Wednesday 15th of May 2024

the wind of hot air...

research...research...

The Spectator and the IPA have little influence on the "proles", as Pru Goward calls you, us — the plebs who work like slaves and believe in windmills… But The Spectator and the IPA are the primal sources feeding The Australian newspaper and ALL the right-wing policies of the Liberal (CONservative) Party. If you listened to the raw arguments of the IPA, you would still be smoking cigarettes "like chimneys" (not very original, I know) and, by rights, you would be filling the hospital bed with your lung cancers, emphysema, gangrene of the big toes, instead of filling the wards with your Covid-19 cases — and die before your grandmother.

 

So the raw policies of the IPA, promoted by The Spectator, are diligently packaged with clever sugar-coated “marketing” so the proles can swallow the poison of the IPA's decided “freedoms”. By rights, you should be able to smoke your cigars and infect your neighbour with chronic bronchitis.

 

If you believe that Scomo has come to accept papa-net-zero, you would be a fool. He has been taken to COP26, screaming and kicking, with a more than vague, say farty-windy-gale force hot air, agenda of emission capture technology that has not been invented yet, and other sauce thinning devices that are not even worth the spit. 

 

From time to time it is useless to go blue in the face to explain the reality of global warming, because it’s too complicated and the marketing of which is done done through similar crude marketing as that of the IPA poison. 

 

Greta cops a lot of criticism for her forthright invectives. You dorks.

 

And we have the usual indices such as the polar bears numbers.. The IPA senior analysis is good on polar bears. It has graphs and statistics that we have also studied to indicate that global warming is impacting their population. Now, counting polar bears is not for the sun-seeking Bali-Vacationer. And as we know, some polar bears are seen, some are not because of various factors from the white snow to the bears that are getting closer to civilisation in search of garbage bins for food. So, the surveys of polar bears have been iffy. (https://ipa.org.au/ipa-today/unable-to-see-the-polar-bears-for-the-snow)

See also: https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/31205

 

The next instalment at the IPA responsible for global warming is, guess what... the SUN. We’ve already dealt with this. OF COURSE THE SUN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR WARMING THE PLANET. But not the way the IPA and other fantasist loonies see it. For them, there is an inexplicable increase in solar activity (which has not been detected yet — since serious observations have shown that the sun has been rather quiet during our most globally 17 warm years — since 2000… But they don’t shy in promoting the sun activity as the global warming factor, quoting the discreditable pseudo-“scientific” analysis by dinosaurs, such as Connolly et al…(https://ipa.org.au/research/climate-change-and-energy/how-the-ipcc-buries-evidence-of-the-suns-climate-influence).

 

Now, we have been told that ScoMo has become a convert from reading a book by William (Bill) Gates:

 

Bill Gates was an unlikely climate campaigner. It was what drew Scott Morrison towards the billionaire software developer and philanthropist’s latest book.

Morrison discovered How To Avoid A Climate Disaster while perusing Amazon. He bought it in February and immersed himself in it for days. He has regularly quoted large slabs back to advocates and critics of stronger action on climate change since.

Those playing at home might have noticed this week the Prime Minister name-dropped the Microsoft founder several times. First in an opinion piece published in The Daily Telegraph, Herald Sun and Courier-Mail this week on why the 2050 target mattered.

“The path to net zero is also not a straight line,” he wrote. “In fact, as Bill Gates argues, forcing outcomes by 2030 with unrealistic targets can divert resources from technologies with longer lead times that will be essential to achieving 2050 objectives. So we will keep making sensible commitments and doing our best to exceed them.”

 

And then again and again and again. To colleagues, to voters, to industry leaders.

Morrison’s political opponents this week labelled his net zero moment “weak” and a “sham”. The environmental movement – who rarely trust the conservative side of politics to deal with the issue – said it was “a plan for a plan” and the federal government was “short-changing” Australians by refusing to join other nations in at least halving emissions by 2030.

In response, Morrison walked a pragmatic line and like Gates tried to focus on solutions rather than problems. All with varying levels of success.

The pair spoke for the first time last year at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, discussing funding for vaccines and the Indo-Pacific’s health challenges. They hit it off.

