The Politics of Climate Change: Green New Deal And Other Madness



Researchers have found that 90% of global net zero pledges have a low likelihood of coming to fruition.

The study conducted by Imperial College London claims that the only way to ensure targets are met is to make them legally binding.
More ambitious policies are needed, the authors stress, as with current aims and no implementation of net zero pledges, the world’s temperatures could rise by up to 3°C by 2100.

Net zero targets of 35 countries were assessed, covering every nation that produces at least 0.1% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The UK, New Zealand and EU managed to gain a high vote of confidence from the analysts but 90% fell into the low confidence category.

This included the US and China, which together make up 35% of global emissions.

Lead researcher Professor Joeri Rogelj said: “Climate policy is moving from setting ambitious targets to implementing them. However, our analysis shows most countries do not provide high confidence that they will deliver on their commitments. The world is still on a high-risk climate track and we are far from delivering a safe climate future.”

Out of the 35 policies examined, just 12 are legally binding and the study warns that this may be the only way to ensure their progress does not fall by the wayside.

“We need to see concrete legislation in order to trust that action will follow from promises,” co-author Dr Robin Lamboll added.

NHP - Total change in the air?
2023-06-07 Podcast
In the final podcast before our Big Zero Show, Sumit Bose speaks with Mark Rose from TotalEnergies Gas and Power.

TotalEnergies is, like many of the gas majors, changing radically. It's setting net zero targets, divesting investments into renewable power, and exploring green gas.

Ying and yang in Britain

 




NHP - Total change in the air?
2023-06-07 Podcast
In the final podcast before our Big Zero Show, Sumit Bose speaks with Mark Rose from TotalEnergies Gas and Power.

TotalEnergies is, like many of the gas majors, changing radically. It's setting net zero targets, divesting investments into renewable power, and exploring green gas.

Ying and yang in Britain


NET ZERO IS 100% STUPID.

ON THIS PLANET, A LIVING ENTITY LIVES BY CONSUMING ANOTHER LIFE OR A COMBINATION OF CARBON, HYDROGEN AND OXYGEN.

ANIMALS REJECT CO2, plants CONSUME CO2 AND REJECT OXYGEN.

WE LIVE FROM THEIR OXYGEN.

NET ZERO = TOTAL DEATH = SUICIDE
 

4 dead, 2 critically injured after fire breaks out at NYC e-bike shop​


Authorities said the cause is under investigation, but the lithium-ion batteries that power these devices have been blamed for numerous fires.

At least four people are dead and several others injured after a fire broke out early Tuesday morning at an electric bike repair shop in New York City.

Fire officials said the blaze broke out just after midnight on the first floor of a six-story building on Manhattan's Lower East Side, which also houses several apartment units. Authorities said two men and two women were killed, while two other women were hospitalized in critical condition. A firefighter also suffered minor injuries.


While the cause of the fire is still under investigation, piles of charred e-bikes and scooters could be seen on the sidewalk outside the building.

SEE MORE: Lithium batteries on e-bikes are exploding without warning

The lithium-ion batteries that power these devices have been blamed for a rash of fires in recent years. The New York City Fire Department says at least 200 fires and six deaths were caused by lithium batteries on electric bikes in 2022.
The bikes are often used by food delivery workers to zip around the city.

Earlier this year, two children were killed in New York City from a fire that was blamed on an electric bicycle. Additionally, at least 38 people were injured in Manhattan last November, some of them critically, from a similar incident.

The New York City Fire Department posted a video to social media later Tuesday morning, encouraging New Yorkers to follow safe practices when storing or charging their lithium-ion powered mobility devices.

"Do not leave batteries charging unattended overnight when you're sleeping," the department said on Twitter. "Do not use power or extension cords to charge."


Officials who manage public housing in the city had previously proposed banning e-bikes because of incidents like these, but later backed down amid backlash from low-income residents who rely on the transportation for their livelihoods.
 

Well... it appears somebody's got two firing neurons...
maybe this will prove contagious.

Sweden Scraps ‘Unstable’ Green Energy, Shifts Back To Nuclear Power

Sweden has just dealt a severe blow to the globalist climate agenda by scraping its green energy targets.

In a statement announcing the new policy in the Swedish Parliament, Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson warned that the Scandinavian nation needs “a stable energy system.”

Svantesson asserted that wind and solar power are too “unstable” to meet the nation’s energy requirements.

Instead, the Swedish Government is shifting back to nuclear power and has ditched its targets for a “100% renewable energy” supply.

The move is a major blow to unreliable and inefficient technology.
[...]
“We need more electricity production, we need clean electricity and we need a stable energy system.”

Environmental campaign group Net Zero Watch has welcomed the move.

The group argues that the Swedish decision is “an important step in the right direction, implicitly acknowledging the low quality of unstable wind and solar, and is part of a general collapse of confidence in the renewable energy agenda pioneered in the Nordic countries and in Germany.”

Under its new direction, Sweden now views nuclear power as being critical to the nation’s “100% fossil-free” energy future.

Sweden can “afford to reject fossil fuels, relying on nuclear and hydro and biomass,” Net Zero Watch suggests.

Dr. John Constable, Net Zero Watch’s Energy Director, said that “living close to Russia focuses the mind.”

