Vote Conservative for an End to the Wind Scam!!!

A PC government will not allow connection of Gilead and wpd wind projects to the grid

For release April 30, 2014

MPP Todd Smith confirms that a PC government will not allow connection of proposed County wind projects to the grid

Prince Edward County, ON — Responding to a request for clarification by CCSAGE Naturally Green regarding the PC Party’s position on wind projects currently “in the pipeline”, local MPP Todd Smith has confirmed by letter that, under a PC government, such projects will not be allowed to proceed if there is no municipal consent.

Smith referred to the text of Bill 42, the Affordable Energy and Restoration of Local Decision Making Act, introduced by Tim Hudak in the Ontario Legislature in 2012. Smith said, “The intention here is quite clear that, regardless of where in the process a project is, provided a project is not connected to the grid, it is our intention not to go ahead with it unless it has municipal consent. Clearly, the projects planned for Prince Edward County do not have municipal consent and thus, would be cancelled.”

Smith reconfirmed the PC Party’s position after consultation with Tim Hudak, and taking account of County Council’s “not a willing host” motion passed on April 23, 2013.

Following receipt of Smith’s letter, Gary Mooney of CCSAGE said, “From the day that he was elected, Todd has been 100% supportive of the several County groups opposing wind turbines on grounds of adverse effects on human health, the natural environment, heritage, property values, the local economy and municipal control. We couldn’t ask more from our MPP.”

Smith’s statement covers both Gilead Power’s 9-turbine Ostrander Point project, already given REA approval but still under appeal, and wpd Canada’s 29-turbine White Pines project, currently undergoing technical review by the Ministry of the Environment.

Informed of the contents of Smith’s letter, Mayor Peter Mertens had this to say, “We are greatly indebted to Todd for his close attention to the concerns of County residents and business owners, and for his support of the position of County Council.”

STOP SUBSIDIZING USELESS, INEFFICIENT WIND!

Perverse Renewables Policy turns Wind Power into Super-Predator

great white shark

The RET turned me into an occasional Super-Predator.

On the rare occasions when wind power is able to deliver meaningful output to the grid – usually at night-time – generators are more than happy for the dispatch price (the price paid by the grid operator to generators) to hit zero – and have even paid the grid operator to take their output, on occasions.

In Australia, that perverse market outcome is a product of the mandatory Renewal Energy Target – which forces retailers to take wind power output ahead of every other generation source (failure to take wind power and Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) that go with it, leaves the retailer liable to pay a fine (the “shortfall charge”) of $65 for each MW/h the retailer falls short of the mandated target; the REC that is issued to wind power generators for each MW of wind power dispatched (currently worth around $28); and the Power Purchase Agreements wind power generators hold with retailers, containing fixed and guaranteed guarantee minimum prices of between $90-120 per MW/h (3-4 times the cost of conventional power).

As a result of the above, when they’re delivering to the grid, wind power generators are happy to watch the dispatch price plummet, punishing base-load generators, while having no impact on their own returns.

Some might call it “predatory pricing” – Travis Fisher an American economist with the Institute for Energy Research certainly does.

Here’s a very detailed analysis of the US energy market by Travis in which he demonstrates just how perverse renewable energy policy is.

What Travis says about predatory pricing by wind power generators in the US has direct relevance to what’s happening in the Australian energy market. In the piece below just substitute the “Clean Energy Council” for the “American Wind Energy Association (AWEA)”; and substitute “Renewable Energy Target (RET) and Renewable Energy Certificate (REC)” for “Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) and Production Tax Credit (PTC)”.

AWEA’s Bold Push for More Wind Welfare Wind
Institute for Energy Research
Travis Fisher
23 April 23

The American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) is making an all-out effort to convince Congress to renew the wind production tax credit (PTC), the wind industry’s lucrative subsidy that expired at the end of 2013. AWEA is desperate to revive the PTC and, unfortunately, its most recent lobbying push relies heavily on misinformation and half-truths in order to divert attention away from the PTC’s many critics.

To set the record straight, this article addresses some of AWEA’s flawed arguments and glaring omissions. The PTC, while incredibly valuable to owners of wind power facilities, hurts U.S. taxpayers and undermines the economic efficiency and physical reliability of the U.S. power grid.

Background

AWEA is a well-funded and well-organized industry association with 40 years of experience influencing public policy and an annual budget of more than $30 million. Perhaps due to AWEA’s skilled lobbying efforts, four different administrations and countless lawmakers have sided with AWEA and provided the wind industry a direct hand-out from American taxpayers.

Initially signed into law by George H. W. Bush as part of the Energy Policy Act of 1992, the PTC has expired and been renewed multiple times. Each renewal lasted only a short period, designed to extend the industry’s coveted subsidy for just one or two more years. Most recently, the PTC was extended through the 2013 calendar year as part of the “fiscal cliff” legislation passed in early 2013. A PTC extension for 2014 recently passed the Senate Finance Committee after being added to a tax extenders package by one of the wind industry’s most enthusiastic supporters, Senator Chuck Grassley. The Joint Committee on Taxation projects that a one-year extension of the PTC will cost American taxpayers over $6 billion.

