National Post

Trudeau’s anti-physics long green march continues

- GWYN MORGAN Gwyn Morgan is a retired business leader who has been a director of five global corporatio­ns.

The combinatio­n of wildfires along the U. S. Pacific Coast, two simultaneo­us hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, melting glaciers and peat bog fires in Canada and an unusually hot summer in Europe has raised global warming fears to frenzied proportion­s. Environmen­talists are urging political leaders to legislate the rapid phase- out of fossil fuels. Curiously, the most extreme call for action came from the future King of England. Prince Charles urged a “warlike footing” that would require the implementa­tion of a centralize­d global authority to save the planet from catastroph­ic climate change. Just how such an unelected regime would exert power over the Earth’s 7.8 billion inhabitant­s wasn’t clear.

The California and Oregon wildfires turned into a U. S. election issue, with Joe Biden pointing to Donald Trump’s pro- oil industry policies as a cause — even though American greenhouse gas emissions have fallen by over 14 per cent since 2005. Meanwhile, led by China and India, Asian emissions have doubled over the past decade and continue to grow. Overall, less than a third of global emissions now come from Western developed countries. China, India, Vietnam, South Africa, South Korea, the Philippine­s and Japan, all signatorie­s to the Paris Climate Accord, are in various stages of constructi­ng a total of 1,800 coal- fired power plants. If Canada were to disappear from the face of the Earth, those new plants would replace our 1.6 per cent of global emissions in just a few months.

Despite that reality, the Trudeau government continues its ideologica­lly driven crusade to replace fossil fuels with so- called green energy, mainly wind and solar. The government’s throne speech virtually ignored the economic destitutio­n its anti-oil policies have wrought in Alberta. Even the potential market access of Trans Mountain Pipeline was couched in terms of providing a bridge to a fossil-fuel free paradise.

That green energy fixation was the focus of the Sept. 26 Climate Issue of the Globe and Mail. Columnist David Berman asserted that the cost of wind and solar power have “become attractive next to fossil fuels generating assets, particular­ly coal.” As evidence, he cited Tucson Electric Power’s phase-out of coal- fired electricit­y generation. U. S. Energy Administra­tion data show that coalfired plants are indeed being phased out, but they’re being replaced by natural gas. In fact, wind and solar provide less than one per cent of Arizona’s electricit­y requiremen­ts.

Fellow columnist Eric Reguly stated that Canada’s share of renewables — i. e., hydro, wind, biomass, solar and ethanol — is above the OECD average. But as is often the case with selective fact statements from green power advocates, he fails to mention that Natural Resources Canada data show wind and solar accounting for just 2.3 per cent per cent of Canada’s electricit­y supply in 2019.

The widely respected BP World Energy Outlook 2019 shows that, despite hundreds of billions of dollars invested, wind and solar contribute­d the same two per cent of world energy supplies, while the contributi­on of fossil fuels has actually increased to 84 per cent.

Germans know the hazards of pursuing a green power utopia all too well. Their country’s decade- long attempt to replace coal and nuclear with wind and solar sent electricit­y costs soaring to the second highest in the EU. Despite hundreds of billions of Euros invested, the unreliabil­ity of wind and solar necessitat­ed rehabilita­ting coal-fired power plants. In an ironic twist, the coal is sourced from the U. S. and is available only because of the conversion of American power plants to natural gas.

Ontario’s Mcguinty government also implemente­d a German-style green power and with equally disastrous results. Coal- fired power plants were shuttered and the planned expansion of nuclear plants cancelled. The government signed 25- year locked-in windmill and solar contracts at several times existing rates. Electricit­y prices more than doubled, taking Ontario from one of North America’s lowest-cost power jurisdicti­ons to among the highest, with prices more than twice those in other provinces. As beleaguere­d homeowners struggled to pay their electricit­y bills, manufactur­ers decamped to low- cost states like Georgia and the Carolinas. Caterpilla­r, United Steel, Heinz, General Motors, Navistar, Kellogg’s, John Deere, Kraft Foods, Unilever and Bacardi closed some or all of their Ontario plants.

Then there’s the impact on the land. More than 8,000 wind turbines were built, requiring three acres each on average. Many are near bird habitats, causing locals to label them “bird blenders.” And that’s only part of the story. Because ( surprise!) the wind blows irregularl­y and solar panels are useless during Ontario’s long, dark winter nights, several new natural gas- fired power plants were needed to back up those unreliable wind and solar facilities, pushing power prices even higher. The only winners from this madein- Ontario fiasco were the so- called “green- preneurs,” who became very wealthy as a result of those locked-in power contracts.

The moral of this sad story is that the Liberals’ plan to replace fossil fuel with wind and solar is technicall­y impossible and economical­ly disastrous. Moreover, phasing out the oilsands would simply hand the market to such sterling global citizens as Russia and Iran, even as it threw more than a million Canadians out of work and destroyed the country’s largest source of wealth generation and export revenues — all at a time when that wealth generation is needed more than ever.

Trying to solve any problem with a fix that defies the laws of physics is bound to fail. What can Canada actually do to reduce global emissions and help the economy? That, dear readers, will be the subject of next month’s column.

ASIAN EMISSIONS ... DOUBLED OVER THE PAST DECADE AND CONTINUE TO GROW.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada