CCSAGE Fighting Back Against Wind Turbine Injustice!

400 PEC residents and business owners threaten claims for compensation if wind turbines are built here

Naturally Green sign[NATURALLY GREEN signs.  Due to strong demand, we have ordered new signs, which are now available for purchase.  For pickup in the  Picton area, phone 613-476-2700; South Marysburgh, 613-476-7310; Wellington, 613-399-2407, Ameliasburgh, 613-962-6902 .]

At the beginning of May, CCSAGE NATURALLY GREEN took ads in local County papers and on CountyLive to point out existing legal rights to claim compensation if the construction of industrial wind turbine factories cause adverse effects to the value of businesses and properties.

Within three weeks, almost 400 County business and property owners indicated they would consider bringing such claims.

What did we do with this overwhelming response?

  • On June 4th, we wrote to the Premier, the Ministers of Energy and the Environment, the leaders of the two opposition parties and the Presidents of Gilead Power and wpd Canada Corporation. Below is a copy of our letter for your information.  You can read a copy of our letter HERE .
  • We notified our colleagues in all parts of Ontario with or threatened by industrial wind turbines of our initiative and its result.
  • We issued a media release to every print and electronic outlet in the entire Province.

We’ll keep you informed from time to time of future developments. Meanwhile, thank you to all respondents on-line, by mail, at our Town Hall meeting in Milford and in response to canvasses on Picton, Bloomfield and Wellington Main Streets.

CCSAGE NATURALLY GREEN

Newly Installed Solar Panels cause a Serious House Fire!

North Anston: House fire was caused by new ‘solar panels’ say residents

House fire on Nursery Road in North Anston

House fire on Nursery Road in North Anston

 

 

Firefighters were called just after 11am on Thursday morning to a house that was ablaze on Nursery Road.

The whole street watched on in shock as South Yorkshire firefighters – who are currently staging a 24 hour strike – used a crane and hoses to tackle the flames that were coming from solar panels on the roof.

One woman said: “They have only just had those solar panels put on, I would say they have only been on a week.”

Another said: “I have only just noticed them.”

There were four fire engines on the scene and a Police cordon was set up at both ends of the street as traffic was forced to divert around the villiage.

A neighbour said: “I saw the woman run out of the house in her pyjamas with her phone in her hand and her young son who I think is about two-years-old.”

“I have heard the man was upstairs asleep because he works nights.”

Firefighters started a walk-out this morning at 9am in a long running row over pension arrangements but they have been answering to 999 calls.

A man said: “I timed them and it took them 18 minutes to get here.

Residents Forced to Fight for Compensation for Losses… from Wind Projects!

Claim ready

Garth

County businesses and property owners prepare to defend the value of their livelihoods and savings

CCSAGE Naturally Green has opened another front in the battle to defend Prince Edward County from industrial wind turbines—and has recruited a phalanx of worthy soldiers ready to resist the invading developers.

Taking their cue from a successful litigation in Ottawa, nearly 400 businesses and property owners in PrinceEdwardCounty have signalled their intention to seek financial compensation if they suffer loss of value as a result of turbines constructed nearby.

Many fear that the arrival of massive 40- storey turbines looming over their homes and business will lead to a loss in revenue and a drop in property values. CCSAGE Naturally Green has spent the past few weeks informing property and business owners of their rights to claim compensation.

The principle was affirmed last year by the Supreme Court of Canada when it ruled that governments cannot diminish private property value without compensating the affected property owner.

The case revolved around a truck stop that found itself essentially put out of business, when a new section of highway 417 restricted direct access to the restaurant and gas bar. The province argued it had not taken any of the claimant’s land and therefore was not obliged to compensate the truck stop.

The claimant made an appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) and was awarded $335,000 in damages for market value loss. The case was appealed all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. It ruled that the routing of the new highway represented a substantial interference with the claimant’s property, and reinstated the OMB’s original ruling and compensatory award.

Critical to the issue facing landowners in Prince Edward County is that the Supreme Court described the distinction as “on one hand, interferences that constitute the ‘give and take’ expected of everyone and, on the other, interferences that impose a disproportionate burden on individuals.”

It found that even if the province believed it was acting in the general public’s good, it could not impose a burden upon an individual property owner disproportionately without compensating them.

Likewise, the province argues that industrial wind energy is beneficial to all Ontario residents, yet the burden—in this case loss of property or business value—will be harm specific business and landowners particularly those in the shadows of these massive machines. Such is the basis of the claim that nearly 400 business and landowners are readying to make.

Garth Manning is heading the initiative on behalf of CCSAGE Naturally Green. Manning is a widely respected property lawyer—now retired. He earned the Queen’s Counsel designation and has served as president of the Ontario Bar Association.

Through advertisements in this newspaper and others, as well as in a public meeting in Milford, Manning and his CCSAGE colleagues were able to alert many dozens of folks to their legal right to claim costs through the OMB.

The overwhelming response has surprised even him.

“The probability of a high number of claims if wind turbines are constructed in Prince Edward County is certain,” predicted Manning.

It is neither a silver bullet nor is it a substitute for other measures in defending the County from industrial wind turbines, according to Manning. But this initiative effectively puts industrial wind developers on notice that folks in this County, and elsewhere in Ontario, will actively defend themselves against loss of value.

It may not have an impact on the most ardent developers, but investors in these businesses must now assess another investment risk factor.

