We need to Get the Message Out! Only Hudak is Willing and Able to Repair Damage!

Pretty radical stuff

During the present campaign a great deal has been made of the Conservative plan to create 1,000,000 private sector jobs and reduce public sector jobs by 100,000 to 2006 levels.

Much criticism has been levelled at Tim Hudak and his Party for these election promises.

Funny thing is, even Smokey Thomas, head of OPSEU, agrees there are probably 60,000 superfluous management positions in the Provincial bureaucracy.

The Premier is Tim Hudak’s most vocal critic on these promises. She claims reducing the Public Service by 10% will destroy Ontario’s economy.

Yet she has never told the voters what her own government’s Ministry of Finance concluded in a confidential report on the impact of her proposed Ontario Pension Plan. It found that her plan would result in the loss of 150,000 private sector jobs.

Yet she still promises to implement an Ontario Pension Plan.

The million jobs plan has been derided, but even if it is only an aspirational goal some think it is very achievable. Even the Star agrees. One can understand however why a government, which over 8 years has only managed to double the Ontario debt and deficit while destroying over 300,000 jobs in the Province, wouldn’t understand the plan.

The Conservatives have promised to stop signing contracts for more unneeded wind and solar generation, cancel any applications that have not already been approved and re-evaluate, on a case-by-case basis any approved projects that aren’t already connected to the grid.

He would also give municipalities more control over the siting of wind projects:

“If people can have a say about a hot dog stand going in for a Canada Day celebration, shouldn’t they have a say about massive industrial wind turbines in their backyard?” Hudak said.

This is indeed good news to those of us that have been fighting Ontario’s insane energy policy for the past few years – maybe it is an indication that someone in government has listened.

Premier Kathleen Wynne said her government remains committed to its overall plan for renewable energy, including wind power.

Hudak’s campaign is disconcerting:

He’s trusting voters to assess the situation and make their choice based on a full understanding of the options. He evidently believes voters understand the damage that’s been done to the province under the Liberals, and the danger of continuing down that path, and being mature enough to choose between repairing it, or continuing along the same route.
– Kelly McParland

Trusting voters? Telling them what you’re really going to do?

Pretty radical stuff!

On the other hand we have promises that no jobs will be endangered, no impact will be felt, and spending can continue to grow at the same old unsustainable pace, or even increase. In the past decade that’s certainly been the approach to winning elections in the province.

It will be interesting to see whether this faith in Ontario voter’s ability to appreciate the options, and in their maturity is justified.

To many of us, companies and individuals, it will signal whether out future remains in this Province or not.

Agenda 21 principles built on Junk Science, and Socialism!


Interest In Bioenergy On the Rise

Robert Bryce – Senior Manhattan Institute Fellow – gave a vibrant talk yesterday in New York City at a gathering called to launch his latest book “Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper,” which he describes as a “rebuke to the catastrophists.”

The premise is that technology and innovation are helping people live healthier, longer, more fulfilled lives than at any other point in history. Bryce started his talk with statistics about the computing power of smart phones – which surpass that used in early moon missions – nanotechnology, aviation advancements and state-of-the-art internal combustion engine design. Despite all the bad news carried by mainstream media concerning disease, famine and hardship, people are better off today than ever before, says Bryce.

“The catastrophists want degrowth,” Bryce said, as he rattled off quotes from famous activists whose message is that a return to a pastoral existence is the way forward. Societies around the world powered their needs by burning wood for centuries, but most people would probably be against returning to that system today. He describes this view as “slouching toward dystopia.”

Climate activist Bill McKibben is famous for saying “do the math” when it comes to climate change and fossil fuel consumption. Bruce riffs on this theme in the book, turning the phrase around to show that renewable energy alone is not sufficient to meet the world’s incremental energy consumption requirements – let alone existing consumption levels.

“We’re not going to save climate change with solar panels on Walmart roofs in California,” Bryce said.

He is not anti-renewable energy, but does not believe wind and solar alone can power the global economic growth engine and Bryce uses loads of statistics to back up his view. “We need [energy] density, density is green. A smaller environmental footprint is the ideal,” he said.

Responding to a question about nuclear power, Bryce joked that “if you are anti-carbon and anti-nuclear, then you are pro darkness.” Overall, his message is positive and certainly entertaining, so stay tuned for a book review once we’ve had a chance to read it.

Breaking Energy Breaking Energy provides access to news, analysis, thought leadership, reference materials and discussions about the day’s most important energy market trends. Breaking Energy participants stay ahead of breaking news, participate in high-profile events and enjoy access to the central hub of the industry community as it transforms in response to fast-moving changes in energy politics and regulation, deals with financial challenges and leads technological advances.

