Business World

Earth Day, Greenpeace and the renewable energy lobby

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR.

Earth Day was first celebrated on April 22, 1970, 51 years ago, to raise environmen­tal awareness among Americans, and was later adopted in many countries around the world. What later followed were a series of scary climate prediction­s, all of which were just false alarms.

Below are some stories, headlines, and climate prediction­s which never materializ­ed. Note that in the 1970s, people were scared of global cooling and a new ice age. This changed to fear of global warming and rising sea levels in the late 1980s, and in the 1990s the anthropoge­nic or manmade global warming/climate change was solidified. Among the latest climate Armageddon prediction­s came from US Rep.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) saying that the end of the world will be in 2031 (see Table 1).

The UN, former US Vice-President Al Gore, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), and Greenpeace are among the big institutio­ns and personalit­ies that push climate alarm worldwide. They target global ecological central planning especially in energy, transporta­tion, agricultur­e, and other sectors.

Before, big environmen­tal groups like WWF and Greenpeace targeted National Government­s

for them to bow to their global agenda of “decarboniz­ation” or moving away from fossil fuels (coal, gas, oil) to intermitte­nt renewables (wind, solar, biomass, small hydro). Recently they changed tactics and targeted big corporatio­ns, harassing and shaming them if they do not bow to their global agenda.

Last week, Greenpeace launched its new report, “Decarboniz­ing Meralco,” co-written by the Center for Renewable Energy and Technology (CREST). It is an obvious wind-solar lobby — from cover to body there are lots of wind-solar farms shown. The ideologica­l and emotional bias of the paper is captured by its Table F: PSA Price Forecasts for 2025, where the generation cost of wind and solar in 2025 are projected to be only one-half or one-third of 2019 costs.

Their figures are outlandish and far out. Wind and solar remain expensive and become “viable” only because of various mandates (like priority dispatch in the grid) and subsidies especially the feed-in tariff (FiT) or assured, guaranteed high price for 20 years. Intermitte­nt wind and solar need large batteries to address their highly unstable and fluctuatin­g output and such batteries are not cheap and add to their cost.

Aside from the high prices of wind-solar, their power generation is also very small, only 0.1% of total power generation in 2012, 2.2% of the total in 2019, and 3.8% in first quarter 2021. Table 2’s data on FiT rates come from the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), data on power generation mix from the Department of Energy.

In one of my recent columns (https://www.bworldonli­ne.com/ carbon-tax-is-not-good/, March 29), Table 1 there showed that “With few exceptions, countries that have retained a high coal share to total power generation — at least 30% — have also experience­d fast growth: China, India, South Korea, Turkey, Poland, and Taiwan. And countries that significan­tly raised their coal share… also experience­d fast growth: Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippine­s. Countries that reduced their coal share experience­d slower growth — the US, Canada, Australia, Germany, the UK, Italy, and Spain.”

So the corporate harassment strategy and “decarboniz­ation” lobby of Greenpeace is based on false climate alarm as shown in Table 1, and on false price assumption­s as shown in Table 2.

Meralco and other big energy companies in the Philippine­s and other countries should not bow to Greenpeace’s alarmist and wind-solar lobby agenda. There is no “climate crisis/ emergency” and there is no need to embrace expensive, intermitte­nt, unstable, unpredicta­ble, weather- and batterydep­endent energy.

 ?? minimalgov­ernment @gmail.com ?? BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers
minimalgov­ernment @gmail.com BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines