Renewable energy is cripplingly expensive, hopelessly unreliable, massacres wildlife, destroys landscapes, destabilizes the grid, harms indigenous peoples, and causes climate change.
But apart from that, it’s great, says a meticulous review published in the scientific journal Energies by a team of Irish and U.S.-based researchers.
Actually, the part about renewable energy being ‘great’ is a joke but the rest is true. The scholarly review – Energy and Climate Policy – An Evaluation of Climate Change Expenditure 2011-2018 – is probably the most thorough meta-analysis published on the so-called ‘clean energy’ sector.
Its conclusion, though neutrally expressed, could scarcely be more damning:
…The reader may wonder whether the current proposed “zero-carbon” energy transition policies based predominantly on wind- and solar-generated electricity are truly the panacea that promoters of these technologies indicate.
It will confirm all President Donald Trump’s worst suspicions about renewable ‘clean’ energy and about utopian projects like the Green New Deal.
But it will make grim reading for Joe Biden, Boris Johnson, Greta Thunberg, Al Gore, the Prince of Wales, David Attenborough, the Pope, Leo Di Caprio and the rest of the rag bag of public figures who have sought to burnish their caring, eco-friendly credentials by championing ‘renewable energy’ as the best way to save the planet.
In fact, the review authors demonstrate, renewables – mainly wind and solar – do little if anything to reduce carbon dioxide emissions but are very good at wasting eye-watering sums of taxpayers’ money.
Concern for climate change is one of the drivers of new, transitional energy policies oriented towards economic growth and energy security, along with reduced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and preservation of biodiversity. Since 2010, the Climate Policy Initiative (CPI) has been publishing annual Global Landscape of Climate Finance reports.
According to these reports, US$3660 billion has been spent on global climate change projects over the period 2011–2018. Fifty-five percent of this expenditure has gone to wind and solar energy. According to world energy reports, the contribution of wind and solar to world energy consumption has increased from 0.5% to 3% over this period. Meanwhile, coal, oil, and gas continue to supply 85% of the world’s energy consumption, with hydroelectricity and nuclear providing most of the remainder.
The report’s lead author Coilín ÓhAiseadha puts this expenditure in context:
“It cost the world $2 trillion to increase the share of energy generated by solar and wind from half a percent to three percent, and it took eight years to do it. What would it cost to increase that to 100%? And how long would it take?”
According to the review, wind and solar are bad for a number of reasons – not least among them being the harm they do to the environment.
One of the rationales used for wind power is that it reduces man-made climate change.
But, in fact, the study shows, it actually causes climate change at a local level, changing wind patterns, temperatures, precipitation, even causing flash flooding.
In particular, recent years’ research has produced considerable theoretical and empirical evidence that wind turbines can have significant local or regional effects on climate.
For example, Abbasi et al. (2016) explain that “large-scale wind farms with tall wind turbines can have an influence on the weather, possibly on climate, due to the combined effects of the wind velocity deficit they create, changes in the atmospheric turbulence pattern they cause, and landscape roughness they enhance”.
Green technologies are also incredibly resource-greedy. Part of the problem is their feeble ‘power density’ – which is the measurement of the amount of land required to produce a fixed amount of energy.
By far the most power-dense form of energy is natural gas, followed by nuclear, oil, and coal. Fossil fuels can produce large amounts of energy-requiring little land.
Renewables, by contrast, need huge amounts of land to produce relatively tiny quantities of energy. Fossil fuels produce on average about 1000 times more power for any given land surface area.
Renewables also require large quantities of minerals. Merely for the UK to fulfill Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s dream of making all cars in Britain electric by 2030 would, according to a group of experts led by Professor Richard Herrington, Head of Earth Sciences at the Natural History Museum in London, require:
“…just under two times the total annual world cobalt production, nearly the entire world production of neodymium, three quarters the world’s lithium production and at least half of the world’s copper production during 2018 […] If we are to extrapolate this analysis to the currently projected estimate of 2 billion cars worldwide, based on 2018 figures, annual production would have to increase for neodymium and dysprosium by 70%, copper output would need to more than double and cobalt output would need to increase at least three and a half times for the entire period from now until 2050 to satisfy the demand”
This expansion in mining is likely to have serious adverse social and environmental impacts in the often impoverished countries where the rare minerals are found.
As co-author Dr. Ronan Connolly says:
“The average household expects their fridges and freezers to run continuously and to be able to turn on and off the lights on demand. Wind and solar promoters need to start admitting that they are not capable of providing this type of continuous and on-demand electricity supply on a national scale that modern societies are used to.”
They also make poor people poorer by forcing them to use expensive ‘clean’ energy when fossil fuels would be much cheaper and more effective.