The Institute for Energy Research (IER) has consistently argued against the PTC and highlighted its negative effects, which range from threatening grid reliability to redistributing federal tax dollars to a minority of U.S. states.

AWEA and Exelon Spar Over the PTC

As part of AWEA’s push to renew the PTC, it recently published a 28-page report that attempted to show that the PTC does not distort electricity markets and does not harm nuclear plant owner-operators. The policy report comes as a direct response to Exelon Corporation, the owner of the largest fleet of nuclear plants in the U.S. The issue at the center of the policy debate is “negative pricing.”

What is Negative Pricing?

Unlike the stable and predictable price of electricity at the retail level, market prices for wholesale electricity can fluctuate widely throughout the day – usually referred to as on-peak and off-peak prices – and across seasons. For example, wholesale prices tend to range between $30 and $50 per megawatt-hour but can drop into the negative or spike well above $500 per megawatt-hour. When the price becomes negative, electric generators are actually paying the grid to take their electricity. Several factors influence wholesale prices, namely supply, demand, and transmission constraints. Fundamentally, negative wholesale prices send a distress signal to markets that the supply and demand balance on the grid is economically unsustainable and suppliers need to reduce their output.

Why do sellers not drop out of the market when negative pricing occurs? As the Energy Information Administration (EIA) notes, “negative prices generally occur more often in markets with large amounts of nuclear, hydro, and/or wind generation.” That is because each of these technologies has an incentive to continue operating even when its facilities are temporarily paying the grid to take their power.

Nuclear plants are designed to run at full output and not “ramp” up and down, making them very reliable but inflexible. In times of very low demand, nuclear plants will sometimes take negative prices rather than go through the long and expensive process of lowering their output. Similarly, hydroelectric plants sometimes take negative prices in power markets because they are forced to run in order to comply with environmental requirements that force them to release water, regardless of whether the electricity is needed.

Unlike nuclear or hydro producers, the wind industry actually profits from negative prices because the PTC is such a large subsidy. Wind producers receive PTC payments per unit of power produced (even when the power has no value whatsoever to the grid), so they flood the grid with uneconomic power and ignore the distress signal sent by negative prices. Specifically, wind producers are paid the equivalent of $35 per megawatt-hour in PTC subsidies, so a wind producer taking the PTC can still profit while paying the grid to take its electricity.

Wind’s inflexibility in the face of negative prices is therefore a policy problem with a policy solution (let the PTC expire), not a matter of physics or environmental restrictions.

The threat to baseload generation from negative prices is very real. Already, Dominion closed its Kewaunee Nuclear Plant in Wisconsin 20 years ahead of schedule and Entergy plans to retire its Vermont Yankee Nuclear Plant at the end of this year. Both companies cited economic considerations as the reason for closing the plants. While it is true that low-cost natural gas is partially responsible, it is also clear that artificially low prices caused by the PTC during off-peak hours played a role. In fact, the Department of Energy’s assistant secretary for nuclear energy referred to this emerging pattern of nuclear plants shutting down early as “a trend we are clearly very, very concerned about.”

Exelon’s Argument

Exelon argues that the PTC wreaks havoc on baseload or “around-the-clock” generation such as nuclear power by encouraging negative prices in wholesale electricity markets. In contrast to baseload units, electricity production from wind peaks at night and in the early morning when electricity demand is low, which contributes to a situation of over-supply. A 2012 study commissioned by Exelon maintains that PTC-related negative prices harm baseload power and grid reliability because they “directly conflict with the performance and operational needs of the electric system.” Essentially, if the PTC is extended, it will induce more negative pricing events during off-peak hours, and make more baseload units uneconomic. In other words, the PTC perpetuates a system of predatory negative prices that attack reliable (and far less subsidized) baseload producers.

The power grid reliability implications are straightforward. The PTC is making reliable generation uneconomic, while subsidizing unreliable wind power. Without reliable generation up and running, many regions will struggle to meet seasonal peak demand in winter or summer. For most of the country, the highest peaks occur in the summer months. The following chart from a study on the intermittency of wind power illustrates just how little wind contributes to those summer peaks (click on the graph for a clearer view).

ERCOT-Wind-Power

On these arguments against the PTC, IER is not alone – energy experts across the board agree with Exelon. The Congressional Research Service (CRS) acknowledged the problem of negative pricing, noting in 2012 that “[n]egative power prices associated with wind power might generally occur at night when wind is producing at high levels. Large amounts of wind power generation can potentially contribute to transmission congestion and result in negatively priced wholesale power in certain locations.” The EIA also specifically lists the PTC as a cause of negative prices.

The same CRS report from 2012 outlined the reliability issues associated with wind, predicting that “should wind power continue to experience growth, it is uncertain whether current [regional transmission organization] market designs would function to ensure availability of the types of generation that would be necessary to both maintain resource adequacy and manage the variable and intermittent nature of wind power.”

