The Mentally-Deficient Efficiency Drive

by | Nov 10, 2012

One of the most persistent and peculiar ideas that has been given life by environmental thinking is its conception of ‘efficiency’. Environmentalists like to believe that nobody has ever thought of efficiency before, and that it cannot be found without them. One problem with ‘efficiency’ is of course that once you reach a certain level of it, there are no more gains to be had. Greens discover that something is only X% efficient, and imagine that it had never occurred to anybody — least of all engineers and designers — to make X as close to 100% as possible. ‘Look!’, they urge,’we can reduce the energy use of this object by 100-X%’. But there’s efficiency and there’s efficiency. Efficiency is determined by our priorities. ‘Efficiency’ appears to be a straightforward and objective idea, but it turns out that our priorities are ideologically loaded. Environmentalism takes common sense, and by a sleight of hand, produces a nonsense.

Consumer Focus, says their website,  ‘is the statutory consumer champion for England, Wales, Scotland and (for postal consumers) Northern Ireland. We were formed by The Consumers, Estate Agents and Redress (CEAR) Act 2007.’ Which is to say they are a QUANGO: they look like an independent organisation, but they are doing a job the state wants them to do. In the case of Consumer Focus, their remit is to ‘operate across the whole of the economy, persuading businesses, public services and policy makers to put consumers at the heart of what they do’. Well, we’ll see about that.

Consumer Focus (CF) have just published a report, in which they say ‘Energy efficiency investment is one of best ways to boost the economy – new research reveals‘.

 A new report from Consumer Focus shows that investing money raised through carbon taxes in a major energy efficiency programme is one of the best ways to create jobs and boost the economy, while also tackling fuel poverty.1 The report2 – ‘Jobs, growth and warmer homes’ – is published today (Friday 9 Nov).

The research shows that significant Government energy efficiency infrastructure investment could:

  • Generate up to 71,000 jobs and boost GDP by 0.2 per cent3 by 2015 and create up to 130,000 jobs by 2027.
  • Lift up to nine out of ten households out of fuel poverty, reducing energy bills in all treated homes by at least £200 per year
  • Cut household energy consumption by 5.4 per cent by 2027 and quadruple the impact of the government’s energy savings schemes – Green Deal and Energy Company Obligation
  • Cut overall carbon emissions by 1.1 per cent, including household emissions reduced by around 5.6% by 2027

You can download the entire report here. It expands on these claims about CF’s research:

  • Economic benefits: Investing the money in improving the homes of fuel poor households has a better outcome on growth and employment than the alternative options modelled.
  • Social benefits: Between 75% and 87% of the households that would have otherwise been in fuel poverty are removed from fuel poverty, improving the quality of millions of lives of some of the most vulnerable members of society and reducing health care costs.
  •  Environmental benefits: UK CO2 emissions fall by more than 5% compared to baseline by 2027, contributing to the UK’s legal commitment to reduce GHG emissions by 2050.

These are some big claims. 130,000 is a lot of jobs. And £200 is a lot of money to the 9.1 million households that CF believe will be living in fuel poverty in the near future thanks to rising bills. CF’s solution — this miracle — is to take the increasing carbon taxes that will be paid on top of bills, to subsidise the improvement of those 9.1 million households with 95% of this revenue. This is the preferred scenario of three considered by the CF’s report. 

We are interested in the EE-All scenario. Here are the projections for 2015:

And here are the projections for 2027:

So far, this is all seems fairly innocuous… You take a little bit of money from the consumer at the point of purchase — the polluter pays, after all — and you give it to the people who can’t afford the commodity that the consumer purchased, to make their lives a bit nicer. What could possibly be wrong with that?

Let’s take the easiest claim to deal with first — that the fuel poor  will be £200 a year better off as a result of their homes being made more efficient. As you can see from the above tables, the revenue taken from carbon taxes rises from £2.8 billion in 2015 to £6.8 billion by 2027. Interpolating between these points gives us the following result.

