The Biased Oxford University Report That Claims Renewables Are Cheaper Than Gas

From Tilak’s Substack

Tilak Doshi

The University of Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment entered Britain’s North Sea policy debate last week with its latest ‘rapid analysis’ entitled ‘Impact of Oil and Gas Exploitation in the North Sea on UK Household Energy Bills‘. Yahoo Finance UK was the first UK media outlet to publish a full article on the study, headlined ‘”Sheer fantasy” to claim draining North Sea oil would cut bills – experts’. A day later, GB News published its piece: ‘North Sea oil would barely cut UK energy bills claim Oxford experts.’

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Given that the Smith School is explicitly committed to “the green transition to achieve Net Zero emissions and sustainable development”, the study’s conclusions are no surprise. According to the analysis, even a maximalist ‘drill baby drill’ strategy in the North Sea would save households a paltry £16 to £82 per year — and then only under the heroic assumption that every penny of tax revenue is redistributed directly as bill rebates. Absent such redistribution, consumers would see “no discernible benefit” because oil and gas prices are set on international markets.

In contrast, the study asserts that a fully renewable-powered UK could slash household bills by £105 to £441 annually, depending on the pace of electrification. Anupama Sen, Head of Policy Engagement at the Smith School, was unequivocal: “The idea that draining the North Sea would make the UK more energy secure or significantly save on household bills is sheer fantasy.” The report concludes that “regardless of the remaining lifetime of North Sea oil and gas, a ‘drill baby drill’ approach would actually cost households more money versus continuing on our path to clean energy”. These findings sit comfortably with the school’s self-declared mission.

The lay reader – with a common-sense grasp of high school economics and without the privilege of an advanced Oxbridge degree in PPE – may be forgiven if he asks some elementary questions: won’t an increase in oil and gas production in the North Sea add to the nation’s GDP, improve Great Britain’s balance of payments as a net oil and gas importer, increase government tax revenues and provide oil and gas jobs and ancillary benefits in cities like Aberdeen which serve the offshore oil and gas industry? How do these compare in their impacts to the general standard of living, quite apart from the specific impact on household power bills which the Oxford analysis is focused on? And, curiously, how does the fact that oil and gas prices are set in global or regional markets mean that British citizens will derive “no discernible benefit” by an increase in the country’s energy exports?

The model world versus the real world

Scratch beneath the polished veneer of modelling and scenario-building employed in the ‘rapid analysis’ and one finds something rather more troubling: a stylised exercise in assumption-driven advocacy, where conclusions are preordained and empirical realities are inconveniently side-lined. The study’s research results should surprise no one acquainted with Oxford’s role in the climate culture wars. The methodological template is familiar: scenario-based modelling resting on selective assumptions that systematically favour renewables while downplaying or externalising their full costs. Empirical observation of actual energy system performance gives way to stylised projections whose conclusions are baked in from the start.

The study draws on January 2026 wholesale price levels — a period of relative calm before subsequent market disruptions — and projects savings from full electrification, including heat pumps replacing gas boilers. Yet the claimed superiority of renewables rests on several assumptions that collapse under rigorous economic scrutiny.

First is the treatment of remaining North Sea reserves. The analysis treats recoverable volumes as effectively known and limited in duration, disregarding further exploration and development. This ignores the fundamental uncertainty surrounding ultimate recoverable resources in mature basins. Without renewed exploration and appraisal — activities rendered uneconomic by the UK’s combination of elevated corporation tax rates and repeated windfall levies — any estimate of reserves remains inherently speculative. The fiscal regime itself suppresses the very investment required to delineate the resource base, creating a self-reinforcing loop in which depressed activity levels are then cited to justify further restraint. This circular reasoning is a hallmark of ideologically driven modelling.

