Tag Archives: The Greens

Despite the hottest year in a hundred thousand years, Europeans voted for maligned, climate denying, far right parties

From JoNova

By Jo Nova

The spell is broken

Thirty years of crafting a fantasy narrative was fine while countries floated on a cloud of endless easy money, but those days are over.

Counting is still underway in the EU elections, but the Greens appear to have lost around 20 seats, shrinking from 74 seats to 53. In Germany, the Green-stranglehold of Europe, exit polls suggest the Green vote fell from 20.5% to 12%.

In a shock, Marine Le Pen’s party in France doubled Macron’s party vote achieving 30% of the vote to his 15%, whereupon Macron called an emergency election, hoping to save a few extra spots in France’s Parliament before the “Far Right” really wakes up.

The “Far-Right” of course, being any party which doubts that bicycles can stop storms:

Despite 242% of Nobel prize winning experts being certain that life on Earth will be destroyed by 2034*, climate action was not a priority for most Europeans.

Far-right gains in EU election deal stunning defeats to France’s Macron and Germany’s Scholz | AP News

Newspaper journalists though have different priorities to most voters. There go those climate ambitions…

European election results spark fears over weakening climate ambitions (cnbc.com)

Some newspapers don’t just have different priorities, they speak a different language:

Who are these parties that deny that we have a climate?

Five years ago The Guardian called it a “Quiet Revolution Sweeping Europe” as the Greens went from fringe idealists to “potential kingmakers”. Instead it was a five year reckless experiment that trashed historic industries and threatens a lifestyle that took a thousand years to create.

The real Kingmakers in the EU who were panicking about climate change last week, are now suddenly non-committal about inviting the Greens to talks. It was always about power for Ursula Von der Leyen and sadly she is still there. There is still much to do.

The wonderful Mark Steyn on the EU elections and the media massaging:

Indeed, between [Marine Le Pen’s] triumphant National Rally and M Zemour’s Reconquête (the Reconquest party), what the BBC and even the Telegraph insist on calling the “far right” got just shy of forty per cent of the vote. (M Zemour’s party is for those who think Mme Le Pen is no longer “far right” enough.) In Germany Olaf Scholz saw his party come third, behind the even more “far right” Alternative für Deutschland. Over a million of Scholz’s voters switched to the ooh-ever-so-far-right AfD.

So the “far right” are getting a lot nearer: maybe the Telegraph should try holding the telescope the right way round.

Instead, the media took consolation in finding the far-right rampage didn’t go quite as far as it might: in the Netherlands, Geert Wilders’ Freedom Party has gone from zero seats to six to emerge as the largest single Dutch party in the European Parliament – but all the experts are agreed that for some reason this is a wee bit of an under-performance.

UPDATE: Good news, the young voters are turning away:

[Google translated]

Greens with massive losses – especially young voters turn away

The AfD and CDU are particularly popular with young voters. Voting right is not a trend, but rather a matter of self-defence. The Greens are the main losers, as they have become the epitome of philistinism. They get the ridicule of the internet for free.

Both parties have lost their magic. Now things are getting even worse for the Greens. The new youth parties are called AfD and CDU. Of all things! Anyone who joins the Junge Union or the Workers’ Party for Germany today is a revolutionary. The middle class is green, or better said: the bourgeoisie. And who is alternative if they are on the side of the philistines?

For most young people, however, it is clear that they will not retire at 70, they will not buy a house, and they may not be able to support a family – and if they do, their children will grow up in problem areas, in rural wasteland or in an environment of left-wing indoctrination. Voting right is not a trend, not chic, not a whim. It is pure self-defense.

Read it all (in German)

h/t Willie Soon, Krishna Gans, Old Ozzie, David Wojick, Kim, Stephen Neil.

*How many climate experts said Antonio-Guterres Mr-Boiling-Planet was wrong?

Far-Right-Bell curve original author unknown. Seen on this tweet

Energy Scale: Nuclear Powered Future Means Thinking Big & Acting Now

Small modular reactors (SMRs) are disrupting conventional notions surrounding nuclear power. Smaller, more compact, and producing minimal emissions, this innovative alternative to traditional nuclear power is receiving more public and private sector attention as governments across the world scramble to meet global energy needs reliably and responsibly.

From STOP THESE THINGS

When it comes to reliable and affordable power, big truly is beautiful. There has been plenty of focus on Small Modular Reactors which, in time, promise to revolutionise the generation and distribution of electricity. However, in the here and now, in Australia the heavy lifting is being done by large-scale coal-fired generators, with gas, diesel and kerosene being used for turbine and piston-engined generation.

Occasional bursts of wind power and solar power (weather and wind permitting) get thrust into the grid, allowing operators to collect $billions in subsidies every year.

Those subsidies are helping to destroy what’s left of Australia’s reliable coal-fired power fleet.

What replaces those reliable 24 x 365 generators is a matter of delusional faith (on the one hand) and unmitigated anxiety-filled realism (on the other).

The cult that thinks chaotically intermittent wind and solar, backed up by mythical mega-batteries, can replace coal-fired power plants have another thing coming.