 

 

 

Academic, Ian Plimer, Tells About the Faux-Green Movement, and What it Has Become

Academic slams tyranny of the greens

Academic slams tyranny of the greensIan Plimer describes the greens as a ‘malevolent, unelected group’. Photo: Paul Harris

TREVOR SYKES

Professor Ian Plimer has never been renowned for moderation in his opinions about the extremist elements of the green movement and in this book he launches on them in a full-blooded, broken-bottle attack.

In his own words: “What started as a ­laudable movement to prevent the despoilation of certain areas of natural beauty has morphed into an authoritarian, anti-progress, anti-democratic, anti-human monster.” That Plimer should attack the greens is no surprise. More impressive is the book’s foreword, written by Patrick Moore, a co-founder of Greenpeace, who fully ­supports Plimer.

He congratulates Plimer for a book that provides a “different . . . and extremely rational look at the agenda of the green movement today”. “In many respects, they have become a combination of extreme political ideology and religious fundamentalism rolled into one,” Moore says.

“There is no better example of this than the fervent belief in human-caused ­catastrophic climate change.” Moore even rejects the core green belief that carbon dioxide emissions are harmful.

Plimer’s thesis is that the real agenda of green groups (often registered as charities) is nothing less than the destruction of modern civilisation and that a key aim is to kneecap the global energy industry which provides society with electricity. It has always seemed odd that greens are so hostile to a gas which is vital for the life of trees. As a trained geologist, Plimer is well aware that the planet’s climate has been changing since its birth 4½ billion years ago. “If the Earth’s climate did not constantly change, then I would be really worried,” he says.

What he contests is that manmade carbon dioxide has anything much to do with such change. It must be comforting for left-wingers to blame evil industrialists for destroying our planet, but in fact carbon dioxide accounts for only 0.04 per cent of the atmosphere and man-made carbon dioxide accounts for maybe 4 per cent of that, so Plimer regards the proposition as nonsense.

Also, carbon dioxide emissions do not accumulate quickly in the atmosphere.

After five to seven years, they are absorbed by the oceans, trees or rocks. Plimer believes that for scientists to argue that traces of a trace gas can be the driving force for climate change is fraudulent.

WHAT CAUSES CLIMATE CHANGE?

 

Sceptical scientists do not know what causes climate change but it would seem a complex combination of factors. Plimer believes the atmosphere is merely the medium through which climate change manifests itself and the major driver is “that giant fusion reactor we call the sun”.

He says: “It is quite capable of throwing out immense clouds of hot, ionised gases many millions of kilometres into space, sometimes with drastic effects on both the Earth’s atmosphere and on spacecraft travelling outside the lower atmosphere and the Earth’s protective magnetic shield.” Plimer, who is not renowned for pulling his punches, describes green extremists as hypocritical – “a malevolent unelected group attempting to deconstruct healthy societies that have taken thousands of years to build”.

That may sound extreme, but it’s difficult to find an alternative explanation for the change they have forced upon the Drax power station in Yorkshire.

Drax used to boast it was the largest, cleanest and most efficient coal-fired power station in Europe, generating up to 3960 megawatts. Greens demonstrated against it, saying Drax was the largest carbon dioxide emitter in Europe. So Drax is changing from coal to biomass. Plimer says it intends to import timber from North Carolina for fuel. This is madness, both economically and ecologically. A plant which used to burn 36,000 tonnes of coal a day will instead burn 70,000 tonnes of wood.

Forests will have to be chopped down in North Carolina, which must involve some destruction of native habitats of creatures such as otters and woodpeckers. Habitat destruction kills birds and animals more surely than climate change ever will. The timber will be reduced to pellets in factories fuelled by conventional fuels, then shipped across the Atlantic in diesel-burning boats. Over the 20-year life of the power station, that would involve the destruction of ­511 million tonnes of wood.

The energy density of wood is about half that of an equivalent weight of coal, so wood will produce more expensive ­electricity. Burning wood also releases its stored carbon dioxide.

WIND AND SOLAR POWER UNRELIABLE

 

The European Environment Agency has ruled that burning wood is carbon neutral because the carbon dioxide will be absorbed over time by the oceans or other trees.

That leaves the EEA in the odd position of believing that a molecule of carbon dioxide emanating from wood behaves differently to a molecule emanating from coal.

The greens, having achieved their aim, have stopped demonstrating although there is a strong argument that the conversion of Drax will make it more, not less, harmful to the planet.

Wind farms and solar power stations are unreliable and totally unable to provide base load electricity.

Plimer gives calculations which show that wind turbines are barely able to generate as much electricity in their lifetime as it takes to make them.

. Even more bizarre was the Spanish solar plant which enjoyed such large subsidies that it could make profits generating electricity at night by shining floodlights on the panels. The floodlights were powered by a diesel generator. These are only three examples of green illogic from a book crammed with them.Plimer has assembled a massive case which needs answers.

Even more bizarre was the Spanish solar plant which enjoyed such large subsidies that it could make profits generating electricity at night by shining floodlights on the panels. The floodlights were powered by a diesel generator. These are only three examples of green illogic from a book crammed with them

Not For Greens, by Ian Plimer, Connor Court. $29.95.

Wynne’s Irresponsible Spending, is Our Downfall. We Pay for her Mistakes!

