Author Topic: Dissecting a Wind Project: An Introduction to Bad Economics (and political Correctness  (Read 249 times)

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Offline rangerrebew

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Dissecting a Wind Project: An Introduction to Bad Economics (and political Correctness
By Bill Schneider -- November 14, 2022

“My own personal experience turned me from being ‘mildly agnostic’ about intermittent renewable power to being a strong opponent of such schemes. And outside of some ephemeral political argument about ‘saving the planet’ … intermittent power schemes, whereby the generation capacity is linked to either a regional grid or large power user that relies upon predictable energy, should be avoided at all costs.”

This is an energy story, a personal one – and it begins back when I first saw the option on my utility bill while living in a suburb of Boston back in 1999. I could elect to pay more for “green” power, about 20 percent more. “Buying a cup of coffee to save the planet” seems reasonable. I checked the box.

This was how an “Average Joe” thought~23 years ago. By some reckoning, that’s an entire generation. Since then, media have literally carpet-bombed the internet, airwaves, and print, with story after story after story of how, if we don’t DO SOMETHING!!!™ the world will heat up, the oceans will rise, and all the poor island nations in the Pacific will flood and cease to exist.

My views have changed a lot.

https://www.masterresource.org/wind-power-costs/average
abolitionist Frederick Douglass: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did, and it never will.”