Last December, the New York Times published an article about how wind and nuclear power “are trying to kill each other off” and noted the “cannibal behavior” of wind in power markets.

Focusing on Texas, which is the U.S. market hit hardest by wind power, Public Utility Commission Chairman Donna Nelson testified in 2012 that “[t]he market distortions caused by renewable energy incentives are one of the primary causes I believe of our current resource adequacy issue … [T]his distortion makes it difficult for other generation types to recover their cost and discourages investment in new generation.” And as the non-partisan Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote in May of 2013, “[a] growing number of analytical reports … point to the negative impact of renewable energy mandates and subsidies (direct and indirect) on the competitiveness of nuclear power.”

In fact, some environmentalists are troubled by wind power’s parasitic effect on nuclear power. James Hansen’s observation relating to a similar policy – renewable portfolio standards – actually underscores Exelon’s argument regarding the PTC:

The asymmetry finally hit me over the head when a renewable energy advocate told me that the main purpose of renewable portfolio standards (RPS) was to “kill nuclear”. I had naively thought that the purpose was simply to kick-start renewables. Instead, I was told, because utilities were required to accept intermittent renewable energies, nuclear power would become less economic, because it works best if it runs flat out.

In short, the predatory pricing enabled by the PTC is real, it is harmful to reliable generation, and it hits nuclear generation the hardest. AWEA cannot shrug off the harmful effects of the PTC or pretend they do not exist. As an Exelon executive said recently, “[w]e can work with AWEA on a clean energy future but we can’t deny the truth.”

AWEA’s Fuzzy Math

AWEA’s policy report, titled “The facts about wind energy’s impacts on electricity markets: Cutting through Exelon’s claims about ‘negative prices’ and ‘market distortion,’” attempts to turn the negative pricing arguments on their head by narrowly focusing on the wind industry’s side of the story. Specifically, AWEA flatly misrepresents the effect of the PTC on wholesale markets by omitting important information and making bogus comparisons.

AWEA claims the impact of wind on wholesale markets is “entirely market-driven” and “widely seen as beneficial.” The first claim is patently false and the second is very misleading.

No one at AWEA can claim with a straight face that the growth in the wind industry is “entirely market-driven.” AWEA spends millions of dollars a year lobbying for renewable energy mandates in the states and for the PTC and other support at the federal level. If wind were truly “market-driven,” there would be no need for AWEA’s massive lobbying effort for mandates and subsidies. The mandates and subsidies AWEA supports are the exact opposite of “market-driven.”

AWEA knows better than any other organization just how much government support the wind industry receives – support that simply does not exist for baseload generation and should not exist for any power generation source whatsoever. Because of AWEA’s lobbying efforts to mandate the use of their product, 29 states and the District of Columbia mandate certain levels of renewable energy generation (these laws are commonly called Renewable Portfolio Standards or RPSs). Because the vast majority of the power being used to satisfy these requirements comes from wind plants, the wind industry currently enjoys a government-mandated market share. This alone is enough to discredit AWEA’s comment about Exelon obscuring the “real story of wind energy successfully competing against more expensive forms of energy in the market.” AWEA knows the wind industry is winning on government support, not the free market.

State-level mandates aside, AWEA attempts to downplay the role of the PTC specifically in undermining baseload generation. It is vitally important to realize that negative prices are not the only indicator of market distortion. AWEA draws a false dichotomy in its report between the “real economic savings” from wind and the “exceedingly rare” negative prices that cause market distortions. Here, AWEA downplays the possibility that market distortion can exist without negative prices. But just as the PTC subsidy causes negative prices at the extreme, it regularly causes artificially low power prices in off-peak hours that can be just as damaging to baseload generation.

AWEA then makes the stretch that, because the negative pricing problem was less rampant in 2013 than it was in 2012, market distortions from the PTC no longer exist or are “extremely rare.” This argument is fatally flawed as demonstrated by the following analogy. Consider if a thief said, “I didn’t do anything wrong in 2013. I only stole half as often as I did in 2012.” Such a statement would be silly because theft is theft. The same is true of harmful market distortions.

Just because there were fewer hours in 2013 with negative prices, it does not follow that the PTC is any less of a problem. Even in a world where prices were never to fall below zero, market distortion caused by the PTC could still render baseload units uneconomic. For example, reliable power plants would still close if prices were consistently at or very near zero. As discussed above, this is what we are seeing in practice, AWEA’s distractions notwithstanding.

Also, the 2012 data are so bad that 2013 was bound to be a less damaging year – in fact, one of Exelon’s plants took negative prices for 8.3 percent of all hours in 2012. The fact that this statistic fell to 4.3 percent in 2013 is little consolation. Essentially, we can debate the extent to which the PTC continues to cause negative prices, but to recast the PTC as incapable of distorting power markets is disingenuous on AWEA’s part.

Finally and perhaps most disturbingly, AWEA’s report fails to capture any long-term effects of the PTC. For example, in several places the AWEA report talks about wind power “replacing the most expensive and polluting sources of energy.” In practice, wind cannot do this because wind is unreliable. Wind cannot replace the most expensive source of electricity generation because those generation sources only run at peak times. The wind does not blow when AWEA wants it to and millions of dollars spent on lobbying cannot change that simple fact of the physical world.

