The developed world’s response to the global energy crisis has put its hypocritical attitude toward fossil fuels on display. Wealthy countries admonish developing ones to use renewable energy.
Last month the Group of Seven went so far as to announce they would no longer fund fossil-fuel development abroad. Meanwhile, Europe and the U.S. are begging Arab nations to expand oil production. [bold, links added]
Germany is reopening coal power plants, and Spain and Italy are spending big on African gas production. So many European countries have asked Botswana to mine more coal that the nation will more than double its exports.
The developed world became wealthy through the pervasive use of fossil fuels, which still overwhelmingly power most of its economies.
Solar and wind power aren’t reliable, simply because there are nights, clouds, and still days.
Improving battery storage won’t help much: There are enough batteries in the world today only to power global average electricity consumption for 75 seconds.
Even though the supply is being scaled up rapidly, by 2030 the world’s batteries would still cover less than 11 minutes. Every German winter, when solar output is at its minimum, there is near-zero wind energy available for at least five days—or more than 7,000 minutes.
This is why solar panels and wind turbines can’t deliver most of the energy for industrializing poor countries.
Factories can’t stop and start with the wind; steel and fertilizer production is dependent on coal and gas; and most solar and wind power simply can’t deliver the power necessary to run the water pumps, tractors, and machines that lift people out of poverty.
That’s why fossil fuels still provide more than three-fourths of wealthy countries’ energy, while solar and wind deliver less than 3%.
An average person in the developed world uses more fossil-fuel-generated energy every day than all the energy used by 23 poor Africans.
Yet the world’s rich are trying to choke off funding for new fossil fuels in developing countries. An estimated 3.5 billion of the world’s poorest people have no reliable access to electricity.
Rather than give them access to the tools that have helped rich nations develop, wealthy countries blithely instruct developing nations to skip coal, gas, and oil, and go straight to a green nirvana of solar panels and wind turbines.
This promised paradise is a sham built on wishful thinking and green marketing. Consider the experience of Dharnai, an Indian village that Greenpeace in 2014 tried to turn into the country’s first solar-powered community.
Greenpeace received glowing global media attention when it declared that Dharnai would refuse “to give in to the trap of the fossil fuel industry.”
But the day the village’s solar electricity was turned on, the batteries were drained within hours. One boy remembers being unable to do his homework early in the morning because there wasn’t enough power for his family’s one lamp.
Villagers were told not to use refrigerators or televisions because they would exhaust the system.
They couldn’t use cookstoves and had to continue burning wood and dung, which creates air pollution as dangerous for a person’s health as smoking two packs of cigarettes a day, according to the World Health Organization.
Across the developing world, millions die prematurely every year because of this indoor pollution.
In August 2014, Greenpeace invited one of the Indian’s state’s top politicians, who soon after become its chief minister, to admire the organization’s handiwork.
He was met by a crowd waving signs and chanting that they wanted “real electricity” to replace this “fake electricity.”
When Dharnai was finally connected to the main power grid, which is overwhelmingly coal-powered, villagers quickly dropped their solar connections.
An academic study found a big reason was that the grid’s electricity cost one-third of what solar energy did. What’s more, it was plentiful enough to actually power such appliances as TV sets and stoves.
Today, Dharnai’s disused solar-energy system is covered in thick dust, and the project site is a cattle shelter.
To be sure, solar energy has some uses, such as charging a cellphone or powering a light, but it is often expensive and has distinct limits.
A new study in India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, found that even hefty subsidies couldn’t make solar lamps worth their cost to most people.
Even in wealthy nations such as Germany and Spain, most new wind and solar power wouldn’t have been installed if not for subsidies.
This is why, for all the rich world’s talk of climate activism, developed nations are still on track to continue to rely mostly on fossil fuels for decades.
The International Energy Agency estimates that even if all current climate policies are delivered in full, renewables will only deliver one-third of U.S. and EU energy in 2050.
The developing world isn’t blind to this hypocrisy. Nigeria’s vice president, Yemi Osinbajo, articulated the situation elegantly:
“No country in the world has been able to industrialize using renewable energy,” yet Africa is expected to do so “when everybody else in the world knows that we need gas-powered industries for business.”
Rather than selfishly block other countries’ paths to development, wealthy nations should do the sensible thing and invest meaningfully in the innovation needed to make green energy more efficient and cheaper than fossil fuels.
That’s how you can actually get everyone to switch to renewable alternatives. Insisting that the world’s poor live without plentiful, reliable, and affordable energy prioritizes virtue signaling over people’s lives.
Mr. Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus and a visiting fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution. His latest book is “False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet.”
Read more at WSJ
Very good. Thank you.
Boffey is the type of person who watches CNN and reads the NYT’s and think their seeing and reading the Truth
David Boffey;
Read this please…..
https://principia-scientific.org/carbon-dioxide-water-sunshine-life/
Thank you.
Judging by his comments, Boffey appears to be a man who knows it all. or claims to do so. “misinformation about CO2”? Does boddey know all about it then? Lindzen has issued a challenge to any scientist who can prove he current theories. Well, I guess Boffey will “prove ” them…..to his satisfaction.
“Boffey”,not boddey, of course!
Bjorn Lomborg’s expertise is as a dissembler and deceiver. He is well known for it. Why didn’t you check his track history? This is a very accurate piece
https://h2bh.home.exetel.com.au/who-said/bjorn-lomborg/
And this
https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/news/bjorn-lomborgs-lukewarmer-misinformation-about-climate-change-and-poverty/
Also, why do you keep repeating your misinformation about CO2? I have responded elsewhere a couple of times but you run away when the facts are presented.
I would love to see some hard data to back up your claims.
Boffey, you’re the one ignoring facts and being just plain ignorant here. Climate-related deaths have improved tenfold over the last century. And lack of energy deaths just from cooking over indoor fires kill 300 times the number of people that die from weather-related causes. Bjorn Lomborg’s expertise is as a statistician. That, for your uninformed mind, is who assembles the data upon which science is based. Every solar panel and windmill added to the grid drives up the cost of energy because the grid requires energy 24/7/365. And unreliable energy just can’t do that. Solar and wind are expensive because they are necessarily redundant. Did you even read the article you criticize? I’m a farmer with a biology degree. CO2 is the basic ingredient of our carbon-based life on earth. All life dies without it. Over eighty percent of the mass of every species on earth is composed of just two elements – oxygen and carbon. Because all life on earth is made of little carbon sacks of water. Solar, wind, and battery storage have their place. Nowhere is it on the grid. We can thank indoctrinated people like you for our skyrocketing cost of energy and the inflation it causes our energy-based civilization. Do your homework. Because your woke world is killing more people with energy poverty than the climate ever will.
“Solar, wind, and battery storage have their place. Nowhere is it on the grid.” Only in just about every country on Earth.
“Did you even read the article you criticize? “Proof “Solar and wind power aren’t reliable, simply because there are nights, clouds, and still days.” conveniently forgetting grids, rapidly improving storage tech and other forms of power generation. i.e. he is not telling the truth. As usual.
Did you even read mu post? Obviously not.
As a biologist you must know these facts. All extant avian and terrestrial species evolved when CO2 was around 200 ppm, then with the onset of the Industrial Revolution it started to rise, to 295 ppm a hundred years ago to 415 ppm today, so we evolved at 200 ppm, not 415 ppm. and CO2 is a known “greenhouse gas”.
Also, as a biologist and farmer you must know that to make use of any increase in CO2 large quantities of water and chemical fertilisers are required, which respectively aren’t available and too expensive for most.
“Because your woke world is killing more people with energy poverty than the climate ever will.” Says who? Lying Lomborg? Or Crooke Epstein?
Barry, replying to Boffey is a waste of time. He already knows it all, even if what he knows is wrong.
Well said Steve. The bloke is a block of wood and can’t see the forest for the trees. Like some people I have met – must have the last say and will manipulate what he says to suit his wonky views.
Very good. Thank you.
As i=usal; Lomborg is cherry picking, ignoring facts and being generally dishonest. Bjorn Lomborg is an intelligent and outspoken critic of climate science and climate action. His analysis is often faulty and sometimes devious.
“Dr Lomborg now has a long track record of being an unreliable and inaccurate source of information about climate change. He devotes most of his writing efforts to churning out polemics for the opinion columns of newspapers which fail to fact-check his false claims.”
Proof “Solar and wind power aren’t reliable, simply because there are nights, clouds, and still days.” conveniently forgetting grids, rapidly improving storage tech and other forms of power generation. i.e. he is not telling the truth. As usual.