Destination Destruction: Deluded Virtue Signallers Destroying Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies

Every country chasing the wind and solar ‘transition’ is suffering from a mix of power rationing and rocketing prices. There is no exception.

Which brings us to our sunny land, Australia.

Blessed with abundant reserves of coal, gas and uranium, it ought to enjoy the world’s cheapest power prices (20 years ago, it did).

Now, however, since the Federal government’s Renewable Energy Target ramped up in 2009, power prices have been increasing at double-digit rates, with much worse to come. Michael Crawford’s graph was drawn in 2018; retail power prices have close to doubled, since then.

Current predictions are that Australian retail power prices will jump a further 35%, next year, following the closure of more reliable coal-fired plants.

Just like California, Germany, Denmark and the UK Australia’s obsession with chaotically intermittent wind and solar has a price. And it’s hard-pressed households and battling businesses who end up paying it.

The pitch from the renewable energy rent seekers and other crony capitalists profiteering from the greatest economic and environmental fraud of all time is that all this suffering is for the greater good. With thousands of households and businesses already unable to pay their power bills, the political meme is starting to resemble Marie Antoinette’s suggestion about the destitute eating cake if they couldn’t find bread.

True it is that Australia’s energy troubles started back in 2001 under the John Howard led Liberal government when it introduced the Renewable Energy Target. Back then it was a fairly innocuous critter. Under the Kevin Rudd led Labor government in 2009 the RET was increased by several orders of magnitude, and the die was cast.

Massive subsidies to wind, large-scale and domestic solar pushed the reliable coal-fired generators to the back of the delivery line, every time the sun was up and the wind blew; the renewable energy certificates (worth between $60 and $85 per MWh of wind and large-scale solar delivered) allowed wind and solar generators to undercut the conventional generators. Unable to dispatch to the grid, they were forced to remain online and burn coal and unable to earn revenue.

Over time, the deliberate destruction of the conventional generator’s business model has driven out of business, precisely as intended.

The current situation was as perfectly predictable, as it was perfectly avoidable.

Notwithstanding the bleeding obvious, Anthony Albanese – who heads up the current Labor government – and Chris Bowen, his hapless Energy Minister – are doggedly refusing to reverse course.

Instead, this deluded pair have doubled down, with a raft of new policies designed to accelerate the destruction of what’s left of Australia’s reliable power generation system. Claiming that it can all be done with sunshine and breezes, mythical mega-batteries and a whole lot of wishful thinking.

The Australian’s Chris Kenny takes a look at what passes for energy policy in this sad and sorry country.

We’re making the ultimate sacrifice to prove our virtue
The Australian
Chris Kenny
29 October 2022

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is not to blame for our energy crisis – we did it to ourselves

The trouble with cautionary events is that people can take different lessons from the same warnings, and entirely the wrong ones.

For instance, a practical person would respond to repeated flooding by putting their house on stilts or rebuilding on higher ground, while a climate catastrophist tends to see this as a prompt to promote electric cars and solar panels.

One will help. The other will not.

In a similar vein, the impractical climate alarmists and the Albanese Labor government have taken the warning implicit in soaring gas and coal prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as evidence we need to accelerate the weaning of our nation from fossil fuels.

Realists, on the other hand, would conclude that the high demand driving those price hikes is a clear demonstration of global reliance on fossil fuels and the inadequacy of available alternatives.

It is tempting to think of the pathetic blame-shifting for our energy crisis to the Ukraine situation as a cynical excuse – what sane person would actually try to fit up Vladimir Putin for an Australian electricity grid that has insufficient dispatchable genera­tion?

But we should suspend our incredulity – some of these people seem to believe this stuff, or at least have convinced themselves.

Labor’s Climate Change and Energy Minister, Chris Bowen, has revealed himself to be the high priest of our national energy transition. With the hubris of a zealot, he is on a crusade to save the planet and is happy to rip out the heart of the national economy on the altar of net zero.

All cocksure and sanctimonious, he told an energy conference earlier this month about the investments required to deliver on the emissions reduction goals he has pledged to the UN. Bowen said we would need to install 40 massive wind turbines every month until 2030 – more than a wind turbine a day for eight years.