Furthermore, as James Hansen and others have observed, heavily subsidized wind power is actually displacing zero-emission nuclear power rather than the “most polluting” sources AWEA references. If the goal of the PTC was to wipe out America’s nuclear fleet, then it is succeeding. But if the goal was to support zero-emission generation, then it has backfired miserably. The PTC has wasted billions of taxpayer dollars to replace nuclear, a clean technology that works, with one that only sounds good and is fundamentally unreliable.

Conclusion

The wind production tax credit distorts power markets by allowing wind producers to profit from artificially low prices. Such market distortion undermines the reliability of America’s power grid in the long run by forcing reliable baseload power plants to close -including nuclear plants, which in turn defeats any environmental purpose for keeping the PTC.

AWEA’s recent study is a desperate attempt to obscure the very real and worrisome long-term effects of the PTC by relying on misleading data. The PTC has rightly received scrutiny from energy experts across the political spectrum, and it deserves a more comprehensive analysis than AWEA provides in its report.
IER Economist Travis Fisher authored this post.
Institute for Energy Research

The only significant difference between the Australian energy market and that detailed above, is that Australia doesn’t have any nuclear power generation at all.

Instead, it’s base-load gas generators who are being pounded by wind power generators’ ability to periodically crash the dispatch price.

By base-load gas generators, we’re referring to either gas/thermal plants (where gas is used to fire boilers, create steam and run turbines) or highly efficient Combined Cycle Gas Turbines.

One early casualty was Stanwell (Queensland’s largest power generator) – which back in February took the extraordinary step of announcing it would mothball its biggest gas-fired power station – the Swanbank E power station, near Ipswich – a highly efficient Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) plant – and resurrect a coal facility built in the 1980s. Stanwell put its inability to operate its gas-fired plant squarely down to the market distortions created by the mandatory RET (see our post here).

What’s doubly perverse is that generating power using CCGTs produces about 50% less CO2 emissions than coal/thermal. Instead of CCGTs, generators have invested $millions in Open Cycle Gas Turbines (OCGTs) that emit 3-4 times the CO2 per unit of electricity – when compared to a modern coal-fired thermal plant and cost a small fortune to run (between $200-300 per MW/h, compared to $25 for coal/thermal). So much for a policy designed to “save the planet”.

Because wind power can only be ever delivered at crazy, random intervals – 100% of its capacity has to backed up 100% of the time with spinning reserve and inefficient OCGTs – which can be deployed in a heartbeat to keep the grid balanced — and the lights on – whenever wind power output varies or disappears altogether (see our post here).

Wind power generators’ ability to game and distort the dispatch price by operation of the mandatory RET (and the matters outlined above) is about to come under the microscope of the RET review panel.

The top-flight energy market consultancy, ACIL Allen has been directed by the panel to focus on the cost impacts of renewable energy in the electricity sector. And that means the whole electricity market – and the long-run impact the RET will have on power prices, including the impact of periodic predatory pricing by wind power generators knocking out highly efficient base-load gas generators – like Stanwell’s Ipswich plant.

Given the make-up of the panel – and the terms of its brief – we doubt that ACIL Allen will pull any punches.

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Now – have I got your attention?

Liberals are a Detriment to Our Province! Election Needed NOW!

 

Gas Plant scandal is just one of the many more scandals ongoing with the Liberals!!!!

by thebiggreenlie

Everyone seems to have their “panties in a knot” over the gas plant scandal in Ontario but there are many more recent muck ups unfolding right now within Queen’s Park that involves the Western portion of our once great Province!

Wynne in tandem with Horwath has basically ruined this Province with one bad decision over another and it will be decades before we can fix this mess IF these tow failed leaders are thrown out of the Pink Building once and for all.

Without a house cleaning like no other in modern history Ontarians should all start to think about moving to another Province for a new start before there isn’t anything left to hang on to except a bleak broken and overpriced future!

Time for Wynne to go and take all her herd of gerbils with her along with the NDP who have clung to Wynne’s pant legs like thirsty pups and give us all a break!

Jarvis: We need a conscious uncoupling

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks to The Empire Club of Canada in Toronto on Monday, April 28, 2014. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks to The Empire Club of Canada in Toronto on Monday, April 28, 2014. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press

Anne Jarvis
Apr 29, 2014 – 6:30 PM EDT

The government is a shambles. It’s time for the NDP to stop propping it up. Andrea Horwath should pull the plug.

Consider the news this week (and it’s still early). The government admitted that it – specifically Premier Kathleen Wynne, when she was Transportation minister – “negotiated away” its oversight over the $1.4-billion Herb Gray Parkway, the biggest infrastructure project in the province. It bungled a major plan to modernize gambling, astray in its projections by a total of almost $5 billion and hundreds of jobs, according to a damning report by the auditor general. While the government touts a new, $2.5-billion fund to attract business, the skyrocketing cost of electricity is “breaking” already battered manufacturers. And the deficit, which the government said it would eliminate by 2017-18, is expected to rise with a free-spending budget designed in part to woo the NDP and be an attractive platform for an election.