So the Treasury will be taking £57.4 billion in carbon taxes between 2015 and 2027, and CF want to spend 95% of that (£54.9 billion) on doing up poor people’s houses, to save them £200 a year on bills.

Not all the homes are treated at once. This is a 13 year programme, as you can see in table 3.8 above. This is shown in the following graph:

So totting up the million or so households that save £200 in 2015, 2016… 2027, all the way up to the 9.1 million households who don’t get to enjoy their £200/saving until 2027, we get the following:

So as we can see, the £55 billion that CF want to spend between now and 2027 is only worth £12 billion over the same time. The remainder is £42.9 billion.

Of course, the likely response here is that the efficiencies created will persist. This is true, but those 9.1 million households saving £200 a year each, or £1.8 between them won’t have realised the benefit of the remaining £42.9 billion for another 23 and a half years — 2050. This doesn’t seem like a good deal to me, if the intention is to improve people’s living conditions and make their money go further. More to the point, energy bills have risen substantially more than £200 in the last decade, as they are predicted to continue. Should they double again — as seems to be a possibility — a £200 benefit may not be sufficient to take people out of ‘fuel poverty’.

But CF claim that their idea will bring other benefits, such as jobs. A whopping 130,000 jobs. These 130,000 jobs grow as follows:

Over the course of the 13 years, 1.3 million full time years are worked. So the benefits are equivalent to 100,200 full time positions over 13 years. At a cost of £424, 390 per job. Or, if we take the 13 year equivalent jobs, £548,064 per job, or £42,159 per year. Each job treats 90.8 homes over the period, or 7 homes per year — one home per job every 52 days.

Although the Christmas of 2027 will be a snug and cosy time for the 9.1 million homes who’ve had all that work done for free, with £12 billion saved up for presents, it will be a less happy time for 130,000 workers who will, just a week later, lose their jobs. Because, while it may be true that the insulation on the homes may persist (but won’t yield a net benefit for another 23 years) jobs do not last in the same way.

The green understanding of jobs is as peculiar as its understanding of ‘efficiency’. The jobs that are created are understood by CF to produce extra GDP — to produce wealth. But they don’t, they produce a big transfer of wealth, certainly. But they only marginally increase the efficiency of the UK’s energy supply by a tiny fraction for a comparatively huge workforce. These benefits are, according to CF:

  • Cut household energy consumption by 5.4 per cent by 2027 and quadruple the impact of the government’s energy savings schemes – Green Deal and Energy Company Obligation
  • Cut overall carbon emissions by 1.1 per cent, including household emissions reduced by around 5.6% by 2027

Here we see green ideology at work. Cutting household energy consumption by 5.4% by 2027 is seen as a worthwhile end — the real priority in the environmentalists’ conception of efficiency. But there is no real good served by reducing consumption for its own sake outside of the environmental perspective. As I point out on this blog, in order to take environmental imperatives like ‘reducing consumption’ at face value, you have to presuppose a great deal. Most people in the world would not regard cutting their consumption as a Good Thing. On the green view, walking is more ‘efficient’ than using a car. But if we take ourselves and our needs seriously, walking for the sake of reducing consumption is highly inefficient: I can get to where I want to be in minutes in a car, but it might take all day to walk there.

So let’s find a compromise with the greens. They will abandon their asceticism if we can find a way of reducing CO2 emissions from consumption. In other words, we have to find a way of reducing energy bills for 9.1 million people by £200 a year, and cut the UK’s carbon emissions by 1.1% for the £55 billion they want to spend on improving people’s houses. Can it be done?

