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10
May 2009
The
Rising Price of Power
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Many people have been shocked to learn that the
Department of Conservation has received more than $8 million
dollars in cash payments from state energy companies, in
return for withdrawing their opposition to projects with
significant environmental effects.[1] While not unlawful,
under the Resource Management Act – referred to be some as
the Ransom Management Act - such payouts have the look, feel
and smell of “back-handers”.
On a world scale, New Zealand has always ranked very
highly as a country that is largely free of corruption. But
the “soft corruption” inherent in the Resource Management
Act has been evident since it first became law.
Designed by Labour, but passed by the National Government in
1991, the Resource Management Act encourages “affected”
parties to receive financial compensation to appease their
environmental objections. Faced with years of delay,
significant holding costs and massive legal fees, many
applicants have simply paid the money, kept their mouth shut,
and got on with the job. One hopes that National’s review of
the Resource Management Act puts a stop to this sort of soft
corruption.
The Department of Conservation was paid $175,000 by
Meridian Energy in return for not opposing their Project Hayes
wind farm development. Estimated to cost up to $2 billion, the
Meridian Energy proposal will compromise the Lammermoor Range
near Dunedin, an area of New Zealand long termed “iconic”.
So while DOC might be expected to object to the building of a
dwelling in an area rich in outstanding natural features and
landscapes, because of their payout they will not object to
the building of 176 wind turbines standing 160 metres tall
covering a designated area of almost 100 sq km.
There is no doubt that wind farms are in vogue around
the world as governments prioritise renewable energy projects
in order to comply with the demands of the Kyoto Protocol.
Such “green” energy projects have been promoted by
environmentalists as the best way to not only save the planet
from global warming, but to create thousands of green jobs in
the process. On further investigation however, these claims
are found to be spurious. Global temperatures are now cooling
not warming, and for each green job created, 2.2 other jobs in
other parts of the economy are destroyed.[2]
The pressure to reduce mankind’s dependence on fossil
fuels is at the leading edge of a global political attack on
industrialisation itself. This battle is epitomised by stunts
such as “earth hour”, whereby radical environmentalists
ask people to switch off their power for an hour in order to
“celebrate” the renunciation of electricity as a symbol of
mankind’s commitment to a “carbon free” future. This
return to the dark ages is seen by these climate activists as
a worthy aspiration for mankind.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Energy is the lifeblood of modern civilisation. We use
it every minute of every day to give us the quality of life we
enjoy today. In fact, we should be celebrating the lights
shining in our homes and throughout our cities as symbols of
human progress and modern achievement, not decrying them as
evil, as the green movement would want us to do.
Nor should governments succumb to such political
pressure to replace efficient power generation with the
inefficient, since such action will not only drive up energy
prices putting enormous financial pressures on industry and
households alike, but it will also cost jobs - and invariably
lives.
New Zealand already has one of the highest rates of
renewable energy generation in the world. According to the
Ministry of Economic Development, during December last year,
74 percent of the 10,067 Gigawatt-hours of electricity
generated in the country was from renewable sources. The
breakdown shows that 59 percent of the supply came from
hydro-power, 18 percent from gas, 11 percent from geothermal
sources, 7 percent from coal, 3 percent from wind, with the
balance coming from wood, biogas and oil.[3]
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, energy expert
Bryan Leyland, outlines the controversial facts surrounding
the use of windpower in New Zealand:
“In
New Zealand we are told that windpower is economic compared to
alternatives, that the unpredictable short term fluctuations
can easily be covered by our “abundant hydropower”, and it
helps conserve hydropower storage. Therefore, we are told, we
should happily accept destroying iconic landscapes and
seriously upsetting people who live nearby. The truth is, as I
will show, that windpower is expensive compared to
alternatives, hydropower schemes have no spare capacity to
back up windpower in a critical dry year and wind power output
is lowest in the late summer and autumn when we need it most.
“Furthermore,
windpower adds a new source of major fluctuations to power
systems that are, anyway, inherently unstable. Constant
adjustment is needed to ensure that the total generation in a
power system matches the normal fluctuations in load –
seldom above 50 MW - on a minute by minute basis.
If the fluctuations are excessive, the lights go out.
With about 1000 MW of windpower on the system we are
likely to see swings of 500 MW in a few minutes.
The system operator will find it very difficult – and
expensive – to find generating plant that can match these
swings. The cost
will be passed on to the consumers.
Bryan concludes, “Windpower
exists worldwide because of grants, tax breaks and massive
subsidies and because, consumers, taxpayers and ratepayers,
not the generators, pay for the cost of transmission and
backup power stations. I believe that, given the high cost and
operational problems of wind power, no responsible Board of
Directors of a state-owned or private company could – or
should - agree to ‘investing’ in windpower.
There are better and cheaper alternatives”. To read
the full article click here
>>>
A
ground-breaking study from Spain backs up this view.
The Madrid-based Rey Juan Carlos University has recently
published a report that outlines the damage caused by
excessive government assistance to producers of expensive wind
and solar energy. The result has been a dramatic rise in the
cost of power in Spain with electricity rates for large
consumers increasing by almost 55 percent last year. This has
resulted in a massive loss of competitiveness in Spanish
industry with more and more businesses relocating or expanding
into countries with lower energy costs. Further, as the growth
in the supply of expensive renewable energy increases, so the
share of the cheaper and more reliable hydro and nuclear power
decreases. This means that power prices will continue to rise
into the foreseeable future, harming business and households
alike, with no end in sight.[2]
According to Ministry of Economic Development energy
price data, in 1995 New Zealand had the second cheapest
household power and the third cheapest industry power out of
Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, the UK and the USA. But by
2006 that had changed to being the second most expensive for
both household and industry power, with household power rising
by 37.5 percent and industry power by 56.3 percent.[4]
While there are many factors responsible for these
increases, the $8 million in payouts that the Department of
Conservation has received from energy companies to offset
environmental impacts and obtain resource consents, is
indicative of the massive costs associated with the Resource
Management Act that have clearly contributed to the rising
price of power.
Looking ahead, with 70 percent of the country’s electricity
supplies being generated from the cost-effective renewable
hydro-power and geothermal power sources, there is surely no
need for the government’s State Owned Enterprises to be
saddling consumers with other forms of more expensive
renewable generation. As each new windfarm comes on stream and
feeds its more pricey power into the grid, so the overall cost to the consumer will continue to rise.
But if we are honest, the biggest driver of power price
increases is yet to come. An Emissions Trading Scheme will
effectively impose a carbon tax across the economy, which will
adversely impact on businesses and consumers alike.
Officials have already estimated that such a scheme
will increase electricity prices by at least 5 percent and
they also warned that there will also be flow on increases
from other parts of the economy as well.
Keeping the cost of power as low as possible so that
householders can afford to enjoy the benefits of modern life
and Kiwi businesses can be internationally competitive is
surely a goal that New Zealand should be striving for.
This
week’s poll asks:
Are you are prepared to pay higher prices for
electricity generated from wind power? Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.RadioNZ,
$13m
paid in RMA agreements by power companies
2. Dr Gabriel Calzada, Study
of the effects on employment of public aid to renewable energy
sources
3.MED, NZ
Energy Quarterly, Dec ‘08
4.MED,
Real
Energy Prices for Households, Industry
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