BlackRock says it’s on ‘high alert’ for Ontario

debt downgrade after Wynne victory

On Friday, a day after Kathleen Wynne's Liberals won a majority in the Ontario election, BlackRock's head of Canadian fixed-income said “We’re on high alert that S&P will downgrade Ontario.”

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan DenetteOn Friday, a day after Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals won a majority in the Ontario election, BlackRock’s head of Canadian fixed-income said “We’re on high alert that S&P will downgrade Ontario.”

Ontario’s borrowing costs spiked the most in six months Friday as investors wagered the province’s credit rating will be cut after Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals won re- election on a plan that would increase the deficit.

The extra yield investors demand to hold Ontario’s latest 10-year bond over a Canadian government benchmark note rose 2 basis points at 10:20 a.m. in Toronto, the biggest one day jump since January 10, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Standard & Poor’s has a negative outlook on the province’s AA- credit rating, a signal it expects a rating change will be lower. Moody’s Investors Service called Wynne’s fiscal plan a credit negative on May 2.

They’re seeing a deteriorating financial balance sheet

“We’re on high alert that S&P will downgrade Ontario,” said Aubrey Basdeo head of Canadian fixed-income in Toronto at BlackRock Inc., the world’s biggest money manager. “She’s front-loading the deficit or the total debt in anticipation future years will benefit from stronger growth. They’re just looking at the raw numbers and they’re seeing a deteriorating financial balance sheet.”

Wynne has promised to use deficit-fueled stimulus spending to spur an economy that stagnated at 1.3% growth in each of the past two years before paring back to balance the books in years to come.

Under the Liberal plan, a $3 billion boost to program spending this year would increase the deficit to $12.5 billion from $11.3 billion last year. Wynne has pledged to eliminate the deficit by the 2017-18 fiscal year by holding spending for three years following the 2014 increase.

An S&P downgrade would put Ontario in the single-A range of its ratings scale, though investors would take the ratings of other firms into account as well to determine borrowing costs. Moody’s Investors Service rates the province Aa2 with a stable outlook and Fitch Ratings has a negative outlook on its AA rating. DBRS Ltd. has a stable outlook on its AA Low rating.

“It should happen quickly, although the agencies may wait for the budget to be reintroduced,” John Braive, vice chairman at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s CIBC Global Asset Management unit, said by e-mail from Toronto today.

Ontario’s borrowing-cost advantage over lower-rated Quebec shrunk to only five basis points, the lowest spread all year, the data show. An S&P downgrade would put Ontario’s rating in line with the firm’s assessment of Quebec.

Its going to be a challenge for the province to hit their out year spending targets

In the U.S. bond market, the drop from AA to single-A for a foreign government can mean about 1 percentage point higher borrowing costs on average, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch Data.

“Its going to be a challenge for the province to hit their out year spending targets,” Braive said, adding that the province will need to issue more bonds as a result.

Bloomberg.com

Now that she’s in, Just Sit Back and Watch the Destruction!

Get ready for a horror show

christina-blizzard

BY  

Kathleen Wynne
Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne (QMI Agency)

Get ready for a horror show.

Voters in this province not only gave the nod to bad behaviour — they rewarded it by giving the scandal-plagued government of Kathleen Wynne a majority government.

Go figure.

Despite the $1 billion blown on gas plants, the Ornge air ambulance fiasco, the deleted e-mails, the disgraceful $317 million bail-out of MaRS, voters still weren’t ready to boot a Liberal government that’s embroiled in two — count ’em — OPP investigations out the door.

Apparently the devil you know is better than trying your luck with a party that hasn’t blown $1 billion on eHealth.

Liberals took seats from both the Tories and the NDP. In Trinity-Spadina, long-time New Democrat Rosario Marchese was booted by Liberal Han Dong. In Davenport, the NDP’s Jonah Schein was crushed by Cristina Martins. Even stalwart Cheri DiNovo (Parkdale-High Park) barely squeaked back.

But the Tories also took some stunning losses in Burlington, Barrie, Cambridge and of course, Doug Holyday, in Etobicoke–Lakeshore.

Two solidly blue seats without incumbents in Newmarket-Aurora and Durham also fell to the Liberals. They’d previously been held by Frank Klees and John O’Toole, respectively. They should have stayed Tory — but in stunning upsets went red.

It was a campaign marked by negativity.

Almost two dozen unions took on PC leader Tim Hudak over his hard line on unions. And they drew blood.

In a remarkably elegant political exit Thursday night, Hudak said he’s stepping down. He knows he has no choice and it was courageous of him to fall on his sword so quickly. The party now has the tough task of re-building.

This vote wasn’t so much a referendum on him as it shows the vote-buying power of the unions in this province.

In the end, though, after the mudslinging and a gruelling 40-day campaign the province chose to return to what Wynne herself called, her “safe hands.”

How safe are they?

This province is morally and financially bankrupt.

Yet, we’ve patted the perpetrators on the back and sent them to Queen’s Park with a licence to spend and plunder.

They will be insufferable. Watch for a festival of smug triumphalism from the Liberals.

There’ll be a flurry of activity at Queens’ Park over the next few days.

First, Wynne must visit Lt.-Gov. David Onley Friday to tell him she can form the next government.

She has pledged to bring her budget to the legislature within 20 days.

And then hold your breath.

Her budget promises a made-in-Ontario pension plan that will bring in a payroll tax on corporations.