Among the revelations in the reports and emails obtained by the NDP under a Freedom of Information request and reported by The Windsor Star’s Dave Battagello, Ontario’s Transportation Ministry “consistently notes” that the contract for the parkway, awarded by Wynne when she was transportation minister, “does not allow the MTO to exercise its role and responsibilities as the legislated road authority and puts the provincial interest (the public) at risk.”

The agreement provided no way for the ministry to intervene to ensure standards were met, no authority to change or stop construction if there was a serious problem and no penalties.

“…there was nothing that MTO could do on its own to force compliance with Canadian standards.”

Current Transportation Minister Glen Murray wrote in an email to the CEO of Infrastructure Ontario last June, “We may have compromised our ability to enforce the law by negotiating our authority away.”

And we all know what happened with the parkway: hundreds of potentially faulty girders were installed and later had to be ripped out.

The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation’s plan to modernize gambling two years ago, approved by the cabinet that included Wynne, was supposed to create jobs. Instead, according to Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk, it will likely cost jobs. Profit that would go to the government to pay down the deficit was supposed to increase by $4.6 billion over five years; now, the projection is less than $2 billion. The plan was supposed to draw $3.2 billion in investment; now the projection is less than $1 billion.

In short, the government didn’t do its homework. It banked on as many as a dozen new casinos, but five municipalities either voted against them or changed them significantly. It abruptly cancelled the sharing of slot machine revenue with horse racing and then had to spend half a billion dollars helping the industry’s transition. Meanwhile, the OLG has had five board chairs and seven CEOs in nine years.

The government on Monday announced its $2.5-billion Jobs and Prosperity Fund to attract investment and help existing businesses expand. The same day, Gary Goodyear, the Minister of State responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario, told a conference at the University of Windsor that skyrocketing electricity costs are “breaking” manufacturers.

READ MORE HERE:

World-wide retreat from unreliable, unaffordable, renewables….

Cash cut for solar farms that blight countryside: Energy minister set to announce review of subsidies

  • Solar power industry costs the taxpayer an estimated £600 million a year
  • Large landowners can claim up to £50,000 a year for hosting a solar farm
  • Conservative party will veto any new on-shore wind farms if returned in 2015

By BEN SPENCER

Huge solar farms which blight the countryside are to have their funding slashed by the Government, the Daily Mail has learned.

In a further sign of the Conservative shift from away from green politics, sources confirmed that Tory Energy Minister Greg Barker will announce a review of solar industry subsidies in the coming weeks.

The current system of subsidies mean large landowners can scoop up to £50,000 a year from a solar farm, a large chunk of which is paid for through household bills.

Solar industry subsidies cost the British taxpayer £600 million a year, which will increase by a further £125 million if the new projects are completed

Solar industry subsidies cost the British taxpayer £600 million a year, which will increase by a further £125 million if the new projects are completed

 Overall the solar industry costs Britain £600million in subsidies a year, a bill that will rise by £125million if planned projects are completed.

Mr Barker wants to take support payments away from the unpopular large solar farms, the majority of which are built on farmland in southern England.

Instead, he wants to increase financial backing for solar panels on the roofs of supermarkets, schools and businesses, where they do not create a visual blight.

Mr Barker’s intervention comes a week after the Tories announced they will make a stand against onshore wind turbines at the next election.

The Conservative Party pledged not to subsidise any new onshore wind farms if they win in 2015, to the delight of their grassroots supporters.

The new announcement will be equally welcomed by constituency parties, particularly in rural areas where solar farms have been built in increasing numbers.

The Conservative Party has vowed not to grant permission to any new on-shore wind turbines and slash subsidies for solar farms if returned in 2015

The Conservative Party has vowed not to grant permission to any new on-shore wind turbines and slash subsidies for solar farms if returned in 2015

It will be of particular note in the South West – one of the sunniest part of the country and the biggest target for the solar industry – where the main competition for Conservative candidates are pro-renewable energy Liberal Democrats.

There has been huge expansion in the number of large solar projects over last two years. In 2012 there were 46 large-scale farms in Britain.

By the end of February this year the figure had leaped to 184 projects.

An additional 194 projects have planning permission and are awaiting construction.

The Energy Minister pledged earlier this month that he would not allow ‘unrestricted growth of solar farms in the British countryside’.

Launching the Government’s Solar Strategy, he said he wanted to turn Government offices, factories, supermarkets and car parks into ‘solar hubs’.

And he said he did not want to see solar panels become as unpopular as onshore wind.

‘We have put ourselves among the world leaders on solar and this ambitious strategy will place us right at the cutting edge,’ he said.

‘There is massive potential to turn our large buildings into power stations and we must seize the opportunity this offers to boost our economy as part of our long term economic plan.

