-
Methane Concentrations : Losing Control
Posted on January 9th, 2012 No commentsEvery once in a while, it’s good to remind myself of the data – to help me focus once again on why I do what I do. Yesterday evening, I decided to catch up on exactly how out of control atmospheric methane concentrations are in the region around the Arctic :-
When reviewing the charts, the secondmost important thing to see is the high point measurements, the peaks, rising over time.
The most vital thing to observe, however, is the inexorable rise of the minimum measurements since around 2007 – which implies a higher overall background atmospheric methane concentration. Much of this methane explosion can probably be blamed on global warming from excessive carbon dioxide emissions – which showed signs of coming under control between 1990 and 2000, but after that lifted off once more.
People dispute why carbon dioxide emissions have risen consistently and sharply since the turn of the millenium – but one of the answers is to be found in the rapid deployment of coal-burning for power generation. Stronger environmental controls on air quality have reduced the health impacts of coal-burning, but mean that the net effect is stronger global warming.
So much could be done to alleviate the strong warming of the Arctic, and prevent dangerous instabilities. It is time to say it – and keep on saying it – and not relent – every measure to keep the Arctic cool is urgent.
Big Number, Big Picture, China Syndrome, Climate Change, Climate Chaos, Climate Damages, Coal Hell, Contraction & Convergence, Cool Poverty, Demoticratica, Direction of Travel, Disturbing Trends, Emissions Impossible, Fossilised Fuels, Global Heating, Global Warming, Health Impacts, Incalculable Disaster, Meltdown, Methane Madness, Methane Management, Nudge & Budge, Paradigm Shapeshifter, Peak Coal, Peak Emissions, Policy Warfare, Political Nightmare, Protest & Survive, Realistic Models, Science Rules, Screaming Panic, The Data, Zero Net -
Urbanity, Durbanity
Posted on December 12th, 2011 1 comment
People working for non-governmental, and governmental, organisations can be rather defensive when I criticise the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change or UNFCCC. What ? I don’t back the international process ? Climate change, after all, is a borderless crime, and will take global policing. Well, I back negotiations for a global treaty in principle, but not in practice.
The annual wearisome jousting and filibustering events just before Christmas do not constitute for me a healthy, realistic programme of engagement, imbued with the full authority and support of global leadership structures and civil society. People can try to spin it and claim success, but that’s just whitewash on an ungildable tomb.The Climate Change talks that have just taken place in Durban, South Africa, were exemplary of a peculiar kind of collective madness that has resulted from trying to navigate and massage endless special interests, national jostling, brinkmanship, unworkable and inappropriate proposals from economists, communications failures and corporate interference in governance.
The right people with real decisionmaking powers are not at the negotiating table. The organisations with most to contribute are still acting in opposition – that’s the energy industry, to be explicit. And the individual national governments are still not concerned enough about climate change, even though it impacts strongly on the things they do consider to be priorities – economic health, trade and political superiority.
Over 20 years ago, the debate on what to do to tackle global warming and still maintain good international relations was already won, by the commonsense approach of Contraction and Convergence – fair shares for all. Each country should count on their fair share of carbon emissions based on their population – and we would get there by starting from where we are now and agreeing mutual cuts. The big emitters would agree to steeper cuts than the lower emitters – and after some time, everybody in the world would have the same, safe emissions rights.
What has prevented this logical approach from being implemented ? Well, we have had the so-called “flexible mechanisms” pushed on us – such as the Clean Development Mechanism which essentially boils down to the idea that the richer high-emitting countries can offset their carbon by paying for poorer low emissions countries to cut their carbon instead. Some have been attempting to make the CDM carbon credits into a commercial product for the Carbon Trading market. Some may contest it, but the CDM and carbon trading haven’t really been working very well, and anyway, the CDM doesn’t aim for emissions reductions, just offsets.
Other carbon trade has been implemented, such as the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS), which doesn’t appear to have caused high emissions industries to diversify out of carbon, or created a viable price for carbon dioxide, so its usefulness is questionable.
Many people have put forward the idea of straight carbon pricing, mostly by taxation. The trouble with this idea should be obvious, but rarely is. Over four-fifths of the world’s energy is fossil fuel based. Taxing carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels would just make everything, everywhere, more expensive. It wouldn’t necessarily create new lower carbon energy resources, as the taxes would probably be put into a giant climate change adaptation fund – a financial institution proposed by several people including Oliver Tickell and Nicholas Stern, although in Stern’s case, he is calling for direct grants from countries to keep the fund topped up.
On the policy front, there has been a continuing, futile attempt to force the historially high-emitting countries to accept very radical carbon cuts, as a sign of accountability. This “grandfathering” of emissions responsibilities is something that no sane person in government in the richer nations could ever agree with, not even when being smothered with ethical guilt. One of the forms of this proposal is “Greenhouse Development Rights“, essentially allowing countries like China to continue growing their emissions in order to grow their economies to guarantee development. The emissions cuts required by countries like the United States of America would be impossible to achieve, not even if their economy completely toppled.