Second, the core claim that renewables have become cheaper than natural gas-fired generation misrepresents electricity market fundamentals and cost accounting. The report implicitly relies on Levelised Cost of Electricity (LCOE) or analogous plant-level metrics to assert price-setting advantages via Contracts for Difference (CfDs). Yet LCOE systematically excludes the system-wide burdens imposed by variable renewable energy (VRE). Real-world deployment of wind and solar requires overbuilding by factors of three to five times nominal capacity to compensate for low-capacity factors (typically 15-40 % for wind and 10-25 % for solar, versus 80-90% for conventional thermal plants). Reliable supply demands dispatchable backup — often gas turbines operating inefficiently at part load — together with grid reinforcement, transmission upgrades and ancillary services for frequency control and inertia. These integration costs are not marginal; they escalate non-linearly with penetration.

Full Cost of Electricity (FCOE) metrics, which internalise balancing, adequacy and network expenses, routinely show renewables imposing higher total system burdens than dispatchable alternatives once reliability is assured. The Smith School study’s assertion that renewables would decouple bills from international gas prices overlooks the merit-order dynamics in wholesale markets: during periods of low VRE output, the marginal (typically gas) plant continues to set the clearing price paid across the entire generation fleet.

This is not unique to the UK but is common to all modern grids. CfD subsidies provide revenue certainty to developers. The resulting risk and financial levies are shifted onto consumer bills. Claims of inherent cheapness dissolve when these full integration costs — backup supply, grid upgrades and overbuild — are properly accounted for. Detailed analysis by Kathryn Porter and David Turver among others gives the lie to the argument that it is the marginal cost of gas-fuelled power generation that explains UK electricity prices which are the highest in the developed world.

The sleight of hand on renewables

Third, the intermittency challenge receives inadequate attention. Weather-dependent generation is not merely variable but often not correlated with demand, particularly during prolonged low-wind, low-sun events. The modelling appears to assume seamless accommodation through unspecified flexibility measures. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen echoed a parallel narrative on March 16th 2026, arguing that “the real problem is access for RE to an upgraded grid” and that “inadequate grids” prevent “cost-effective renewable capacity” from reaching consumers. She urged acceleration of the Grids Package to speed permitting and flexibility.

Yet this framing inverts causality: it is the pursuit of high shares of dispersed, variable sources of energy that necessitates precisely these expensive upgrades in the first place. The Oxford study’s reliance on partial costing echoes broader deficiencies in activist literature, where system-level realities are subordinated to ideological priors.

Fourth, projected savings from mass heat pump deployment rest on optimistic engineering assumptions detached from UK housing realities. The report highlights that heat pumps produce around three units of heat per unit of electricity consumed, versus less than one for gas boilers, potentially saving households around £330 annually. Yet real-world coefficient of performance degrades sharply in colder conditions and in the poorly insulated building stock that characterises much of Britain’s housing. Upfront capital and retrofit costs remain prohibitive even with subsidies.

Critical literature, including statements from within the renewable sector itself, has repeatedly questioned the economic case for a subsidised rapid rollout at scale. Dale Vince, an eco-millionaire and founder of the green energy company Ecotricity, has publicly criticised heat pumps, labelling them as ineffective, expressing concerns that the Government’s push for heat pumps could result in cold homes and increased energy bills for consumers.

Fifth, recent auction outcomes undermine the narrative of ever-cheaper renewables. The AR7 CfD round for offshore wind delivered strike prices that, as analysed by David Turver, were about two and a half times higher than assumptions embedded in official Climate Change Committee projections. When these elevated support costs feed through to consumer bills via levies and network charges, the headline figures cease to represent genuine affordability.

Junk economics in tandem with junk science

Physicist Norman Rogers opined in an article at the American Thinker that the climate industrial complex is a political movement disguised as a scientific movement. Along with other leading physicists such as John Clauser, William Happer, Steven Koonin and Richard Lindzen, Rogers is of the view that:

The climate models are an exemplary representation of confirmation bias, the psychological tendency to suspend one’s critical facilities in favour of welcoming what one expects or desires. Climate scientists can manipulate numerous adjustable parameters in the models that can be changed to tune a model to give a ‘good’ result. Technically, a good result would be that the climate model output can match past climate history. But that good result competes with another kind of good result. That other good result is a prediction of a climate catastrophe. That sort of ‘good’ result has elevated the social and financial status of climate science into the stratosphere.

A visual illustration of junk climate science is represented by the tendency of the climate models to run ‘too hot’ compared to actual observed temperature data.