Liberals are Throwing Away our Children’s (and Grandchildren’s), Future!

Warning: Reading about How the Ontario Liberals Keep on Winning Might Make You Sick

Enough is enough.

You would think the sheer waste of taxpayer dollars through scandals and mismanagement would be enough to hang the Liberals.

Especially since, at the same time your money swirls down the toilet, the Liberals continue to run deficits (seven in a row) andIllustration: Truth and Lie pile up debt that your grandchildren’s children will still be paying off.

Yet in spite of their mistakes and outright lies (the hit parade includes: the billion-dollar gas plant cancellation and the failure to provide proper oversight of Ornge air ambulance expenses and out-of-control spending at the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation and elsewhere) they’ve managed to hold onto power for 11 years. How is that?

I’ll give you three reasons. (Hold on, it’s a long explanation.)

1. They buy votes with big spending promises.

George Bernard Shaw got it right. “A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.”

When even the tax-the-rich NDP recognize that Ontarians are taxed to the hilt and refuse to put up with any “new taxes, tolls or fees that hit middle-class families,” you know Ontario must be in financial trouble.

Net debt is projected to climb to $269.2 billion for 2013–14 and hit $324.5 billion by 2017–18 (nearly 40% of Ontario’s economy). In fact, Ontario’s debt has more than doubled since the Ontario Liberals came to power in 2003–04 when the provincial debt stood at $138.8 billion (or 27.5% of the economy).

Interest payments are the third largest expense in the budget. And right now interest rates are low. When rates go back up, each point will add another $3 billion to our annual interest payment, points out economist Jack Mintz.

But in spite of repeated warnings about the need for spending cuts, from former Liberal finance minister Dwight Duncan (who conveniently woke up to the Ontario’s debt problem in his last few months in office) and public servants in Ontario’s finance ministry, what did the Liberals propose in the budget that forced an election?

Big spending promises, of course. Billions for schools and hospitals, roads and bridges, billions more for corporate grants, and millions for a smorgasbord of social services.

With this budget, the Liberals are in fact driving toward a deficit $2.4 billion higher(or 24% more) than they previously projected—in spite of hiking taxes by almost $1 billion. The deficits planned for 2015–16 and 2016–17 also increased by $1.7 billion and $1.8 billion.

In other words, the Liberals forecast spending to jump by $3.4 billion this year, $900 million more than projected in the 2013 budget, with program spending expected to climb by nearly $3 billion to $119.4 billion.

With Ontario already in a fiscal mess, the NDP (yes, the NDP, a party not known for financial responsibility), criticized the budget as “a mad dash to escape the scandals by promising the moon and the stars.”

2. They pander to unions, whose members make up a big chunk of the electorate.  

The real beneficiary of the tax-and-spend Liberals has been the unions.

For starters, over half of Ontario’s program spending goes to pay public-sector workers their salaries and pension benefits.

What’s more, when the Liberals came into power in 2003, only 14,926 public-sector employees were making $100,000 or more. Today, 97,796 Ontario public-sector workers are on the so-called Sunshine List, an increase of 655% in just 10 years.

But, really, who can be surprised when about 70 percent of public-sector employees are unionized (compare this to the roughly 15 percent unionization rate in the private sector)?

The fact is the Liberals have pandered to unions, especially teacher’s unions, handing out massive, unaffordable pay hikes.

From 2003 to 2011, the McGuinty Liberals increased education spending by 45%, hiring 14,000 more teachers (up 10%) and increasing salaries by 24%—all while student enrollment actually dropped by 6%.

And teachers repaid the favour, “volunteering and voting for McGuinty’s Liberals in huge numbers during the past three elections.”

But following a narrow election win in 2011 (voters were angry over broken promises and higher taxes), McGuinty shifted direction, proposing to freeze teacher wages for two years and curb benefits to reduce the government’s alarming $14.4 billion deficit.

The teachers reacted with predictable outrage.

So despite all their talk about austerity, the Liberals just couldn’t say “no” to their vote-rich cash cow.

While the McGuinty government was calling for wage freezes publicly, it secretly negotiated a three percent wage increase with the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, which represents 35,000 voters, er, government workers.

And forget about Kathleen Wynne taking a firm stance on public-sector wages and benefits.

In a clear bid to win back union support, one of her first moves as premier was to negotiate an LCBO contract that gave 7,000 unionized workers a $1,600 signing bonus over two years—about $9 million— and wage increases of two% in 2015–16.

Her education minister also renegotiated new contracts with the province’s two biggest teachers unions, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation and the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, offering better maternity benefits, fewer unpaid days off, and an improved “sick-day bank.”

And the quid pro quo?