Well, according to DECC, the UK emitted greenhouse gasses equivalent of 590.4 million tonnes of CO2 in 2010. So we’re looking to cut 5.9 million tonnes. This should be easy enough, because 204.3 million tonnes of the UK’s GHG emissions come from the electricity supply. If we assume a kilowatt hour (kWh) produces a kilogramme of  CO2, we would need to cut 5.9 billion kWh from our CO2-emitting energy supply, and produce it from zero-carbon generators. There are 8,760 hours in a year, so 5.9 billion divided by 8,760  equals 673,516. We’re looking to replace 673,516 kW of CO2-emitting electricity generating capacity with non CO2 emitting capacity. 673,516 kW is 0.67 GW. So we need to find a .67 GW generator. My choice is nuclear.

Prices of nuclear power stations in the UK are hard to come by. There weren’t any for sale on eBay. But the US Energy Information Administration has some info on costs. (I will not apologise for the inaccuracies that will necessarily follow from merely converting the costs of US nuclear power to £UK, because, as will become apparent, the CF took far less care in making their argument.) Clicking on Table 1 of this US EIA’s page  takes you to an Excel file, which says that the ‘overnight cost’ of a nuclear power plant is US$5,335 (2010) per kW. At today’s exchange rate, that’s £3,354.5. So .67GW of capacity would cost us £2.3 billion. But that isn’t quite enough, in fact, because no power station produces energy 100% of the time, and we need to ensure that we find 5.9 billion kWh a year. So let’s assume that our nuclear plant only produces 80% of its capacity. We need to add another 25% to the price… £2.8 billion.

The cost/benefit analysis of buying a nuclear power station vs following CF’s report is not looking good for them. But something which might tip the balance in their favour are the ongoing costs of operating the nuclear power station. Again, the US EIA has the answer. The fixed ongoing costs for nuclear are $88.75 (2010) per kWh and the variable costs were $2.04. So that’s £55.8 per kW and £1.28 per MWh. £55.8 x 841,895kW = £46,977,741. £1.28 x 842 x 24 x 365 = £9,440,000. So, the annual cost is £56,417,741.

We’re now in a position to compare the two strategies: the CF’s programme of taking carbon tax revenue from the rich, and using it to make poor peoples’ homes more efficient and produce less carbon vs my idea of building a nuclear power station.

The CF want £55 billion over 13 years, or £4.23 billion a year.

I want £2.8 billion capital cost, and £56.4 million a year thereafter.

Who wins?

Let’s make the point more clearly. In the first year, my idea costs £1.43 billion less. For the remaining 12 years, my idea costs $4.17 billion a year less. The difference over the entire 13 years is £51.5 billion. That’s enough to give those 9.1 million households £200 a year for decades. But if we’re in the business of giving stuff away, there’s a better idea. Why not spend that entire £55 billion on nuclear power stations and give the electricity away? According to the US EIA’s prices, that would buy us 16GW of nuclear generating capacity, or 140 TWh (assuming 100% load factor) — which would lower bills substantially. According to DECC In 2011, the UK consumed 365 TWh of electricity, 108 TWh of which came from coal.  So our new nuclear plants could completely replace all coal! Why aren’t CF jumping up and down for nuclear?!

There’s a catch, though. CF wanted to create 130,000 new jobs. Would 16GW of nuclear generating capacity do the same?

According to the UK’s Nuclear industry Association, there are 60,000 workers in the UK’s nuclear sector. Let’s imagine that they are all working in electricity generation. Last year they produced 69 TWh of electricity from 10.5 GW of net capacity. Assuming the same capacity factor (75%) for our new nuclear plant, that would give us 105 TWh and 91,304 jobs. (Less the jobs it took away from the other generating sectors, of course.)