“For solar,” he added, “we still need to install more than 22,000 500-watt panels every day.” This means building in enough 2.4m x 1.2m solar panels to stretch, end to end, more than 52km, every day. Bowen wants to fund and approve 28,000km of transmission lines to link up renewable energy projects around the country.

Think of the protests and delays. Think of the landscapes and the cost.

When you consider how these regulated, guaranteed, profitmaking assets will be encouraged to provide electricity that cannot be stored and therefore must be mirrored by an equivalent amount of dispatchable generation, you realise this transition will not happen as currently outlined.

It has been attempted in many countries and places so far, and all of them have ended up in an energy cost and supply crisis – just look to Germany, Spain, Britain or California. No one, save for the hydro-electricity powerhouses of Norway, New Zealand and Tasmania, has been able to make renewables plus storage work.

And the government, Greens, teals, climate activists, public broadcasters and Liberal “moderates” pretend our problem is Russian imperialism in eastern Europe.

The renewable transition will not happen within the next two decades; it is too expensive and too impractical.

We have politicians in charge of the Treasury benches who simply do not understand the practical madness of their ideological goals.

We are an energy-rich nation. Our globally significant coal, gas and uranium resources constitute our greatest natural economic advantage and make us the envy of most other countries.

Yet we have decided to surrender our advantage. We have chosen to make the ultimate sacrifice, embracing energy poverty to prove our virtue, while exporting our energy resources for others to enjoy.

What sort of a country would indulge in this self-harm? It only can be one that has forgotten the necessity of rational thought and has wallowed in so much good fortune that it has forgotten the need for hard work and vigilance.

I have been watching this unfold and writing about the delusion for a decade or more. It is like watching a friend ignore kind-hearted interventions year after year as they destroy their life with drugs and indolence.

Even now, when we are face-to-face with damaging electricity price increases and actual short­ages of supply, the zealots declare that the answer to our woes is to double down on the renewables that have created this fiasco.

Since their socialist economic ideals proved unworkable (remember Kevin Rudd’s call for social democrats to “save capitalism from itself”?), they pour all their zeal into an energy transformation to deliver on the modest little goal of saving the planet.

They seem not to comprehend that affordable, reliable energy was central to both the capitalist and socialist models – only the capitalists were better at providing it. Now energy has fallen victim to ideological posturing.

All this is compounded in a country and an age where no fact, no knowledge is considered relevant if it predates Twitter. Instead of taking our best guide from what we know happened in the past, we think we know better.

The fact higher floods, longer droughts and deadlier fires have tested us in the past is deliberately unremembered to support a catastrophist version of the present. And investors in sure-fire, government-guaranteed renewables do not stop to consider the fundamentals of our economy.

Even esteemed climate campaigner and former Hawke government adviser Ross Garnaut seems to have forgotten his own crucial findings from his seminal 1989 work on how our economy should benefit from integration with northeast Asia.

Back then, Garnaut noted our energy advantage – “greater abundance and a lower cost” – and wrote about emissions and air pollution from energy generation and resource refinement was easier to manage on our sparsely populated continent because they are “difficult to manage well in densely populated” environments.

What were advantages in 1989 were surrendered by 2009, which might be fine if the world were cutting emissions. But, as we all know, our costly efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are environmentally impotent because global emissions continue to grow.

To mention any of these realities in the current environment is to invite smears of “climate denialism” as teal so-called independent Zali Steggall threw my way last week. This goes to the schism in our society; where Steggall poses on climate in a wealthy electorate where people tend not to feel electricity-bill pain or surrender land to wind and solar farms.

Meanwhile, mainstream families weigh kitchen-table financial choices between food, clothes and power bills. Steggall and her ilk push policies that put power prices up from electorates where people spend more each year on hair styling than working families have to find savings for their power bills.

Somehow Labor, the Greens and the teals have ended up on the side of hairdressing and Teslas rather than working families.

This is the political opportunity and national calling of the Coalition, to support sense over sanctimony, mainstream families over woke elites, and practical policies over virtue signalling.

Peter Dutton started to part the waters on this debate on Thursday night, arguing we need to consider nuclear energy as the reliable, affordable and emissions-free panacea. This is an argument worth having and a reform worth delivering.

In Britain and France, the Ukraine crunch has prompted decisions to expand already significant nuclear programs. In Germany, nuclear plants slated for retirement had their lives extended.

