They Are Not Wind Farms, They Are Subsidy Farms

I really can’t believe this was actually published in a UK paper. Via the Telegraph.uk:

From the summit of Plynlimon, in the deep country of the Cambrian Mountains, there is a 70-mile panorama of the Cader range, hill after green-blue hill stretching into the distance, from the peaks around Bala to the shores of Cardigan Bay.

It was a view that caught the breath. It still does, in a different way. The view from Plynlimon now is of more than 200 wind turbines, nearly a tenth of Britain’s onshore total, stretching across ridge-lines, dominating near and far horizons. The author George Borrow wrote a whole chapter on Plynlimon in his classic 19th-century travelogue, Wild Wales. It’s not so wild these days.

The countryside is being overrun in the UK with wind farms. To say they are not living up to their billing is an understatement:

RUK says that “every unit of electricity from a wind turbine displaces one from conventional power stations”, and even the existing wind turbines have “the capacity to prevent the emission of 3.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per annum”.

The key weasel word in that last sentence is “capacity”. The CO2 reduction figure assumes that all wind turbines are able to generate electricity to 100 per cent of their capacity, 100 per cent of the time. But the basic problem with wind power is that most of the time, the wind does not blow.

A typical commercial turbine needs a wind speed of between 6-10mph to start operating – and automatically stops when the wind is more than around 55mph, to protect its mechanisms. Even when the wind is blowing between those speeds, it – and therefore the amount of electricity generated – is variable, and usually below the turbine’s full theoretical capacity.

According to government figures, the average wind turbine operates to just 27 per cent of its capacity – even the industry only claims 30 per cent – and there are some grounds for suggesting that even this is a significant exaggeration. Professor Michael Jefferson, of the London Metropolitan Business School, says that in 2008 less than a fifth of onshore wind farms achieved 30 per cent capacity. (emphasis added)

FYI, I like the phrase “the key weasel word.”

Set aside the fact that CO2 does not contribute to the mythical phenomenon of global warming, wind power does not pay for itself. I doesn’t pay for itself in the UK, it doesn’t pay for itself in China and it doesn’t pay for itself in Germany:

Campbell Dunford, director of the Renewable Energy Foundation (REF), says that Germany – which has the largest number of wind turbines in Europe – “is building five new coal power stations, which it does not otherwise need, purely to provide covering power for the fluctuations from their wind farms. I am not sure [wind] has been a great success for them.” Mr Dunford claims that Germany’s CO2 emissions have actually risen since it increased its use of wind power. Though the wind itself might, in RUK’s words, be “free,” the cost of backup capacity is likely to be astronomical.

What an economic disaster.

If wind power doesn’t deliver on its promised generation capacity, constructing the wind mills destroys the natural landscape and has all kinds of hidden costs-such as additional conventional back up generation capacity why build them?

Why, then, are we so “fixated” with wind? The number of onshore wind turbines is likely to treble in the next few years. A total of 7,000 turbines, on and off-shore, are either under construction, approved for building or seeking planning permission.

Part of the answer may be that wind turbines are visible, tangible symbols of political commitment and moral righteousness. Mr Clegg’s party wants 15,000 of them, and the Energy Secretary, Chris Huhne, also a Lib Dem, has described them as “beautiful”. The Lib Dems are also fiercely against nuclear, though their Tory partners are not.

The rest of the answer appears to be subsidy. The Government pays an indirect subsidy, a “renewable obligation”, or RO – and putting up a wind turbine is the cheapest way to collect it. In contrast to better renewable technologies, a turbine is inexpensive to build, perhaps around

What a scam and we the people are paying for it. And the closing quote in the Telegraph article:

Mrs Clegg has acted with characteristic business acumen. These aren’t just wind farms – they’re subsidy farms.

An extra big tip O’ the hat goes to Tom Nelson


With Off Shore Drilling Moratorium In Gulf Of Mexico Idled Oil Rigs Are Moving To Brazil

As pointed out previously, now that Obama has implemented his ‘moratorium‘ on offshore oil drilling, many of the idled oil rigs are being moved to other locations that are allowing oil exploration. One such place is Brazil.

Brazil is looking to become a major player in the oil industry and will gladly accept the oil rigs and the tens of thousands of jobs that go with them. Via Gateway Pundit:

Barack Obama’s oil drilling moratorium will cost tens of thousands of American jobs. But, not everyone will suffer.

Oil companies are planning on moving their rigs from the Gulf of Mexico to South America off the coast of Brazil where the government is more friendly to energy corporations.

Reuters reported, via Free Republic:

Brazil could benefit from the BP Gulf of Mexico spill as a U.S. moratorium on offshore drilling boosts available rigs for the country’s deep water oil exploration program.

Even as an ecological catastrophe makes the future of U.S. offshore drilling less certain, Brazil is plowing ahead with a $220 billion five-year plan to tap oil fields even deeper than BP’s (BP.L) ill-fated Gulf well, which is still leaking crude.