So, CF might now say, ‘ahh, but Ben’s idea creates 40,000 fewer jobs than ours’. This may be true, but look at what those jobs create. The CF’s 130,000 jobs create a negative amount of electricity — 5.9 TW hours. My first plan produces the same amount of positive electricity for a fraction of the price, and the second produces nearly 20 times as much for the same price. Moreover, whereas the CF’s plan produces 130,000 low-skilled, low-paid, jobs for 13 years, my nuclear power plan creates 91,304 of the most highly skilled jobs on first-world salaries. In labour efficiency terms, then, the CF’s plan dilutes the overall efficiency of the electricity generating sector by adding 130,000 jobs. If the search for efficiency wasn’t subject to the law of diminishing returns, household electricity demand could be reduced by 100% by a workforce of 2.4 million. Meanwhile, under my plan, my 90,000 jobs, which create 105 TWh, almost supplies the entire domestic sector, which has an annual consumption of 112.8 TWh. My 90,000 jobs are infinitely more productive than the CF’s 130,000 jobs.

It gets worse for the CF now we come to examine the environmental benefits. Their plan displaces 5.6% of household emissions by making 9.1 million homes energy efficient. As you will remember, this is equivalent to 5.9 million tonnes of CO2, because a kilowatt hour produces a kilogramme of  CO2. My plan therefore reduces UK emissions by 105 million tonnes of CO2. That reduction effectively completely decarbonises the entire UK domestic electricity supply.

So how will this benefit people living in fuel poverty? Well, the ongoing plant costs under my scheme cost £1,099,180,017 — roughly a £ billion per year for the entire domestic sector. Between 25 million homes, that is about £43 per home per year, not including the cost of develiery. We’ve met the upfront capital cost of £55 billion through carbon taxes over 13 years. Now we can sit back and enjoy the cheap energy. According to OFGEM, 54% of a £470 electricity bill is ‘wholesale cost’. So that’s £253. And since we’re no longer producing any nasty CO2, we can remove the £47 charge for ‘environmental costs’ the government add to bills. The average bill now looks like this: £43 wholesale electricity cost, £84.6 for distribution, £23.5 transmission charges, £9.2 VAT, and £32.9 ‘other costs’, coming to a total of £193.2 per year. We’ve reduced the average electricity bill by £276.8 for everyone, not just the fuel poor. That’s taken many people out of fuel poverty — especially if they use electricity rather than gas to heat their homes. But if we’re still feeling generous, perhaps we could give some extra relief to the remaining fuel poor.

So, in summary, by focusing our efforts on production, rather than on the green conception of ‘efficiency’, we could substantially reduce or even eliminate fuel poverty, reduce bills for everyone, eliminate CO2 emissions from the domestic sector, produce 91 thousand very high quality permanent and productive jobs for the same money that CF want to use to reduce CO2 emissions by just 1.5%, reduce bills only for 9.1 million homes by only £200 a year, and to create 130,000 13-year full time, low-skilled jobs.

Of course, the real test of whether I win or not would depend on a much more careful treatment of more accurate numbers. I offer the above only to offer a sketch of ball-park figures from the data I have available. I would be grateful for any ideas about how to improve it. I do not offer the above as an argument for a particular choice of technique. Instead, the intention was to show how ‘efficiency’ is highly sensitive to what we focus on. ‘Efficiency’ is not always a worthwhile end in itself, and much more good might be done by other policies. What I believe the above does do, is raise a question about Consumer Focus.

Why are ‘reducing demand’ and ‘improving efficiency’ in the consumer’s interest? The argument above is that the parameters of ‘efficiency’ have been narrowed to these measures of performance at the expense of arguments that might better improve people’s conditions. These parameters of the policy discussion have been narrowed by the government, and by the party-political consensus on climate and energy policies. The idea of producing more electricity more cheaply is anathema to that consensus. Consumer Focus, being an organisation mandated to act in the consumer’s interest by statute in fact serves the interests of the government, and its preferred policy agenda. And indeed, when we look at the staff of the organisation, we see that it is filled with people who guarantee that the parameters of any research this superficially ‘autonomous’ organisation produces will remain narrow enough to prevent any criticism of government policy. Take CF Board member, Sharon Darcy, for instance…

