Which is worse - gradual man-made global warming or
sudden electricity blackout? Alarmists try to scare us by claiming that man’s
activities are causing global warming. Whether and when we may see new man-made
warming is disputed and uncertain. If it does appear, the world will be
slightly warmer, with more evaporation and rainfall; plants will grow better
and colonise some areas currently too cold or too dry; fewer old people will
die in winter and sea levels may continue the gradual rise we have seen since
the end of the last ice age.
There may even be a bit more “green” in Greenland.
There is no evidence that man’s production of carbon dioxide is causing more
extreme weather events. Any change caused by man will be gradual and there will
be plenty of time to adapt, as humans have always done. Most people will hardly
notice it.
What is certain, however, is that global warming
policies are greatly increasing the chances of electricity blackouts, and here
the effects can be predicted confidently - they will be sudden and severe.
Localised short-term blackouts can be caused by
cyclones, storms, fires, floods, accidents, equipment failure or overloading.
People will cope with them. The more widespread blackouts, caused for example
by network collapse or insufficient generating capacity, will have severe
effects.
All modern human activities are heavily dependent on
electricity. Blackouts will stop lifts, trains, traffic lights, tools,
appliances, factories, mines, refineries, communications and pumps for fuel,
water and sewerage. People will be trapped or stranded in trains, ports,
airports, lifts, hotels, hospitals and traffic jams. ATM’s, credit cards and
supermarket checkouts will not work. Cash, cheques, IOU’s and pocket
calculators will be required to buy anything.
Immediately a blackout occurs, those with emergency
generators, fuel or batteries will start using them.
But within a very few days, batteries will run flat,
emergency fuel supplies will be exhausted, food supplies will disappear from
stores and pumped water will not be available. Intensive dairies, hatcheries,
piggeries and feedlots will all face critical problems in keeping their animals
alive and cared for.
If the blackout is extensive and prolonged, looting
will infect the big cities and then spread to country areas. People who are
old, sick, incapacitated or alone will be forgotten as able-bodied people focus
on feeding and protecting their own.
The real threat to humanity today is not the
theoretical dangers from gradual man-made global warming. A far bigger real
danger is the growing threat to reliable electricity supplies from deep-green
climate policies.
The most reliable electricity supplies come from coal,
gas, hydro, nuclear, geothermal or oil. Misguided politicians and
uncompromising nature are conspiring to ensure that few of these will be
available to generate Australia’s future electricity.
The carbon tax and renewable energy targets threaten
the financial viability of using coal, gas or oil to generate electricity.
Banks and investors will not risk their capital on new carbon-powered stations
dependent on an unstable and polarised political environment. And the declining
profitability of existing stations under the carbon tax and mandated market
sharing makes it risky and uneconomic to spend money maintaining existing aging
stations.
The same green zealots who plot to destroy carbon
energy will also work to prevent the construction of new nuclear or hydro
plants in Australia. And Australia’s geothermal resources, being generally deep
and remote, are unlikely to provide significant electricity for decades.
We are thus being forced to rely on fickle breezes and
peek-a-boo sunbeams to generate expensive and intermittent electricity. And it
will not be economic to continue building backup gas plants that are run below
capacity or sit idle, earning insufficient income as they try to fill the
unpredictable production gaps in the supply of green energy. The margin of
supply safety will disappear.
Therefore, if we continue to allow green zealots to
dictate our electricity generation, blackouts are inevitable. Britain and
Germany already face this grim prospect.
All actions have consequences. We cannot continue
pouring billions of dollars of community savings down the climate-change
sink-hole, without starving our essential infrastructure. We cannot keep adding
taxes and political risk to traditional electricity generators without reducing
new investment in real base-load generating capacity. And we cannot keep adding
unstable solar and wind elements to our electricity network without adding
greatly to electricity costs and the risks of network failure.
When the lights fail, and the supermarket shelves are
cleaned out, we will return, at great cost and after much misery, to cheap
reliable continuous electricity using coal, gas or nuclear fuels.
Gaia worshippers will find that “Earth Hour” will not
be such fun when it becomes “Earth Week”.
Viv Forbes is the chairman of the Carbon Sense Coalition
Viv Forbes is the chairman of the Carbon Sense Coalition
3 comments:
Exactly
Seems to me Viv is a little short on facts and that all of his "results" of loss of electric power could equally be applied to sea level increases caused by global warming, or am I just being biased?
Pretty standard denier line of argument from Viv who "has been involved in various capacities at Burton Coal, Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal, South Blackwater Coal Mine, Tahmoor Coal Mine, Newlands/Collinsville Coal Mines, MIM, Utah Goonyella/Saraji and Gold Fields." Coal has done a great deal to advance civilisation but it is time to move on. Time to retire, Viv. Be content with your millions of dollars.
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