Millions of dollars spent on attack ads directed exclusively against Tory leaders in Ontario’s 2003, 2007, and 2011 elections—by a powerful coalition of special interest unions that includes the Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association, the Canadian Auto Workers, and the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation and calling itself the Working Families Coalition.

The so-called Working Families coalition first “came together in 2003 to discredit then Tory premier Ernie Eves and get Dalton McGuinty elected.” Their ad campaigns had such a big impact on the election results, they followed up with more of the same in the 2007 and 2011 elections. For this campaign, they’re just getting started, but expect a barrage of attack ads aimed squarely at Tim Hudak.

The coalition’s negative ads effectively doubles the advertising budget of the Liberals at the expense of the Tories through loose election laws around third-party advertising. Unlike political parties, third parties “can spend as much as they want, take contributions as large as they want and keep their financial backers hidden until long after the campaign is over.”

In Ontario’s 2011 general election, Working Families spent $1.6 million to help the Liberals.

Other big spenders included the Elementary Teachers’ Federation—$2.6 million—and the English Catholic Teachers’ Association, which spent $1.9 million to help defeat the PC party. For comparison’s sake, out of 21 registered political parties, only two spent more than $2 million on advertising. The Elementary Teachers’ Federation, the biggest third-party advertiser, spent more on advertising than nineteen political parties combined.

Spending records for the 2007 election (the first year third parties had to register with Elections Ontario) show a similar story. A shocking “90 per cent of the $2.3 million raised by third-party advertisers for the 2007 campaign went to organized labour or groups opposed to specific Tory policy positions.”

Plainly, Ontario’s election laws are giving Liberals with their deep-pocketed union allies an unfair advantage.

3. They reward party insiders with lucrative contracts.

In Ontario, it’s not what you know, but who you know.

From eHealth Ontario and Cancer Care Ontario to the Local Health Integration Networks, the Liberals have a history of rewarding party loyalists with “cushy, untendered contracts” and well-paid appointments.

In 2004, Mike Crawley, the then-president of the Ontario Liberals, was awarded awind power contract that guarantees his company AIM PowerGen $66,000 a day for 20 years. That’s a total of $475 million dollars.

In 2010, nearly two-thirds of the $68 million of taxpayers’ money spent on the 14 LHINs went to cover the salaries and remuneration of government-appointed board members.

Pat Dillon, the business manager of the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council and the head of the infamous Working Families Coalition, has received a number of appointments—to Premier Wynne’s Transit Panel, the Ontario College of Trades, the WSIB Board, Infrastructure Ontario, and more.

The Globe and Mail recently reported that Ontario Liberal friends and allies were awarded millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded contracts because of loopholes in the rules surrounding government expenditures. The report goes on to say that, “while there is no indication that any of the transactions were illegitimate, the lack of transparency makes it difficult to determine what services were provided at taxpayers’ expense.”

The sad truth? It pays to be a friend of the Liberals. Ontario taxpayer, not so much.

The Ontario Liberals are long past their best-before date

After 11 years, it’s time to hold the Liberals to account.

Imagine if some pimply-faced thug robbed a gas station and got caught, he’d get what? A thousand dollars tops and some jail time.

But the Liberals who have “stolen” billions of taxpayer money through incompetence and cronyism remain unpunished.

It’s time to throw the Liberals out. They’ve inflicted enough damage on the province. It’s time they answered for their crimes against taxpayers.

 

The “Gang-green” has to be removed, in order for the host to survive!

UK’s “Green” Wind Power Policy Turns to “Gangrene”

Bandaged-Foot

Britain’s energy policy is clearly “other worldly” (see our post here) and/or the product of a “finer” kind of thinking (see our post here).

When it comes to giant fans, the Brits’ political betters are yet to work out that they’ve been stung by the greatest economic and environmental fraud of all time.

One Brit who cottoned on early to scale of the rort was James Delingpole – here he is at his acerbic best.

Vote Blue, Go Green, Turn Septic: 30,000 Reasons Why The Conservatives Deserve To Lose The Rural Vote
Breitbart.com
James Delingpole
20 May 2014

“Vote Blue, Go Green”. It seemed like such a handy slogan when the Conservatives first introduced it in 2006. Not only would it “detoxify the brand” and wrong-foot the opposition, but it would also remind people of the party’s natural bond with the country and the environment: not just Conservatives but conservators….

Well that was the idea, anyway. And I do hope whoever thought of it has now retired to his study with a bottle of whisky and his service pistol because he bloody well should: this ill-advised adventure into enviro-loon idiocy has been the kiss of death for the Conservatives in their natural constituency the rural shires.

Here is one reason why.