Sharon is a Board member of the National Employment Savings Trust (NEST) and housing association The Hyde Group. She is a member of the Ofgem’s Low Carbon Network Fund Expert Panel and Consumer Challenge Group for monopoly price controls.  She is a member of the Ofwat Customer Advisory Panel and Future Regulation Advisory Panel.  Previous roles include Member of the Council of energywatch, Chair of Sutton Borough Citizens Advice Bureaux and member of the London and Southern Committee for the Consumer Council for Water. Sharon Darcy – Declaration of Interest – Feb 12 (PDF 116KB)

And it turns out that her declaration of interests include the fact that she campaigns for the Liberal Democrats, and is a consultant to other quangos. That’s not to say Darcy had any hand in this report, nor in specifying a brief in such a way as to deliberately set out to find in favour of a certain agenda. But what it does ask, is where does the CF consider the consumer’s argument for more, and for cheaper energy? It doesn’t. It can’t. The idea that there are better things in the world than ‘efficiency’ doesn’t occur to Consumer Focus, who nonetheless claim to champion the consumer’s interests — it decides them for the consumer.

This demonstrates the danger of political consensus. Not just between parties, but between all political institutions and civil society. Consumer Focus’s press release said, for instance:

Consumer Focus, and a coalition of organisations (The Energy Bill Revolution), argue that a proportion of funds generated by carbon taxes, should be used for targeted energy efficiency schemes. The new report details a range of funding options from using 35 per cent of carbon tax revenue to 95 per cent and how this could cut fuel poverty by 75 per cent to 87 per cent depending on the level of investment.

A look at the Energy Bill Revolution’s ‘who’s behind it’ page shows a vast constellation of NGOs, think tanks, companies, Quangos, and other organisations, who seem to have put their collective name behind this research in the name of ‘Warm Homes, Lower Bills’ — their slogan. Yet it would seem that through their narrow vision, they fail to consider better ways of delivering it than blowing £55 billion on a nonsense scheme with highly dubious benefits. You can guarantee that the research suits them though.

If civil society cannot challenge political consensuses and cannot interrogate the thinking behind policies, it becomes a mere echo chamber for the government. It is hard not to draw the conclusion that, indeed, rather than championing the public’s interest, statutory and independent organisations are nothing more than outsourced PR agencies for Number 10 and government departments. The consequence of this hollow political arrangement is inevitably colder homes and higher bills. There is no surprise that those are the two effects of the last two governments’ policies.

23 Comments

  1. Vinny Burgoo

    Half of the people who wrote the Consumer Focus report work for an emissions trader owned by Baxi, a major manufacturer of ‘efficient heating and hot water solutions’. It would probably be unfair to suggest a conflict of interest but in a world echoing to shrill cries of ‘Big Oil!’ it doesn’t seem excessive to jerk the knee a little and whisper ‘Big Boiler’.

    (My house would essentially need rebuilding to make it more thermally efficient. If someone offered to pay I’d probably turn them down. I spend less than £400 a year heating it, I like it the way it is, and my nose doesn’t agree with properly sealed and centrally heated modern homes – it gets all blocked up. If your breath steams in winter, put a hat on.)

    Reply
  2. Vinny Burgoo

    I tried to use your editing facility to get rid of the extra ‘e’ in ‘on’ at the end. The ‘e’ is still there and I’m now ‘ undefined’. Sorry about that. Dunno what happened. The comment above is by ‘Vinny Burgoo’.

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  3. Mike Haseler

    I worked in industry, and if there was a way to make things more efficient it was done. No questions asked, if it saved money it was grabbed with both hands and wanted yesterday.

    But like all investments saving energy is a question of energy spent to energy saved. Indeed, I call it enerconics, because I’ve yet to find an economic equation that doesn’t work if you replace £/$ with kwh/Mj.

    So, almost invariably if it doesn’t make financial sense, it doesn’t make energy sense.