Note: Global surface air temperature (Tsfc) trends tracking 34 CMIP6 climate models through 2025. The following plot shows the Tsfc trends, 1979-2025, ranked from the warmest to the coolest. “Observations” is an average of 4 datasets: HadCRUT5, NOAAGlobalTemp Version 6 (now featuring AI, of course), ERA5 (a reanalysis dataset), and the Berkeley 1×1 deg. dataset, which produces a trend identical to HadCRUT5 (+0.205 C/decade).

Source: https://www.drroyspencer.com/2026/01/surface-air-temperature-trends-climate-models-vs-observations-1979-2025/

Economists, alas, are not immune to the pressures of ‘tuning’ models and incorporating assumptions that deliver the preferred conclusion: the ‘climate crisis’ is upon us but, hallelujah, we have renewables to mitigate emissions and avert the apocalypse. In junk economics, central economic concepts — for instance, international price formation for commodities, the role of merit order in modern grid planning, and the distinction between LCOE and full system costs of electricity— are either misunderstood or presented in ways that advance predetermined policy outcomes. The Smith School’s study exemplifies ‘junk economics’ in service of Net Zero ideology: modelling calibrated not to test hypotheses but to reinforce them. Karl Popper, who described the falsifiability criterion that founded modern science, is left spinning in his grave.

So, sack Ed Miliband

On Sunday, Chris O’Shea, the head of British Gas called on the Government to drop its ban on exploiting untapped oil and gas fields in the North Sea, saying the move would help ease spiralling energy costs in the wake of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. He said an increase in drilling would play a role in efforts to bolster energy resilience after the Iran war sent prices surging. Earlier in March, Greg Jackson, founder and CEO of Octopus Energy – UK’s largest renewable-focused energy suppliers and retailer – publicly urged the UK government and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband to exploit more North Sea oil and gas resources. He argued that the country should “use what’s available” from domestic reserves to stabilise prices, reduce reliance on volatile imports and avoid an energy shock.

Among others who have called out against Ed Miliband’s effective ban on new North Sea oil and gas development are Tara Singh (CEO, RenewableUK – the UK wind industry trade body); Jürgen Maier (Chairman of Great British Energy – Miliband’s flagship state-backed green energy company); and Kemi Badenoch (Leader of the Conservative Party).

Yet, as we have seen, Oxford University’s Smith School, committed to Net Zero advocacy, finds these widely shared views “sheer fantasy”. Britain’s households, already facing Europe’s highest power costs, deserve scholarly analysis grounded in observed system performance rather than Net Zero predilections.

It is clear that the Labour Government is not capable of implementing even a faintly rational energy policy – a posture it shares with its counterparts in the EU which are largely composed of legacy Left-socialist governments. It is also apparent that without the sacking of Ed Miliband – the virtue signalling energy-illiterate – nothing will change. Until green ideology is exorcised from the Westminster bubble and woke universities, the climate idiocracy will continue to shape policy — and ordinary British families will continue to pay the price.

This article was first published by the Daily Sceptic https://dailysceptic.org/2026/03/27/the-biased-oxford-university-report-that-claims-renewables-are-cheaper-than-gas/

Dr Tilak K. Doshi is the Daily Sceptic‘s Energy Editor. He is an economist, a member of the CO2 Coalition and a former contributor to Forbes. Follow him on Substack and X.

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strativarius
March 30, 2026 3:05 am

It is clear that the Labour Government is not capable of implementing even a faintly rational energy policy”

To me, it is abundantly clear that the Labour Government has no intention whatsoever of implementing even a faintly rational energy policy. The ideology remains supreme; it really does. Yesterday I posted…

MPs Put Net Zero Above Energy Security

You have sat too long for any good you have been doing lately.

Depart, I say, and let us have done with you.

In the name of God, go!