The number of onshore wind turbines in Britain has reached 30,000 after increasing by 13 per cent last year, according to research. The disclosure has prompted suggestions that the wind industry is encroaching upon the countryside by stealth. The figure dwarfs the total that is commonly quoted by the industry, which currently stands at 4,399. The discrepancy is because the lower figure does not include the vast numbers of small and mid-sized turbines that have the capacity to produce less than 100kW of electricity each. The smaller turbines range from “micro” roof-top turbines to those that can reach over 100 feet tall and have been installed by thousands of farmers and landowners across the UK. (H/T to the Renewable Energy Foundation for spotting this).

Now every one of those wind turbines tells a story – one with which, as a country dweller myself, I am painfully familiar. It goes like this:

1. Greedy landowner wants to make a bit of extra money for doing bugger all. Decides to put a wind turbine on his land. It will ruin the view for miles around and upset all his neighbours. But where else can you earn around £30,000 a year (per turbine), index linked, just for sitting on your arse?

2. Sure enough, everyone in the neighbourhood objects to this potential eyesore. Resistance is disorganised at first, but little by little a campaign movement (such as this one which urgently needs your support: to stop a turbine being built where Prince Rupert’s forces slept the night before the Battle of Naseby) is established, which costs all involved an eye-watering amount of time, money and commitment. Still, these efforts are rewarded for, after much lobbying, the local council’s elected members – defying their in-house planning department – vote against the planning application.

3. The landowner appeals, as is his right under planning law. He also makes another application to the council, knowing that it will gain the full support of the planning department which, besides being ideologically in favour of renewable energy, is also following the government’s official policy. Meanwhile, the local campaign becomes more fraught, time-consuming and costly than ever – especially now that an expensive lawyer has had to be hired to fight the appeal.

4. The appeal is decided not by a local who understands the area’s needs, but by someone from the Planning Inspectorate which – again following the government’s official policy – is biased towards allowing renewable energy projects unless there are very strong reasons against. Likely at this point, the greedy landowner will win the appeal and all the community campaign’s time, effort and money will have been wasted. If somehow the community is lucky enough to win the appeal, the landowner will simply go through the whole process again, hoping to win the appeal on the next application he has made. Most likely he will win for planning law on wind farms is stacked very much in favour of the developers.

5. So the wind turbine finally goes up, despoiling the view for miles around, knocking around 15 per cent off the value of nearby properties, keeping people awake some nights with its intermittent, low-frequency noise, and making the landowner his cool £30,000 a year (most of it derived not from the value of the actual power he generates but from green levies added to everyone’s energy bills).

And which government bears the responsibility for these disastrous rifts within the rural community and for the ruination of the British landscape? Why the one led by Conservative David Cameron, which promised to be the “greenest government ever”, of course.

Which isn’t to say that some Conservatives haven’t performed well on a local level. Star of the anti-wind campaign has been my own MP Chris Heaton-Harris, who has schemed long and hard to make his party see sense on their renewables policy. Another hero is Montgomeryshire MP Glyn Davis who is fighting to stop the turbines and pylons currently scheduled to wipe out mid-Wales and the matchlessly beautiful Shropshire border country. In the Cabinet there’s the great Owen Paterson and also Communities Secretary Eric Pickles, currently on a mission to veto as many new onshore wind projects as possible at the planning stage.

But with 30,000 bat-chomping, bird-slicing eco-crucifixes already littering the countryside, it’s surely a case of too little too late. Cameron – a countryman who really should know better – had his chance on becoming Conservative leader to dissociate his party from Labour’s disastrous green energy policies but instead chose, either from ignorance or cynicism, to not just to embrace them but to double down on them.

If future generations wish to stop and contemplate David Cameron’s legacy there are plenty of places dotted all over the country where they can do so. Just above the Warwickshire village of Priors Marston, for example, there’s a magnificent view down over the fields of yellow rape into the most gorgeous Midlands countryside. And bang in the middle of this view, so perfectly central and dominant it might be an out-take from a Wes Anderson movie – is a single wind turbine. It didn’t need to be there. It shouldn’t be there.

Thanks to Cameron’s “greenest government ever” it’s stuck there for at least the next twenty-five years, ruining the view, slicing and dicing wildlife, driving up energy bills, making one landowner richer and everyone else in the neighbourhood poorer. Rural communities are much closer-knit than urban ones. They don’t forget slights like this.
Breitbart.com

james-delingpole_3334

 

McGuinty and Wynne….Same Evil Person, in a Different Outfit? LIARS!

Liars: The McGuinty-Wynne Record
by: Daniel Dickin

About the book
Daniel Dickin sees a clear split in Ontario’s wealth and prosperity. For the first 136 years following Confederation, Ontario was known for its balanced budgets, responsible spending, and prudent political, fiscal, and economic policies. These policies made Ontario the “economic powerhouse” of Canada and the envy of the other provinces.