Sadly, a number of charities, aid and development agencies and other non-governmental organisations with concern for the world’s poor, have signed up to Greenhouse Development Rights not realising it is completely untenable.
The only approach that can work, that both high- and low-emitting countries can ever possibly be made to agree on, is a system of population-proportional shares of the global carbon pie. And the way to get there has to be based on relative current emissions, ignoring the emissions of the past – your cuts should be larger if your current emissions are large. And it should be based on the relative size of the population, and their individual emissions rates, rather than taking a country as a whole. Yes, there will be room for a little carbon trade between nations, to enable the transfer of low carbon technologies from wealthy nations to un-resourced nations. Yes, there will be space for enterprise, as corporations have to face regulation to cut emissions, and will need innovation in technology to divest themselves of fossil fuel production and consumption.
This is Contraction and Convergence – and you ignore it at our peril.
A few suggestions for further reading :-
“Contraction and Convergence The Global Solution to Climate Change” by Aubrey Meyer. Schumacher Briefings, Green Books, December 2000. ISBN-13: 978-1870098946
The Greenhouse Effect : Science and Policy” by Professor Stephen H. Schneider, Science, Volume 243, Issue 4892, Pages 771 – 781, DOI: 10.1126/science.243.4892.771, 10 February 1989.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/243/4892/771.abstract
http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Publications/PDF_Papers/
http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Publications/Publications.html“Climate Change : Science and Policy“, edited by Stephen H. Schneider, Armin Rosencranz, Michael D. Mastrandea and Kristin Kuntz-Duriseti. Island Press, 10 February 2010. ISBN-13: 978-1597265669
“The Greenhouse Effect : Negotiating Targets” by Professor Michael Grubb, published by the Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA) in London, 1990.
“Equity, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, and Global Common Resources” by Paul Baer, Chapter 15 in “Climate Change Policy : A Survey” by Stephen H. Schneider, Armin Rosencranz and John O. Niles, Island Press, 2002. ISBN-10: 1-55963-881-8 (Paper), ISBN-13: 978-1-55963-881-4 (Paper)
“Kyoto 2 : How to Manage the Global Greenhouse” by Oliver Tickell, ISBN-13: 978-1848130258, Zed Books Ltd, 25 July 2008
http://www.kyoto2.org/
http://www.kyoto2.org/docs/the_land_1.pdfAdvancing Africa, Contraction & Convergence, Corporate Pressure, Deal Breakers, Delay and Deny, Demoticratica, Direction of Travel, Economic Implosion, Emissions Impossible, Energy Change, Energy Revival, Fair Balance, Financiers of the Apocalypse, Foreign Investment, Freemarketeering, Geogingerneering, Global Warming, Green Investment, Growth Paradigm, Hydrocarbon Hegemony, Marvellous Wonderful, Peak Emissions, Policy Warfare, Political Nightmare, Realistic Models, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, Solution City, Sustainable Deferment, Ungreen Development, Unutterably Useless, Utter Futility, Vain Hope, Vote Loser, Western Hedge, Zero Net -
Renewable Gas : Balanced Power
Posted on November 5th, 2011 1 commentPeople who know very little about renewable and sustainable energy continue to buzz like flies in the popular media. They don’t believe wind power economics can work. They don’t believe solar power can provide a genuine contribution to grid capacity. They don’t think marine power can achieve. They would rather have nuclear power. They would rather have environmentally-destructive new oil and gas drilling. They have friends and influence in Government. They have financial clout that enables them to keep disseminating their inaccuracies.
It’s time to ditch the pundits, innuendo artists and insinuators and consult the engineers.
Renewable Gas can stand in the gap – when the wind doesn’t blow or the sun doesn’t shine and the grid is not sufficiently widespread and interconnected enough to be able to call on other wind or solar elsewhere.
Renewable Gas is the storing of biologically-derived and renewably-created gases, and the improving of the gases, so that they can be used on-demand in a number of applications.
This field of chemical engineering is so old, yet so new, it doesn’t have a fixed language yet.
However, the basic chemistry, apart from dealing with contaminants, is very straight-forward.
When demand for grid electricity is low, renewable electricity can be used to make renewable hydrogen, from water via electrolysis, and in other ways. Underused grid capacity can also be used to methanate carbon-rich biologically-derived gas feedstocks – raising its stored energy.
Then when demand for grid electricity is high, renewable gas can be used to generate power, to fill the gap. And the flue gases from this combustion can be fed back into the gas storage.
Renewable gas can also be biorefined into vehicle fuels and other useful chemicals. This application is likely to be the most important in the short term.
In the medium-term, the power generation balance that renewable gas can offer is likely to be the most important application.
