We Don’t Need More Windbags. We Need Water Plants and Batteries

The climate industry has turned guilt into its own renewable energy source. Endless, cheap and utterly useless. In the process, it keeps blasting penalties into Row Z while the open goal of abundance sits right there, waving its arms and begging to be scored.

We are told not to water our lawns, not to drive our cars, not to boil our kettles and, if possible, not to breathe too heavily. Meanwhile, the country that invented the modern sewer system now has Thames Water circling the drain. A taxpayer-funded utility drowning in £17 billion of debt, spewing sewage into rivers and so broken that ministers are openly preparing to take it into public ownership. A nation surrounded by water can’t even keep the taps on.

Perhaps the most absurd idea of all was covered in our sister publication this week. The academic eco-nutters want to breed a plague of blood-sucking ticks that will make us allergic to red meat, because of course cows are the new weapons of mass destruction and the only path to climate salvation is to turn our Sunday roast into a war crime.

Yet look at those who write the rules. Private jets to Davos, convoys of black SUVs, plates of rare fish flown halfway round the world. They burn fossil fuels like they’ve got a spare planet in the garage. They waste water like there’s an ocean plumbed straight into their swimming pools. Then they wag their fingers at us for flushing twice. It’s hypocrisy on the scale of London run by Victorian slumlords. Manicured square and fountains spraying water for the elites while typhoid spreads in the streets.

Our politicians throw billions at green vanity projects yet global emissions keep climbing because China, India and half the developing world are burning coal like it’s an Olympic sport. Meanwhile here at home, Britain boasts of being a “renewables superpower” while serving up some of the highest household energy bills in the Western world. The wind drops, the sun hides and families pay through the nose for the privilege of living in the dark.

The alternative is obvious. Technology, not theology. Desalination plants and large-scale battery energy storage systems (BESS) aren’t hair-shirt penance. They’re power tools for civilisation. The difference between a monk with a candle and a bloke with a light switch.

They do not shrink the human footprint; they make it more resilient. That is why the West’s refusal to build desalination plants and accelerate battery technology while lecturing the world about “sustainability” is such a scandal. It is like Brussels telling farmers to cull cows in the name of nitrogen targets while subsidising diesel for German carmakers.

To question the orthodoxy is to risk heresy. To admit failure is to invite career suicide. So our leaders don’t lead. They double down on dogma and pour billions into projects that don’t work because it’s easier to waste money than to say the three words that terrify modern politics: We were wrong.

Yet history is clear. Progress has always come from imaginative engineering. London stopped cholera not with sermons on hygiene but with sewers. America defeated the Dust Bowl with irrigation, not homilies on rain dances. Israel now gets more than half of its domestic water from desalination. Far from being punished for prosperity, Israelis drink it daily.

The West could do the same tomorrow. It isn’t carbon guilt that will save the West but the courage to turn seawater into fresh water and sunlight into stored energy. We know how to do it. Desalination plants and batteries big enough to keep the lights on when the wind isn’t blowing and the sun isn’t shining. But instead of investing in storage, our leaders throw billions at vanity projects that only work when the weather cooperates.

Part of the problem is that too many reputations, careers and egos are nailed to the Net Zero cross. Bureaucrats, academics and politicians have built entire identities on it. Genuflecting before Saint Greta of Stockholm, a sulky teenager elevated to oracle because she scowled at world leaders and told them they’d ruined her childhood. Add to that the spoiled brats of Extinction Rebellion, gap-year anarchists in £300 trainers who glue themselves to Lamborghinis before popping home to Chelsea for an oat-milk flat white. These are the people our political class listens to.

But true innovators, true leaders, aren’t afraid of failure. They know when to cut their losses and change course. That is the very essence of progress. Yet the West, entranced by teenage doomsayers and a rabble of privately educated eco-hooligans, has chosen pride over pragmatism, image over impact, theology over technology. The result is a civilisation that could be resilient tomorrow but insists on being fragile today.

The truth is brutal. The West doesn’t lack the means to solve its water and energy problems. It lacks guts. It is led by a generation of politicians who would rather be admired than effective, who prefer to moralise than to build. They have turned abundance into austerity. Progress into penance.