Unfortunately, all of that changed when Dalton McGuinty’s Liberals took the reigns of power in Ontario in 2003. The 136 years of substantial progress and good governance were thrown to the side in favour of expensive government experiments, reckless green energy programs, record-setting deficit spending, a ballooning debt and scandal after scandal after scandal – along with all the lies to cover it up.

While the average Ontario citizen benefitted under the Big Blue Conservative governments of the 20th century, the only people benefiting from the Ontario Liberals are the public sector unions and Liberal Party elites.

Kathleen Wynne took over Dalton McGuinty’s legacy in 2013 and had the opportunity define her new government. She had the opportunity to get Ontario back on track and set herself apart from the scandal-plagued McGuinty past. Unfortunately, Kathleen Wynne only continued McGuinty’s legacy of scandals and lies, digging Ontario deeper into the hole of higher debt, more taxes, and fewer jobs.

Dickin’s book provides the hardhitting analysis and inconvenient facts that have been public information for years yet never organized into one strong, cohesive argument. This book presents a compelling argument for the real legacy of Dalton McGuinty and the Ontario Liberal Party – and it isn’t pretty – they are liars who have covered up the mismanagement and derailment of a once great and prosperous Ontario.

*BONUS*
Get a free bumper sticker with this purchase.

About the author
Daniel Dickin is a grassroots community leader and self-described political junkie. He obtained his Bachelor’s degree in law and political science from Carleton University in 2011. He has worked on federal and provincial election campaigns, including in Dalton McGuinty’s former riding of Ottawa South. Daniel is also a legal and political affairs columnist for the Prince Arthur Herald and Huffington Post Canada publications.

*BUNDLES*

 
$40.95
 

Wynne’s Pension Plan will Eliminate 150,000 Jobs…and NOT Through Attrition!

Internal, confidential government document’s confirmed the 150,000 jobs losses, stating –

  • “payroll taxes would have the largest negative impact on employment.”
  • the Ministry of Finance calculated that for every $2-billion increase in Ontario payroll taxes, 18,000 people would lose their job

Canada Free Press — May 22, 2014

Canadian workers and employers contribute $42 billion a year nationwide to the Canada Pension Plan.  Ontario’s share of these annual contributions is roughly $16.5 billion. The payroll tax will mean 150,000 fewer private sector jobs.

Internal, confidential government document’s confirmed the 150,000 jobs losses, stating –

  • “payroll taxes would have the largest negative impact on employment.”
  • the Ministry of Finance calculated that for every $2-billion increase in Ontario payroll taxes, 18,000 people would lose their job

Ontarians already pay the highest payroll taxes in Canada. On average, families pay $9,970 a year in government payroll taxes in addition to their personal income taxes

The McGuinty-Wynne Liberal payroll tax will increase taxes by:

  • $788 a year for someone making $45,000
  • $1,263 a year for someone making $70,000
  • $1,643 a year for someone making $90,000

Ontario small business has been unanimous in their opposition to this job killing tax:

  • In particular, CFIB is vehemently opposed to the proposed Ontario Retirement Pension Plan, which will hurt small business owners and their employees by taxing everyone who issues and receives a paycheque and does not currently have a workplace pension. “In one of the worst Ontario budgets ever, the government is picking the pockets of Ontarians, especially the middle class, to pay for it.” (Dan Kelly, President, Canadian Federation of Independent Business)
  • The OCC does not support a stand-alone Ontario pension plan, as the plan will create administrative duplication with the CPP, further fragment Canada’s pension landscape, and potentially deter job creation. (Ontario Chamber of Commerce)

 

broke bankrupt

More Bad News for Renewable Energy’s “Solar Power!”

Via.GREENIE WATCH.

May 22, 2014

Solar panels ‘are time bombs’

THE Coalition has likened the spate of house fires caused by allegedly faulty rooftop circuit-breakers to the pink batts fiasco, claiming Labor ignored warnings that subsidies for solar power would create a similar honey pot for dodgy operators.

As revealed by The Australian, Advancetech, the Queensland company that imported and sold 27,000 solar power DC isolators, went into receivership last Friday, leaving tens of thousands of homeowners to replace them in their rooftop arrays or risk a ­conflagration.

The Queensland and NSW governments have issued recall notices for the Avanco isolators after 70 of them burnt out, in some cases causing minor house fires.

Also recalled is a PVPower branded isolator imported and sold by Swiss electrotechnical products supplier DKSH, though that began in March at the instigation of the company.

Describing solar panels as “ticking time bombs”, Nationals senator Ron Boswell said there would be “possibly thousands” of other dangerous breakdowns.