    The only way these green nutters get the figures to work, is that they only measure the obvious consumption of energy. So, e.g. when comparing the CO2 “saved” by wind to that spent in putting the bird mincer, they assess the CO2 costs by those items that can are obvious and can be directly measured, and they measure the saving (ignoring all the costs they can’t see).

    So, e.g. the cost of producing a windmill will include the steel for the tower, but it will not include the cost of the sandwich bought by the sales rep selling the windmill to government. Nor will it include the CO2 cost of the civil servant who processes the tax return of the wind developer making vast sums of money.

    Likewise when assessing the “benefit”, they do not include the cost of backup generation, the cost of maintaining all that new transmissoin line etc. etc.

    So, how does one work this out? The simple way to work out all these hidden energy costs is to use a very simple approximately CO2 = ENERGY = COST (by = I mean proportional).

    Now we can easily compare the CO2 savings:

    If “renewable energy” is profitable … it saves CO2
    If it is not profitable …. most likely it produces more CO2 than it saves.

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  4. Mike Haseler

    Just noticed your moto “CHALLENGING CLIMATE ORTHODOXY” and I fear you may well have to change this. Because scepticism is fast becoming the new orthodoxy!

    I was at a meeting of the Royal Society and happened to meet Josh (the cartoonist) who was also attending. At the end of the two day meeting we were discussing the way that the only mention of the CO2 warming was in the talk by prof Judith Curry when she said “the models are not fit for purpose”.

    At first, I had assumed she was a bit of an outlier in the climate world and had expect quite a bit of hostility not only toward her but towards sceptics in general. In contrast that was almost missing (except for one individual). But by the end of the meeting we had both reached the same conclusion … most of them did not disagree with Judith Curry. That’s not the same as saying they want to swing from the rafters of parliament shouting: “WE GOT IT WRONG”. But it was very clear that no one involved in climate research was at all enthusiastic about the CO2 warming predictions.

    Indeed, I would say that most climate researchers are now close enough to our position to be called “sceptics”. I know that sounds bizarre, but most sceptics accept 20th century warming and accept CO2 causes around 1°C. Both amateur sceptics and “climate science sceptics” also know that there have been few discernible impacts (again no something they want to shout about).

    So, in reality I felt sceptics and researchers had a lot more in common than e.g. researchers and the NGOs pushing climate nonsense or the idiot politicians who only listen to the few climate researchers who are eco-nutters and not the bulk who are quite sensible.

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  5. Ben Pile

    Mike: ‘scepticism is fast becoming the new orthodoxy!’

    I would make a distinction between orthodoxy and forms of agreement. Debate is anathema to orthodoxies. Meanwhile, the complaint of most sceptics is not that there’s no climate change, but that a political consensus excludes dissent from the scientific and political discussions. So while there is a sense of the word ‘orthodoxy’ which means ‘consensus’, what worries us more is the sense which implies ‘dogma’, or the policing of opinion.

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  6. Sladen Chambers

    Excellent article, Ben and thanks for your hard work crunching all those numbers. I was so pleased to find someone else use the word ‘ascetic’ about the green lobby. Their form of energy efficiency frequently results in nothing more than pushing everyone back into some romantic vision of a mediaeval idyll. For example, the new ‘efficient’ gas boiler that we had installed in our Victorian terraced house failed totally to heat it adequately. The boiler was oversized as the plumber knew they weren’t that efficient – which speaks voulmes to start with. I had it set to maximum all winter long and I still had to wear three pullovers and gloves around the house although I could remove some of that if I lit a nice warm CO2 pumping log fire in the grate. I tried contacting various of the quangos pushing these things about the problem and all I got was that I needed to increase the insulation in my house. Of course, that’s easier said than done when you live in a conservation area.

    It’s all nonsense on stilts but it’ll carry on as long as there’s money to be made.

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  7. ilma630

    Well done Ben for writing this, and just makes so much sense. I read this other other day, wanted to find it, and saw the link tweeted just now.

