Friday, November 03, 2017

3 November - JoNova on Feedly!

JoNova: Science, carbon, climate and tax
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World Bank likes Australia’s Emissions Trading Scheme — the “secret” ETS
According to the World Bank, Australia has implemented an ETS It’s charades all round. Carbon markets are so dismal that the World Bank marks up the Australian ETS (which most Australians have never heard of) as “implemented”. Which makes it so much better than Canada’s which is “under consideration”. In fact the World Bank says Australia’s ETS covers half our emissions and 381 Megatons of CO2 or
60% of Australians are OK with dumping Paris if they can cut their Electricity Bill
Nearly half of Australians are already paying more than they want to for the Paris Agreement. Sixty percent of Australians wouldn’t mind us dumping it if it meant getting cheaper electricity. That fits with most other surveys for the last four years. It’s a stable slab of the population — despite the ABC and Fairfax running prime-time adverts for renewables constantly pushing the line that renewa
Germans get paid to use junk electricity: Wind power generates when people DONT want it
Welcome to the world of baby-economics where people think a “negative” price is a sign of success. In Simpletown people are cheering. But in the real world a price signal that’s negative tells us that someone is selling something so awful they have to pay someone to take it away. It’s a burden that must be got rid of, like trash. Germany set to pay customers for electricity usage as renewable ene

Yesterday

Some days one thousand MW of solar vanishes in Australia
The Australian national grid stretches from the tropics to the cold temperate zone from 16S to 43S. You might think that along those 40,000 kilometers of transmission lines there is always somewhere somewhere sunny at midday, but some days you’d be wrong. James Luffman at WattClarity, noticed this extensive cloud arrangement affecting solar on Friday May 19th. On that day, a one thousand MW gener

Oct 30

Britain can have electric cars or turn Scotland into a wind farm, which will it be then?
Who wants to wait for charging? Instead, just dump the flat batteries, pick up a new set. (See the youtube below). Having a nation full of electric cars is fine as long as you don’t want to drive them. Wind Farms would need to “cover whole of Scotland” to power Britain’s electric vehicles By Paula Murray Jack Ponton, emeritus professor of engineering at Edinburgh University, said another 16,000 t

Oct 28

Weekend Unthreaded
… Saw this extraordinary rock in the sky five minutes ago. Had to take a photo sitting on the lawn in the dark of something, apparently, 400,000 kilometers away. I do like the way the sun illuminates the weathered texture on the edge of the light. Last week Jaxa announced they found a lava tube cave 50m wide and 50km long, with handy walls that may contain water in rock form. (Chilled, ready for

Oct 26

Wow. The colorblind see color
It’s not often that a technology provides so much instant enjoyment, astonishment, shaking, even tears. Tim Blair found a movie of a colorblind man seeing color for the first time. And there are lots of videos out there. See one artist reduced to tears. Watch this young boy react. (The next man seems very happy but says “your world is so much better than mine.”) Or this boy at 40 seconds. Know so
Only 10% of power allowed from solar in Broome WA to stop grid “fluctuations”
When too much solar is more than enough The WA government-run electricity provider (Horizon Energy) has called a halt to new solar installations in Broome, a town in Northwest WA that is not connected to the national grid, or even the main WA grid. (It’s 2,000km north of Perth). About 10% of the town’s power comes from solar* but apparently the little grid can’t handle the fluctuations, so the ear

Oct 25

Perth Event Friday night: “Understanding Cultural Marxism”, Bill Muehlenberg
Invitation to a public event sent to me: Bill Muehlenberg: Understanding Cultural Marxism Classic Nights An Adult Education initiative from St Augustine’s, Friday 27th October, Perth, Western Australia From his renowned Culture Watch website: ‘We live in an age where we see evidence of cultural decline, the erosion of values, the decline of civility, the denial of truth and the elevation of unrea
The rise of fake skeptics who “change their minds” about climate change
Poor Nick Kilvert at the ABC again, finds climate yeti’s everywhere — that imaginary creature, the converted skeptic. This is an important missing link in the fictional narrative — obviously if The Evidence Is Over-bloody-Whelming, there will be a stream of people gradually awakening. Alas, Kilvert doesn’t realize the traffic is all the other way, an exodus, and there is no single outspoken skept

Oct 24

Aussies eating junk to get better weather, old coal plant increases 73,000% in value in two years
Funny things happening today in Australia: Australians are cutting back on Fruit and Veges to pay electricity bills: Since eating raw fruit and vege is associated with lower mortality, efforts to stop people dying of climate change in 2100 may be killing people today: Australians are cutting back on basic things like fresh fruit and vegies in order to keep the lights on with the National Debt Hel