‘Solar not only benefits the environment, it will see British job creation and deliver the clean and reliable energy supplies that the country needs at the lowest possible cost to consumers.’

However, the British weather is not always best suited for harnessing the power of the sun

However, the British weather is not always best suited for harnessing the power of the sun

A Whitehall source told the Daily Mail the announcement would be made in the coming weeks: ‘The Solar Strategy set the direction of travel. We are looking at how we follow that up with action.

‘We are keen to boost building-mounted solar, where there is real potential. There are real opportunities there.

‘Solar can continue to be an important part of the energy mix. We are looking at financial and non-financial barriers to this.’

Mr Barker is keen that businesses follow the example of Jaguar Land Rover, which this month installed Brain’s largest rooftop solar panel array at its plant in Staffordshire.

It installed 21,000 photovoltaic panels which will generate more than 30 per cent of factory’s energy requirements.

Britain needs to triple its renewable energy output in the next six years if it is to meet its legally-binding renewable energy targets, to produce 15 per cent of total energy by 2020.

With an increase in onshore wind ruled out by the Conservative leadership, and offshore wind and nuclear sources remaining expensive, rooftop solar arrays are one of the few politically acceptable routes for Government to take.

John Constable, of the Renewable Energy Foundation which campaigns against subsidised green energy, said: ‘This is the classic case of an overheated market getting out of control. It’s quite clear that unless the Government reigns in spending the cap they have set will be broken.

‘This is an industry that should never have been subsidised in the first place.

‘Greg Barker is now trying to get it under control, but the Government should have done this much earlier when they came into power in 2010.

‘This is a hangover from Ed Miliband’s time in control of energy and they are only now getting to grips with it.’

A spokesman for the Department of Energy and Climate Change said: ‘We’re very clear that Government support for any renewable technology has to deliver the best value for money to consumers. As technologies mature and costs of generation come down, those savings have to be passed on to bill payers.

‘We will consult on any changes to current levels of support, but our ultimate goal is for renewable generation to be competitive with other forms of electricity generation.’

Paul Barwell, chief executive at the Solar Trade Association, said: ‘We are disappointed that DECC is launching another review on the solar industry.

‘Investor confidence and market stability is absolutely essential in order to deliver sustained cost reductions for consumers and a healthy solar industry for UK plc.

‘We are obviously on tenterhooks to see what changes DECC is proposing to make.

‘We are also concerned that any excessively hasty push for cheap solar will come at the cost of achieving quality in the solar farm industry, which is essential to retain public support.’

The Ugly Truth about Industrial Wind in Rural Communities!

Boone County: Wind turbines affect lifestyles of rural residents

In bringing wind turbines to Boone County, some are essentially trying to disguise heavy industry as farming. Some have even had the audacity to call their decision to financially benefit from the wind turbines as “freedom to farm.” It would appear, in fact, that they are looking for freedom to have industry.

This letter is intended to share some of the thoughts of a fourth-generation Boone County farmer in regards to the intention of the County to allow, and some neighbors to promote, wind turbines to be built,  Northern Boone County.

It is important to recognize that the residents of this rural area have chosen to live in this rural area – to make their livings and to enjoy their lives – because of the residential and agricultural zoning that allows them separation from densely populated and designated industrial areas. The reason that designated industrial areas exist is to protect residential and agricultural areas from the byproducts associated with heavy industry, such as excessive sound, light, stray voltage, heavy traffic, and so on.

In bringing wind turbines to Boone County, some are essentially trying to disguise heavy industry as farming. Some have even had the audacity to call their decision to financially benefit from the wind turbines as “freedom to farm.” It would appear, in fact, that they are looking for freedom to have industry.

It seems to be not too far of a stretch to say that, if we have industrial turbines, why can’t we bring in some other industry? Maybe a big factory, like Motorola*, where they could make some electronics? If we call it an electronics farm, probably some industrious individuals could then say that qualified also as freedom to farm.

Someone else said, in the newspaper, “this could be Northern Boone County’s Chrysler.” Could it be that Northern Boone County does not need, nor does it want, a Chrysler? Aside from the logistical and financial untruths of this statement, the residents living in Northern Boone County have chosen to live in this rural environment because they enjoy the lifestyle offered here. If they wanted to live in the shadow of such a mecca of industry, they would live there.

So why, then, have some farmers agreed to the preposterous contract allowing wind turbines onto their property? One sentiment that could explain some of these behaviors is this: at a meeting last fall, someone said to the County Board “if you don’t give us these wind turbines, what are you going to do for us?” It seems to me that as a farmer, you are responsible for making a living by farming, not looking to the county to help you find a way to find subsidies, not demanding that the county allow you to benefit at the detriment of the health, financial well-being, and general lifestyles of your neighbors.

Last week, I drove to Spring Valley for some unrelated business which took me right past hundreds of windmills. It was interesting that on a nice, clear, breezy day, no wind turbines were turning, not one. I liken the wind turbines directly to Motorola, the story of the huge factory in Harvard being known only too well in this area, because of the similarity between the exciting promises made in building them, and the disappointing reality of both scenarios. I sadly wonder how much money was being made for those “farmers” from that day’s harvest,” just as I cringe at the supposed prosperity offered by the Motorola company for the communities in McHenry County.