Dutton will have his work cut out, though, because this is an area where the postmodern aversion to facts is palpable. Too often it is feelings and ideology that matter most, not reality.

On Thursday morning, for instance, with normal media talking to families and businesses suffering from skyrocketing power prices, the ABC’s Radio National Breakfast chose to interview Mike Cannon-Brookes, the climate activist billionaire who has bought a huge chunk of AGL to prosecute his renewable energy goals while collecting profits from energy price rises.

Despite Cannon-Brookes’s obvious interests, the interviewer, Patricia Karvelas, was not antagonistic, probing or even sceptical.

Cannon-Brookes declared our electricity price rises could be blamed on the Ukraine invasion alone and claimed the Australian states with the highest renewables penetration had the lowest power prices.

Anyone who has the slightest idea about the nation’s energy market would have known instantly what tosh this was, but it was not challenged on the ABC.

For the record, the states with the highest renewables penetration are Tasmania and South Australia – streets ahead of the others. And the states with the highest electricity prices are, wait for it, Tasmania and South Australia – streets ahead of the rest.

But this is the media sidebar that may explain the bigger issue. So long as our debate is as fact-free and politically driven as it is, how can we ever manage an issue as complicated and important as reshaping our electricity grid?
The Australian

This pair is determined to wreck what’s left of our power supply.

About stopthesethings

We are a group of citizens concerned about the rapid spread of industrial wind power generation installations across Australia.

Comments

  1. 120 b.p.m. says:

    Hmm… So Gina Rinehart withdraws her $15,000,000 sponsorship deal from netball Australia, due to virtue signalling players refusing to wear her logo.

    So where were the renewable energy Carpetbaggers with their millions? Why didn’t they step up to the plate? Even if Dan Andrews has seen a political opportunity to buy votes in the coming Victorian election, why was it left to a state premier to step in to support the national netball team? Is all not well in the so-called green economy? Or are they so greedy that these faceless individuals just can’t wait to get their rent seeking millions offshore and out of the country quick pronto!

    At least Gina Rinehart is willing to put her face to her millions.

  2. Well said Chris kenny. Every time labour gets in they rip the guts out of regional Australia. The inner city labour ministers are more worried about stopping their own electorate voters voting green than doing what’s best for us in regional areas. Usually they are given regional type portfolios so they stay out of city limelight just in case they get the numbers to take over. As for the renewable projects they destroy what’s left of our roads hightail it back to their city’s for the weekend and then blame the weather for them not making the energy they said they would.

  3. The Libs lost me with their push for renewables. Yes, they were going to push for the unreliables utopia at a slower pace than Labor but they were still going down this wayward path. That was it for me. They lost my vote and the vote of quite a few people I talk to.
    If they still want to go down this path and have any credibility and the possibility of regaining a few of their past voters they will have to push for nuclear. I mean push for nuclear, not just say that we should have a discussion about it.
    The reason is obvious, or it should be. Nuclear is the only CO2 free, reliable, 24/7 power source available with our current technology. This is the argument they should be putting forward.
    If they don’t push for nuclear the Libs are stuffed!

  4. The Renewable Acquisition Target Schemes (RATS) are the same players in the world energy scheme stage as those involved in Enron. As the curtain fell on that performance they went to Act 2 and Mr. Portfolio is the director yet again working diligently in what he and Mr. Perfect Pronoun does and always does to capture your attention and energy so future performances are well funded so in case there’s another shortage of lumber that is needed to prop up these movie sets they are prepared. Some of the problems with this script though is the use of the term “weaning off fossil fuels” as if robust energy is a baby that is rather attached to mother’s milk. That is used as little con game of it’s own in the play on words that then presents the background set of wind and solar props as the destination. Any one that follows this yellow brick road can see as long as they are not wearing green colored glasses that the props are an illusion used in story telling to create illusions. These illusionists and those who believe the story as being real continue to believe that the robust energy is a pathetic “reliance on fossil fuels”. Note the word fossil which creates the scene of ancient dinosaurs and again how the “destination” that is portrayed is actually a movie set in the background that shows a grand utopia of spinning propellers touching the heavens with blue skies and fresh white puffy clouds and black heat panels with outstretched arms staring directly into the sun like the hippie who’s retinas were burned as it was high on drugs.

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