Oct 23

Rudd’s last minute gift to renewables -industry $7 billion extension til 2030
Apologies to foreign readers as we rake over the Stupidest Energy Policy on Earth. This really takes the cake. Back in 2010 Rudd signed off on an extension of subsidies to renewables generators that would apply from 2020-2030, long after he would be gone. Effectively this decision will take up t0 $300 per Australian over that decade – in the order of $1000 per family – and gift to the renewables i

Oct 22

Australian cars fail outdoor emission tests too. To reduce pollution we must only drive in laboratories…
Australian cars just as bad — one hybrid car puts out 400% more CO2 than “advertised” The AAA tested 30 cars under Australian real on-road conditions and found that like VW and so many others, the cars pass pollution tests in the lab, but fail in the real world: – Sydney Morning Herald The report by the Australian Automobile Association, members of which include the NRMA and RACV and RACQ, says re

Oct 21

Unthreaded Weekend
Shots from Geographe Bay, SW WA. I won’t be winning an award for these, but it was kinda cool. … They were having fun. …. Showing off: …. Judging by their very long flippers, dorsal fins, and the time of year, these were humpback whales which grow to 30 – 50 tonnes, and 15-18m long (medium sized for a whale). They are heading south for the summer to feed around Antarctica. They are apparently pre
Turnbull’s “game changer” — $2 a week savings next decade that most Australian don’t believe
Turnbull threw away the Lib’s best election strategy in the last election and almost lost. He couldn’t run a carbon tax scare like Abbott had (or Trump did even moreso). Now he can’t run a cheap electricity campaign in a nation where wallets are bleeding from power bills. It would be a gift campaign to mock the idea that wind and solar make prices cheaper — that’s a bubble desperate to be popped.

Oct 20

Our BoM electronic thermometers are “purpose designed”. We’re not sure what purpose.
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology collects one-second records and can turn them into newspaper headlines. In contrast, the UK averages its readings over one minute, and the US over five. Obviously longer averaging could slow the latter down in the PR stakes (if that was their aim). Hypothetically old glass thermometers just wouldn’t be as good at generating headlines. They take a lot longer to

Oct 18

Politicians “shocked” at the power crisis waiting in the Australian electricity grid
Did some politicans just wake up? The news today is that our Energy Minister may realize Australia is conducting a wild experiment with our electricity grid, and may have managed to convince other Australian federal politicians of the risk. Coalition MPs shocked by energy threat The Australian: Robert Gottleibsen (even Gottleibsen gets it). When Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg walked into the Coa
Australia’s new NEG National Energy Plan hides a carbon tax, international carbon credits
Graham Lloyd points out we are back where started — a national plan involving international carbon credits: RepuTex analyst Hugh Grossman says the NEG, in effect, ­will establish a de facto price on greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector. The government already has indicated that the electricity companies may be able to purchase international or domestic carbon credits to cover any overrun

Oct 17

German wind industry “threatening to implode” as subsidies end wiping out half or more of new plants
In Germany as 20 years of wind subsidies comes to an end in 2020, half to three quarters of the industry may disappear. So many parallels with Australia. The Germans have had wind subsidies for 20 years, but even after two decades of support, the industry is still not profitable on a stand-alone basis. In 2016, some 4600MW of new wind plants were installed, but that may drop to one quarter as much
All the major nations are failing to meet their Paris targets says Nature paper
The Magnificent Paris deal was rubbery-theatre, make-of-it-what-you-will, and with rare diligence here is Nature publishing a paper where a team bothered to check progress. (If only Nature held scientific research as accountable as political deals. MBH98 anyone — where Mann’s hockeystick was accepted by Nature, but not the corrections?) Lo, Nature does a bit of conspiracy thinking: “It is easy fo

Oct 16

Santa’s arrived! Australia drops new Renewables Targets, will meet “Paris”, stop blackouts, reduce costs
This is good news but Turnbull still wants to have the Paris cake and power the fridge with the crumbs Faced with national bill shock, dismal Newspolls, and even leadership rumors, Turnbull is, at last, dropping the deadweight Finkel Clean Energy Target. The biggest poisoned-band-aid will not be plastered on, though mini bandaids will be. Too much regulation is never enough and the energy market i
In Australia, even some people with jobs are struggling to pay bills and put food on the table
The Foodbank press release: Financial stress pushing millions of Australians into food insecurity One in six or, 15% of the Australian population, apparently has experienced “uncertainty” around food in the last 12 months. For some, that’s only one episode in a year but still, in a first world country which is a major food exporter, it’s not a sign of wealth and good times. If the survey is to be

Oct 14

Weekend Unthreaded
… Rainbow over Castle Rock, Oct 2017. We had a few days away last week in Geographe Bay, SW WA thanks to the kindness of a supporter. Miles of quiet beaches for those who don’t like crowds. Rating: 9.2/10 (45 votes cast) Rating: 9.2/ 10 (45 votes cast)