Cromwell to the Rump Parliament April 1653

Parliament decided to put Net Zero above the national interest and the motion was voted down by 297 votes to 108. Not a single Labour, Liberal Democrat, Reform, Restore Britain or SNP MP voted in favour of the motion.
https://dailysceptic.org/2026/03/29/mps-put-net-zero-above-energy-security/

What the hell is wrong with them? Here we go again…

Rachel Reeves to tell G7 accelerating shift to clean energy is best defence against energy price shocksGuardian

And to assist in that…

Researcher Finds Proof The Met Office is Inflating UK Maximum Temperature RecordsDaily Sceptic

Plus ca change, eh.

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
March 30, 2026 4:21 am

Being flogged helps one tolerate shoes that are tight.

Reply to  strativarius
March 30, 2026 8:09 am

Don’t know who Restore Britain is, and the others are just the usual suspects, but why did Reform not vote in favor? Isn’t that very odd?

strativarius
Reply to  michel
March 31, 2026 3:05 am

It’s mad – Restore is a breakaway faction of Reform under Rupert Lowe.

Keitho
Editor
March 30, 2026 3:59 am

They could always use the abundance of coal under their feet to generate electricity. Gives them an independent, reliable source of energy that wouldn’t need foreign manufactured equipment such as wind turbines and solar panels. Great opportunity to reindustrialise and increase independence.

strativarius
Reply to  Keitho
March 30, 2026 4:07 am

They could always use the abundance of coal under their feet 

Indeed, we could…

Britain to ban coal mines under Miliband’s net zero plans
Operators warn that UK steel mills would become more reliant on imports from Russia and ChinaTelegraph

Then again…

Reply to  Keitho
March 30, 2026 6:53 am

Oxford report? Oxford has expertise in energy systems?
As usual, their “researchers” do not look at a to z lifetime costs.

HIGH COST/kWh OF W/S SYSTEMS FOISTED ONTO A BRAINWASHED PUBLIC 
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/high-cost-kwh-of-w-s-systems-foisted-onto-a-brainwashed-public-1
.
People are brainwashed to love wind and solar. They do not know by how much they screw themselves by voting for the elites who push them onto everyone.
.
If owned/controlled by European governments and companies, would be a serious disadvantage for the US regarding environmental impact, national security, economic competitiveness, and sovereignty 
.
Western countries cajoling Third World countries into Wind/Solar, and loaning them high-interest money to do so, will forever re-establish a neocolonial-style bondage on those recently free countries.
 
What is generally not known, the more weather-dependent W/S systems, the less efficient the traditional generators, as they inefficiently (more CO2/kWh) counteract the increasingly larger ups and downs of W/S output. See URL
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/fuel-and-co2-reductions-due-to-wind-energy-less-than-claimed
.
W/S systems add great cost to the overall delivery of electricity to users; the more W/S systems, the higher the cost/kWh, as proven by the UK and Germany, with the highest electricity rates in Europe, and near-zero, real-growth GDP.
.
At about 30% W/S, the entire system hits an increasingly thicker concrete wall, operationally and cost wise.
The UK and Germany are hitting the wall more hours each day.
The cost of electricity delivered to users increased with each additional W/S/B system
.
Nuclear, gas, coal and reservoir hydro plants are the only rational way forward.
Ignore CO2, because greater CO2 ppm in atmosphere is essential for: 1) increased green flora to increase fauna all over the world, and 2) increased crop yields to better feed 8 billion people.
.
Net-zero by 2050 to-reduce CO2 is a super-expensive suicide pact, to:
1) increase command/control by governments, and
2) enable the moneyed elites to become more powerful and richer, at the expense of all others, by using the foghorn of the government-subsidized/controlled Corporate Media to spread scare-mongering slogans and brainwash people, already for at least 40 years. Extremely biased CNN, MSNBC, NPR, PBS, NBC ABC, CBS come to mind.
.
Subsidies shift costs from project Owners to ratepayers, taxpayers, government debt:
1) Federal and state tax credits, up to 50% (Community tax credit 10%; Federal tax credit of 30%; State tax credit; other incentives up to 10%),
2) 5-y Accelerated Depreciation to write off of the entire project,
3) Loan interest deduction
.
Utilities forced to pay at least:
15 c/kWh, wholesale, after 50% subsidies, for electricity from fixed offshore wind systems
18 c/kWh, wholesale, after 50% subsidies, for electricity from floating offshore wind
.
Excluded costs, at a future 30% W/S annual penetration on the grid, based on UK and German experience: 
– Onshore grid expansion/reinforcement to connect far-flung W/S systems, about 2 c/kWh
– A fleet of traditional power plants to quickly counteract W/S variable output, on a less than minute-by-minute basis, 24/7/365, which means more Btu/kWh, more CO2/kWh, more cost of about 2 c/kWh
– A fleet of traditional power plants to provide electricity during 1) low-wind periods, 2) high-wind periods, when rotors are locked in place, and 3) low solar periods during mornings, evenings, at night, snow/ice on panels, which means more Btu/kWh, more CO2/kWh, more cost of about 2 c/kWh
– Pay W/S system Owners for electricity they could have produced, if not curtailed, about 1 c/kWh
– Importing electricity at high prices, when W/S output is low, 1 c/kWh
– Exporting electricity at low prices, when W/S output is high, 1 c/kWh
– Disassembly on land and at sea, reprocessing and storing at hazardous waste sites, about 2 c/kWh
Total ADDER 2 + 2 + 2 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 2 = 11 c/kWh
.
Offshore wind full cost of electricity FCOE = 30 c/kWh + 11 c/kWh = 41 c/kWh, no subsidies
Offshore wind full cost of electricity FCOE = 15 c/kWh + 11 c/kWh = 26 c/kWh, 50% subsidies
The 11 c/kWh is for various measures required by wind; power plant-to-landfill cost basis.
This compares with 7 c/kWh + 3 c/kWh = 10 c/kWh from existing gas, coal, nuclear, large reservoir hydro plants.
Some of these values increase, due to inflation, and exponentially increase as more W/S systems are added to the grid.
.
The economic/financial insanity and environmental damage is off the charts.
Europe has near-zero, real-growth GDP. Its economy has been tied into knots by inane people.