    Have you managed to get this into Peter Lilley’s hands yet (or those of the other supporting MPs), as it might provide more armament for him in his new job on the CCC? It also needs a MUCH simplified version that everyone can use to write to their MP, as (i) they won’t read anything this long, and (ii) they likely voted for the Climate Change Act, so need something that’s so easy to understand, even they cannot fail to.

    Thanks again.

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  8. Joe Smith

    Speaking to the same theme, but with different conclusions you might find Julian Allwood and Jonathan Cullen’s recent book Sustainable Materials interesting. Optimistic, assuming creative and honest intellectual approach to challenges.

    Reply
  9. Vinny Burgoo

    Sladen Chambers, how disgusted are you about self-congratulation?

    Reply
  10. geoff Chambers

    Damian Carrington is in a state of shock about the IEA report that there’s going to be lots of cheap energy
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/damian-carrington-blog/2012/nov/12/iea-report-peak-oil
    and links usefully to a new DECC Energy Efficiency Strategy paper which can be found at
    http://www.decc.gov.uk/en/content/cms/news/pn12_140/pn12_140.aspx
    at a quick glance it’s high on psychology of the behaviour-changing kind, but there’s a hefty statistical summary to back it up.

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  11. Craig Loehle

    Here in the Chicago area, I put insulation in my attic 20 yrs ago. It paid for itself easily (Chicago gets very cold in winter for you Brits). What next? I got an energy efficient furnace when my old one failed. No problem, I had to get one anyway. The only thing left was new windows. There was no way this would pay for itself because they cost $16,000 for my house. Why did I get new windows? The old ones were so drafty that you could feel the draft on your head while sleeping–generating lots of colds. AND we could never keep the lower level warm no matter what. AND the old windows looked terrible (older house). But purely to save $, there was no way to justify new windows.
    I also strongly agree that thinking only of energy savings and not costs is insane. Money roughly combines the true costs of some activity since polluting activities are regulated and internalize their polluting costs.
    Finally, the “jobs” meme is so nonsense–we can easily maximize jobs by building new highways with shovels instead of bulldozers (or even using spoons instead of shovels) but it would bankrupt us.

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  12. Iceman

    Thanks for the partial Milton Freidman quote Dr. Loehle.

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  13. tim gasser

    Great piece Ben.

    But then I must admit to some bias. I spent 10 years in commercial nuclear power generation.

    In addition to “efficiency”, you can add “recycling” and “organic” to terms that environmentalists love but do not understand.

    I love the look people get when I inform them that in most cases all that effort they put into sorting garbage is mostly wasted time, particularly if recycling is mandated rather than market driven. They don’t grasp the simple fact that if there is no market for a material, the collector ships it to the landfill with all of the other garbage. I personally have nothing against recycling. I just consider it mentally deficient when it is done per political mandate.

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  14. Lewis Deane

    I live in a very poor, shabby corner of the Western World (as they call it) – Morecambe, UK. Even here, the rents are pretty. Would any of my Rachminesque friends rent out these ‘rooms’ if they were forced to pay for this so called ‘efficiency’? That is to say, the making of old, Victorian houses ‘up to scratch’? Therefore we’re not talking here about ‘fuel poverty’ but, rather, ‘home poverty’ ie a park bench. (I say ”Rachminesques friends’ but only in the sense in which I have to keep on their good side in order to stay in the cold, damp freedom I have been allowed!)

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  15. Lewis Deane

    Ben, you entice and intrigue. The fact that you have been an advisor for a UKIP MEP fascinates. This is the ‘new normal’ (to make a joke!) in our very, very old Marxist Dialectic. Is it the ‘use’ of the ‘useful fools’? I like, or almost, what Farage has to say but I suspect his and UKIP’s demagoguery? But, perhaps, I am just such a jaded politico, that you have found wanting, the weakness of cynicism? ‘Towards what…’ is always the question. Towards what?