Researchers are working on optimising all aspects of renewable gas and biorefinery, and businesses are already starting to push towards production.
We can have a fully renewable energy future, and we will.
Bait & Switch, Big Picture, Biofools, British Biogas, British Sea Power, Conflict of Interest, Corporate Pressure, Delay and Deny, Demoticratica, Direction of Travel, Divide & Rule, Drive Train, Electrificandum, Energy Change, Energy Revival, Engineering Marvel, Environmental Howzat, Feel Gooder, Financiers of the Apocalypse, Fossilised Fuels, Gamechanger, Gas Storage, Green Investment, Green Power, Hydrocarbon Hegemony, Hydrogen Economy, Major Shift, Marvellous Wonderful, Mass Propaganda, Media, Methane Management, National Energy, National Power, Not In My Name, Nuclear Nuisance, Nuclear Shambles, Oil Change, Optimistic Generation, Peak Emissions, Peak Energy, Peak Oil, Policy Warfare, Political Nightmare, Public Relations, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Gas, Renewable Resource, Resource Wards, Shale Game, Social Capital, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Solution City, Stirring Stuff, The Power of Intention, The War on Error, Toxic Hazard, Transport of Delight, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net -
Glimpsing the Future
Posted on February 6th, 2011 No commentsCan we glimpse the future of energy ?
Ambient, sustainable energy is all around us, and sooner or
later we will find the ways to make use of it for the good of all.The following is an appropriately edited transcript of a
conversation on the Claverton Energy Research Group
forum online, and was written by Nick Balmer, a consultant
in renewable energy.
__________________________________________________________…The huge scale of the possible changes for all concerned is
causing all of the current Titans in the [energy] industry to deploy
the full force of the media [and their] PR [public relations] in an
attempt to manipulate the public and policy towards their own way
of thinking, or in such a way as to protect their own vested interests.The great thing is that these issues are being aired out in the open,
and groups like [Claverton Energy Research Group forum] allow
people with knowledge of these affairs to debate these issues openly.The big problem is that each of us has only a very detailed
understanding of some small fraction of the total issue.Most of the public and government only has a very slight knowledge
of the total issue, and has had only limited access to ways to find out
in detail what is going on.As Egypt is demonstrating today, everybody now has a voice and as
Wikileaks shows, sooner or later everything will come out into the
open.All of us are struggling to come to terms with this explosion of
access to knowledge.It is quite clear that lots of bubbles are being burst as a result of
the Global Financial implosion and the huge expansion in available
knowledge.Just as banking and property has been shown to be an unaffordable
Ponzi scheme and to be vastly over-inflated, UK energy policy is now
coming under huge scrutiny.We can now compare our energy systems with other countries.
Due to the huge geological accident of fate, since the 1700′s in coal,
and 1970′s in oil and gas, we have been extremely fortunate in being
able to live way beyond the lifestyle standards of most of the World.We have not had to adapt.
Other countries that didn’t have this advantage had to change over
recent decades.Places like Denmark, Austria, Germany [and so on] have made huge
changes because they had less energy from fossil resources.Now we have reached the peak or crunch point, we find ourselves well
behind those countries that had to adapt earlier.Everybody is concentrating on the Capital cost of deploying per
MW [megawatt] and overlooks the cost of fuels.The cost of fuels over time is massively more important than the
CAPEX [capital expenditure on investment].So even if windfarms cost 20 times per MW or GW [gigawatt] more to
build than nuclear or coal or gas, in the scheme of things,
[wind power] is always going to win, because the fuel is free and
unlimited for centuries to come.Similarly [solar power technologies], or even more effective,
household insulation and cutting energy use.And yet the media and government are blinded by the barrage of PR
and media from the energy vested interests who are working with
every muscle to stop this coming out into the open.I often meet financiers in my work trying to promote and support AD
[anaerobic digestion of biological waste for the production of
renewable methane], biomass, solar and wind projects.I am always struggling to prove to them that I have an offtake [return
on investment] and the fuel supply. This is often really hard to do
[but] I only have to do this for seven to 12 years to make my business
cases stack up.I was really depressed at the end of one such presentation and
discussion, when one broadly sympathetic banker who had turned me
down said that he was having even worse problems with largescale
energy projects.How do you predict the price and supply of coal forward for 25 years
or more ?It has jumped 17% in recent months.
How do you prove that you are going to have offtake for huge power
stations in future years ?Demand dropped 8% in 2009.
How do you raise the equity or debt for a billion [pound] project when
banks don’t want to lend more than £30 million each ? Imagine how
many banks that would take ?We have reached a tipping point in our economy, sustainability and
future outlook.Yes, the existing mega-power companies are fighting as hard as
Mubarak today to hold onto power, but they represent the past just
as surely as he does.Those companies can rejuvenate themselves, unlike the Egyptian
President.If they don’t, there are an increasingly large number of smaller and
more active players coming into the market.The average household pays somewhere around £1,300 a year for
its heating and lighting.The companies that come forward with a way to do that for £1,000 is
going to capture the market very quickly.I have friends in Austria who only pay 65 Euros for services that I
pay £1,400 for.They do this through insulation, triple glazing, solar and biomass energy.