Reply to  wilpost
March 30, 2026 7:00 am

NEW MINE-MOUTH COAL ELECTRICITY LESS COSTLY, AVAILABLE NOW, NOT PIE IN THE SKY, LIKE EXPENSIVE FUSION AND SMALL MODULAR NUCLEAR 
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/coal-electricity-less-costly-available-now-not-pie-in-the-sky
 
It is very easy for coal to compete with wind and solar
In the US, Utilities are forced to buy offshore wind electricity for about 15 cents/kWh.
That price would have been 30 cents/kWh, if no 50% subsidies.
.
Offshore wind full cost of electricity FCOE = 30 c/kWh + 11 c/kWh = 41 c/kWh, no subsidies
Offshore wind full cost of electricity FCOE = 15 c/kWh + 11 c/kWh = 26 c/kWh, 50% subsidies
The 11 c/kWh is for various measures required by wind and solar, power plant-to-landfill cost basis.
This compares with 7 c/kWh + 3 c/kWh = 10 c/kWh from existing gas, coal, nuclear, large reservoir hydro plants.
Some of these values increase, due to inflation, and exponentially increase as more W/S systems are added to the grid.
.
Coal gets very little direct subsidies in the US.
Here is an example of the lifetime cost of a coal plant.
The key is running steadily at 90% output for 50 years, on average
.
Assume mine-mouth coal plant in Wyoming; 1800 MW (three x 600 MW); turnkey-cost $10 b; life 50 y; CF 0.9; no direct subsidies.
Payments to bank, $5 b at 6% for 50 y; $316 million/y x 50 = $15.8 b
Payments to Owner, $5 b at 10% for 50 y; $504 million/y x 50 = $21.2 b
Lifetime production, base-loaded, 1800 x 8766 x 0.9 x 50 = 710,046,000 MWh
.
Wyoming coal, low-sulfur, no CO2 scrubbers needed, at mine-mouth $15/US ton, 8600 Btu/lb, plant efficiency 40%, Btu/ton = 2000 x 8600 = 17.2 million
Lifetime coal use = 710,046,000,000 kWh/y x (3412 Btu/kWh/0.4)/17,200,000 Btu/US ton = 353 million US ton 
Lifetime coal cost = $5.3 billion
.
The Owner can deduct interest on borrowed money, and can depreciate the entire plant over 50 y, or less, which helps him achieve his 10% return on investment.
Those are general government subsidies, indirectly charged to taxpayers and/or added to government debt.
.
Other costs:
Fixed O&M (labor, maintenance, insurance, taxes, land lease)
Variable O&M (water, chemicals, lubricants, waste disposal)
Fixed + Variable, newer plants 2 c/kWh, older plants up to 4 c/kWh
.
Year 1 Cost
O&M = $0.02/kWh x 710,046,000 MWh/50 y x 1000 kWh/MWh = $0.284 b
Coal = $15/US ton x 353 million US ton/50 y = 0.106 b
Bank/Owner = (15.8, Bank + 21.2, Owner)/50 y= 0.740 b
Total = 1.130 b
Revenue = $0.08/kWh x 710,046,000 MWh/50 x 1000 kWh/MWh = $1.136 b
Total revenue equals total cost at about 8 c/kWh
Banks and Owners get 0.74/1.136 = 65% of the project revenues  
 