That will hurt.

This province will almost certainly see a credit downgrade within days of her budget passing.

We’ve already seen credit watches and warnings. Our debt is almost $300 billion — and there’s no credible plan to balance the books.

The message is clear.

Voters in this province have no appetite to do what it takes to get this province back on the right financial track.

Hudak told them some bald truths in this election.

He told them he’d downsize the civil service by 100,000 and implement a pay freeze for two years.

Wynne promised the opposite. She’ll keep everyone on the bloated public payroll. No freeze — and still balance the books.

It’s an impossible dream.

Now that reality has kicked in, she’s going to have to show us how she’ll do that.

Her numbers just don’t add up.

Something has to give.

Still, voters had no appetite for honesty in politics.

Sometimes the truth hurts. And the truth is this province is living beyond its means — and this will only get worse over the next four years.

In 11 years, the Liberals turned this province from the economic engine that drove this province to the poor man of Confederation. And that’s fine with voters.

This is a stunning Friday the 13th horror story.

And we’re just at chapter one.

 

Ontario is in for a Very Rough Ride….and they asked for it!

Kathleen Wynne’s reality: Ontario’s massive debt cannot be ignored

 Theresa Tedesco | June 12, 2014 | Last Updated: Jun 13 8:41 AM ET

Ontario Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne speaks to supporters after winning the Ontario election in Toronto on Thursday June 12, 2014.

Frank Gunn/The Canadian PressOntario Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne speaks to supporters after winning the Ontario election in Toronto on Thursday June 12, 2014.

Now that voters have returned Kathleen Wynne to power, the premier will need to find a way to manage a debt load that is larger than California’s while continuing to keep the credit rating agencies mollified long enough to avoid a dreaded downgrade.

With a net debt of $267.5-billion that is growing at a faster rate than the economy, the challenge is just beginning for the party that emerged victorious from the provincial election. “They are still going to be facing pressures from the credit agencies to get the province’s fiscal finances in order,” said Mazen Issa, senior Canada macro strategist at TD Securities in Toronto. “There’s no way to avoid it. The reality is there and it can’t be wished away.”

Put simply, Ontario is increasingly dependent on tapping lines of credit because it spends more than it collects. Currently, the province pays $11-billion annually in interest payments to finance its debt — money that is not going toward paving roads, building public transit, hiring more teachers and shortening wait times in hospitals.

During the 40-day election campaign, which focused predominantly on the economy, the three main parties offered a stark choice: Conservative leader Tim Hudak vowed to cut 100,000 public-sector jobs over four years and lower corporate taxes to kick-start the creation of one million jobs in eight years while balancing the budget in two.

The New Democrat and Liberal parties both promised to loosen the provincial purse strings further and increase spending for at least two years by borrowing more money and increasing taxes. NDP leader Andrea Horwath promised to offer wage subsidies to businesses to hire new workers, slash auto insurance rates and cut government spending by $600-million annually although she wouldn’t say how she would balance the books in three years.

Liberal leader Wynne also promised to balance the budget by 2017 and she too was vague on details of cost cutting, prompting critics to accuse both parties of pinning their hopes on unusually robust economic growth in the range of 2.8% to 4.7% to pump up government coffers.

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“It’s a bit of a Hail Mary to hope the economy will recover so much that it will take care of the problem,” said Candice Malcolm, Ontario director of the Canadian Taxpayers Association. “It’s a huge hole to come out of and it’s going to require tough measures, including looking seriously at the spending side.”

Ms. Malcolm believes that the premier will not be given much time to make drastic spending cuts before credit rating agencies and bond markets begin to force her hand. Finn Poschmann, vice-president of policy at the C.D. Howe Institute, concurs: “Certainly the pressure is there for a downgrade. To balance the budget in two or three years will take sharp measures and that is a difficult task.”

Next year, the province’s net debt is forecast to jump by 7.7%, faster than the 4% economic growth rate anticipated during the same time. Still, while Ontario may be carrying more debt than California, long considered the poster child for poor fiscal management, Moody’s Investor Services Inc. has nonetheless applied a slightly higher — and more favourable — credit rating of Aa2 (the third-highest investment grade rating) to Canada’s largest province. Meanwhile, Standard & Poor’s has slapped a lower AA-rating with a negative outlook for Ontario.

Meanwhile, there are signs of pressure that a downgrade is inevitable. For one, Ontario has $250-billion worth of bonds rated by Moody’s, the most of any sub-sovereign borrower tracked by the New York-based ratings company, according to Bloomberg. The province’s ability to pay back those bonds, known as the debt-to-revenue ratio, is 237.7% — the worst among all Canadian provinces, including Quebec, according to a Moody’s report. Alberta ranked lowest — and the best — with a debt-to-revenue ratio of 31.9%.

Michael Yake, assistant vice-president at Moody’s Toronto, explained the rating agency’s concerns in an interview: “We see deficits narrowing at a lower pace but in Ontario, they are growing from previous forecasts. That’s not an ideal situation from our point of view.”

And that is worrisome for a province that borrows as much as Ontario. A future downgrade would result in higher borrowing costs, adding billions more to the debt-to-revenue ratio. Ontario currently spends 9.2% of its revenues on interest payments and provincial government estimates predict that figure will rise to almost 11% in the next four years. Keep in mind that interest rates have been at 20-year low levels and will inevitably rise if the economy grows at a faster clip.

The cost of carrying that debt will also skyrocket, as much as $3-billion in annual interest costs for every point increase in interest rates, according to Jack Mintz, the Palmer chair and director of the School of Policy at the University of Calgary. The bottom line: more money will be earmarked for servicing the debt and less spending for vital services.

“It’s been an issue that has been lingering for several years,” said TD’s Mr. Issa. “Some very tough decisions are going to have to be made to get the books in order.”

Wind Energy is a Dreamer’s folly. Just a money pit!

Robert Bryce’s new book slays the wind power Easter Bunny

Easter-Bunny-Wallpapers-HD

Robert Bryce picked the wind power fraud for what it is from the very beginning.

In his 2010 book “Power Hungry: The Myths of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future” (Public Affairs), Bryce skewered every one of the myths relied upon by the wind industry to peddle its wares; and went on to predict the massive benefits of the US shale gas revolution – in terms of both cheap energy – operating as a boost to a flagging economy – and as a method of reducing CO2 emissions in the electricity sector.

We’ve covered some of his recent writings on US energy policy and the wind power fraud (see our posts here and here and here).

Bryce has just published another cracking book “Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper: How Innovation Keeps Proving the Catastrophists Wrong” (Public Affairs) that loads up on the nonsense that is US energy policy today.

Here’s a review of Bryce’s latest by the New York Times.

Wind? Biofuels? Get Real, a Contrarian Says
Review of Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper
The New York Times
7 June 2014

Every so often we need someone to put in a kind word for the devil, if only to remind us of unpleasant facts. On energy policy, we need someone willing to declare flat out that “if oil didn’t exist, we would have to invent it. No other substance comes close to oil when it comes to energy density, ease of handling, and flexibility.”

We need someone who says: Don’t kid yourself, coal will be around for a long, long time, as a cheap source of electricity across the globe. Someone who scoffs that anyone who believes in wind power and biofuels as a solution to the soaring demand for energy also believes in the Easter Bunny. And someone willing to argue that the most sensible long-term answer to the world’s unquenchable thirst for electricity is a revival of nuclear power, a reality that he says thinking environmentalists are coming to accept.

Robert Bryce, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative research group, fills that role with zest. The author of four books on oil and energy, Mr. Bryce has written a new book well worth reading, though it will not sit well with those who applauded when Al Gore received the Nobel Peace Prize. The title of his breezy book — “Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper” — captures the headlong rush of Western culture’s endless drive for ever better technology. It is an extraordinary impulse that has created a world in which more people live longer and more comfortably than ever before.

The book amounts to Mr. Bryce’s emphatic, against-the-grain views on energy policy coupled to a once-over-lightly history of Western technology. His eccentric take on history bounces from the Panama Canal to Edison’s light bulb to the first computers, weirdly wrapping in excerpts on the AK-47 Kalashnikov automatic rifle, Olympic 100 meter times, and the Tour de France. He introduces puzzling techno-terms like “attoseconds,” which are billionths of a billionth of a second. (That, astonishingly, is the scale of time used in laser snapshots of the inner workings of an atom.) His historical vignettes do illustrate the benefits of Smaller Faster, etc., but they are like making an entire meal of amuse-bouches.

Mr. Bryce’s policy prescriptions will be more welcome in Houston than in the White House. He contends that the pantheon of environmentalists like Mr. Gore, Bill McKibben, Amory Lovins and Greenpeace — he calls them “the catastrophists” — are wildly optimistic, if not daft, in their extravagant hopes for wind power, solar cells and biofuels. He insists that his differences with them are not ideological but purely physics and economics: that their alternative possibilities are inherently too weak as fuels to scale them up to meet the world’s unceasing demand for more electricity.

From studies of wind farms he calculates that the average power density for wind energy is about one watt per square meter. A wind farm large enough to power just one data center for Facebook would require nearly 11 square miles of land, he says. On a far larger scale, the United States has about 300 billion watts of coal-fired generation capacity. So to replace it by wind power would sop up 300,000 square kilometers of land, about the area of Italy. Here he is tilting at windmills — no one has ever proposed shuttering the nation’s coal mines and relying on wind — but the comparison serves his contention that in the big picture, wind power will always be a minor player.

Biofuels have a power density even smaller, only a third of wind’s, and thus they hog even more land, he writes. Mr. Bryce considers it a scandal and a gross misuse of government subsidies that 40 percent of the nation’s corn harvest already goes into producing corn-based ethanol, pushing food prices much higher as collateral damage.

He pounces on Mr. Lovins’s prediction that by 2050, the United States will draw 23 percent of its power from biofuels. That is “ludicrous beyond language,” he says. If an acre of switchgrass yields about 17 barrels of oil equivalent a year, then achieving that 23 percent would take up 342,000 square miles of cropland, the equivalent of Texas, New York and Ohio combined, he calculates.

Mr. Bryce knows his way around an oil field, and he writes authoritatively about the constantly improving technology of extracting oil and gas. Thanks to those improvements, estimates of oil and gas reserves have shot up, defying repeated predictions that they were on the verge of topping out. Comparable innovations in wind energy or biofuels just aren’t possible, he maintains.

Disappointing for a man so sure of other data, Mr. Bryce waffles on the critical point of global warming. He declares himself a resolute “climate agnostic,” despite the overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change is a reality. Environmentalists might well see this as a convenient way to skirt the issue of the fossil fuel industry’s responsibility for endangering the planet.