Most [UK] households have less than £400 per year discretionary
disposable income. This prevents them making changes to their houses
they desperately want and know they need to make. This can
drop their energy demands hugely.If somebody can unlock that Gordian Knot the benefits would be
enormous as there are something like 27 million households.At a time when household debt is at an all-time high, incomes are
shrinking, and 40% live on ether government salaries, state
pensions or benefits.Energy is a very high part of these households’ outgoings – if you
pay £1,300 a year and your house only brings in £11,000 to £20,000
per year.A 50% increase in the £1,300 could bring great distress, and
possibly even civil unrest here.The increases fossil power [companies] need to make their systems
bankable will increase energy bills. This will feed straight through into
government liabilities because 40% of us live on government payouts.If government can drop the cost of heating and lighting quite easily
by £100 to £500 per household per year while at the same time
provide employment for hundreds of thousands of White Van men
cutting energy uses, doesn’t this make far more sense than building
unsustainable power stations that will have to be [bankrolled] by the
government, who will then have to buy back electricity at a price our
communities cannot stand ?Project a similar calculation onto transport fuels and you get even
greater problems.At $80 a barrel [of oil] industry is shrinking and relatively few
renewable fuel business cases work. At $100 a barrel most renewable
fuels can compete.At $120 a barrel almost any alternative beats oil, and that is before
you start to look at issues like fuel security and the environment.Although the battle is one of David and Goliath, or the Dinosaur and
those early mammals, between the new energy industries and the
existing vested energy industries, [it] has only one outcome.It is only a matter of the co-lateral damage along the way.
Like Mubarak, it is clear they must go. Are they going to go
gracefully, or are they going to smash the place up first ?Nick Balmer
Renewable Energy ConsultantBe Prepared, Big Picture, British Sea Power, Burning Money, Carbon Commodities, Carbon Taxatious, Corporate Pressure, Cost Effective, Direction of Travel, Economic Implosion, Emissions Impossible, Energy Change, Energy Insecurity, Energy Revival, Engineering Marvel, Financiers of the Apocalypse, Fossilised Fuels, Green Investment, Green Power, Low Carbon Life, Major Shift, Marvellous Wonderful, Methane Management, Money Sings, Oil Change, Optimistic Generation, Peace not War, Peak Emissions, Peak Energy, Peak Oil, Political Nightmare, Public Relations, Renewable Resource, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Stirring Stuff, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net -
A Combustion-free Future
Posted on September 28th, 2010 No commentsCombustion of Fossil Fuels and Biomass is a major cause of chronic respiratory problems around the world.
Many people seem to know that smoky stoves in the Global South cause lung disease for millions of children in poverty.
But what will happen as more so-called Renewable Energy is built in the United Kingdom ?
This answer from Almuth Ernsting points the way :-
“Forth Energy have put in a planning application for a power station in Dundee which will burn 1 million tonnes of mainly imported wood per year. Altogether, they want to build four power stations in Scotland which will burn a total of 5.3 million tonnes. That’s the equivalent of nearly two-thirds of the UK’s annual wood production. Such a large new demand for wood will, directly and/or indirectly, mean more industrial tree plantations and more logging at the expense of forests, climate and communities. If approved, Forth Energy’s power stations would attract an estimated £300 million in subsidies every year – paid as “Renewable Obligation Certificates” through a levy on electricity bills. Local residents would be affected by more air pollution in a city with already high levels of pollution. There are also serious concerns about the impacts on the Firth of Tay and Eden Estuary,which is a Special Area of Conservation. There has been a large number of objections from residents in Dundee already. To read more background information and to object to the application through our webform, please go to: http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/forthsep2010.php”
The solution : stop burning things to make energy ! It’s really, really simple. Use Wind Power, Solar Power, Wave Power, Tidal Power, Geothermal Power…
“The Two Marks” – Mark Delucchi and Mark Jacobson make similar arguments :-
Breathe Easy, Climate Change, Corporate Pressure, Disturbing Trends, Emissions Impossible, Energy Change, Environmental Howzat, Global Warming, Health Impacts, Low Carbon Life, Protest & Survive, Social Change, Technological Sideshow, The Data, Toxic Hazard, Zero Net Almuth Ernsting, Biofuelwatch, Mark Delucchi, Mark Jacobson, Repower -
FIT for Purpose
Posted on September 24th, 2010 No commentsImage Credit : Marrickville Greens
Everywhere in the world that Renewable Energy subsidies, grants or guaranteed unit price contracts have been set, there has been a gradual, or sometimes even rapid, development of new Renewable Energy assets. Which seems like quite a good reason for the State to partly finance the development of Renewable Energy systems, if you take the long view. (Note : I’m using the word “asset” in its proper, original sense here – something that has value long after it has been created, and long after it has been paid for.)