For lower electricity cost/kWh, borrow more money, say 70%
Traditional Nuclear has similar economics; life 60 to 80 y; CF 0.9 in the US.
.
For perspective, China used 2204.62/2000 x 4300 = 4740 million US ton in 2024.
China and Germany have multiple ultra-super-critical, USC, coal plants with efficiencies of 45% (LHV), 42% (HHV)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/ultrasupercritical-plant

Reply to  wilpost
March 30, 2026 7:04 am

“Net Zero by 2050”-Activists Stumped by New Evidence Showing No Link Between CO2 & Temperature Over Last 2.7 million Years
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/net-zero-by-2050-activists-stumped-by-new-evidence-showing-no
By Chris Morrison
.
The climate science world (the “settled science” division) is in shock following the discovery in ancient ice cores that levels of carbon dioxide remained stable as the world plunged into an ice age around 2.7 million years ago.

Levels of CO2 at around 250 parts per million (ppm) were said to be lower than often assumed with just a small 20 ppm variation recorded for the 2.7-million-year period. during which there were multiple glaciation periods

In addition, no changes in methane levels were seen in the entire period.
Massive decreases in temperature with occasional interglacial temperature increases appear to have occurred with very minor changes in ‘greenhouse’ gas concentrations, ppms.

This revelation has caused near panic in activist circles.

Reply to  wilpost
March 30, 2026 8:58 am

The reason CO2 has no effect on air temperature is simple: There is too little CO2 in the air to absorb enough out-going long wavelength IR light emanating from the earth surface to heat up the large mass of air.

At the Mauna Loa Obs. in Hawaii, the concentration of CO2 in dry air is 429 ppmv. One cubic meter of this air has a mass of 1,290 g and contains a mere 0.84 g of CO2 at STP.

The claims by the IPCC and collaborating unscrupulous scientists that CO2 causes global warming and is the control knob of climate change are fabrications and lies. The purpose of these is to justify and ensure the maintenance and generous funding of the IPCC at its headquarters in Bern, Switzerland.

Scissor
March 30, 2026 4:30 am

Horse riding can be a very cheap form of transportation when ignoring the horse’s food, shelter, care, saddles and harnesses, etc.

Of course not everyone can ride a horse, and, for example, carrying ones skis, poles and boots to a ski resort is not very practical when riding a horse. And, one should not forget the matter of wastes, though this might benefit one for growing mushrooms.

strativarius
Reply to  Scissor
March 30, 2026 4:44 am

Horse riding can be a very cheap form of transportation when… you’ve had legal issues…

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is seen inspecting horses near his Norfolk homeDM

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
March 30, 2026 5:44 am

Filly?

GeorgeInSanDiego
Reply to  strativarius
March 30, 2026 6:45 am

Randy Andy, the git that keeps on giving.

ScienceABC123
March 30, 2026 4:46 am

It seems the Smith School has implemented a Joseph Goebbels quote…

“If you repeat a lie often enough, people will believe it, and you will even come to believe it yourself.” – Joseph Goebbels

March 30, 2026 4:47 am

That Rogers quote, in part:
“Climate scientists can manipulate numerous adjustable parameters in the models that can be changed to tune a model to give a ‘good’ result. Technically, a good result would be that the climate model output can match past climate history.” 

