Originally published Mar, 2010.
Abstract: Well-meaning
but idiotic government workers in Spain subsidized a hopeless solar
power project that is now essentially worthless. The cost was astronomical and
the government is now withdrawing the subsidies as even the most dedicated leftist
can work the numbers and see that this project is terminal and will never work
out. This is a classic debt-driven asset bubble formation folly and now it
comes crashing down in disgrace. Clumsy excuses are offered for this mess by
the Times and we are encouraged to hear that the government regulators in Spain are still
‘learning’ how to subsidize a worthless project. Maybe some of them can rush
over to California
and show them some new tricks before that state crashes in debt.
The
New York Times, aka the Walter Duranty Papers[1] features a raster of computer keyboard
finger-gepokers who can blend any news item, save very few, with the goals of bigger government
and higher taxes into high song and noisy glory. We can always appreciate how such
an advance [pick one at random] can ‘create jobs,’ ‘save the polar bears’ or
bring peace and justice to our society with your tax monies. This is so
wonderful that we wonder why the Times is
not the Star Chamber Central clearing
house for the world where our conduct, products and governments can be
streamlined and continually improved by their careful analysis and expertise.
Then,
a marvelous concept like busing, Social Security, War on Poverty, Cash for
Clunkers or other enthusiastically sanctioned project[2]
goes bust and the embarrassing necessity to offer justifications becomes
paramount. Here, the excuses abound but are almost always focused on the evil
capitalists. Today, the NYT
reluctantly reviews what went awry with Spain ’s magnificent surge into
solar power as their green bubble appears to be bursting. The
analysis is interesting as it discretely skirts around several salient points
while avoiding the central issue:
[I
offer extensive quotes in this blog so that the reader can view the exact
language and can be confident that nothing was taken out of context or that
nobody was misquoted. The easiest way to take in the salient points is to read
the emphatic points in the quotes and then peruse my
comments. Comments on my comments are always welcome.]
The Promise and the Glory!
“PUERTOLLANO,
Spain — Two years ago, this gritty mining city hosted a brief 21st-century gold rush.
Long famous for coal,
Puertollano
discovered another energy source it had overlooked: the relentless, scorching
sun.”[3]--Solar
Industry Learns Lessons in Spanish Sun By Elisabeth Rosenthal, New York Times,
Published: March 8, 2010
[Emphasis is mine in all quotes.]
“Soon, Puertollano ,
home to the Museum of the Mining Industry, had two enormous solar power plants,
factories making solar panels and silicon wafers, and clean energy research
institutes. Half
the solar power installed globally in 2008 was installed in Spain ”-- Solar Industry Learns Lessons
The
government is behind us! A stimulus! Jobs!!
“Armed
with generous incentives from the Spanish government to jump-start a national
solar energy industry, the city set out to replace its failing coal economy by attracting
solar companies, with a campaign slogan: “The Sun Moves Us.””-- Solar
Industry Learns Lessons
Ooops?
What went wrong??
“But as low-quality,
poorly designed solar plants sprang up on Spain ’s plateaus, Spanish officials
came to realize that they would have to subsidize many of them indefinitely,
and that the industry they had created might never produce efficient green energy
on its own.”-- Solar Industry Learns Lessons
Where was the quality control governance? Didn’t
the government have ‘experts’ on hand to inspect the wonderful new facilities??
Where was Phil Jones or Michael Mann? If they had used high-quality parts and
service would this have changed the outcome??
“Puertollano ’s wrenching fall points to the delicate policy
calculations needed to stimulate nascent solar industries and create green jobs,
and might serve as a cautionary tale for the United States , where a similar
exercise is now under way.
For now,
electricity generation from the sun’s rays needs to be subsidized because it requires the
purchase of new equipment and investment in evolving technologies. But costs
are rapidly dropping. And regulators are still learning how to structure stimulus
payments so that they yield a stable green industry that supports
itself, rather
than just costly energy and an economic flash in the pan like Spain ’s.”--Solar
Industry Learns Lessons
This is unusually harsh for the NYT to point out the manifold warts in a marvelous social program like green job
creation. The ‘lesson’ we learn here is that government ‘regulators’
are still learning how to subsidize
an unworkable program that was doomed to failure in the first instant. They
cliché here is that somebody didn’t do their homework, but we are talking about
government people and lackeys.
Gee,
weren’t the economics of solar power generation known for some time?
ScienceDaily (Feb. 22, 2008) — Despite increasing popular
support for solar photovoltaic panels in the United States, their costs far
outweigh the benefits, according to a new analysis by Severin
Borenstein, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School
of Business and director of the UC Energy Institute.”[4]-- Cloudy Outlook For
Solar Panels: Costs Substantially Eclipse Benefits, Study Shows
Or:
““At the time of this writing, the installed cost of solar panels
runs between $7 to $9 per watt, so a 5 kW system would cost
on the order of $35,000-$45,000 and an 8 kW system would be anywhere from $56,000 to
$72,000. Many utility companies are offering incentives with some
subsidizing as much as 50% of the cost of the system. Even so, a system that
generates an average of $73 of electricity per month would take a long time to
pay for itself even if you could get it at half cost. For example, a
system that cost $18,000 would have a payback period on the order of 20 years. The panel cost today is around $4 per watt and the
extra cost that brings it up to $7 to $9 installed is to cover the installation
labor and the electronics needed to tie it into your existing electrical system.”[5]-- How much does it cost to install
solar on an average US
house?