The Queensland senator said the Labor government’s subsidy to encourage home owners to install solar panels, the Small-scale Renewable Energy Certificates scheme, led to an overheated market in which shoddy operators and cheap imports thrived.

“The flaws and waste associated with this scheme have been largely under the radar because of the scale of the personal tragedies associated with the pink batts fiasco, but as an exercise in silliness, waste, and maladministration, the solar scheme has been its absolute equal,” Senator Boswell said.

“It has a long way to go before it plays out, as systems installed age.

“Fire-prone isolators in rooftop solar arrays in Queensland and NSW are just the sort of problem Labor was warned about, and ignored, as it ramped up demand for its solar program in 2010.”

He quoted several experts who had given evidence to a Senate committee on the topic that year, including the chief executive of environmental credits trader Greenbank Environmental, Fiona O’Hehir, who said the subsidy gave rise to possible dodgy and dangerous installations.

“You would actually have DC generation on your roof, which can be as high as 120V DC. A flood of cheap imports into Australia could mean that we have significant risk,” she said at the time.

“If it continues at this rate, we will soon end up with a situation along the lines of the insulation program, which would be a disaster for the renewable energy industry.’’

The SREC scheme is still in place, though at a much reduced rate of subsidy, and is under review pending the outcome of the inquiry into renewable energy by businessman Dick Warburton.

SOURCE: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/solar-panels-are-time-bombs/story-fn59niix-1226926234717#

Aussies Set to Scrap Renewable Energy Targets!

Australia’s Miners say: “Tony, it’s Time for

the Great Big Toxic REC Tax to GO”

keith-de-lacy

As the RET Review Panel get ready to help axe the mandatory Renewable Energy Target, Australia’s miners have united to brand the RET a guaranteed “job killer” and just “plain crazy”. The miners quite rightly identify the Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) issued under that policy as an enormous and unnecessary cost burden to households and business.

In truth, RECs are simply a Federal Tax on all Australian electricity consumers, because the entire value of the REC is added directly to power bills and (under the large-scale scheme) is all directed to wind power generators, as a government mandated subsidy.

Currently, around 12% of Australia’s electricity comes from renewable generation sources (with almost half of that coming from hydro power, the great bulk of which pre-dates the RET legislation). Annual demand is around 190,000 GWh, so 12% of that (the “contribution” from renewables) represents 22,800 GWh.

The wind industry and its parasites argue that the REC Tax/Subsidy will lead to “investment” in renewable energy (ie wind power) capacity sufficient to satisfy the current 41,000 GWh mandated annual target. However, satisfying that target by 2020 is economically and practically impossible: a matter which Australia’s biggest generators and retailers all agree upon (see our post here).

To meet that target would require an increase in total installed wind power capacity of around 24,000 MW – from the present capacity of 3,000 MW – to more than 27,000 MW (at a cost of more than $50 billion); and a duplicated transmission network to carry it (at a cost of more than $30 billion) (see our post here).

In addition, financing that “investment” would depend upon the REC price reaching $90 to make all of these new projects commercially viable. Currently, the REC price is $26 and falling – which is way below what is required to even cover wind farm operating costs; and nowhere near enough to cover construction costs. This is the main reason that banks are simply refusing to lend to wind power companies.

With less than 23,000 GWh coming from renewable sources at present – and no likelihood of any significant wind power capacity being added between now and 2020 – Australia will simply fall short of the fixed target by a figure in the order of 18,000 GWh.

Now, at this point, power consumers might breathe a sigh of relief thinking they’ve avoided being slugged with the REC Tax – which would have otherwise been added to their power bills – if all those extra wind farms had been built and were producing the additional 18,000 GWh needed to satisfy the fixed target. Oh, but if it were that simple.

For every MW that a retailer falls short of the mandated target it gets whacked with a $65 fine – what is referred to under the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 as the “shortfall charge” – follow the links hereand here.

The big retailers, Origin Energy and Energy Australia have already said that – rather than messing around with intermittent and unreliable wind power – they will simply cop the $65 fine and pass that entire cost on to their retail customers (see our posts here and here).

This means that – instead of just paying the average wholesale price of $35-40 MWh – retailers will end up paying close to $100-105 per MWh – the wholesale price plus the fine. And that will all be passed on to power consumers.

Remember, that the original objective of the mandatory RET was to encourage the generation of electricity by renewable energy sources and, thereby, to reduce CO2 emissions in the electricity sector.

In the end result, however, power consumers will simply end up paying the cost of a whopping $65 per MWh fine – that will be recovered by retailers on over 42% of the fixed annual mandatory RET of 41,000 GWh.

By 2020, the $65 per MWh fine will be levied on a shortfall of around 18,000 GWh – which means a total of around $1.17 billion (18,000,000 MW x $65) will go straight into general revenue every year until 2031 – when the RET expires.