With an estimated 35 rigs idled in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil is already receiving inquiries from companies looking to move their rigs here, where vast discoveries in recent years may soon turn the country into a major crude exporter.

Once the rigs move to Brazil, they won’t return any time soon.

Saturday Night Links: The Super Hornet Edition

Found these really cool pictures of the Australian Air Force’s  Block II F/A-18 F Super Hornet at the DEW Line.

Obstructing Government Operations (FAIL)

Ten Buck Fridays + Christine O’Donnell Grassroots Money Bomb

Job offers not sticking to Obama, but the crude won’t wash off

Bye-bye, Miss American Pie

The Public School Indoctrination Machine at Work: Teachers Openly Promote Revolution

Video: Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) laughed at for implying during hearings that Congress CAN’T cut spending

Yet you have idiot congresscritters like Rep. Gerry Connolly that insist that the only way to make up for their extraordinary level of deficit spending is to increase taxes.

Frugal Story of the Week: Thrifty Little Old Gal Verna Oller Secretly Leaves Millions to Town to Buy Swimming Pool (video)

America’s Golden Age of Ignorance

Ignorance is a dangerous, dangerous, thing. WE here in America, are only just re-learning this lesson.

This is truly the Golden Era of Ignorance in America. If we survive the damage it has done, we must begin all over again teaching our children what it means to be an American under the protection of the original US Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Fundraiser Or Memorial Service? Focused From Day One, Eh?

Spread The Misery Around: Nancy Pelosi And The Democrats Want To Stop Dividend Payments For BP Investors

Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.

Winston Churchill

It is bad enough people in the Gulf region are suffering economic losses along with the environmental damages.  However, how is punishing investors (pension plans, 401k’s, index funds and institutional investors) by stopping dividend payments and reducing  BP’s ability to raise capitol, you know to help fix the problem and pay restitution, going to stop the oil leak?

Via the Politico:

“I’m saying that they should not be paying dividends until they make these people whole and make a better effort to do it in a timely fashion,” Pelosi told reporters. “These people are coming to us and saying ‘I have to take out a loan,’ . . . . which I can ill-afford to repay because BP is not, you know, is not paying. BP has the money, it made $17 billion last year. They went up, what, 12 points on the stock market yesterday?”

BP’s paying dividends to stock holders has grown controversial in recent days, as Gulf shore residents have complained about the speed in which the company has responded to loss of income claims.

I guess creating a good sound bite is more important that fixing the problem.

More Federal Spending On High Tech Gadgets Does Not Necessarily Yield More Learning

Federal dollars are being spent by school districts to purchase all kinds of fancy gizmos and high tech equipment to “better prepare students for the high tech economy of tomorrow.” Or something like that.

Via the WaPo:

Under enormous pressure to reform, the nation’s public schools are spending millions of dollars each year on gadgets from text-messaging devices to interactive whiteboards that technology companies promise can raise student performance.

Driving the boom is a surge in federal funding for such products, the industry’s aggressive marketing and an idea axiomatic in the world of education reform: that to prepare students kids for the 21st century, schools must embrace the technologies that are the media of modern life. (emphasis added)

However, more and more educators are questioning the effectiveness of the new high tech gadgets:

Increasingly, though, another view is emerging: that the money schools spend on instructional gizmos isn’t necessarily making things better, just different. Many academics question industry-backed studies linking improved test scores to their products. And some go further. They argue that the most ubiquitous device-of-the-future, the whiteboard — essentially a giant interactive computer screen that is usurping blackboards in classrooms across America — locks teachers into a 19th-century lecture style of instruction counter to the more collaborative small-group models that many reformers favor.

Engaged and involved parents expecting and demanding performance from their children is the key to success and not the latest teaching technique or fancy video display.

A video demonstration of a SMART Board:

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Videos: Driving The Nurburgring In A 1967 F1 Car and Corvette ZR1

First up a great vintage video from 1967:

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Now that you have the lay of the land, here is a great video* of a ZR1 Corvette ripping up the Nurburgring:

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Too cool!

*I realize I’ve posted the ZR1 vid before, but since the WordPress ‘episode’

Under Democrats ‘Health Care Reform’ It turns Out You Just Might Not Be Able To Keep Your Plan

Surprise, surprise, surprise:

Over and over in the health care debate, President Barack Obama said people who like their current coverage would be able to keep it.

But an early draft of an administration regulation estimates that many employers will be forced to make changes to their health plans under the new law. In just three years, a majority of workers—51 percent—will be in plans subject to new federal requirements, according to the draft.

Employers say it’s more evidence that the law will drive up costs. Republicans say Obama broke his promise. But some experts believe increased regulation will lead to improved benefits for consumers.

“On the face of it, having consumer protections apply to all insurance plans could be a good thing for employees,” said Alex Vachon, an independent health policy consultant. “Technically, it’s actually improved coverage.”