The ugly numbers on
this folly:
“When it
was announced in the summer of 2007, Spain ’s premium payment for solar
power was the most generous anywhere — 58 cents per kilowatt-hour — with few strings
attached.”--Solar Industry Learns Lessons
Gee, I pay 14 cents to my power mongers and that is
too high. Other losers are in this club including the Germans who should have
known besser:
“In Spain,
the tariff, now adjusted quarterly, is about 39 cents per kilowatt-hour
for electricity from freestanding solar power plants, and slightly higher for
panels on rooftops.
Germany’s
tariff, 53
cents per kilowatt-hour, is expected to fall at least 15 percent
this summer, and there are proposals before Parliament to eliminate subsidies
for solar plants on farmland.”-- Solar Industry Learns
Lessons
Did I mention I pay 14 cents and part of that burden is
for off-shore counterfeit
Bluewater Wind platforms[6]
that are also inefficient? Is this simple
incompetence or should we troll for stooges?[7]
But, there
is hope:
“The bonus
payments required to make solar energy financially viable vary, depending on
local sunshine and the cost of conventional energy. Experts predict that,
possibly by next
year, Italy
will be the first place where solar-generated electricity will not need
subsidies to compete with electricity from fossil fuel. Italy has
abundant sun and sky-high energy rates, given that it imports most of its
fossil fuel.”-- Solar Industry Learns Lessons
But, did we do the arithmetic in the Italian
case at the start? We wouldn’t want this to be another green asset bubble frothing
over with gangrenous debt would we? No, we are confident that
someday somebody might eventually break even on some remote project so that we
can all be apprised that ‘we have the solution’ and can ‘save the polar bears.’
Joy.
The
government wasted money on phony projects and the unemployment has not returned
to pre nonsense levels.
“Unemployment,
though now up around 10 percent, has not returned to the 20 percent figure. The
city is home to a number of solar businesses: a new 50-megawatt thermal-solar plant
owned by the Spanish energy giant Iberdrola created hundreds of jobs.
Although
coal mines still dot the landscape and a petrochemical factory remains one of Puertollano ’s largest
employers, That new solar plant sits just next door, with more than 100,000 parabolic
mirrors in neat rows on about 400 acres of former farmland. Clean
and white as a hospital ward, it silently turns sunshine into Spanish
electricity.”--Solar Industry
Learns Lessons
We are back to mirrors? Isn’t this technology a
bit old? Archimedes used this scheme but was it cost effective?[8]
Is this new thermal-solar plant going to be cost effective?? Did they do some
calculations?
Well, we could propose that certain bidders and
power sooth-Sayers demonstrate that their inventions and innovations are cost-effective
before we jump in and sink billions
of dollars into a worthless pit. That sounds reasonable, but that is not how government works. So, why don’t
we pick a few of these novel gigs to throw a few trillion dollars into and see
if one of them hits then we can proclaim success! Yea!
We
will do it for the polar bears no matter what the cost.
rycK
Comments:
ryckki@gmail.com
[1] In honor of that celebrated Communist
stooge and liar and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for the NYT . The color RED is used in my essays in honor of Walter Duranty,
a saint, if there could be one, in the Marxist Archives of Honor.
“He said that these people had to be
"liquidated or melted in the hot fire of exile and labor into the
proletarian mass". Duranty claimed that the Siberian labor camps were a
means of giving individuals a chance to rejoin Soviet society but also said
that for those who could not accept the system, "the final fate of such enemies is death."
Duranty, though describing the system as cruel, says he has "no brief for
or against it, nor any purpose save to try to tell the truth". He ends the
article with the claim that the brutal collectivization campaign which led to the famine
was motivated by the "hope or promise of a subsequent raising up" of
Asian-minded masses in the Soviet Union which
only history could judge.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Duranty
[2] The Bursting of the GanGreen Bubble II A Prediction coming True in Gooey
Green
[3] Solar Industry Learns Lessons in Spanish Sun By Elisabeth Rosenthal, New York Times,
Published: March 8, 2010 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/09/business/energy-environment/09solar.html?em
[Emphasis is mine in all quotes.]
[4] Cloudy Outlook For Solar Panels: Costs
Substantially Eclipse Benefits, Study Showshttp://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&num=100&newwindow=1&q=costs+and+efficiency+of+solar+power&btnG=Search&aq=f&oq=&aqi=
[5] How
much does it cost to install solar on an average US house? http://solarpowerauthority.com/how-much-does-it-cost-to-install-solar-on-an-average-us-house/
[7] Trolling for Stooges:
The New York Times Endorses Carbon Baloney Auctions
Posted
by rycK on Saturday, March
15, 2008 11:57:57 AM
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