We suggest that even within developed nations, policies to reduce CO2 emissions similarly are often at odds with improving the livelihoods of the less affluent in society.
For example, one policy tool which is often promoted as being potentially useful for reducing CO2 emissions is the implementation of “carbon taxes”. Carbon taxes can take many forms, but typically penalize the use of forms of energy that are associated with relatively high CO2 emissions. Researchers studying the socioeconomic implications of various carbon taxes in multiple countries have found that carbon taxes “tend to be regressive”, i.e., the burden tends to be greatest on the poorest households.
The report drily concludes that whether the goal is protecting biodiversity, securing a stable and reliable electricity supply, increase economic growth, or reducing CO2 emissions, the answer in every case is NOT renewables.
According to Medium:
Cobalt mining, required to make batteries for e-vehicles, has severe impacts on the health of women and children in mining communities, where the mining is often done in unregulated, small-scale, “artisanal” mines. Lithium extraction, also required for manufacturing batteries for e-vehicles, requires large quantities of water, and can cause pollution and shortages of fresh water for local communities.
As lead author, Coilín ÓhAiseadha, points out:
“There was worldwide coverage of the conflict between the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and the Dakota Access Pipeline, but what about the impacts of cobalt mining on indigenous peoples in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and what about the impacts of lithium extraction on the peoples of the Atacama Desert? Remember the slogan they chanted at Standing Rock? Mni Wiconi! Water is life! Well, that applies whether you’re Standing Rock Sioux worried about an oil spill polluting the river, or you’re in the Atacama Desert worried about lithium mining polluting your groundwater.”
Even if they were as virtuous as their advocates claim, renewable technologies are hopelessly inadequate to the task of powering modern Western Civilisation.
Read rest at Breitbart
People that understand even the basics of the sciences of biology and of climate, know that MORE CO2 does far more good to humanity and to the environment. Less CO2 would have been lethal. CO2 plus water plus sunlight – photosynthesis – not only powers life on earth via the sun. CO2 fueled photosynthesis also creates the oxygen necessary for all animal life to exist. More CO2 has increased the biomass on earth by as much as 30%. It has shrunk deserts by making plants stronger and more drought tolerant. And more CO2 has brought a string of world record crop yields. Making CO2 more important to life than oxygen! All life dies without CO2. During the last 600 million years of multicellular evolution, the Phanerozoic, CO2 has been naturally declining from 7,000ppm towards a lack of CO2 oblivion. Our last 3 million year ongoing Pleistocene/Holocene ice age is the coldest the earth has ever been during the entire Phanerozoic. Global temperatures remain well within that natural pattern. In spite of the fact that a minuscule 120ppm increase in CO2 has brought us to a level not seen in 12 million years. Proving that while CO2 is insignificant to climate, it is the most important molecule to life on earth. And far too low for comfort and safety.
So all that land cluttered up with Wind Turbines and Solar Panels and the Eco-Freaks are not saying a Thing
Interesting….. but it would have been better if the article had not name-checked Trump.
If the Audubon Society was so concerned about the Birds they would oppose Wind Turbines and Solar Panels but like the rest of the liberal Eco-Freaks their allowing a rediculous ideology to get in the way of Common Sense
Unfortunately, looks like the U.S will have to suffer a bit of PAIN as the climate activists force their will onto the energy transition. In the next 2-3 years as blackouts & unreliable (and more costly) electricity in California and New England set in and as fuel prices begin to spike due to lower domestic oil & gas production, maybe THEN we can start to have a thoughtful, well informed energy policy discussion. It is difficult to collaborate with ZEALOTS. Maybe Americans need a lesson in energy imperatives and how PHYSICS, not politics & “aspiration” is the driver in this arena. With a probable Biden win on November 3 and new administration next January, I guess we will find out just how “silly” this is going to get…
“Probable Biden Win” is quite unlikely.
Not so sure that enough Americans are thinking their vote through to the “back drop” behind the Biden ticket. Too many folks are voting AGAINST Trump, not really supporting Biden. Let’s face it. Trump can be a very dislikeable character and many will never get past their distaste for him personally. Question is, will there be enough folks that can support Trump even if they dislike him?
Quite so but they are playing with fire for their emotional prerogatives.
Also, wind and solar are energy systems still under development and not yet ready for the energy market. This is why fear based activism was needed to sell it.
https://tambonthongchai.com/2020/08/18/energy-storage/
Green energies are always under development and not ready for market. They have been 10 years away from break-through since the oil crisis in the 70’s.
You are very correct and the efficiencies are near physical limitations, not enough to counter for the low density fuel used.