However, as Peter Smith explains below, those pinning their hopes on SMRs as an immediate fix to Australia’s power woes also need a reality check.

What Smith has to say about maintaining Australia’s coal-fired power generation fleet, and progressively upgrading it with High Efficiency Low Emission plants makes perfect sense. However, over the longer term, large-scale nuclear power plants are an obvious choice for a uranium rich country like Australia. Whether Australia’s notionally conservative Liberal party has the stomach for either path is an open question.

Nuclear or Net Zero. It Can’t be Both
Quadrant
Peter Smith
30 October 2023

It seems clear that the Coalition will go to the next election with an incoherent energy-cum-climate change policy. Sticking with net zero and going nuclear won’t mix. Pursuing the first will effectively rule out the second.

The Coalition is very unlikely to propose building any conventional large-scale nuclear reactors. It will punt for Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), each providing up to 300MW. For example, numbers of them would have to be linked to provide the comparable electricity supply of our largest coal power station. At full capacity, Eraring generates 2880MW.

Westinghouse, which is developing SMRs, recently provided a projected cost of US$1 billion for its 300MW model. That’s about $1.5 billion in Australian dollars. So Eraring’s power generation could be replaced for something upwards of $15 billion once all costs have been factored in. A lot of money, but a lot less than the $25 billion or more it would likely eventually cost (including transmissions lines) for storing much less power via Snowy 2.0. Assuming Snowy 2.0 is completed; which, clearly, it won’t be. It’s simply a case of when it will be put out of its misery. Cancel Malcolm Turnbull’s prime ministerial pension in small recompense for the sunk cost? Just an idle thought.

Of course, Eraring is just one of the remaining coal-power plants for the chop. Speaking at climate “summits” in July and again in October, Daniel Westerman, the CEO of AEMO, said that the “historic mainstay of the power system — coal-fired generation — is on the way out … two-thirds of coal, or 14GW, could exit the market in six-and-a-half years’ time.”

Relacing fourteen gigawatts of coal would take some 47 SMRs at a cost of about $70 billion-plus. Now we’re talking real money? Not so much. After all, Net Zero Australia, a partnership between the University of Melbourne, the University of Queensland, Princeton University and an international consultancy group, reported, also in July, that Australia would need to spend “up to $9 trillion on the transition in the next 37 years;” and, of this, $1.5 trillion by the end of the decade. Silly, unachievable, amounts of money. Still, it puts a mere $70 billion in perspective. It’s peanuts. So the Coalition and Australia are on a nuclear winner? Not so fast.

Westinghouse said it hoped to have its first (300MW) SMR operating in the United States by 2033. That’s ten years away and we are a long way from adding Australia to the queue of orders. And I assume that Westinghouse won’t be a laggard among the major companies developing SMRs.

What will Australia need to do before joining the queue and putting in its order? First, the Coalition will need to win the next election and probably the one after that. Second, it will need have the existing legal prohibition on nuclear energy overturned by the Parliament. That means getting a bill passed by the Senate. Third, it will need to identify sites for the SMRs and, critically, for high-level waste disposal. Watch out for underground bones, spiritual connections, and leftist judges of a development-denying turn of mind. Good luck.

But suppose a miracle happens and Mr Dutton eventually puts in an order. I would say you could put things on the same footing as the delivery of the first Australian-made SSN-AUKUS nuclear submarine. To wit, the early 2040s.

Before I go on, let’s never forget, when logically preferencing reliable and continuous nuclear power over unreliable and intermittent wind, solar and pathetic battery power, that refurbishing existing coal-power plants and building new efficient ones is much the best option. It is a tragedy of our age that the climate-change hoax has pretty well ruled that out. The United Nations, the EU, the ABC, the Greens, inner-city latte-sippers, Greta Thunberg, renewable-energy carpetbaggers, and many notables, would all howl. One Nation might stand up to it. The Coalition? Hardly.

But back to where I left off, nuclear by the early 2040s. Not so bad? Sadly, it is so bad. It’s too late. Westerman’s not for waiting. He’s a glass half-full man to whom dire predicaments are opportunities. Apropos:

Our Integrated System Plan is clear that investment is needed at scale. Generation from wind and solar, energy storage systems and other firming capacity, and transmission, all need urgent investment to ensure the lights stay on as our coal-fired power stations retire … the east coast power system needs to triple the amount of grid scale solar and wind by 2030, and triple it again by 2050, from 16 GW today to 141 GW by 2050, while storage needs to expand by a factor [of] 30…to 60 GW. That’s a big economic opportunity in anyone’s language, all in the best interests of energy consumers.

Letting this “big economic opportunity” slip is not on Westerman’s agenda, nor more broadly is it on the agenda of climate influencers and potentates. While things aren’t going nearly as well as hoped. Increasing costs, shortages of skilled manpower and pesky objections to ugly wind, solar and transmission eruptions are slowing progress. Nonetheless, the ship has sailed and, even if they win, no bunch of pantywaist Libs, hitched to net zero, will take enough wind out of its sails (if you’ll forgive the metaphorical pun). By the 2040s, the nuclear option will have come too late to save the day. Too much will have been invested in destroying coal and erecting wind and sun totems to reverse course.