Until leaders find guts and imagination, they’ll keep wielding spanners like toddlers with Ikea instructions. Fixing the smoke alarm while the house burns down. The oceans will still be there, the sun will still shine and the engineers will still be ready.

Enough of the theology of guilt. The only thing missing is the courage to stop building monuments to vanity and start building the things that keep the lights on and the water flowing.

Until that day comes, forgive me if I treat every ministerial speech on climate with the same respect I give the seawater they refuse to desalinate. Undrinkable.

Clive Pinder is the host of CeaseFire on KVEC TalkRadio and a columnist for the SLO Tribune. He offends Islamists and the metropolitan political establishment in equal measure on Substack.

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ComradeSvelte
ComradeSvelte
7 months ago

Stopped reading at the idiot suggestion of de-salination and batteries??? WTAF, we have plenty of water and plenty of fuel, plenty… just cretins and thieves in command….

JXB
JXB
7 months ago
Reply to  ComradeSvelte

Idiot? Yes he is. This piece of nonsense… “A taxpayer-funded utility drowning in £17 billion of debt, spewing sewage into rivers and so broken that ministers are openly preparing to take it into public ownership. “ If it were taxpayer funded it would already be in public ownership you clot! The reason for spewing sewage into rivers is surface drainage and sewerage flow into the same sewers meaning treatment plants after heavy or prolonged rainfall cannot handle the volume. That’s a legacy issue, needing huge investment to correct. Taking Thames Water into public ownership won’t correct that, because Thames Water used to be in public ownership which failed to provide the investment to deal with this and caused the problem in the first place. Thames Water’s problem is it was acquired by Private Equity because it was struggling and needed investment but whose modus operandi is to promise investors a quick and substantial return, so they use the assets of acquisition to load it with debt and distribute the loan as dividends, or in other cases sell off assets for the same purpose. Since utilities are regulated, it shows the incompetence of the Government and its quango lackeys who let this… Read more »

The Enforcer
The Enforcer
7 months ago
Reply to  JXB

Spot on JXB

StickyWicket
7 months ago

Batteries are not the answer. They just add cost and after charging and discharging losses they consume energy.

We need concentrated, reliable sources of electricity generation.

kev
kev
7 months ago
Reply to  StickyWicket

First off, use all the coal we can extract safely and efficiently at home, by some estimates 200 years worth. Build new coal power stations that don’t pollute, and I don’t mean carbon Capture BS, doesn’t work and never will, and why anyway? Just scrub the true pollutants and the soot and other particulates. Build lots of high efficiency new gas stations. Build at least 15 new fast0breeder nuclear reactors, investigate Thorium reactors and the small scale reactors – this is already 25 years too late to start, and that’s on the Conservatives. Those 15 nuclear stations could have been online for 10 years with another 30 years of life. Solar only works at the scale of individual rooftops with battery backup, but current batteries are not “sustainable”, nor can they provide suitable longer term storage – a few hours at best. We need nuclear, coal and gas for a stable base load and reliable supply not subject to intermittency issues. Wind turbines are an abomination, destroying any landscape they appear in, including sea views. Personally, I would demolish every last one of them, but disposing of them is no small matter, maybe they can be recycled to recover some… Read more »

RichardTechnik
RichardTechnik
7 months ago

Clive
You have it back to front. There is absolutely no need for either Desalination plants or large-scale battery energy storage systems (BESS).
Unlike Abu Dhabi or Dubai, plenty of fresh water falls on certain areas. What our masters have prevented for 45 years our building reservoirs and water pipelines from supply to demand. Including reservoirs for holding water to generate electricity. Turning to Battery storage systems they are expensive. Land hungry and potentially dangerous. How many hours would you expect a set of BESS to run the country for ? Innova’s 800MWh installations deliver less than 2hours at max power of 400MW. We’d need around 2000 to run for a day. Having sacrificed our large power stations to the NetZero cult and have a potentially unstable electricity grid, we need a whole lot of new gas or oil fired stations to restore what we had. More if we ever want to halt the suicidal de-industrialisation

