Eurocrats’ Energy Plans Are Gobbledegook
On Thursday Boris Johnson advocated investment in nuclear power plants. But that is not what the media focused on. Rather, they focused on his comment that if you have an old kettle you can replace for £20, it could save you £10 a year. This clip, taken out of context, quickly did the rounds on social media.
Johnson is right, of course. The fact that Britain does not invest heavily in nuclear energy is a disgrace. Calder Hall, built in 1956, was the first nuclear power station in the world to produce electricity on a commercial basis. Yet since then, for no discernible reason, Britain has let its nuclear sector wane.
But we cannot blame the media for focusing on the kettle analogy. While nuclear power may be a viable solution for Britain in the long-run, in the short-run the British government has no better strategy than to tell the average person to upgrade their kettle. The reason is simple: there is not enough gas.
The plans being floated by the Eurocrats in Brussels highlight this perfectly. Frankly they are gobbledygook. They advocate introducing “a price limit for inframarginal electricity technologies”. What does that mean exactly? Basically nothing.
The proposals look like they were written by some poor economist who has nothing of interest to say and so reverts to spewing esoteric microeconomic language. All the jargon is there – from talk of the “inframarginal electricity price” to bluster about “greater legal certainty”. But in reality, only one statement in the entire leak has any meaning: “mandatory demand reduction for gas”. That is, rationing.
As I have already noted: there is not enough gas. Since there is not enough gas, people must use less. Either the market can ration this scarce gas by increasing its end price for consumers until they use less, or the state can ration the gas by diktat. There is no third alternative – no matter how many times you invoke the “inframarginal electricity price”.
Each approach has advantages and disadvantages. Rationing via increased prices will likely mean that the sectors of the economy that need the gas most will get it. But it also means that the poor will get hit disproportionately. Rationing via state diktat ensures general welfare. But it risks distorting the market and cutting off key industries.
At the end of the day, however, these are secondary considerations. The main point is that there is not enough gas. Gas rationing means blackouts and blackouts mean that economic activity will grind to a halt. There is a real chance that Europe’s economy will collapse this winter, and living standards will fall sharply. Britain is not exempt from this cruel fate.
The only real solution is to get more gas. To do that the Europeans must hold their noses and accept Russian demands to open the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Doing so would overtly flout the sanctions and therefore be an enormous political victory for Russia. But the fact of the matter is that Russia wins either way.
If we do not flout the sanctions then we collapse, our living standards evaporate, and we likely undergo civil unrest and political upheaval. The people in the Kremlin will no doubt look West and laugh. If we break the sanctions, the whole anti-Russia campaign dissolves and we probably move back toward diplomatic normality. That is a big win for the Russians.
So, it is up to us – or rather our leaders. Do we want to stubbornly commit hara-kari to try to make a point – and meanwhile give the Russians a good laugh? Or do we sober up, assess the reality of the situation and hand Russia the victory that they will achieve regardless? Personally, I find ritual suicide distasteful, irrational and primitive.
Philip Pilkington is a macroeconomist and investment professional. You can follow him on Twitter here and subscribe to his Substack newsletter here.
To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.
Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.
Fracking Hell !…..
Coal. Shale. Pronto.
And nuclear for tomorrow.
Problem with coal is that the barstewards blew up the coal fired power stations….
How dare the Russians turn off the gas.
What have we ever done to them.
And still the MSM, at the behest of the RPTB as usual, spout the same old rubbish re the reasons for this and bleat about high prices as opposed to the simple fact that your energy supply will be restricted – and you will be happy.
That said, whilst nuclear is touted as the solution (albeit very long term) everyone seems to have forgotten about waste and when, not if, there’s another Chernobyl, 3 mile Island, Windscale, Fukoshima. etc.- expert opinion may change again. We have short memories don’t we..
Have we got any coal? Drax sits on a coalfield and burns USA wood pellets – but hey, the experts say it’s carbon neutral. Lol.
Since the advent of nuclear power just 100 deaths can be directly attributed to the industry:
Michael Schellenberg, “Apocalypse Never.”