The types of changes that employers would be forced to make include offering preventive care without copayments and instituting an appeals process for disputed claims that follows new federal guidelines. The law already requires all health plans to extend coverage to young adult children until they turn 26. But such changes also nudge costs up. (emphasis added)

144 days until November 2nd, 2010

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Obama Administration ‘Misrepresents’ Experts Views To Justify Oil Drilling Moratorium

Never let a crisis go to waste:

The seven experts who advised President Obama on how to deal with offshore drilling safety after the Deepwater Horizon explosion are accusing his administration of misrepresenting their views to make it appear that they supported a six-month drilling moratorium — something they actually oppose.

The experts, recommended by the National Academy of Engineering, say Interior Secretary Ken Salazar modified their report last month, after they signed it, to include two paragraphs calling for the moratorium on existing drilling and new permits.

Salazar’s report to Obama said a panel of seven experts “peer reviewed” his recommendations, which included a six-month moratorium on permits for new wells being drilled using floating rigs and an immediate halt to drilling operations.

Obama and his henchmen will politicize everything.

And if you think “no big deal, after 6 months or so, we will get back to drilling in the Gulf of Mexico” and things will get back to normal, as pointed out previously at MCT, this is not the case:

They also said that because the floating rigs are scarce and in high demand worldwide, they will not simply sit in the Gulf idle for six months. The rigs will go to the North Sea and West Africa, possibly preventing the U.S. from being able to resume drilling for years.

They also said the best and most advanced rigs will be the first to go, leaving the U.S. with the older and potentially less safe rights operating in the nation’s coastal waters.

This will take years to unravel.

Alice Cooper On The Dearth Of Great New Bands (And A Great Vintage Music Video)

Excerpt of interview with Alice Cooper and the questioner asks why there is a dearth of great new bands. Via The Globe and Mail (Canada):

Q: You would have thought, by pure evolution, that bands would be better now than before.

A: That’s interesting. But try and find me a young guitar player. They’re very, very hard to find. I go see bands in Los Angles, and when they get to the part of the song where the lead guitarist should take off – the Jeff Beck part – they just play the rhythm right through it. I ask the guy, “why don’t you fill that in?” And they say, “Oh, this is modern rock – we don’t do that.”

Q: You don’t buy that?

A: I think they’re more interested in the attitude of the song. I get bands coming to me, asking me to listen to their tapes. I listen to the first three songs and I say “I get it, you’re angry. But where’s the song?’

Q: I hear good songs from modern rock bands like Foo Fighters and Queens of the Stone Age, so I’m not sure I agree with you. But what do you see as the cause of this poor musicianship?

A: I think it’s pure laziness. I’m not kidding you.

Great answer. And now a great video of Alice Cooper:

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AP Reviews Hundreds Of Pages And Quizzes Dozens Of Specialists To Find More Medical Care Can Make You Sicker

The Associated Press (yes, that Associated Press) has reviewed hundreds of pages* of studies and quizzed dozens of specialists to arrive at this finding.

Overtreatment means someone could have fared as well or better with a lesser test or therapy, or maybe even none at all. Avoiding it is less about knowing when to say no, than knowing when to say, “Wait, doc, I need more information!”

The Associated Press combed hundreds of pages of studies and quizzed dozens of specialists to examine the nation’s most overused practices. Medical groups are starting to get the message. Efforts are under way to help doctors ratchet back avoidable care and help patients take an unbiased look at the pros and cons of different options before choosing one. (emphasis added)

And then there is this odd quote in the story:

This is not, I repeat not, rationing,” said Dr. Steven Weinberger of the American College of Physicians, which this summer begins publishing recommendations on overused tests, starting with low back pain (emphasis added)

Why bring up rationing after studying hundreds of pages from various studies and quizzing dozens of specialists?

On a related note, Obama’s nominee to head the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Donald Berwick, is a fan of health care rationing.

Via The Heartland Institute:

Berwick has attracted controversy as a strong supporter of single payer health care, particularly in an essay written with two colleagues and published in Health Affairs in 2008.

“With some risk, we note that the simplest way to establish many of these environmental conditions is a single-payer system,” Berwick and his colleagues wrote.

And in a 2009 interview on Comparative Effectiveness Research in Biotechnology Healthcare, Berwick focused on what he perceives as the benefits of the UK’s National Institute for Clinical Health and Excellence (NICE).

“NICE is extremely effective and a conscientious, valuable, and—importantly—knowledge-building system [which has] developed very good and very disciplined, scientifically grounded, policy-connected models for the evaluation of medical treatments from which we ought to learn,” Berwick said.

The interviewer pointed out, “Critics of CER have said that it will lead to the rationing of health care.”

Berwick responded, “We can make a sensible social decision and say, ‘Well, at this point, to have access to a particular additional benefit [new drug or treatment] is so expensive that our taxpayers have better use for those funds.’ The decision is not whether or not we will ration care—the decision is whether we will ration with our eyes open.” (emphasis added)

Sounds a lot like this quote from Obama:

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* The AP will review hundreds of pages of studies and quiz dozens of specialists to support the idea that less health care is better. But, they didn’t bother to review the thousand pages of the health care law to understand what was in it.