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Monday, June 14, 2021

Ross Meurant: Providers or Power

Last week I penned a piece on hydrogen being promoted at the G7 as an alternative energy source for Europe. My conclusion was: Europe would do itself as massive favour if it accelerated the supply of Russian gas via the North Stream.

In this article I clinically debunk the myth that power generators: solar, wind and batteries, are the solution to protect the environment. In fact, I demonstrate that these, “Green Machines” will cause massively greater environmental damage than is the unfortunate by-product of the mainstream providers of power.

Some basic physics: there are limits on the natural sources which cannot be exceeded.

Best conversion rate of sun photons to electrons is 33%. We achieve 26%

Best wind conversion is 60%. We achieve 45%.

Therefore, we are close to the maximum capture of energy from these sources – providing the sun shines and the wind blows.

The solution some say is batteries.

Taking Tesla’s battery factory in Nevada – the world’s biggest; it would take 500 years for that factory to make enough batteries to satisfy the energy consumption of one day in the USA.

This begins to explain why, after 20 years and billions of dollars in subsidies, solar and wind only produce 3% of world electricity needs.

Putting aside physics and economics, if your mission is to protect the planet with solar, wind and batteries, as always, be careful for what you wish.

Solar, wind and batteries are built from non- renewable materials.

A single electric car battery weights about half a tonne. To build a battery requires the moving and processing of about 250 tonnes of earth - somewhere on the planet.

To build a single 100 mw windfarm to power 75,000 homes requires some 30,000 tonnes of iron ore, 50,000 tonnes of concrete and 900 tonnes of non-re-cyclable plastic for the huge blades.

The cost to get the same power output from solar, including the cost of cement, steel and glass, is about 150% greater.

Other elements are required include rare earths. To satisfy current plans for production of solar, wind and battery power, the world will need a 200 – 2000% increase in mining for elements such as in cobalt, lithium and dysprosium.

These materials will largely come from China, Russia Brazil – and will require intrusion of earth-shattering machinery into biodiversity areas which as yet have not been disturbed. If your quest is to protect nature and the environment, the reality of the destruction of natural resources may cause you to recalibrate your thinking.

The mining process will require massive amounts of conventional energy. Then there’s the energy use for refining and factory processing and distribution.

And then there’s the more deleterious issue of – waste.

Solar, wind and batteries have a relatively short life span – 20 years.

Machinery for conventional generation methods such as gas turbines lasts twice as long before replacement is required.

IRENA (International Renewable Energy Agency) calculates by 2050 the worn-out solar panel tonnage will almost double the weight of the total of current plastics waste. Worn-out wind turbines and batteries will produce millions of tonnes more waste.

The probability that child and or virtual slave labour will be a feature of some aspects of mining the raw materials for batteries, might be a consideration for the humanitarians among us.

To briefly juxtapose the current cost of energy against the costs projected in this article if we go down battery alley:

· It costs about the same to drill one oil well as it does to build one giant wind turbine.

· Yet, while the turbine generates the equivalent of about one barrel of oil per hour, in the same hour, the oil rig produces 10 barrels per hour.

At a time when the current government is, in its surreptitious style, signalling the banning of petrol cars by 2050 (1), it may well fall to the next government to get back to the basics of physics and review the imposition of a regime which may well see New Zealand taking the wrong turn.

For doubters as to the integrity of content and as a matter of personal academic integrity, my source for the above is: Mark Mills senior fellow Manhattan Institute, Prager university.

Reference:
(1) https://www.driven.co.nz/news/nz-government-looks-at-banning-fuel-burning-cars-by-2050/

Ross Meurant: a graduate in politics both at university and as Member of Parliament; formerly police inspector in charge of Auckland police spies; currently Honorary consul for an African state; Trustee and CEO of Russian owned commercial assets in NZ and has international business interests.

3 comments:

DeeM said...

Absolutely Ross. The figures show that the plan most Western governments are intent on following is completely impractical and unattainable. With the added irony that it will likely cause more environmental damage, not less.
So we have to ask ourselves why? Is the current generation of influential politicians, journalists and scientists just plain stupid...well, possibly, and in some cases absolutely. But I think it is very unlikely to apply to all of them. Which means there is much more to this than "saving the planet" from climate change.
Left-wing ideology has taken hold of the West and I believe it is about displacing capitalism as the dominant economic model in favour of a new brand of socialism and ultimately centralised world government. This will lead to much less political accountability and leave sovereign nations subservient to a UN-type body.
Man-made climate change, based on a fatally flawed theory, is just a tool to force this new world order and get people used to being told what to do. A long-term version of the Covid pandemic if you like!

G. Marshall said...

Tesla virtual power stations like the one build in Australia are just that, they are are not real. They are merely big storage devices which do not produce any power, they consume power in their losses inherent in all electronic/electrical systems and the heat generated in the charging and discharging of batteries. As the age, their capacity reduces and they become less efficient

Sven said...

We live in a time where bio-terrorism and eco-terrorism will become the norm, we live in a time where children in the third world get their hands and feet cut off if they refuse to work in the rare earth mines build to feed the new green energy, all based upon the new western communist mantra humanity is the enemy.