Indeed. More people die from choking on biscuits. Literally.
‘Do we want to stubbornly commit hara-kari to try to make a point…’
The only people committing hara kiri are Putin’s cannon fodder:
‘And what will these volunteer battalions be without digital closed radio communications working 24/7? An uncontrollable crowd of deer, which the Ukrainians, actively playing “from defense”, will very quickly send to cemeteries and hospitals. What will be the advance payment for the “3rd Army Corps” glorified by Shurygin, the state of communication in which is senseless to try to describe to those who have not seen it – people simply will not believe that this is happening? And it is happening, it is happening. The Corps will be a huge, monstrous, unruly mob of deer.’
LPR Volunteer Murs live journal account 01 Sept 22
All we have to do is wear woolly hats and retain an extra 30% of our body heat, a bit similar to the 30% we turn up our heating in the winter normally, you might say…..
We can either stand up to Putin ourselves, now, by wearing a hat, for heavens sake, or have our children do it for us, further down the line…..
The Ukraine War has been going on since 2014.
Personally, I don’t trust one word from either side, but in the battle of good vs. evil, I’m pretty sure we’re not the good guys.
There are no good guys in foreign policy, only national self interest.
That is why the first duty of government is defence of the realm, the dereliction of which such a notable feature of the last thirty years; consequences, the failure of deterrence, plain for all to see.
But this is, no doubt, what you are alluding to and not many outside Washington would disagree with you (and the climate change consensus in Washington is a similar problem):
‘The most important part of that consensus is the idea that the United States will exercise leadership on virtually every issue of world politics, and has the right to interfere with any government we happen to dislike if we think we can get away with it. That spreading of course those liberal values, is good for us and good for the world. Questioning that basic view is not a smart career move if you want to rise in Washington.’
Stephen Walt, Harvard Kennedy School
What happens in America never stays in America.
If you want to stand up to Putin as claimed energy security is a necessity first. Since we don’t have that we can’t stand up to anyone important, and are merely a basket case, and blathering about what the kids may or may not have to do is just waffle I’m afraid.
Energy security, as far as we are concerned, can be secured by wearing a hat this winter; nothing more required.
You may not want to stand up to anyone but that is a matter for you alone. The bulk of the rest of this country thinks differently, plain for all to see.
The sanctions are playing Putin’s game. The sanctions don’t hurt him one bit, but they do hurt ordinary Russian people, who are all the more likely to rally to his cause. Putin is even joining in the fun by increasing restrictions on gas to Germany. It used to be well understood that if you want to hurt Russia economically, you increase oil supply to lower the price. That’s what governments used to do, but it hasn’t happened. The politicians are stupid, but they are not that stupid. The real target of sanctions is not Putin, but people in Western Europe.
Sanctions mean Putin cannot announce national mobilization for fear of civil unrest.
Without mobilization he cannot win.
This winter will be a disaster for Putin’s forces.
How would that work though? I can’t think of any examples of sanctions turning the sanctioned population against their rulers. Most people rightly blame the sanctioning country, not their own government. The Russians are themselves voluntarily escalating the gas sanctions.
The sanctions restrict Putin’s war effort. So, as a consequence, he needs more troops for offensive operations otherwise he loses the initiative. So he has to mobilize. Massive losses of forcibly conscripted recruits ultimately causes revolutions.
The sanctions restrict Europe’s keeping warm and eating efforts more than anything.