It is my hope that members of the County Board will carefully consider the facts in making their decisions regarding the proposed zoning amendment and not be swayed by the unlikely promises or desperate pleas offered by wind turbine advocates.

Randy Williams


Source: http://rockrivertimes.com/2…

APR222014

Thank you Donna Quixote….
Posted in: NewsPosted: April 29, 2014

Freak Collision With A Wind Turbine Brings Down A Plane Killing 4 In South Dakota

Single Engine Plane Crash In South Dakota

South Dakota surely is abounding with mishaps. After a blizzard wiped out nearly 100,000 cows, a freak accident brought down a plane with 3 on–board passengers.

All 3 passengers, including a person on the ground, died instantly when the plane crashed in South Dakota. The plane is suspected to have collided with a wind turbine at a wind–farm. Debris lay near a wind turbine to the west of South Dakota Highway 47. One of the wind turbines had its blade broken off.

The plane was identified as a single-engine Piper 32, and was traveling from Hereford, Texas, to Gettysburg, South Dakota. The single-engine plane was registered to Donald J. “D.J.” Fischer of Gettysburg, according to the FAA. Though the local authorities haven’t officially released any data, among the deceased was the owner, Fischer, a 30–year, who was believed to be flying the plane himself. Local officials confirmed the identities of 2 other victims: cattlemen Logan Rau and Brent Beitelspacher, who were on the plane. The name of the fourth victim hasn’t been released, though reports indicate his name was Nick Reimann. Beitelspacher and Rau are well-known in the cattle industry, and regularly visited such sales and fairs to trade livestock, reported ABC News

The plane arrived at the Hereford Municipal Airport Saturday and left the next evening, said Hereford City Manager Rick Hanna. Though it crashed in South Dakota, the plane was returning from a big–range cattle sale in Hereford, Texas. The plane broke contact and went missing overnight. The authorities found wreckage on Monday in the South Dakota Wind Energy Center. The wind farm in Hyde County has 27 turbines and only one had its blade broken off, indicating that the plane might have crashed directly into the turbine and then crashing into the ground, reported Amarillo Global News.

While The National Transportation Safety Board is leading the investigation along with the FAA, locals confirmed that the weather was exceptionally foggy and that visibility was poor. Liberal precipitation, combined with fog, might have caused the pilot to lose altitude and misjudge the distance to the ground. Further, owing to the height of the turbine and continual rotation of the blades could have made spotting it difficult. To further complicate the matter, weather reports indicated low–altitude clouds could have extremely complicated the task of maneuvering a single–engine light aircraft. Apparently the South Dakota skies are notorious for causing such mishaps.


Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/1230244/freak-collision-with-a-wind-turbine-brings-down-a-plane-killing-4-in-south-dakota/#dRymmhW3JHbl4IjT.99

Donald Trump faces new wind farm hell at Turnberry

Reposted from:

Donald Trump is set to buy Turnberry - but is a wind farm planned for nearby? Picture: Hemedia

Donald Trump is set to buy Turnberry – but is a wind farm planned for nearby? Picture: Hemedia

  • by ANDREW WHITAKER

A CONTROVERSIAL wind farm could be installed overlooking a luxury golf resort the flamboyant US tycoon Donald Trump is set to take over in a £35 million deal, it has been claimed.

 

The news comes after billionaire and arch wind power sceptic lost a high profile court battle against the Scottish Government’s approval of an offshore wind farm at his course at the Menie Estate in Aberdeenshire.

However, a government agency said an offshore turbine could be installed on land near the prestigious Turnberry course in South Ayrshire, where Trump is reported to be on the verge of making his latest acquisition.

Marine Scotland has identified a 116-square mile area for possible offshore wind development – off the Ayrshire coast just 3.5 miles from the shoreline at Turnberry as part of its policy of promoting renewable and green energy.

The Scottish government agency in a document called “Scoping study for Offshore Wind Farm Development in Scottish Waters” earmarked the land at Turnberry as possible land for future renewable energy development.

Trump, who currently owns 16 golf resorts around the globe, is understood to be close to buying the Turnberry course from owners Leisurecorp – a subsidiary of the Dubai government.

However, Trump, who is a longstanding opponent of wind farms, could pull out of the investment at Turnberry it was claimed by the head of Holyrood’s energy committee Murdo Fraser.

The billionaire has already called a halt to any future major investment at his Menie golf resort including the development of a luxury 140-bedroom hotel, due to the SNP government’s backing for the expansion of wind farms.

Nationalist ministers were accused of a “gung-ho approach” to renewables and of putting jobs and investment at risk with their plans to rely on wind farms for the bulk of Scotland’s energy needs.

Mr Fraser, a Tory MSP, warned that Trump would not pursue investment in Scotland and was almost certain to scrap any plans to buy Turnberry

He said: “Given Mr Trump’s aggressive opposition to the project off his Menie resort, it’s hard to imagine him pursuing this while the possibility of offshore wind remains.