Oct 13

Another meaningless survey shows 4 in 5 Australians want “clean energy” (if someone else pays)
Yet again, it’s another mindless apple-pie-survey produced to fog the debate Most Australians don’t want to pay anything more for renewable power. “Four in five (78%) said Yes: the Australian government should introduce a new Clean Energy Target to encourage the construction of new clean energy sources in Australia.” — The Australia Institute If we ask people if they’d like free/cheap/clean stuff,
Kiribati sinking “like Titanic” but 59 million times slower
Kiribati, with a natural resource base of almost nothing, makes 15% of its nominal GDP, via donations from the Australian government. Periodically Mr Anote Tong, president of Kiribati,visits Australia to remind us how much they need help money. Creatively, this year, Mr Tong is comparing Kiribati’s future to the sinking of the Titanic. Give the man points for theatrix: “We are the people who will

Oct 12

ABC: Let’s pretend base load power doesn’t exist, call it a dinosaur. Who’s in denial?
The new phrase that must be neutered is “base load”. It’s like kryptonite for renewables! Nick Kilvert at the ABC helpfully provides a no-hard-questions mouthpiece and tells us Base load power is the dinosaur in the energy debate. To serve the Australian taxpayer he quotes a Professor Vassallo, Chair of Sustainable Energy Development (USyd), and CSIRO Energy Director Dr Glenn Platt. Just in case t

Oct 11

Carbon pollution rises and the world gets less windy…
Wind speeds have slowed since the sixties God is playing a joke on wind investors: The stilling: global wind speeds slowing since 1960 Known as ‘stilling’, it has only been discovered in the last decade. And while it may sound deceptively calm, it could be a vital, missing piece of the climate change puzzle and a serious threat to our societies. While 0.5 kilometre per hour might barely seem enoug

Oct 10

Event in Brisbane Friday: Mark Latham, Malcolm Roberts, Ross Cameron “Cost-of-Living”
Click to enlarge What a fantastic line-up of speakers at the One Nation, Cost of Living Summit on Friday 13th October, 9.30-4pm. Go see Malcolm Roberts, Mark Latham, Ross Cameron, Graham Young, Tim Andrews, Dr Alan Moran, Prof Tony Makin, and Dr Dan Mitchell (USA) and others speak on Friday at the Queensland Parliament House, LC (red chamber): Just $20. https://www.trybooking.com/book/event?eid=3
Dangerous Abbott unleashed, speaks the truth, critics froth and flounder
Finally the gloves are off The critics called him a climate denier anyway, even when he toed the politically correct line, so there was nothing left to call him. For former Australian Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, there is no point in pandering. Now after a great speech, the EcoWorriers are left saying he is “loopy”. The new unleashed Abbott is so much stronger, more compelling, and his message is

Oct 08

Australian govt may dump renewables subsidies, testing, 1,2,3…
Minister Josh Frydenberg has just implied Australia might drop ongoing endless renewables subsidies (and thus dump the Finkel chief-”scientist” plan). He didn’t say that in so many words, but hinted at it, and will now wait to see how the idea goes down. Soak in this reasoning — renewables are becoming so cost competitive they don’t need subsidies. He’s calling their bluff. It’s like the announce

Oct 07

Weekend Unthreaded
… Rating: 9.1/10 (30 votes cast) Rating: 9.1/ 10 (30 votes cast)
Australian BoM forced to meet skeptics, answer questions, provide a tiny bit of data
The scandals do count. The Australian articles has got Minister Frydenbergs attention. The extensive collection of blog posts and the IPA Climate Change book show there is a deep well of material to fuel more articles. We have barely begun. Congratulations to Jennifer Marohasy. At least we will get a few more answers to questions we shouldn’t even have to ask. The head of the Bureau of Meteorolog

Oct 05

High electricity prices in Australia blamed for sharp economic slowdown
Electricity prices jumped in July. Now, retail sales are falling as wallets run out of money. When Greens, Labor, Conservatives said we need insurance, only skeptics pointed out the price. Commonwealth Bank economist, Gareth Aird, calls the fall a “shocker”. Shoppers stay away as power costs bite –Adam Creighton, The Australian In a sign sluggish wages and higher power prices are starting to bite

Oct 04

Greens, the baseload deniers, want $2.2b for bandaid batteries to keep junk renewables alive
The Greens are now asking for another $2.2billion to pay for the battery bandaid to fix a problem they and the leeching renewables industry created. Adam Bandt is out today with the big new plan, apparently confused about what “load” means: We don’t have a baseload problem, we have a peak load problem,” Mr Bandt said. No matter how you look at this, it’s not a “load” problem. It’s an issue of sup

Oct 03

Matt Ridley: Never experienced anything like this — the climate debate “blackening”
Matt Ridley is about as gentlemanly, polite and sane a man as you’ve ever likely to meet — which is exactly why the mob are so afraid of letting him speak. Ridley even agrees that humans have caused most of the warming in the last fifty years (I shall have to talk t

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