He says he is neither an “alarmist” (a revealing choice of words) nor a “denier,” but tries to patch together an “incontrovertible” climate outlook that both “tribes” can accept: Carbon dioxide emissions are rising, dramatically so, and that will continue; the world will need vastly more energy in the decades ahead to raise the living standards of those in poverty; and if ever we needed smaller, faster, lighter, denser, cheaper, the time is now.

Mr. Bryce’s solution is “N2N,” a reliance on natural gas on the way to a more nuclear world. He is not the first to note that natural gas is relatively clean and available in extraordinary abundance. It generates electricity; it is the coming thing in propelling vehicles. Its use is already cutting CO2 emissions in the United States.

Mr. Bryce makes a case that nuclear power is clean and green and far superior to any other fuel in power density. His enthusiastic embrace of nuclear will astonish most readers, however, with his contention that the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in Japan should be seen as a boon to the revival of nuclear power, rather than an obstacle.

At Fukushima, three reactors melted down with a substantial release of radiation, forcing as many as 300,000 people from their homes, and leaving still unresolved problems of cleaning up massive amounts of radioactive water. And yet, Mr. Bryce writes, even though the plant was wrecked by one of the most powerful earthquakes ever to rock the planet, the World Health Organization has concluded that radiation exposure due to Fukushima was low. No lives were lost to radiation — at least none so far.

Mr. Bryce is decidedly bullish on America, not least because of what’s happening in the oil patch. America enjoys the cheapest power in the industrial world, at 12 cents a kilowatt hour versus 26 cents in Europe and 24 cents in Japan. It leads the world in natural gas production, nuclear production and refined oil output. Thanks to the oil shale, it could soon eclipse Saudi Arabia and Russia in crude oil.

“The best way to protect the environment is to get richer,” he asserts. “Wealthy countries can afford to protect the environment. Poor ones generally can’t.”
The New York Times

chicken-little-poster

Let’s assume (as STT does, for the sake of argument) that the global warming/climate change Chicken Littles are right: the sky really is falling and it’s all CO2’s fault.

So what the HELL are we doing pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into subsidies for wind power? (see our posts here and here)

STT has always thought that if man-made CO2 emissions really were destroying the planet, then sensible governments would have moved to build nuclear power plants from the moment Chicken Little started wailing about the heavens collapsing. It’s a theme that Robert Bryce covered in “Power Hungry” and expands upon in his latest effort.

The French generate around 80% of their sparks using nukes – and have used nuclear power – without any serious incident – for over 50 years: the first plant kicked off in 1962.

Nuclear power is the only stand-alone thermal power source that is base-load and which does not emit CO2 emissions when generating power.

STT readers know that we are a big fan of hydro power, the development of which stalled after the Greens “No Dams” mantra shot them to political power (and see our previous post).  The perversities of our renewable energy legislation mean that the cleanest and most reliable source of renewable energy – hydro – does not benefit from the incentives given to ludicrously expensive and completely unreliable wind power.  That’s right, the “Waterboys” don’t get RECs (only hydro generating capacity built after 1998 is eligible – the 99% of total hydro capacity that was built before then gets nothing).

There is huge potential for further investment in hydro power in Australia – all up and down the Great Divide – bringing with it the ability to harvest huge volumes of water in times of flood – and to beneficially manage that water during periods of drought. However, the perverse nature of the mandatory RET provides every advantage to unreliable and costly wind power at the expense of hydro power: the former takes a matter of months to construct and begin earning revenue (ie RECs); whereas the latter takes years and sometimes decades to complete and for investors to start earning a return (see this video). Investors looking for a quick return on their cash have simply plumped for the soft option and piled in to wind power, with disastrous results on every level (see our post here).

The nuclear power debate has revved up in recent times, with numerous leaders of green groups coming out in favour of nukes as the only sensible answer to generating CO2 free sparks.  These boys have been rounded on by their own kind as “heretics” in a style more befitting of the Spanish Inquisition.

The nuke debate is one that STT will leave to others. Anyone considering taking it up should start with Robert Bryce’s latest.

Smaller Faster Bryce

Matt Gurney: Throw the Liberals out

 Matt Gurney | June 11, 2014 

It's hard to imagine a party in more desperate need of a long, restorative spell in the wilderness.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank GunnIt’s hard to imagine a party in more desperate need of a long, restorative spell in the wilderness.

Tomorrow, June 12, is election day in Ontario. The polls are, to say the least, unclear. No one has any idea what is going to happen. As one person, who does “stakeholder relations” work for clients in Ontario, recently told me, the smart money is planning on six possible outcomes: A Tory minority or majority, a Liberal minority or majority, or an NDP minority or majority. It really could be any of those.

National Post editorial board: A Conservative government for Ontario

It is difficult to overstate just how richly the Ontario Liberals deserve to be removed from office. It is difficult even to know where to begin.

As managers of public services they are, in the most charitable interpretation, famously inept. Witness the scandal at ORNGE, the non-profit set up to run the province’s air ambulance service, which soon devolved into a byzantine scheme to redirect public money into various private wallets. Witness the scandal at eHealth, which the auditor general found to have spent $1-billion comprehensively bungling efforts to create an electronic health records system. Witness former premier Dalton McGuinty’s signature green-energy initiative, which has seen electricity rates skyrocket even as the province exports electricity at a huge loss.