The inherently circular nature of this approach was exactly my point in a post yesterday on the Open Thread here at WUWT. It’s a credit to the GFDL modelers that they so openly documented the tuning objectives and methods.

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2026/03/29/open-thread-183/#comment-4179099

strativarius
Reply to  David Dibbell
March 30, 2026 5:03 am

changed to tune a model…

Now that is music to the ear….

11 alternate and open tunings every guitarist should know
https://www.guitarworld.com/lessons/11-alternate-tunings-every-guitarist-should-know

Or is that a roar?

Safely improve engine power and torque, experience better throttle response and customise your vehicle’s behaviour.
We remap over 5000 cars every single year and use our own in-house, custom tuning solutions.
Enter your reg on our reg checker to learn more and use our reg checker to see what we can do for your vehicle.
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SxyxS
March 30, 2026 5:22 am

If renewables were cheaper than gas then renewables would have a monopol by now,
as noone would even bother to built massive plants, pipelines , storagefacilities
and all the coordination, infrastructure etc that is needed.

I don’t even think that it’d be remotely possible to finance any huge power plant in such a scenario.(yet chinese and Indians are building them all the time)

But the main problem with this claim is, that gas froom all over the world is being transported to Britain (and that there were several conflicts around the the world to get access to gas etc – you don’t do that if renewables are an alternative )
How can gas from your backyard then be so expensive?

I somehow have the feeling that the “cheap renewable science”- claims did not exist prior to the climate agenda – for a simple reason: They are not true.

And we have 2 main renewable pushers admitting it.

” Energy prices will skyrocket with my (renewable) policies ”
Obama

” Energy is tooo cheap ”
Merkel(before the green era)

SamGrove
March 30, 2026 6:08 am

Oil prices may be determined by global markets, but every exploited oil and gas field affects global markets.

Petey Bird
March 30, 2026 7:26 am

Levelised Cost of Electricity (LCOE) is just a propaganda tool.

March 30, 2026 7:43 am

This study is correct—but only if one adopts a distorted line of reasoning in which widespread poverty is considered “cheaper” than development and prosperity.

dougsorensen
March 30, 2026 7:58 am

“The idea that draining the North Sea would make the UK more energy secure or significantly save on household bills is sheer fantasy.”

I don’t think I’ve seen a more ironic sentence in my life. Projection at its finest.

Dave Andrews
March 30, 2026 8:30 am

Dieter Helm is a Professor at Oxford and an energy policy expert. Indeed he has been asked by two different governments this century to carry out energy reviews. Unfortunately neither liked what he had to say and merely put his reviews in the bookcase. Seems the Smith School of Enterprise similarly ignored him probably because he is highly sceptical about unreliables

James Snook
March 30, 2026 9:13 am

Unfortunately wealth creation is anathema to the virtue signalling lefties that currently hold a majority in the Commons, which they are using to destroy our economy.

KevinM
March 30, 2026 10:34 am

North Sea oil would barely cut UK energy bills claim Oxford experts.
Barely?

Bob
March 30, 2026 5:12 pm

Very nice. This post proves that big power (government), big money and big education are no substitute for clear thinking. The whole stinking mess can be cleared up with a few simple moves. No government mandates, no government preferences, power companies are only paid for the power they sell to the grid and the grid’s primary responsibility is to insure constant delivery of reliable affordable power 24/7. Shortfalls will not be charged to rate payers or tax payers. There fixed it for you.

Daniel Muller
April 3, 2026 4:10 am

There is no renewable energy! The manufacture of green energy devices such as solar panels, wind turbines and electric vehicles requires large amounts of critical metals, some of which only occur as rare trace byproducts in the mining of base metal deposits (e.g., Se, In, Cd, Te). Once a mineral deposit has been exploited, new ones need to be explored and developed. There is nothing renewable about them! A recommended source is https://www.sciltp.com/journals/hp/articles/2603003359