The Swedish people wish to “ground their economy in an energy source, nuclear, that is physically sound and secure, unlike renewables which are neither,” he explains.

Other world governments are continuing “to live in a fantasy” about meeting the green agenda goals, Constable added.

“But we are coming to the end of the green dream."
:cheer:

In connection with this:

Siemens Energy shares plunge more than 37% as wind turbine worries deepen

KEY POINTS
  • The company announced late Thursday that a review of issues at subsidiary Siemens Gamesa had found a “substantial increase in failure rates of wind turbine components.”

  • The Siemens Gamesa board has initiated an “extended technical review” that will incur “significantly higher costs” than previously assumed, estimated to be in excess of 1 billion euros ($1.09 billion).
Nicholas Green, head of European capital goods at Alliance Bernstein, said Siemens Energy would likely be able to climb back from the fall, but the scale of the problems had shocked the market.

“There’s a 17 billion euros service order book and that is delivering service on installed wind farms and in wind turbines for quite a number of years ahead — five years ahead, sometimes 10-year contracts — and to discover that a handful of your components aren’t working as you planned, that maybe you’ll need to go in and replace those components, that is a very large liability that you’re taking on,” he said.


Also connected to this - from Jan 2023:

Giant Wind Turbines Keep Mysteriously Falling Over. This Shouldn't Be Happening.

The taller the turbine, the more epic the tumble.

  • Turbine failures are on the uptick across the world, sometimes with blades falling off or even full turbine collapses.
  • A recent report says production issues may be to blame for the mysterious increase in failures.
  • Turbines are growing larger as quality control plans get smaller.
Wind turbine failures are on the uptick, from Oklahoma to Sweden and Colorado to Germany, with all three of the major manufacturers admitting that the race to create bigger turbines has invited manufacturing issues, according to a report from Bloomberg.

Multiple turbines that are taller than 750 feet are collapsing across the world, with the tallest—784 feet in stature—falling in Germany in September 2021. To put it in perspective, those turbines are taller than both the Space Needle in Seattle and the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C. Even smaller turbines that recently took a tumble in Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Wales, and Colorado were about the height of the Statue of Liberty.
Turbines are falling for the three largest players in the industry: General Electric, Vestas, and Siemens Gamesa. Why? “It takes time to stabilize production and quality on these new products,” Larry Culp, GE CEO, said last October on an earning call, according to Bloomberg. “Rapid innovation strains manufacturing and the broader supply chain.”

Without industrywide data chronicling the rise—and now fall—of turbines, we’re relying on industry experts to note the flaws in the wind farming. “We’re seeing these failures happening in a shorter time frame on the new turbines,” Fraser McLachlan, CEO of insurer GCube Underwriting, told Bloomberg, “and that’s quite concerning.”
Wind Turbine 1.png

Wind Turbine 3.png
Well that looks rather expensive.
And extremely dangerous.

Let's not forget what they actually do to birds. 🤬

Well I won't be crying about Siemens trading price or any of these turbines falling over.
Good riddance to bad rubbish. :phaser:
 

Well... it appears somebody's got two firing neurons...

maybe this will prove contagious.

Sweden Scraps ‘Unstable’ Green Energy, Shifts Back To Nuclear Power


[...]

:cheer:

In connection with this:

Siemens Energy shares plunge more than 37% as wind turbine worries deepen





Also connected to this - from Jan 2023:

Giant Wind Turbines Keep Mysteriously Falling Over. This Shouldn't Be Happening.

The taller the turbine, the more epic the tumble.




View attachment 76894

View attachment 76896
Well that looks rather expensive.
And extremely dangerous.

Let's not forget what they actually do to birds. 🤬

Well I won't be crying about Siemens trading price or any of these turbines falling over.
Good riddance to bad rubbish. :phaser:
buckling of column. badly calculated.
 
Meanwhile, over in Nebraska, solar park smashed to pieces by hail storm!

“This project will help the city achieve its goal to reduce our carbon footprint and stabilize city costs for the next 25 years,” said Nathan D. Johnson, City Manager, City of Scottsbluff. “Through projects like this, we hope to offer an affordable ‘green’ option to our residents, both residential and commercial, to reap the benefits as well.”

That was the dream. A couple of days ago we witnessed the reality.

Now residents will surely have to rely on good old, reliable fossil fuel power to keep the electricity flowing.

And how long will it take to clean up the toxic mess left behind?


 

indeed, the likes are also a nuisance when we are talking of serious subjects. a picture of a cat gets an infinity of likes and a serious post gets an epsilon. we must find a way to make our comments more constructive. any suggestion?
 
Deep State Madness:
Screenshot 2023-06-29 at 21-14-46 حمد بن فهد بن عبدالعزيز آل ثاني on Twitter.png
We are going to accelerate the electrification of the Port of Marseille and the decarbonization of the fleets, rethink the balance between Marseille and Fos. Yes, we can have an ambition by being supporters of an ecology of progress.


 
Deep State Madness:
View attachment 76997
We are going to accelerate the electrification of the Port of Marseille and the decarbonization of the fleets, rethink the balance between Marseille and Fos. Yes, we can have an ambition by being supporters of an ecology of progress.



i refer to the green? tweet. he is right.
 

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