With the mandatory RET continuing until 2031 – and the $65 fine with it – this means that – from 2020 – a total of close to $12 billion will be added to power bills and pocketed by the Commonwealth. However, there will be: NO additional renewable energy; NO “break-through” on-demand renewable energy technologies; NO reduction in CO2 emissions – just a GREAT BIG TOXIC TAX on ALL Australian electricity consumers.

It’s a point not lost on Australia’s miners. Mining investment and mining exports have kept the Australian economy at the top of the international leader-board in terms of growth in incomes and meaningful employment. Australia dodged a GFC bullet thanks to the red stuff being shovelled out of mountains in North-West Western Australia and the black stuff being shipped out of Queensland. And those States with big mining sectors (WA and QLD) continue to out perform the rest by a mile – in terms of growth in incomes and employment.

So, when miners talk, sensible governments listen (see our posts here andhere). Here’s The Australian on what the miners are saying about the mandatory RET.

Subsidies for clean energy to hit $21bn
The Australian
Annabel Hepworth
22 May 2014

SUBSIDIES for renewable energy schemes such as rooftop solar panels and wind farms will cost electricity consumers up to $21.6 billion by 2020, a new analysis has found.

A submission by the Minerals Council of Australia also warns that more gas and coal-fired power stations could be mothballed or permanently closed as the renewable energy target puts pressure on the electricity market and slashes their revenues.

If this happens, retail electricity prices “can be expected to increase”, according to an economic analysis commissioned by the council which represents mining giants including BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Glencore Xstrata.

The analysis also hits back at fresh claims by the clean energy sector that the RET will create up to 18,400 jobs by 2020, declaring “the most immediate effects” from subsidising the renewable sector are job losses as cheaper forms of energy are crowded out.

“Additional job losses can be expected to arise from the drain on economic activity as a result of higher electricity prices,” it finds.

Former Queensland treasurer Keith De Lacy — now one of the nation’s best-known company directors — declared it was “plain crazy” to have schemes such as the RET, solar feed-in tariffs and carbon tax that were driving up power bills.

“The Australian public keep complaining about the increases in the costs of living and this has become even more so since the budget,” Mr De Lacy told The Australian yesterday.

“But one of the biggest increases in cost has been the price of electricity … It’s the most fundamental of services to the Australian public … These kind of things just make some people feel good but don’t achieve anything.

“They’ve got no place, I believe, in a modern economy.”

The comments add to pressure on the Coalition, given it is split over what to do about the RET.

According to the Principal Economics review commissioned by the Minerals Council, the RET scheme has an opportunity cost (money that could have been invested elsewhere) of more than $36bn by 2020-21.

The analysis finds that subsidies that are recovered through the sale of renewable energy certificates, which are directly passed on to consumers, could reach between $19.3bn and $21.6bn by 2020-21, covering part of the cost to build the infrastructure.

The miners are wielding the figures in a bid to convince the government-appointed RET review panel that the scheme is excessively costly for households and industry, and cannot continue the way it is.

“These are the additional costs paid by energy consumers: households, domestic firms and exporters such as the mining sector,” the council’s submission says.

The submission also warns that the RET will encumber business with “uncapped and high costs for subsidies”, particularly for the scheme for rooftop solar PV panels, “because of poor design and a series of inchoate policy shifts”.

In 2010, then federal minister Martin Ferguson said the RET was a “bonus to the renewable sector of the order of another $20bn to $30bn in commonwealth government support”.

The Australian Industry Group has called for the RET to be maintained, despite demands by some businesses that it be scrapped because it is expensive.

The AiGroup says that while the cost of building wind farms and solar panels is passed on to customers, extra energy from wind farms and solar panels has pushed down wholesale prices.

This has also been a key pillar of arguments by the Clean Energy Council, which is wielding its own research by ROAM Consulting that finds household energy prices would be $50 a year lower by 2020 with the RET, and that leaving it alone would create 18,400 jobs.

The Minerals Council has told the panel lower wholesale prices are not a “function of competitive forces but of government intervention”, are likely to be short-lived and undermine investments in coal and gas-fired power stations needed for reliable electricity supplies.

The analysis points to power station retirements including the permanent shutdown of the Munmorah black coal power station in NSW and temporary closure of South Australia’s Playford.

“Overall retail price rises have therefore been lower than they otherwise would have been,” the analysis says.

Wholesale electricity prices are “likely to increase” if power generators that become unprofitable close. Minerals Council chief executive Brendan Pearson said access to cheap, reliable energy had been a “source of economic strength” for Australia. “This is no longer the case,” he said.