By the end of the lifetime of German roof-top solar panels, or British wind turbines, the economic signal to assist the deployment of these technologies will have long since vapourised, leaving behind a functioning electricity supply that runs without the use of expensive fuel and doesn’t run the risk of major failures and huge drops in power output – unlike large centralised power stations.
The need to invest in long-term non-fuel widely-distrubuted generation assets plugged into the electricity network is essential for its future stability – the more reliable Renewable resources of all scales the National Grid can call on, the cheaper it will be to guarantee a solid supply for all.
The large energy companies most likely consider investment in small- and medium-scale Renewable Energy by individuals and communities as a threat to their monopoly on electrical generation. And so they should. It is time for big changes in the way energy is supplied and managed in this country.
New, large, centralised power plants that the large energy companies want to build will cost their customers dearly in the form of higher energy prices – and there have been continual battles over the planning for and the financing of large new energy plants.
This is why the Feed-in Tariff (FIT) scheme in the UK is so important to keep – a stimulus to create small-scale Low Carbon power resources that will still have value in 20 or even 30 years time with very low maintenance schedules.
The threshold level of the economic stimulus for small-scale Renewables is comparatively low when compared to other forms of investment. The incentive scheme to install principally solar resources can work with funds much lower than those required to underwrite a new fleet of Nuclear Power stations, for example, and yet create a resource that could rival the new reactors without all that cost of nasty radioactive clean-up at the end of a nuke plant’s life.
But, being Great Britain, the Government have had their heads turned by the large energy companies yet again, it seems, as there are rumours that the FIT will be scrapped :-
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/339acf30-c757-11df-aeb1-00144feab49a.html
“Solar power subsidy under review : By Fiona Harvey, Environment Correspondents : Published: September 23 2010 : The recent mini-boom in solar power could be in jeopardy, as the government has privately indicated that new feed-in tariffs that have fuelled the industry could be slashed. If such cuts are adopted, renewable energy experts fear that it will scare off investors – with repercussions throughout the industry. “To change the subsidy system just when you can see the success it has had beggars belief,” said one. “Renewable energy investors . . . will lose faith in this government.” Industry insiders also accused the government of hypocrisy. They say that while Chris Huhne, the energy and climate change secretary, was promising the Liberal Democrat conference 250,000 green jobs as part of a “revolutionary” deal to cut emissions, government advisers were holding meetings in back rooms at which they flagged up potential cuts to the feed-in tariffs (FITs)…”
Don’t blame me or anybody in the Green Party or Greenpeace or Friends of the Earth or a number of other Non-Governmental Organisations or independents if in 15 years time there is still not a significant Renewable Energy resource in the United Kingdom. We have expended a lot of personal energy calling for sensible levels of sustainable funding for the renewables revolution. We can do without the limitations of a stop-start regime.
If you want new energy systems, you need to pay for them. It’s called investment, and we need to do it because our current energy systems are decrepit and high carbon. The large energy companies are not prepared to put their own capital into small-scale Renewables, so it falls to the taxpayer to fill the gap. Why not pay the least for the most by directly incentivising small-scale Renewable Energy with a long-term Feed In Tariff scheme ?
Climate Change, Corporate Pressure, Cost Effective, Emissions Impossible, Energy Revival, Fossilised Fuels, Global Warming, Growth Paradigm, Peak Energy, Political Nightmare, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net Feed-in Tariff, Fiona Harvey, FIT, FT, Germany, micro-renewables, net asset, photovoltaic cell, photovoltaics, PV, Renewable Energy, Renewable Power, small-scale Renewables, Solar Energy, solar panel, Solar power, Sustainable Power, UK, United Kingdom, wind, Wind Energy, Wind Farm, Wind Power, Wind Turbine -
Pat Michaels is Right
Posted on August 15th, 2010 No commentsOf course, Pat Michaels is “right-wing”, but that’s not what I meant.
Some folk will be surprised that I agree with anything that Patrick Michaels says, as he is consistently inaccurate about the Science of Global Warming.
However, he is right that a Carbon Tax is the wrong way to proceed.
Carbon pricing, whether by direct taxation or by a trading scheme, effectively creates a double disincentive for change.
We have a large number of companies and organisations that are highly dependent on the use of Fossil Fuels. Carbon pricing will make these companies and organisations less financially efficient, and they will try anything they can to pass on the costs of Carbon to their consumers and clients, in order to remain profitable.
Carbon Taxation will therefore stimulate cost offsetting, but not Carbon reductions.
Moreover, if companies that make and sell energy are forced to pay for Carbon, they will have less funds available to deCarbonise their businesses; less capital to invest in new lower Carbon technologies.