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  16. Clive Williams

    A great article. Thanks, Ben.
    Windmills are a waste of time and money, but they contibute to the environment.
    They make a lot of noise, they kill many birds, they can interfere with Radar, and
    they are a blot on the landscape.
    Have a read of “The Wind Farm Scam” by John Etherington, 2009 about £8.00
    delivered.
    I heard about it only a couple of months ago and bought a copy. It’s saddening to
    think that Wind Power is still being promoted.

    Reply
  17. Richard Snape

    I think the argument in this post is a useful one to air. There is a certain asceticism about some people who would call themselves pro-environmental, or green. This is a real issue – in fact I remember hearing about one study which asked environmentalists if there were a magic bullet to allow consumption as usual but remove all environmentally negative effects would they use it? A significant number said No. I think there is an issue with assigning virtue to asceticism which does people concerned about potential delitirious effects of energy use no good. As an engineer who would put himself in that latter camp, I am acutely aware of the problems this causes and the potential fro suppressing reasonable debate.

    Similarly, there is an ongoing reluctance to consider nuclear as a low to zero Carbon generation option among some pro-environmentalists. This appears to me to be mainly a fear of the unknown. My belief is that more Nuclear generation is inevitable. I also, for instance, see Fukushima as an example of how a rather serious accident does not in fact cause horrendous multiple deaths.

    I think efficiency per se as the target, however, should not be the focus. In fact, as you point out yourself, efficiency is hardly new to engineers, be they ‘brown’ or ‘green’. If we can do a job with less energy, so much the better, because kWh = ££. The fact is that the CF article proposes a physical efficiency at enormous cost, so the economic efficiency is low. As you say, the relative weight you give to each is ideologically loaded. Although I suspect I personally give far more weight to saved CO2 than you might, but in fact it seems your argument appeals to efficiency just WRT a different variable.

    I actually think you miss one important point in your favour which is this – in order to work on those 9 million homes, you need to gain some sort of consent from at least 9 million residents. That can take some time / money and may not in the end be possible (c.f. the comment above that a number of people do not like sealed homes etc.). To build a clean power station involves convincing a relatively small number of people.

    Although it does not negate your argument, I have an offering on your numbers: Generally accepted Carbon intensity of electricity production is about 450gCO2/kWh, so you need to substitute around twice as much as you have in your calculation with Nuclear. A reference is here CO2 intensity 2011.

    There is, of course, an argument to be made about the lasting benefit of the home improvement vs the inevitable decommissioning and waste disposal costs of nuclear. I guess that would make the calculations closer, but am doubtful that they would overturn your economic argument. However, I’m not sure we actually have time to wait for that if even a fraction of the harmful effects of CO2 rises come to pass.

    So, there you have it, a comment from someone who would no doubt be put in the category of a Green. Hopefully not too hysterical or mentally deficient. I will continue to work towards reducing CO2 emissions, that is my own choice. I hope I will also remain open to debate as to the best way to do this.

    @snapey1979

    Reply
  18. Doug Cotton

    All should read the breaking news here, from which I quote:

    ” This story is huge. America’s prestigious National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and related government bodies found no greenhouse effect in Earth’s atmosphere. Evidence shows the U.S. government held the smoking gun all along – a fresh examination of an overlooked science report proves America’s brightest and best had shown the White House that the greenhouse gas effect was not real and of no scientific significance since 1979 or earlier.”

    For those who have been following the research by myself and others from among nearly 200 members at Principia Scientific International, I’d like to draw your attention to an Appendix now added to my current paper.

    Have a Happy Christmas everyone!

    Reply
  19. Lewis Deane

    Ben, were are you? You haven’t been frightened off by the enormity of the ‘task’? Or, perhaps, distracted by studies and life? Come back. You’re missed

    Reply
  20. Lewis Deane

    And Happy Christmas!

    Reply
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