The analysis draws on previous modelling. It quotes estimates by SKM MMA for the Climate Change Authority in December 2012 that put the cost for buying certificates for large-scale renewables at $15.9bn by 2020-21 and for small-scale renewables at $3.4bn — totalling $19.3bn.

Like most of the figures cited in the new analysis, these are based on an assumption of no carbon price — which the analysis says is appropriate as the Abbott government has announced its plans to repeal it.

To get to the $21.6bn figure, the analysis cites modelling by ACIL Tasman for TRUenergy (now EnergyAustralia) — which wants the RET scaled back — that puts the subsidy for the small-scale scheme at $5.7bn.
The Australian

The figure of $21.6 billion cited for the cost of the REC Tax up to 2020 is pretty close to the mark – matching the figures forecast by Liberal MP, Angus “the Enforcer” Taylor and privately confirmed by Origin.

However, we’re not sure why the Minerals Council stopped the clock at 2020?

The mandatory RET continues until 2031, such that – between 2020 and 2031 – a further $25-30 billion will be collected from power consumers: either by generators in the form of the REC Tax/Subsidy; or by the government in the form of the $65 per MWh fine (the “shortfall charge” – see our commentary above).

As you’d expect the Clean Energy Council trot out the same “Alice in Wonderland” twaddle that they’ve been peddling over the last month or so trying to protect their wind industry clients. No surprises there. Their claim about the RET creating 18,400 “green” jobs is patent nonsense; and gets treated with the contempt it deserves by the Minerals Council.

As to the comments from the Australian Industry Group, we’re not sure what planet they’ve been living on. These lightweights are either simply too lazy to have bothered to read the Renewable Energy legislation; or simply too dumb to understand it – sure, for the intellectually challenged it’s long-winded and tricky to follow (they could start with our post here). And they clearly haven’t paid a power bill lately.

Power consumers couldn’t care less about the wholesale price – they’re lumbered with the retail price – which DOES include the cost of the REC Tax; as well as the obscene returns guaranteed under the Power Purchase Agreements between wind power generators and retailers.

The REC Tax and PPAs are both the direct product of the mandatory RET and have resulted in Australians paying the among highest retail power prices in the world (see page 11 of this paper: FINAL-INTERNATIONAL-PRICE-COMPARISON-FOR-PUBLIC-RELEASE-19-MARCH-2012 – the figures are from 2011 and SA has seen prices jump since then).

The article refers to a “split” in the Coalition over the fate of the mandatory RET. The “split” is – on our reckoning – more like a “splinter”. The vast majority see the mandatory RET for what it is: “corporate welfare on steroids” which – given the Coalition’s unpopular budgetary attack on the “age of entitlement” – simply has to go.

If the Coalition can’t “sell” voters on the need for a measly $7 dollar Medicare co-payment for visits to the Doctor (in order to ensure Medicare is sustainable in the future), how on earth is it ever going to justify an entirely unnecessary $50-60 billion hit on power consumers if the mandatory RET is maintained?

To make the “sell” even harder, that’s $50-60 billion to be pocketed either as REC Tax/Subsidy – by foreign-owned outfits like Acciona, Union Fenosa and RATCH; or by the government in the form of the $65 per MWh fine, with no environmental benefit whatsoever.

It’s a “no-brainer”, Tony – kill the mandatory RET now, before it kills your chances of a second term.

abbottcover

 

How Could Anyone Vote for the Liberal Miscreants?

This Household Is Quite Unhappy With The Ontario Liberals (PHOTO)

The Huffington Post Canada  |  Posted: 05/21/2014 4:43 pm EDT  

 Embedded image permalink

Well, don’t sugarcoat it.

Matt Young, an Ontario PC candidate in Ottawa South, tweeted a photo of an angry letter he found taped to a door in his riding Wednesday.

The note tears a strip off Ontario Liberals over high electricity rates and the gas plant scandal. It also warns Grit MPP John Fraser and his “henchmen” that they will be hit with both HYDRO BILLS and OBSCENITIES if they dare knock.

Whoever posted the letter claims to have worked on five different Liberal campaigns but now regrets those efforts.

Ottawa South was previously represented by former Liberal premier Dalton McGuinty. Fraser won a byelection to replace him in August, besting Young by more than 1,000 votes.

The note may be representative of how some Ontarians feel about the estimated $1.1 billion lost after the cancellation of gas plants in Mississauga and Oakville.

But Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion, who endorsed Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne last week, believes there are more important issues to focus on. In fact, she called the scandal “water under the bridge.”

The best line of the angry letter?

“John Manley would be turning in his grave if he were dead.”

Manley, a former federal Liberal finance minister, was the MP for Ottawa South for about 16 years. He was replaced by another McGunity — Dalton’s younger brother, David.

Ontario voters head to the polls on June 12.

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