From: everything-list@googlegroups.com
[mailto:everything-list@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Alberto G. Corona 
Sent: Friday, November 15, 2013 5:30 AM
To: everything-list
Subject: Re: Global warming silliness

 

>>The fantastic amount of subsidies to the solar energy (That not even
Germany will have enough budget to pay them) not only have destroyed the
familiar and industrial economy with such incredible amount of taxes. They
also have stopped further solar cell  research in the countries where these
subsidies have been granted.

 

References?

 

I leave as an exercise to figure out why that has happened. It is quite
easy. But I guess that some people here well versed in QM and cosmology will
be unable to figure it out.

 

2013/11/15 Telmo Menezes <te...@telmomenezes.com>

Hi Russell,


On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 12:58 AM, Russell Standish
<li...@hpcoders.com.au> wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 12:09:18PM +0100, Telmo Menezes wrote:
>> On Wed, Nov 13, 2013 at 11:32 PM, Russell Standish
>> <li...@hpcoders.com.au> wrote:
>>
>> > The good news is that the figures I've seen is that its not such a
>> > tremendous cost after all.
>>
>> I am very interested in this. Could you be more specific? How can this
>> be? Was there some breakthrough in sustainable sources that increased
>> their efficiency?
>
> The following is an article dealing with the economics in Australia of
> PV vs coal fired stations
>
>
http://reneweconomy.com.au/2013/renewables-now-cheaper-than-coal-and-gas-in-
australia-62268
>
> And here is one for wind power:
>
>
http://www.smh.com.au/business/carbon-economy/rising-risk-prices-out-new-coa
lfired-plants-report-20130207-2e0s4.html
>
> These figure also do not include the existing carbon price of $20 per
tonne.
>
> Existing fossil fuel generators will continue for a while, though, of
> course, particularly as renewables have not yet solved the baseload
> supply problem. Vanadium batteries may be good for that.

Thanks for this. I hope it works.
Reading the articles I have a feeling that this is more related to
banks fearing investments in non-clean energy that could be subject to
increasingly high taxes -- even though it appears that the Australian
conservatives are not inclined to do that. I have no doubt that the
technology is improving and I hope it does, but I would be more
convinced if they addressed the hard numbers on the energy efficiency,
sans current economical incentives, be they regulation or market
conditions. Because I believe that those are the ones that will count
in the long term.

Part of the reason for my worry is that I saw heavy subsidising of
wind farms destroy the industry in my home country (Portugal). The
energy bill there is now about 60% taxes, to maintain the wind farms.
Keeping your house warm in the winter is too expensive, even for the
upper middle class.


>> >> > Obviously fossil fuel will run out anyway, so even without climate
change
>> >> > we'd have to do something.
>> >>
>> >> Yes, but that something we have to do is very different depending on
>> >> whether or not we have to cut CO2 emissions and, more importantly, one
>> >> of the path leads to immense human suffering.
>> >>
>> >
>> > The point is whether we do something, or do nothing, energy costs
>> > _will_ rise. Yes this _will_ lead to human suffering, either way. We
>> > can either choose to pay a bit more now, and have less costs later, or
>> > pay less now, and have steeper rises later.
>>
>> I agree that energy costs will rise and this is a very serious problem
>> that we need to face. If you don't have to worry about CO2 so much,
>> it's easier and less painful -- the more expensive fossil fuels
>> become, the more economic incentive there will be for renewable
>> sources. In this scenario we can retain economic freedom, which is
>> highly correlated with prosperity.
>>
>> > A 10 or 20% energy cost increase to hasten decarbonisation by a decade
>> > will save many billions of dollars of geo-engineering, or evironmental
>> > restoration down the track.
>>
>> Are you aware of geo-engineering proposals that would be very cheap?
>>
>
> Nothing earth-scale will be cheap, or easy to understand all the
> consequences. Ultimately, it will need to come down to a cost-benefit
> analysis, factoring in the unknowns as some kind of risk factor.

But if the technology break-throughs are real, we don't even have to
worry all that much, maybe. There will be a lot of money to be made in
moving to sustainable sources. Pushes for regulation make me suspect
that the technology is not there yet. In which case I agree with you.


>> > Seems like quite an astute investment to
>> > me. Our current conservative government, alas, doesn't seem to think
>> > so.
>> >
>> >> Then there are the geo-engineering ideas that John mentioned. They
>> >> appear to be ignored. This makes the entire thing start to smell a bit
>> >> of religious moralism.
>> >>
>> >> Telmo.
>> >>
>> >
>> > They're not being ignored. But they do require a lot more small-scale
>> > research to understand their risk-benefit tradeoff.
>>
>> I never see this as part of the discussion. I'm very skeptical that
>> this is being seriously pursued.
>>
>
>
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/oct/15/pacific-iron-fertilisatio
n-geoengineering
>
> amongst many other similar experiments.
>
> I can see why certain environmental movements have put geoengineering
> off the table for political reasons, but this doesn't mean it
> shouldn't be researched theoretically, and experimented practically on
> a small scale so that we better understand the costs, efficacy and
> risks if (or more likely when) it becomes a necessary part of the
> total solution.

Ok, we agree.


> As for carbon pricing, which is the current hot topic in Australia. As
> a philosophical point, I am in favour of some sort of carbon pricing,
> but I'm not enough of an economist and energy technologist to know the
> ideal timing for its introduction, nor the amount of the pricing. The
> current fixed price scheme we have amounts to an increase of 10-20% on
> fuel costs, which I would have thought to be "too little, too late". I
> don't know how the price of $20 per tonne was arrived at. I do know
> that the Eurpoean market price is even lower, at around $8 per tonne,
> so I can't see economics providing much of a push.
>
> The problem is that when our current newly elected government was in
> opposition, they went around denying that there is even a problem. I
> wouldn't have minded if they kept the political discussion to whether
> a carbon price was appropriate right now, or questioned the economic
> modelling used to set the price, or whether it should be set by a
> market mechanism. Instead they denied the scientific consensus,
> labelled the carbon price as a "tax", and stood on a platform of
> "scrap the tax", which will be one of the first bills they will
> introduce in parliament in the next week. It makes me mad -
> effectively they have shut down much needed debate on how best we should
> address climate change, and resorted to slogaineering and ideology.
>
> I just hope that the opposition and independent parties act to block
> this behaviour, and hopefully return discussion back to issues of
> policy, not science, which is the proper scope for a parliament. But
> we shall see... At least what Australia does is unlikely to bugger up
> the whole world, we're too small for that.
>
> --
>
>
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Prof Russell Standish                  Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
> Principal, High Performance Coders
> Visiting Professor of Mathematics      hpco...@hpcoders.com.au
> University of New South Wales          http://www.hpcoders.com.au
>
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-- 
Alberto. 

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