In April this year Gates was the guest speaker at US President Joe Biden’s climate summit. Morrison logged on to listen. Gates was upbeat but not deluded about the challenge ahead.

 

Read more: https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/the-billionaire-the-book-and-the-pm-how-bill-gates-convinced-scott-morrison-on-net-zero-20211029-p59489.html

 

 

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Now, don’t forget that our (not mine) ScoMo is a Noah’s Ark addict. He is also a great nappy marketeer, especially if you don't need one… One has to translate what he says into what he thinks. I have done the translation in the toon above… So in regard to Bill Gates, one has to be sceptical, for the Bill-fellow influences your behaviour in accordance to his “bizarre” philanthropy… I don’t doubt Bill’s sincerity, but his methods and final purpose can be close to dictatorship. Scomo is still very adept in telling plausible bullshit and his name dropping of Gates isn’t done lightly — as if to bamboozle the caffe-latte drinkers of the intelligentsia to believe that ScoMo is now a convert to doing something for global warming...

 

 

See also: https://www.yourdemocracy.net.au/drupal/node/27884 

 

https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/35168

 

https://www.yourdemocracy.net.au/drupal/node/30806

 

https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/28076

 

and especially:

 

https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/10145

 

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polishing a turd...

We will have enough ultra-cheap, pollution-free electricity to power homes, vehicles and industry. All that’s needed is the courage to embrace it.

 

The most striking feature of Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s long-term emissions reduction plan outlined on Tuesday is not the long-telegraphed commitment to net-zero emissions by 2050, or the promise of a A$20 billion clean energy program (around 0.2 per cent of national income annually).

It is the announcement of a technology target which is entirely outside the government’s control: solar photovoltaic electricity at a cost of A$15 a megawatt-hour ($/MWh).

That price translates to 1.5 cents per kilowatt hour (c/kWh), a tiny fraction of the 20 to 30 (c/kWh) currently being paid by Australian households. Most of the price households pay consists of charges for transmission, distribution and retail services.

The Australian government cannot deliver (or even significantly obstruct) this target, any more than Australia, acting alone, can much effect the global climate.

But it’s easy to see Morrison is on safe ground in setting ultra-cheap solar photovoltaic electricity as his goal.

That’s because the world is almost there.

Long-term solar power supply contracts in many countries are being settled at prices of less than A$0.02 c/kWh and prices are continuing to fall.

Reductions in the cost of solar modules, inverters and the like are being driven by a massive global industry, with an annual turnover of more than $A200 billion a year, and correspondingly huge research and development budgets.

The programs announced today might help to accelerate progress a little, but they are part of a massive global effort.

Equally critical, and less subject to government control, is the global decline in long-term real interest rates which are now zero or negative, even over terms of 30 years, more than the expected life of a solar plant.

A zero real interest rate, combined with near-zero operating costs means a solar plant only needs to generate enough electricity over its lifetime to pay for its initial installation cost.

Solar electricity now costs very little

Utility-scale solar can now be installed at a cost of less than $A1/watt or $A1,000/kW.

In favourable locations, such as those in most parts of Australia, solar cells can deliver the 2,000 hours of full power per year, over a lifetime of 25 years. That’s 50,000 kWh, implying a cost of A$0.02 c/kWh.

We can expect to see such prices appearing in contracts very soon, as the ultra-low cost of capital is factored into calculations of returns. Technological progress will get us the rest of the way to Morrison’s target.

This remains about as true even when we take account of the need for energy storage, to ensure electricity generated at the midday supply peak can be shifted to meet the demand peak in the early evening and to meet the much lower night-time need (sometimes called “baseload”). The costs of batteries are declining in the same way as solar cells.

What are the implications for the Australian coal industry? It’s already clear new coal-fired power is uneconomic in competition with solar and wind power, and most countries have stopped commissioning new generators.

The exceptions, including those in China, reflect the desire of provincial governments to keep capital investment going, rather than a calculation of costs and benefits.

But as the price of solar falls, even the existing paid-for plants will become uneconomic, unless the price of coal falls drastically.

Brutal arithmetic

The arithmetic is brutal. One tonne of high-grade thermal coal is sufficient to generate 2–3 MWh of electricity.