You can wear a stack of hats so tall that you’d need stabilisers to walk around, but that won’t stop aluminium smelters and steel foundries shutting down due to skyrocketing electricity costs, first putting prices of goods beyond the reach of all but the wealthy, before gradually necessitating a redefinition of what ‘wealthy’ means as economies tank. It won’t stop more fertiliser manufacturers going out of business, wrecking crop yields, driving up prices of food, stirring social unrest and creating the potential for famine around the world and stockpiling panic, shortages and poverty at home. All the hats in the world won’t stop electricity providers buying up vast quantities of diesel to run countless small generators in order to keep the lights on, driving up the price of oil not just used for generation and heating, but for transport, agriculture and shipping too. This will further push up food prices, force up inflation, and put more pressure on supply chains as more businesses go under. A hat won’t stop the service industries collapsing as they can no longer afford to heat premises, run machinery and pay staff, adding to the queue of jobless who will need to be supported through… Read more »
Good government is important. It has been lacking in this country for thirty years. Part of the cause of this has been hubris, a belief that national security was assured. How dumb. The invasion of Ukraine has shaken up the U.S. and this country. The wake up call was timely. Politicians that want to be elected will now have to prioritise matters of national security first and foremost. There is no energy crisis in the U.S. since their energy policies have been a great deal more sensible than our own. The differential in prosperity between Europe and the U.S. will drive changes in policy here, and not before time. Blair’s Britain has been an unmitigated disaster. Nevertheless, as we have seen over the last two years, proportion and perspective are important. We will be in recession next year but inflation will then reduce dramatically. Recession will drive deregulation and business friendly policies. There is plenty of energy available outside Russia and Saudi. And it will be a mild winter. Putin will take a whipping; Biden will take a major hit in the mid terms; the Conservatives here will be radical. But, for the elderly and immobile, hats, appropriate clothing, are… Read more »
I genuinely hope you’re right.
You can bet your house on it.
A hat is certainly important indoors in colder weather for the elderly. From practical experience with somebody like that, blankets and a hot water bottle renewed every few hours are much cheaper than the equivalent in space heating.
Well said.
Is your hat tall and white with a big letter D on it?
You are as nutty as a fruit cake, but I accept you have comedy value……
Resorting to insults invariably indicates the wrong end of the argument.
Put on a hat / Open a window / Save lives.
First class but you are trying to debate with a troll and that is not really worth your effort.
We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall wear hats in France, we shall wear hats on the seas and oceans, we shall wear hats with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be. We shall wear hats on the beaches, we shall wear hats on the landing grounds, we shall wear hats in the fields and in the streets, we shall wear hats in the hills; we shall never surrender. 🇬🇧👒🎩🧢😭
Tell that to the millions swimming in a sea of debt who have to choose between eating and heating. They will probably say that it is ok for the well off and public sector workers (current or retired enjoying inflation proof pensions) whipping up and perpetuating the Romanticisation of the defence of one of, if not the most corrupt countries in Europe, but their moral outrage doesn’t help them to pay their bills which are making their lives a misery.
Someone should translate your comment to Russian and send it to the Kremlin. Their uncontrollable laughter could buy some valuable time for Zelensky to mount another counter offensive.
For homo sapiens living at our latitude heat is just about as essential as food and water. Anyone who thinks you can blithely increase the cost of heating by a factor of 3 overnight and not cause serious civil unrest – not to mention great loss of lives from the cold – is detached from reality. Yet you seem to think it merely comes down to donning a wooly hat and jumper!
It’s not like they can tell the truth is it, “we messed up big time, now we are going to get you all dependent on the State so that you have no autonomy and are forced back into penury whilst we lord it over you like the feudal barons of old”.
All deliberate and part of Agenda 2030.
The UK’s plans appear to be in a mess as well. Announcing one large project like the Sizewell C station made the headlines, but in recent times quite a few potential projects that could reduce the need for financially volatile power sources have been put on the shelf. In particular, there has been no real progress on tidal flow projects, such as the Severn Barrage, or the Swansea Lagoon one, a similar idea in the Bristol Channel near Cardiff, and maybe other sites. While schemes like those will have their own critics, they would at least have the capability of planned output, unless something weird happens to the moon!
http://www.reuk.co.uk/wordpress/tidal/severn-barrage-tidal-power/
http://www.tidallagoonpower.com/projects/swansea-bay/
We will just have to comfort ourselves with the fact that every time an old person dies of hypothermia, it means Ukraine is winning……
There will be many more people dead if Ukraine does not win, and millions of them will be youngsters.