“It’s another example of the Scottish Government’s gung-ho approach to turbines potentially costing jobs and investment.

“Even without Mr Trump’s interest, the idea of turbines looming over one of Scotland’s most famous landmarks is appalling.

“There is definitely a place for offshore wind, but it has to be in a place where it isn’t going to ruin the landscape.”

Trump previously accused Alex Salmond of being “hell bent on destroying Scotland’s coastline” with wind power in his longstanding battle with the SNP leader on the issue.

The businessman in a letter to Mr Salmond said: “Do you want to be known for centuries to come as ‘Mad Alex – the man who destroyed Scotland’?

Those Aussies are all set, to kick Wind to the Curb! Wonderful!

Alan Moran: Scrap the RET and let Australian business compete again

alan pic

Alan Moran: scrap the RET and save our industry.

Stop renewable subsidies to allow lower electricity prices and competitive industry
Catallaxy Files
Alan Moran
24 April 2014

The RET Review brought the usual howls of anguish from the rent seekers concerned that regulatory measures will cease and that they will need to sell their wind and solar products on the open market. That means they would need to persuade people to pay three times the price they are already paying.

Support for the rent seekers is coming strong from the usual green left anti-capitalists, including THEIR ABC.

This piece on the Drum explains the issues then goes full pelt in support of the continuation of the rort. It includes a clip by Sarah Ferguson who, along with her husband Tony Jones and the dozens of other far leftists, is a major shareholder in the tax financed propaganda agency. In the clip the ACCI’s Burchell Wilson stoutly defends the consumer’s right to avoid exploitation by the politically correct.

The RET scheme with the feed-in tariffs for roof-top solar already adds 7 per cent to the cost of electricity to households, a cost that will more than double on present policies. By 2020 the scheme, if unchanged, will add over 40 per cent to the wholesale cost of electricity and largely negate the benefits from the demise of the carbon tax (should that occur). It is little wonder that major energy intensive industries are departing Australia – our prices have risen to be among the highest in the world from among the lowest less than a decade ago.

The RET review does not have the usual clutch of green left or docile functionaries that have previously characterised such reviews. Led by a highly successful businessman, Dick Warburton, there is no likelihood of a repeat of the previous pattern of reviews that ramped up the scheme. In the past we had:

  • Howard announcing a scheme in 2001 which would subsidise an innocuous “two per cent of additional energy”; that was trebled to 9,500 GWh by a hand-picked team established to interpret this.
  • A proposal in 2003 by the hapless Grant Tambling for an increase to 20,000 GWh, which John Howard, having come to his senses, rejected.
  • And as a “compromise”, Rudd and Turnbull agreeing to the present 20 per cent of electricity to be provided by subsidised exotics, mainly wind, defined as 45,000 GWh by 2020.

The rent seekers know the game is up and there is no prospect of an economy-busting increase in their feed. They know they cannot even expect Gillard’s Climate Change Authority placepeople’s solution of retaining the scheme as is and are falling back on one that which would reduce it to comprise the currently expected 20 per cent of electricity.

The presently expected 20 per cent by 2020 shaves off at least a quarter of the existing RET’s 45,000 GWh because regulatory and tax boosts have caused energy demand to drop.

Alternative approaches would range from cancelling the scheme’s subsidies for any new proposals to doing something akin to the Spanish Government’s approach and ceasing to pay any subsidies, even on windmills in the ground.

The review is to report later this year and is taking submissions until May 15.
Alan Moran

Alan mentions “the usual howls of anguish from rent seekers” that followed the announcement of the RET review. Well, after the meeting held by the panel last week in Sydney – where the panel spelled out the review’s real mission (determining the cost impacts of renewable energy in the electricity sector) – those “howls” have become a blood-curdling banshee scream (see our post here).

But we can’t fathom why? You see, the greentard bloggers have been telling us for years now that wind power is “free” and already competitive with conventional power generation sources – it’s a “line” they still run, but now it’s about to be tested.

If they’re right – then the wind industry won’t miss the mandatory Renewable Energy Target at all.

The wind industry simply won’t need the RET to force retailers to take wind power ahead of conventional power under the threat of being hit with a $65 fine (the “shortfall charge“) for every MW they fall short of the mandated target.

And they should have no trouble at all finding retail customers willing to pay 3-4 times the cost of conventional power, delivered at crazy, random intervals – and also willing to find some alternative for the 70% of the time they’ll be freezing (or boiling) and sitting in the dark – wood stoves and candles, say?

And they’ll have no need for a further $50 plus billion worth of Renewable Energy Certificates that – under the current target – will be issued to wind power generators and added to power consumers’ bills between now and 2031.

But, from the hysterical hectoring now coming from the Clean Energy Council, the wind industry and its other parasites about saving the RET, we think actions belie words. Or, as the Americans put it: “money talks and bullshit walks”.

cow_dung

Wind industry spin: you can fill your boots with it.