JohnK
7 months ago
Reply to  RichardTechnik

Balancing supply and demand is a worthwhile investment, and as the article mentions Thames Water, it’s a topic they have had on the shelf for a long time. One of them is a project to make use of the old Thames – Severn canal route to transfer water from the river Severn to the Thames. Then there’s a long term one for another surface reservoir near Abingdon. Neither of them have had a financial green light yet. Anyway, both of those are better value than investing in desalination plant, along with extraction of sea water. Such things are quite likely heavy power loads as well.

The geography limits the development of hydro storage for power, although there are some already, in north Wales and Scotland.

Purpleone
7 months ago
Reply to  JohnK

Thinking about it, renewables charging batteries, which then power desalination plants / pumps to refill water storage locations, is actually a doable use case for interuptable renewables… more expensive of course, but better than plugging it all into the grid

Cotfordtags
7 months ago

I am sorry, but the author has been infected by the green blob but doesn’t know it, like a wasp being eaten by the fungus. Battery sites that are proposed to wipe out agriculture as much as solar. Battery sites that have a tendency to explode polluting the local environment with chemicals and subsequent fire retardant. No thanks. As for desalination, fine if you want to produce water for cooling AI computer warehouses or other commercial uses, but don’t ask me to drink the brackish muck that they produce when we have the ability to collect and store pure clean water that nature has desalinated and returned to us as rainfall. We just need the will to build some more reservoirs.

john1T
7 months ago
Reply to  Cotfordtags

And there’s no faster way to run out of rare earth metals than to use them up in massive grid storage systems. I love lithium batteries in power tools, lets not waste them on this nonsense.

Marcus Aurelius knew
7 months ago

Here’s a rare statement from me: here’s one author for DS whose articles I can ignore from now on.

Dinger64
7 months ago

Batteries my arse!

RT
RT
7 months ago

Batteries! This bloke is off his trolley. Gas fired power stations are all that is required. Efficient, high density and cheap.

Roy Everett
7 months ago
Reply to  RT

Frack on!

adamcollyer
adamcollyer
7 months ago
Reply to  Roy Everett

We don’t even need to do that! There is quite a lot of gas left under the North Sea. But the government won’t let them drill it, and takes almost all the profit if they do.

transmissionofflame
7 months ago

Any water and energy problems we have are of our own making

Please explain why we need desalination plants in a rainy area like ours and why we need batteries to store energy when energy is already stored in hydrocarbons

HaylingDave
7 months ago

Ah thanks everyone for some common sense, weighted responses politely pointing out gaps in author’s core reasoning. And here I was thinking what the flip as I was reading this nonsense!

anmadeli
anmadeli
7 months ago

Many people commenting here would write much better articles than Clive on the water/energy topic. Please don’t waste our time.

varmint
7 months ago

Large scale battery’s at the grid level do not currently exist at a cost that wouldn’t make our energy bills even higher than they are now. It would cost 20 times more to store the electricity than it cost in the first place. Instead of scrambling around pretending to save the planet with absurd niche technologies we should be using the coal and gas we have for decades to come and Nuclear in the long run, because a few Nuclear plants tucked away in a corner somewhere would give us all the electricity we need 24 hours a day unlike the part time wind and sun that turns the country into a turbine and solar panel Industrial Park. Any investment should not be in technologies that cannot power industrial society (wind, sun, tidal etc) but in Nuclear Fusion and any other real technologies not based on green ideology, which is currently the reason we are in this mess.

Marcus Aurelius knew
7 months ago
Reply to  varmint

💯

(batteries)

Purpleone
7 months ago
Reply to  varmint

Agreed – in the meantime though ‘industrial society’ has been slowly wiped out through taxes, energy costs etc…

RTSC
RTSC
7 months ago

We need a new reservoir (or two) and a water transfer system, north to south …. not desalination.

And we need to use the oil, gas, fracked gas and clean coal available in the UK and north sea …. not batteries.

Otherwise a great idea.