In a market where the price is set by competition from solar at A$15/MWh, that would yield revenue A$30–45/tonne, out of which has to come the costs of maintaining and operating an ageing coal-power plant, as well as the cost of mining and shipping the coal.

At the moment thermal coal costs in excess of US$180 per tonne.

“Green” hydrogen, produced by cheap electrolysis, could do the same for coking coal, as well as undercutting “blue” hydrogen produced from gas. Add to that the fact China is in the process of introducing a carbon price, and it’s clear the achievement of Morrison’s solar electricity price target will spell the end of thermal coal. A similar analysis applies to gas.

That won’t happen immediately. In the very short term in places such as China, growth in electricity demand is outpacing installations of solar and wind, pushing coal prices high.

And carbon-free steel is some way off.

When the global demand for coal does declines, it will be higher-cost and lower-quality producers such as those in Indonesia that will feel it before Australia’s.

But the idea Australia will still be exporting significant quantities of coal in 2040 — let alone 2050 — is a fantasy.

The broader story delivered by Morrison (and the right one) is a story of optimism.

Coal on way out, future bright

Instead of the alarmist scenarios of $100 roasts and economic catastrophe still being pushed by opponents of action, we are at a point where we can safely predict we will have more than enough ultra-cheap, pollution-free electricity to power homes, vehicles and most kinds of industry.

All that’s needed is the courage to embrace it.

It will require more than we have seen from our leaders so far.

 

We need to accelerate the transition away from coal-fired electricity and internal combustion vehicles, starting immediately.

Internal Coalition politics might have stopped Morrison from announcing a serious target for emissions reductions by 2030, but there is no reason we couldn’t reduce emissions by 50 per cent or more, while setting a course for a more prosperous and sustainable future.The Conversation

 

Read more:

https://johnmenadue.com/morrisons-plan-has-coal-on-the-way-out-with-the-future-bright/

 

I hope this scenario by John Quiggin — an Australian economist, a professor at the University of Queensland, and a former member of the Climate Change Authority of the Australian government — is done in jest... ScoMo has no plan to speak off, except let the "free-wheeling" of KWatts be done by magic. ScoMo has no desire to phase coal out. Nor gas... The alarmist scenarios of $100 roasts came from the Friends of the ScoMo Society... Remember ScoMo's "electric car" weekend shit-thinking of a couple of years ago. Scomo will say whatever suits his re-election and do whatever — with carpark rorts et al... And we know that the Liberal (CONservative) party is in the pocket of the IPA... AND, LIKE ABBOTT, THE LIBERAL (conSERVATIVE) PARTY LIES.... Quiggin is polishing a BIG turd.

 

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the scomo mirage spectacular...

This is the age of disruptors. And the man who today hops off a plane to take Australia's climate strategy to the world has changed the model of political leadership as we know it.

All this time, we've been thinking the idea was to outline your vision, then campaign, then get elected.

But the Morrison doctrine on climate reveals a new path: Outline what you oppose, then get elected, then shimmy backwards under sniper fire from your own side — all the while denying you're shifting at all — then calmly declare victory, claiming credit for a bunch of stuff you opposed all along.

It's sort of spectacular, in a way. If the spectacle's what you're in it for. 

The truly remarkable feature of the climate "deal" ostentatiously fished out by Scott Morrison last week from a performative scrimmage with his own Coalition colleagues, is that it's essentially a redundancy package for conventional political leadership.

After 25 years of parliamentary advocacy, research, vision, frustration, advances, retreats, reversals and waste, the Australian Government's new plan to eliminate net emissions will involve no legislation whatsoever.

 

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce — a man for whom legislation would have involved the inelegant spectacle of his own MPs (and possibly himself) voting against the PM — is understandably relieved by this development for practical reasons.

But he went further last Tuesday after "The Australian Way" was announced, heaping scorn upon the very idea that a significant national initiative would involve a yea or nay from the people's delegates.

"Legislation brings in laws, and laws outlaw things, and laws are enforced with penalties," he jibed at the Opposition during Question Time. "We believe in inspiration and technology, and they believe in laws and penalties." 

 

Read more:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-10-31/morrison-climate-plan-net-zero-new-model-political-leadership/100576698

 

 

READ ABOUT SCOMO'S MIRAGE FROM TOP.

 

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