bill go up or down. If you tell me renewables are cheaper and charge me more for my power you should be put in prison after a trip to the woodshed.

ethical voter
December 24, 2023 5:22 pm

Yes. Communism collapsed because of the immutable laws of economics and the inevitable exhaustion of other peoples money. And yes. Net zero and the climate madness will do the same. However when communism collapsed the fascist control freek part of humanity simply moved camp into the climate circus. When this circus collapses they will be looking for a new home. This must not happen. They must never find their feet again. To this end I exhort every person who has the freedom to vote to vote only for individuals and eschew all those who would gather you behind a banner of any sort. These people will be the new fascists and control freaks. Individualism is the right and proper antithesis of communism. Your individualism and your power to express it in your vote is the only hope.

c1ue
December 25, 2023 3:53 am

The UK has achieved a new record in wind curtailment payments. The updating of this site (or the source data) was offline for most of November and December but has finally shown what I have been expecting since the end of October: https://www.ref.org.uk/constraints/index.php?tab=yr
290 million GBP and counting.
Note also that the amount of wind curtailment in November and December were actually quite high in MWh terms, but seasonal price reductions ensured that the 300 million GBP number would not be breached despite 300,000+ MWh curtailment in both November (not unusual) and December.

Beta Blocker
December 25, 2023 6:55 am

The conventional wisdom we hear on this side of the pond concerning politics in the UK is that the Tories have made such a mess of things that Labour is certain to win a massive victory in 2025 so sweeping in its scope and extent that it will leave the Conservative Party as the third or even the fourth largest party in Parliament.

Assuming Labour’s victory is that large, is it rational to assume that the UK will redouble its efforts to achieve Net Zero by 2050, spending whatever sums of money are needed to keep the scam going?

Is it also rational to assume that as the price of electricity in the UK continues to rise and the supply of electricity continues to fall, Labour will never pay a political price for the disastrous economic consequences of their Net Zero folly?

Neil Lock
Reply to  Beta Blocker
December 25, 2023 8:16 am

Beta Blocker, you are close to the mark, but nowhere near the bull.

You seem to assume that democracy works for people. It doesn’t. Choosing between two (or three, or four) parties, all of which are opposed to the interests of us “ordinary” people, is no choice. Labour are just as much part of the scam as the Tories are. And rationality is not important to any of them.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Neil Lock
December 25, 2023 11:13 am

Neil Lock: “Beta Blocker, you are close to the mark, but nowhere near the bull. You seem to assume that democracy works for people. It doesn’t. Choosing between two (or three, or four) parties, all of which are opposed to the interests of us “ordinary” people, is no choice. Labour are just as much part of the scam as the Tories are. And rationality is not important to any of them.”

Neil, I live in the middle of nowhere in southeastern Washington state, USA, in a wide spot in the road you would miss altogether if you didn’t already know it was there.

It is apparent even from my perch here in the Middle of Nowhere, USA, that the growing tyranny of the highly educated elites, especially those in the political classes, is becoming a serious problem in all of the western nations.

Here in the USA, I have close relatives living in New York state, in the Puget Sound area of Washington state, and in California who are graduates of Princeton, Tufts, Columbia University, Harvard, USC, UCLA, and the University of Washington.

The academic disciplines these people represent include civil litigation law, general practice law, heart medicine and heart surgery, internal medicine, biological/medical research, the fine arts, and project management for various government-funded scientific research projects.

Each of these people buy into the renewable energy Kool-Aid and dismiss my cautionary warnings about the energy shortfalls which are coming their way. Each of them say that not nearly enough is being done here in the United States to fight climate change.

OK …. What is the response I get when I tell them that as President of the United States, Joe Biden has legal authority to declare a climate emergency and to impose a program of fossil energy rationing similar to the rationing programs imposed during World War II — authority which he hasn’t chosen to use?

What I get is either a deer in the headlights look, or else angry pushback of one kind or another which indicates that the person speaking to me is suffering from an acute episode of severe cognitive dissonance — the state of having inconsistent thoughts, beliefs, or attitudes, especially as relating to behavioral decisions and attitude change.

None of these highly educated people have yet figured out that I — a lowly mechanical engineer and a graduate of a second-tier technical university — that I’m using psychological influence techniques I’ve learned from cartoonist and persuasion theorist Scott Adams in messing with their minds concerning the topic of climate change.

So we must ask this further question …

What will happen when the consequences of Net Zero start to have enough of an impact on the price of electricity and on the reliability of the power grid such that those impacts can’t easily be explained away? What will happen when these impacts become increasingly more severe — when reality begins making itself not just painfully felt, but very painfully felt?

Based on what I’ve seen from Net Zero supporting politicians and from my own climate-concerned relatives is that the world’s highly educated elites will refuse to acknowledge that their energy lifeboat is sinking even while the cold waters of energy rationing begin swirling around their feet.