Picture if you will an elderly Dutton weeping over the energy carnage as he pens his memoirs. If only he’d ditched net zero and plumped for coal until nuclear arrived. Yes, he won the 2024 election with a nuclear pitch. Alas, that net-zero albatross eventually did him in. What, not another blackout, he sighed, as he put down his quill in the dark.
Quadrant

Nuclear Phaseout, Green Energy Transition Causing German Industry And Power Production To Leave

From NoTricksZone

By P Gosselin on 7. July 2023

Germany has gone from being an electricity exporter to being an importer.

Germany’s powerful environmental movement not only vilified fossil fuels, but also nuclear power. So much so, in fact, that Germany has shut down its entire fleet of nuclear power plants over the recent years.

Moreover, Germany plans to exit all fossil fuel power generation by 2038.

So where can Germany get its power from? The government doesn’t have a plan for that. Coalition partner The Greens claim that it is no problem to get it cheaply from wind and sun. But that’s a lie.

Already since Germany shut down its last three remaining nuclear power plants, the country has had to turn to its neighbors to keep the lights on. Germany has gone from being an exporter of electricity to an importer.

Blue indicates export. Red shows import. Source: Bundesnetzagentur (Federal Grid Agency). 

The above chart shows Germany’s net exports and imports of electricity in gigawatt-hours since early 2021.

Over the past 3 years, Germany has had to import power every May-June. But since Germany shut down its last nuclear power plants (Atomausstieg) in April this year, imports of electric power have grown like never before.Power generation isn’t the only thing that’s getting imported.

Due to the country’s record high electricity and energy prices brought on by the transition to green energies (Energiewende), German companies are leaving or planning to leave the country in droves.

The environment has become too hostile to do business.

Companies plan to relocate

Euractiv here reports “16% of the medium-sized companies have already initiated steps to relocate parts of their business” and that “another 30% are considering following suit.”

“Almost two-thirds of the companies we interviewed consider prices of energy and resources to be among the most pressing challenges,” said German Association of Industry President Siegfried Russwurm, citing a recent survey of businesses.

“Electricity prices for businesses have to fall reliably and permanently to a competitive level, otherwise the [green] transformation of businesses will fail,” he said, adding that it was the “the responsibility of politicians to improve the conditions for businesses in Germany.

”In response surging energy prices, electric car giant Tesla scrapped some of its ambitious plans to build its biggest factory for batteries near Berlin and announced in February that it would focus on the US market instead.

Currently Germany’s economic growth is in recession, “with high energy costs and the EU’s carbon prices repeatedly cited as reasons for undermining the country as a location to do business.”

“We’re already observing that investment into energy-intensive industries has fallen significantly in Germany,” Clemens Fuest, the president of the Ifo Institute.

Habeck wants to shut down industry if necessary: Ukraine solidarity to the point of collapse

From auf1.info

By Daniel Matissek

The Greens are now believed to be capable of anything. They themselves make no secret of the fact that they act unscrupulously against the interests and mandate of their own electorate: Baerbock’s “No matter what my German voters say” and Habeck’s “I’m not interested in that at all” are emblematic statements that sum up the whole arrogance of an ideologically radical eco-socialist sect. But now Robert Habeck has gone one better.

Probably never before has a German government politician expressed so brutally and bluntly that he is absolutely indifferent to his own country, his citizens, his prosperity and his future, as Habeck did with his latest statement on Russia and energy policy.

National self-abandonment

The German Vice-Chancellor (!) declares in all seriousness that industrial capacities may be forced to be curtailed or completely dismantled when the gas transit contracts between Russia and Ukraine expire in 2024. Because Austria and the countries of Eastern Europe would then no longer be supplied with gas from Russia, Germany would have to step into the breach.

It is not enough that since the green-dominated traffic light government took office, the most historically unprecedented deindustrialization program in German history has already been underway – as a result of an anti-corporate energy and “climate” policy that not only causes companies to flee and die, but also causes a monstrous destruction of prosperity. Now the national self-abandonment of all the vital interests of one’s own country has reached a new, scandalous climax.

Borders on high treason

Habeck announced this monstrosity on Monday at the East German Economic Forum in Bad Saarow: If Russian gas no longer flows through Ukraine to Eastern Europe to the extent that it is still the case now, what has been agreed upon by Europe will apply. Quite literally, he said: “Before the people there freeze, we would have to reduce or even shut down our industry.”

You have to call a spade a spade: what the German Minister of Economic Affairs postulates here borders on high treason. To sacrifice the continued existence of the German economy and thus the continued existence of millions of jobs for the maintenance of a sanctions policy that is as slavishly executed as it is completely useless, and now even to bring active dirigiste shrinkages into play for this, is a declaration of war on one’s own people.

About the author: Daniel Matissek is a journalist with Palatinate roots, works for AUF1 as well as for various German-language free media (including “Journalistenwatch.com”). Founding editor of the blog “Ansage.org”. Main topics: migration policy, political extremism, democracy and the media landscape. Friend of differentiated nuances, but also passionate polemicist. Motto: “The situation is serious, but not hopeless; But it could also be the other way around.”