Carbon Pricing will not alter the patterns of emissions significantly, if at all.
We have to face facts : the economists are largely wrong about environmental taxation. Record fines and levies demanded of Fossil Fuel companies in the last ten years have not stopped the spills, the leaks, the poisonings of waterways; nor have they helped the companies change course and start to develop Renewable Energies.
The pricing of large scale environmental pollution is a failed disincentive.
Advancing Africa, Bait & Switch, Be Prepared, Big Picture, British Sea Power, Carbon Commodities, Climate Change, Corporate Pressure, Cost Effective, Emissions Impossible, Energy Revival, Environmental Howzat, Global Warming, Growth Paradigm, Low Carbon Life, Peak Energy, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, Science Rules, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Toxic Hazard, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net Carbon Taxation, Carbon Trading, China, Climate Change, Climate Change Policy, CNN, coal, Economic Policy, economics, environmental economics, environmental pollution taxation, Environmental taxation, Fareed Zakaria, Gavin Schmidt, Global Warming, Green Investment, Jeff Sachs, Pat Michaels, policy, pollution taxation -
The Rehabilitation of BP : Solar Shares
Posted on July 24th, 2010 No commentsHere’s a plan to save BP CEO Tony Hayward’s job.
Why not bring in a special new executive at BP’s London Headquarters, maybe ex-CEO of BP, Lord John Browne of Madingley, who was rather green, really, or that other Anthony, the ex-Prime Minister Tony Blair, and make them responsible for expanding an entirely new share offering in Solar Power.
Investors would be encouraged to explicitly finance new solar projects around the world by buying “solar shares” in the company, who make a priority of environmental matters, as we all know.
The British Government could offer extensive tax breaks, declining to tax revenues from solar electricity in the same way that BPs’ Oil and Gas sales are tapped for a percentage slice to help the public purse.
And there you could have it, bish bash bosh.
And while you’re at it, rename the company “Beautiful Photonenergy”.
The world could forget about the Gulf of Mexico plumes and seepages and we could all, together, forge a clean, smooth new Low Carbon, Low Dirt world.
Be Prepared, Big Picture, Energy Revival, Environmental Howzat, Low Carbon Life, Marine Gas, Peak Oil, Political Nightmare, Public Relations, Renewable Resource, Solar Sunrise, Toxic Hazard, Unnatural Gas, Zero Net Beautiful Photonenergy, Beyond Petroleum, Beyond Psychotherapy, BP, BP America, British Petroleum, GOM, Gulf of Mexico, oil spill, Solar Energy, Solar power -
The Major Hitters Forum
Posted on July 22nd, 2010 No commentsMuch as, in principle, progress could be made in having an 80% majority push through commitments on Global Warming, as part of the United Nations Climate Change negotiations process, some commentators feel highly uneasy that important voices from the international community, based around the emerging Science, could be drowned out by these “big hitters” :-
http://cleanenergyministerial.org/
“July 19-20 2010 : The first-ever Clean Energy Ministerial will bring together ministers and stakeholders from more than 20 countries to collaborate on policies and programs that accelerate the world’s transition to clean energy technologies.”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/jul/22/un-bid-international-deal-climate-change
“UN in fresh bid to salvage international deal on climate change : Campaigners welcome plans to amend the way Kyoto protocol resolutions are passed : The Guardian, Thursday 22 July 2010…If the UN’s [United Nations] suggestions are adopted, decisions will be forced through if four-fifths of the protocol vote in favour, after all efforts to reach agreement by consensus have been exhausted. The amendments would come into force after six months…”It is surprising and a big, big deal that the UN is suggesting such considerable reforms as a change in the consensus rules,” said [Mark] Lynas…In a further attempt to galvanise the climate change body into motion, the UN also suggested that countries could be forced to opt out of any amendments, as opposed to the current arrangement whereby they must explicitly agree to any decisions tabled…The amendment, which will be presented in Bonn in August, reads: “An amendment would enter into force after a certain period has elapsed following its adoption, except for those parties that have notified the depositary that they cannot accept the amendment.”…But Lynas warned that any changes to the current consensus situation would cause “fury, angst and consternation”. It could, he said, exacerbate the deep mistrust between rich and poor countries that has already bedevilled the global climate talks.”… Read the rest of this entry »
Acid Ocean, Advancing Africa, Big Picture, Carbon Commodities, Climate Change, Contraction & Convergence, Corporate Pressure, Emissions Impossible, Energy Revival, Global Warming, Growth Paradigm, Political Nightmare, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, Science Rules, Solar Sunrise, The Data, Zero Net Bolivia, C & C, C&C, Cancun, Climate Change, Climate Change Science, Climate Science, Contract and Converge, Contraction and Convergence, COP, COP/MOP, Copenhagen, Framework, Global Warming, Kyoto, Kyoto Protocol, Major Economic Forum, Major Economies Forum, Major Emitters Forum, MOP, Mother Earth, Pachamama, People Movement, Peoples Movement, UN, UNFCCC, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change -
Roger Harrabin : Two Degrees Short Of Accuracy
Posted on June 25th, 2010 No commentsA journalist with a history of Climate Change scepticism writes an opinion piece for a poplular science magazine. The result ? The propagation of error.