December 25, 2023 8:15 am

The author sets out to show that the financial case for the move to wind and solar is terrible, and has been misrepresented, and he is quite right. But the more serious issue is that cost is not the most important factor. The most important factor is that whether its expensive or cheap, it cannot be made to work. Or at least, not in the way the Net Zero fantasy imagines.

What everyone living in the UK needs to focus on is this. The plans for Net Zero, which are endorsed by the entire political class, are not going to be delivered. The only question is how they fail. People need to focus now on what the consequences of this failure will be. I can see a couple of possibilities.

One is they persist in forcing the move to EVs and heat pumps, and at the same time try to move to wind and solar generation, and at the same time refuse to update the local distribution networks to carry the required current and refuse to install enough storage to get through the inevitable week long calms. This doubles demand while supply is destroyed by the move to wind and solar. I think this is the most likely scenario.

In this scenario there is not enough power to run the cars and the heating, and even if there were, there is not enough local capacity to deliver it. So it results in a combination of rationing (to save the local networks when there is temporarily enough power) and blackouts when the wind drops. Some of which will be nationwide hard outages requiring a week or two to get back from. If its even possible at all to recover, with wind fluctuating while you’re trying to do it. This scenario is basically closing down the UK electricity network as we know it.

The second thing is, they could do the heat pump and EV move, and very quietly install lots of additional gas generation. Over 50GW, and keep the present gas capacity running. This would work after a fashion, it would raise costs a lot because of all the useless wind and solar, but it would maintain supply. It would require rationing so as not to overload the local networks, so heat pumps and car charging would mostly stop between about 5pm and midnight, but it would be controlled, it would avoid nationwide blackouts and would keep the renewable fantasy going. This is less likely than the first, but its possible. It would involve reclassifying gas as green. Could happen. Not all that likely, but in desperation its possible.

The other possible scenarios seem vanishingly unlikely given the unbelievable ignorant obstinacy of the UK political class. One would be to keep on more or less as now, dropping the heat pump and EV compulsion. Not going to happen when you have Tories, Labour, Plaid, SNP, Liberals, Greens all desperate to head on over the cliff. Another would be just repeal the Climate Change Act and stop with the whole charade. Not going to happen. Unless Reform get in!

The one thing we know for sure is that in 2040 the UK is not going to be running its electricity generation on wind and solar and also running home heating on heat pumps and transport on EVs. Or if it is, its going to be a different country, one with very cold houses and very little car use, and maybe even careful planning before you turn on a hob or oven or water heater. And frequent at least local blackouts.

Reply to  michel
December 26, 2023 6:03 am

Well, the first scenario you describe may make Paul Ehrlich’s prediction come true re: UK population decline, but not because of climate change, but because of climate change policy.

December 25, 2023 10:52 am

I’ve posted this before an I think it summarizes the security risk we are facing in virtually all western republics as our western woke “leaders” race to one up each other as they implement economy destroying policies. Our enemies are ROFL as they bide their time until we so weaken ourselves to the point where we will be easily subdued without them having to fire a shot.

From https://edmhdotme.wpcomstaging.com/a-few-graphs-say-it-all-for-renewables/

Sun Tzu – “The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.” That is exactly what is happening as Western governments pursue self-harming Green Energy policies. There is no better way to damage Western societies than by rendering their power supplies unreliable and expensive. Cui bono  Who Benefits ??

Anyway, Merry Christmas to all and thanks to all, especially Anthony – this site shines a light on the fraud that is call climate “science”.

MikeInLincs
December 26, 2023 6:50 am

I am far from convinced by the government, but then I suppose what can you expect. After all, there aren’t many science-based modules in a PPE degree.
They are banning the installation of new gas or oil-fired boilers, and the sale or importation of internal combustion engined cars, both by 2035. It’s all very well pushing heat pumps as the solution, but let’s put some actual figures to this.
A typical house with gas or oil-fired central heating in the UK uses 10 to 12 kWh of electricity a day. It also will use an average of 15,000 kWh of gas or oil a year.
Now change the boiler to a heat pump (and we’ll ignore the cost of installation and the upheaval for now), Assuming a typical efficiency factor of three, this would add 5,000 kWh of electricity to your annual bill. You will also need to have an electric immersion heater in your hot water tank because the output temperature from a heat pump probably will not be high enough for most people.
If we assume the heating is used between October and April, it will add around 3 kWh per day to the electricity demand in summer, and up to 30 kWh per day in winter.
Now, let’s throw in a curve-ball. The government wants everyone to change to electric cars. Let’s assume you drive around 25 miles a day, and recharge your car daily at the average miles per kWh efficiency. This will add some six to eight kWh a day.
So, adding it all together, you are looking at an electricity consumption of 20 to 25 kWh per day in summer, and 45 to 50 kWh per day in winter.
This is four times the current daily consumption for a typical house.
Assuming the generating capacity existed — which it doesn’t — the infrastructure couldn’t cope. The National Grid is struggling to cope with our demands now. What will it do when demand quadruples?

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