No they won’t….no they won’t…and no they won’t……
You are entitled to your view. It is not one shared by many who make their living from studying these matters: ‘….a Russian defeat of Ukraine would turn the proactive Western strategy of economic and political engagement into one of retrenchment, where boundaries could be placed on Western ambition and internal divisions stoked to create paralysis. The question in Eastern European capitals would be that if guarantees to Ukraine were negotiable, where does this leave Article 5? Divisions would emerge between the proponents of stability, such as France and Germany – eager for pragmatic diplomacy – and those in the Baltic, Balkans and the UK who fear Russian aggression. With NATO fixed by the imperative to assure its internal cohesion it would have little capacity to ‘compete’. This would therefore open the door to a more coercive approach in Georgia and Moldova, where the objective would be to ensure that these countries remain dependent on Russia and within a Russian sphere of influence. Explicit or implicit assurances to consult Russia on European security frameworks, meanwhile, would demonstrate to Beijing that Moscow is an invaluable ally in preventing AUKUS and other alliances and/or regional security arrangements from being focused solely on… Read more »
‘its not one shared by many’….same rubbish spouted by the pro-vaxxers…..
….there are many admired professors, historians philosophers and economists who don’t back the US proxy war…
…and in the same way they did with Covid you are trying to suggest there’s a consensus..which is of Course on your side…LOL!
There isn’t….
I don’t fear Russian expansion, there is absolutely no evidence for it….it’s the usual Western fear porn….
Hardly anyone I know gives a toss about Ukraine, and they’ll give even less when they can’t pay their bills, start having to cut down on food, or go without…lose jobs and businesses….when they can’t go the pub, and their kids can’t go to school because it’s shut because there’s no heating…
The author is entirely right…they either open Nordstream and get some immediate benefit..or the whole of Europe’s economy goes into free-fall….
There is plenty of energy available. The U.S. is shipping a lot of crude to Europe. Norwegian gas reserves are immense. Energy prices are elevated as a consequence of incompetent energy policies in Europe. That is bringing about some much needed political realism.
If you really believe Nordstream 2 is going to be opened, you’re on the wrong pills.
Who knows if Nordstream will open..I agree with the author that it should…..
If you look on-line and in the newspapers there’s an avalanche of businesses talking about closure due to high fuel prices….
Just one example from today…Tom kerridge the Michelin-starred chef said he was quoted £420,000 to supply energy for a year at one of his smaller locations, up from £60,000. An increase of 600%…
This isn’t unusual, it’s happening everywhere, and it’s not even winter yet….
So we’re now in the business of balancing lives lost among our countrymen at home against strangers’ lives saved elsewhere! Are you all there? – What idealistic utter nonsense!
Canada has plenty of oil and gas, in fact the German Foreign Minister just visited Turdeau in Ottawa to ask for Canadian gas which was refused by this eco extremist manchild. France has been producing over 70% of it’s electricity with nuclear power for over 50 years, safely. The US also has been producing over 20% of it’s electricity with nuclear power. It’s time the Germans and Brits got serious about this impending disaster entirely created by these eco extremists or there will be collapse and chaos.
An impending disaster created by eco-extremists and the utter incompetence and short-termism of all recent governments!
Even before we had the lunatic anarchists running the show, the programme for decommissioning the UK’s nuclear plant (that provides vital base-load requirements) was extant. Yet in 1997 when nuclear generation was more than 25% of the country’s needs, the new Labour idiots did nothing for the full 13 years of their tenure; followed by the coalition for the next 5 years up to 2015. Finally, in late 2015, Cameron gets a 50% deal with the Chinese(!) to fund Hinkley C (which probably won’t supply the grid till near the end of this decade). Then absolutely nothing more since! From 10 nuclear power stations operating in 1997 we now have just 5 left, with this year alone Dungeness B, Hunterson B, and Hinkley B having been permanently shutdown!
The deliberate destruction of our energy sector – coal, gas, oil, nuclear shows very clearly that the freezing of the population this winter has been deliberately planned. If there is a surge in mortality, which is inevitable when combined with the bivalent, booster roll-out then it would be difficult not to conclude that the deaths have been planned for all along. This would mean that somebody in government is complicit in organising a massive increase in population funerals. There is a more succinct way of putting this but I might get banned.
.