Now, I have spoken to Richard Black at the BBC and offered to try to be more conciliatory towards Roger Harrabin in future, but I can’t let this one pass me by.
Here he is, writing in New Scientist, about his trip to the Heartland Climate Change sceptics conference :-
There are some statements of unquantifiable waffliness, and some dubious conclusions, but the one sentence that stood out for me as pernicious enough to comment on was this one :-
“Most [sceptics] agree with the scientific consensus that basic physics means [Carbon Dioxide] CO2 will warm the planet by about 1 degree C above pre-industrial levels.”
It is to be welcomed that Climate Change sceptics are finally beginning to accept that the world is warming, and that mankind’s activities are the majority factor.
What I don’t like is Roger Harrabin’s assertion that the “consensus” on Global Warming is that the planet will warm by “about 1 degree”.
-
Burning Things Is Wasteful
Posted on June 18th, 2010 No commentsCentre for Alternative Technology
Burning things wastes a lot of energy – even burning waste.
1. Plain Old Inefficiency
The systems and infrastructure for the generation and distribution of electricity in the United Kingdom is extremely poor, nigh on immorally wasteful. See the diagram above from the Zero Carbon Britain 2030 report :-
There are so many things that could be done to improve on that enormous loss of energy, and save on Carbon Dioxide Emissions at the same time.
Burning Money, Climate Change, Emissions Impossible, Energy Revival, Health Impacts, Low Carbon Life, Marvellous Wonderful, Methane Management, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, The Data, Toxic Hazard, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net AD, Anaerobic Digestion, Biodiesel, Biofuel, Biogas, Car, cars, Claverton, Claverton Energy, Claverton Energy Research, Claverton Energy Research Forum, Claverton Energy Research Group, Climate Change, coal, Coal-fiired, Combustion, Energy, Energy Transformation, Energy Transition, Freight, ice, Incineration, infernal combustion engine, internal combustion engine, Mercury, Renewable Energy, Renewable Fuel, Sustainable Energy, Thermal Combustion, transport, Transportation, UK Energy Research Centre, UKERC, United Kingdom Energy Research Centre, Vehicles -
Zero Carbon Britain 2030
Posted on June 18th, 2010 No commentsI’m sure you’ll be interested to know that the second Zero Carbon Britain report from the Centre for Alternative Technology is now available for free download from this website :-
http://zerocarbonbritain.org/
http://zerocarbonbritain.org/downloads/ZCB2030.pdfHere are a few articles about the report release :-
http://neweconomics.org/publications/zero-carbon-britain-2030
http://www.cat.org.uk/news/news_release.tmpl?command=search&db=news.db&eqSKUdatarq=37990&home=1
http://www.greenbang.com/uk-carbon-from-637m-tonnes-to-0-possible-by-2030_14526.html
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2010/06/453523.htmlEnjoy !
-
The Price of Carbon
Posted on April 30th, 2010 3 commentsThe Price of Carbon
by Jo Abbess
20 April 20101. Introduction
Policy strategy for controlling risky excess atmospheric greenhouse gas (Gowdy, 2008, Sect. 4; McKibben, 2007, Ch. 1, pp. 19-20; Solomon et al., 2009; Tickell, 2008, Ch. 6, pp. 205-208) mostly derives from the notion that carbon dioxide emissions should be charged for, in order to prevent future emissions; similar to treatment for environmental pollutants (Giddens, 2009, Ch. 6, pp. 149-155; Gore, 2009, Ch. 15 “The True Cost of Carbon”; Pigou, 1932; Tickell, 2008, Ch.4, Box 4.1, pp. 112-116). Underscoring this idea is the evidence that fines, taxes and fees modify behaviour, reigning in the marginal social cost of “externalities” through financial disincentive (Baumol, 1972; Sandmo, 2009; Tol, 2008). However this approach may not enable the high-value, long-term investment required for decarbonisation, which needs adjustments to the economy at scale (CAT, 2010; Hepburn and Stern, 2008, pp. 39-40, Sect. (ii) “The Consequences of Non-marginality”; MacKay, 2008, Ch. 19; Tickell, 2008, Ch. 2, pp. 40-41). Read the rest of this entry »
Big Picture, Carbon Capture, Carbon Commodities, Carbon Rationing, China Syndrome, Climate Change, Contraction & Convergence, Cost Effective, Emissions Impossible, Energy Revival, Growth Paradigm, Low Carbon Life, Nuclear Nuisance, Nuclear Shambles, Peak Energy, Peak Oil, Pet Peeves, Political Nightmare, Regulatory Ultimatum, Renewable Resource, Social Change, Technological Sideshow, Unutterably Useless, Utter Futility, Vain Hope, Voluntary Behaviour Change, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net C&C, Cap & Trade, Cap and Dividend, Cap and Share, Cap and Trade, Carbon Price, Carbon Pricing, Carbon Taxation, Classical Economic Theory, Classical Economics, Climate Change, coal, Contraction & Convergence, Contraction and Convergence, economics, economists, Energy, Fossil Fuels, Gas, Global Warming, Natural Gas, Neoliberal Economics, Oil, Renewable Energy, Sustainable Energy, The Price of Carbon -
Renewable Synergy
Posted on March 30th, 2010 2 commentsThe news is that there is continuing progress towards a fully Renewable Europe. It is, after all, the only means to ensure a sustainable Economy into the future, given the twin blended threats of Climate Change Carbon Mitigation and Peak Fossil Fuels.
Dr Gregor Czisch’s meisterwerk is being translated into English for publication this Summer :-
You would never know from the plainspeaking title just how exciting this is : seriously cheap Energy and peacemaking collaboration all in one shot !
The management consultants PriceWaterhouseCooper (couldn’t they think of a more speakable name ?), have just published their own view on Europe and North Africa combining to provide a one hundred percent renewable Energy solution :-
http://www.pwc.co.uk/sustainability/
http://www.pwc.co.uk/eng/publications/100_percent_renewable_electricity.html
Advancing Africa, Big Picture, British Sea Power, Carbon Rationing, Energy Revival, Growth Paradigm, Low Carbon Life, Marvellous Wonderful, Nuclear Nuisance, Nuclear Shambles, Peak Energy, Peak Oil, Pet Peeves, Renewable Resource, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net Energy, Green Collar Jobs, Green Development, Green Economy, Green Energy, Green Growth, Peak Coal, Peak Economy, Peak Energy, Peak Fossil Fuels, Peak Metals, Peak Money, Peak Natural Gas, Peak Nuclear, Peak Oil, Renewable, Renewable Energy, Renewable Future, Sustainable Energy -
Sustainable Future for Education
Posted on March 29th, 2010 No commentsToday, I’m going to talk to you about education, and no, it’s not about the ongoing “Texas textbook massacre”, where they want to teach children about “alternatives” to the Theory of Global Warming :-
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/04/science/earth/04climate.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/texas-schoolbook-massacre-rewrites-american-history-1929320.html
http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/thegaggle/archive/2010/03/26/why-you-shouldn-t-worry-about-texas-textbook-changes.aspxBig Picture, Climate Change, Energy Revival, Low Carbon Life, Peak Energy, Peak Oil, Pet Peeves, Renewable Resource, Social Change, Solar Sunrise, Voluntary Behaviour Change, Wind of Fortune, Zero Net CAT, Centre for Alternative Technology, Climate Change, education, Global Warming, Wales Institute for Sustainable Eduction, WISE -
Wishful Thinktanking
Posted on February 10th, 2010 No comments[qt:http://www.tangentfilms.com/SternPoznan.mp4 http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Graphics/ContractionAndConvergence.jpg 480 240]
After the accusations and counter-accusations of the attribution of blame, can we at least start moving on from who was responsible for the failure to obtain a global treaty at the United Nations Climate Change UNFCCC conference in Copenhagen in December 2009 ?
None of us have a complete awareness of the ideas and thoughts of others. International negotiations are bound to be limited by lack of knowledge and understanding, clashes of personality and conflicts of national, social and corporate interests.
It is important, however, to try to comprehend the starting points, the foundational ideology, of those we are attempting to negotiate with.
Here it is very important to keep our feet on the floor and our ears to the walls. Why exactly, did the AOSIS, the Small Island States bloc reject the Copenhagen Accord ? Why did the elite group of nations that signed the Copenhagen Accord dismiss the AOSIS and their demands for 350 ppm atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (CO2). Why was China so resistant to the Copenhagen Accord ? Could it have anything do to with their fears of economic loss ?
-
Democracy : Alive & Kicking
Posted on January 21st, 2010 No commentsSheepishly creeping in late, (well I got lost, right, because my Google Map was on the wrong scale without the street names, OK ?), I attended my second Copenhagen de-briefing meeting of the year, with strong signals of properly functioning democracy all the way through.
I learned a lot more about the poor state of international negotiations, how disadvantaged peoples and nation groups were not heard, how the official news feeds were edited, how attempts to communicate from the public assembly at the Klimaforum into the Bella Center using video streaming were met with empty delegate seats, how the elite negotiating teams from the industrialised world failed to collect enough support for their position, how people got left queueing in the freezing cold…


joabbess.com is a solar-powered, wind-powered web log about Climate Change, Energy, Technology and Policy, web hosted by Electric Jamie. 