Continue reading…

The campaign has not been a particularly edifying one. Don’t be surprised if turnout is low — perhaps historically so. But such an outcome, while perhaps understandable, would also be unfortunate. This may not be an exciting election, or one that has seen much thoughtful debate and entertaining oratory, but it’s an important one. Ontario is currently governed by a party that has behaved, time and again, in a fashion that is nothing short of appalling. If the Liberals are re-elected come Thursday, Ontarians will have chosen exactly the government that they deserve.

I’d need a dozen columns to even begin to scratch the surface of just how deserving of a crushing defeat the Ontario Liberals are. Even a brief overview would run into the thousands of words. So, just for those who need a little reminder, recall that this is the government that promised, before being first elected 11 years ago, to not raise taxes, and then immediately raised taxes. Rather than say that the province’s unexpectedly poor fiscal status required such action, the former premier, Dalton McGuinty, tried to convince Ontarians that he hadn’t raised taxes, but merely imposed a premium to fund health care — and then, when it turned out public sector union contracts left the government on the hook for premiums, McGuinty had to publicly stress taxpayers were on the hook for them. Because it was, you know … a tax.

This is the government that established a green energy sector that Ontarians will spend decades paying above market rates for, to provide power beyond what the province currently requires, and that we must export at a loss for lack of any other option. It now subsidizes monthly hydro bills for all but the most voracious consumers of power rather than let the true costs show up in our mailboxes each month — but they don’t call it a subsidy, of course. It’s the “Ontario Green Energy Benefit.”

The Liberals have run a government that lied, repeatedly and for years, about what the economic cost of harmonizing the provincial sales tax with the federal GST would be — an entirely defensible policy that the Liberals, for some reason, pretended would not end up costing Ontario families more … which they later admitted it would. It’s a government that suddenly imposed an eco-tax on consumers — surprise! — and only backed off after the public noticed and became outraged. It’s a government that has committed to billions in ongoing spending by allowing the unionized broader public service to expand far faster than inflation and population growth would warrant, all in the name of buying “labour peace.” That labour peace, it should be noted, ended the instant the Liberals mused about slowing the volleys of cash being hurled the unions’ way. I guess it was more like renting labour peace.

While they were fighting all these battles, Ontario blew a billion bucks in a futile effort to create electronic health records

It’s a government that never saw a minor social irritant it didn’t want to legislate away. Under the Liberals, we’ve seen restrictions on junk food and trans fats in schools, bans on harmless garden-variety (literally) pesticides, and repeated crackdowns on tobacco sales and smoking in cars containing children, even though the children themselves can light up in the car without the police saying boo. It’s a government that considered enforcing a little-known, always-ignored provincial regulation requiring that sushi only be made with previously frozen seafood, but had to settle for banning pitbulls and teens in tanning beds, instead. While they were fighting all these battles, Ontario blew a billion bucks in a futile effort to create electronic health records and became a have-not province, but oh well. Don’t those dandelions on your lawn look fantastic?

The Liberals are a government that ran an air ambulance service that was better at streaming public dollars toward Liberal-friendly executives than it was at rescuing people using helicopters that were unsuited to the role, but sure looked pretty. It’s a government that spent perhaps as much as $1-billion public dollars cancelling two gas-fired power plants that it had previously vocally championed, once polls showed they might lose a couple of seats due to local opposition. Oh, and it’s a government that wrote off the entire town of Caledonia to lawlessness because it didn’t like the optics of sending in mostly white provincial police officers to deal with a small number of native thugs who were assaulting people and destroying property — crimes — during a land ownership dispute. McGuinty called it “peacekeeping.” When I asked him why police were tasked with peacekeeping, which is the military’s job, instead of enforcing the laws equally for all citizens, he shrugged and had no answer.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren CalabreseOntario Premier Kathleen Wynne, left, and Glen Murray, Minister of Infrastructure, ride the subway while en route to Wynne’s speech at the Toronto Region Board of Trade in Toronto Monday, April 14, 2014.

The Ontario Liberals have a new leader now — Kathleen Wynne. She acknowledges that a lot of bad things happened under her predecessor’s watch, and even that she was involved with some of them. She had no choice, she insists, since she was “part of a government.”

It’s not quite “I was only following orders,” but it’s damn near close enough.

In a perfect world, Ontarians would have plenty of terrific options to choose from when searching for a replacement. But they don’t. Both the NDP and the Progressive Conservatives leave a lot to be desired. It’s entirely reasonable for Ontarians to be underwhelmed at what awaits them in their polling stations.

But a vote for either the Tories or the NDP is still better than a vote for the party that brought us everything recapped above, and so much more. It’s hard to imagine a party in more desperate need of a long, restorative spell in the wilderness of opposition than the Ontario Liberals. A vote for them is an endorsement of their record of mismanagement, waste and meddling. If Ontario returns another Liberal government, that record will continue, and that will be exactly what Canada’s most populous province deserves.

National Post

The Whole CO2 scam, was designed to steal our money–legally!

Asthma caused by carbon dioxide–not a chance

I just received a post that included commentary by the great Morano on how the EPA and the Bamster would like to do an agit prop head fake–make carbon dioxide an air pollutant that causes asthma.

 

In the world of public perceptions is science just a secondary consideration–sure it is–big lies and little lies are what agit prop is about.

Morano makes the argument that the EPA has found asthmatic children such a good hook, they had to conflate carbon dioxide regs with air pollution regs. Gina McCarthy starts spouting numbers about reduced asthma attacks, and heart attacks.

http://mobile.wnd.com/2014/06/global-warming-threat-now-its-asthma/

Well, in fact small particle air pollution doesn’t cause heart attacks or asthma.

Sorry Marc, you can easily back up a couple more steps in your criticism of this crap.

The epidemiology is so bad on small particle air pollution that the EPA had a human exposure project going for the last 20 years hoping to find something that would be good evidence. They admit in sworn statements to the court in Virginia in our lawsuit to stop the human exposure experiments that the small associations they find and have found in premature death populations studies don’t prove anything.

Asthma is increasing in incidence and air pollution is declining dramatically.

Carbon dioxide cannot be an allergen, and it cannot increase pulmonary problems or health problems until it gets to above 10% or 10000 ppm in the ambient or inspired air. It presently sits at 400 ppm, or 0.04%. That’s the air we breath in, the air we breathe out has a carbon dioxide level of 4% or 4000 ppm.

The only way that small particles would be related to asthma is allergens in the air, pollen, and such, and allergenic particles are proteinacious so they stimulate immune reactions. The Immune system is designed to identify molecules that are foreign to the body and set up inflammatory reactions to fight the invasion.

In the case of an allergic reaction, the mast cells are engaged and release histamine that causes itching, rashes, welts (we call urticaria), angioedema (swelling of tissues with fluid released from histamine effects) swelling and inflammation of the airways, causing stridor and wheezing.

The treatment is antihistamines and cortisone type steroids to reduce the release of fluids and inflammatory mediators that cause allergic rashes and swelling and wheezing. Pretty simple, but you can count on the EPA and the lefty greenies to lie and deceive. Amazing they can do such a thing on top of the evidence that Asthma goes up as air pollution goes down. But agit prop is not about telling the truth.

Show a pic of a pretty kid with oxygen on and a stack in the background with steam coming out (portrayed as “smoke”) and watch the mommies put on their matching tee shirts.

Milloy and I have waxed eloquent on the bad air pollution epidemiology at JunkScience and American Thinker

http://junkscience.com/?s=asthma+and+air+pollution

Links to dunn essays

EPA

Jon Samet silliness acsh 2005

Part 1

http://heartland.org/policy-documents/epa-junk-science-air-pollution-deaths

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/epa-junk-science-on-air-pollution.pdf

Part II on legal precedents that allow delegation and discretion.

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/mpre-on-epa-and-air-pollution.pdf

more on the delegation/discretion problem

http://junkscience.com/2014/01/30/dingell-says-scotus-screwed-up/comment-page-1/#comment-201664

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1103332

Harvardresearch claims sm part cause cancer.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/28/us-air-pollution-idUSTRE79R5NM20111028

Subsidies make the energy world go round

http://heartland.org/policy-documents/subsidies-make-energy-world-go-round

2013 EPA project

Holding EPA to account Joe Barton speech

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/03/holding_the_epa_to_account.html

EPA can be stopped

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/03/holding_the_epa_to_account.html

a strategy to stop the epa science abuse

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/04/a_strategy_to_stop_epa_science_abuse.html

the EPAs unreliable science

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/03/the_epas_unreliable_science.html

epa unethical research

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/06/epas_unethical_air_pollution_experiments.htm

Milloy and Dunn at JPANDS on EPA Human Experiments

http://www.jpands.org/vol17no4/dunn.pdf

EPW report on Beal Brenner and the playbook

http://www.epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Files.View&FileStore_id=b90f742e-b797-4a82-a0a3-e6848467832a

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/dunn-on-epa-battle.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-congress-ii-with-att.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-ehp-on-the-study.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-ii-to-drs-in-congress.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-deans-1.pdf

Legal strategies for EPA problems

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/2nd-and-3rd-epi-highlights-ref-manual.pdf

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/20/lawyer-losers-who-work-for-our-side-rich-losers-but-still-losers/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/27/physician-condemns-epa-cargo-cult-science-guess-who/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/23/daren-jonescu-on-climate-science-totalitarian-thugs-and-hypocrites/

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junkscience.com/2014/04/01/epa-medical-schools-complicit-in-unethical-and-immoralillegal-human-experiments/

California enviro policy issues

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/californias_toxic_air_scare_ma.html

toxic air scare

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/science_and_the_toxic_scare_ma_1.html

Milloy Ozone study in CA

http://junkscience.com/2013/09/03/study-ozone-not-linked-with-asthma-hospitalizations-in-major-california-hospital-system/

Milloy study on small particles in CA

http://junkscience.com/2013/12/26/epa-air-pollution-scare-debunked-by-best-data-set-ever-assembled-on-particulate-matter-deaths/

.
Asthma is not caused by air pollution. Asthma is an allergic disease.

Take a look at the commentary here at JunkScience and scroll down until you get to Milloy’s report on a multi year study of ozone and asthma in southern CA. No Association.

But before that you get to a Johns Hopkins study that shows that dirty environments for small children desensitizes them and reduces their rate of asthma.

http://junkscience.com/?s=asthma+and+air+pollution

enough for today.