Renewable energy doesn't have what it takes to beat COVID-19
Michael Moore's surprising anti-renewables and environmental-movement documentary Planet of the Humans unmasks the trillions being spent on wind turbines and solar panels that do not deliver as advertised. The movie attacks men like Al Gore, David Blood, and Elon Musk for making billions through renewable taxpayer handouts and electric vehicle production that strips landscapes of wilderness and precious minerals, leaving them uninhabitable and worthless for plants and trees. The ecological destruction left in the wake of renewable energy to electricity farms and subsidized biomass-fueled power plants is cynical at best, with its supporters mercenary in their destruction of nature's ability to alleviate the coronavirus via cleaner air.
What Moore exposes is the "renewable energy sector as not being entirely green or clean as well as criticizing large corporation for virtue signaling on the issue." Whereas the new movie Juice: How Electricity Explains the World advocates for energy poverty to be eliminated through electricity for the globe, Moore's film highlights the dark side of renewables.
As an example of renewables problems, if the Indian Point Nuclear Plant (IPNP) in Buchanan, New York that is slated to be closed were replaced by wind turbines, the consequences would be rising emissions over increased fossil fuel use since renewables need 24/7/365 fossil fuel backup, and bucolic surrounding lands would be destroyed. Here's why: IPNP uses approximately 1 kilometer of land to deliver 25% of New York City's electrical needs, and nuclear is carbon-free. Conversely, it would take 1,300 kilometers of wind turbines to equal the same amount of electrical generation power.
The environmental destruction wind turbines create is extraordinary — "building one wind turbine requires 900 tons of steel, 2,500 tons of concrete and 45 tons of plastic." New, gigantic turbines spanning football fields are now coming online offshore and onshore in the U.S. and other Western nations.
Wind and solar also bring little to no value to electrical grids. When the sun doesn't shine, and the wind doesn't blow at set speeds, it destroys a grid's spinning reserve mode, peaking mode, and backup mode. Germany, Denmark, Great Britain, South Australia, California, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and the latest government to go all in for renewables — Virginia — have all experienced blackouts, higher electrical prices, and weakened grids.
British prime minister Boris Johnson catches the coronavirus, and his country struggles with an unstable grid over widespread adoption of renewables for electricity. In the age of COVID-19, those are life-and-death matters if electricity is hampered for any length of time.
Renewables then make no sense when the entire world is sick. Only using Warren Buffett's logic does chaotic wind power bring financial wealth: "We get a tax credit if we build a lot of wind farms. That's the only reason to build them. They don't make sense without the tax credit."
Large renewable firms in the U.S. expect future, yearly taxpayer subsidies to reach over $60 billion; this doesn't include other direct loan payments and financial arrangements that wind and sun farms need to survive. Imagine $60 billion invested in medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, hospitals, and medical personnel to save lives.
Unemployment numbers are skyrocketing, but in Wisconsin, power subsidies have diverted public resources into rising electrical prices and lost jobs. A detailed study revealed billions wasted and 10,000 jobs per year eliminated to make way for green energy jobs, which never materialized. Real jobs were lost for jobs that need billions in taxpayer handouts to exist.
Neighboring Minnesota has the same results from its implementation of wind turbine energy to electricity farms over reliable natural gas, coal, and nuclear. Add U.S. dependence on China for rare earth minerals, which solar panels and wind turbines are useless without — and clean energy is revealed as a costly proposition during this global pandemic.
What reveals the entire notion of relying on chaotically intermittent renewables dangerous is a seminal work by energy expert Robert Bryce, titled Question of Power: Electricity and Wealth of Nations, which highlights this startling fact:
Roughly 3.3 billion people — about 45 percent of all the people on the planet — live in places where per-capita electricity consumption is less than 1,000 kilowatt-hours per year, or less than the amount used by a refrigerator.
Take into account that globally there are still 6,600 coal-fired power plants in use, and hundreds more planned in China and India, showing that the U.S., the Western world, and developing world needs affordable, reliable, abundant, and flexible energy to electricity that fossil fuels and nuclear provide to fight this pandemic.
Uncertainty is the one constant the coronavirus has shown. Long-term planning is no longer en vogue — now it's understanding cratering oil prices, a possible Great Depression in the U.S. if the country doesn't get back to work soon, trillion-dollar deficits as the new norm, and prosperity taking a backseat to police state–like lockdowns. More damning for renewables than endless subsidies is the fact that without fossil fuels, the coronavirus would rage unchecked.
Over 6,000 products come from a barrel of crude oil — including every part in solar panels and wind turbines. Additionally, renewables can't produce plastic for plastic gloves, ventilator parts, pharmaceuticals, building materials for hospitals, or protective gear for doctors and nurses. All those products begin from crude oil; as the Wall Street Journal puts it, "Big Oil to the Coronavirus Rescue."
We are at a "nexus" during this pandemic of choosing between life-saving products coming from crude oil and renewables that destroy lives, jobs, taxpayer protection, electrical grids, landscapes, and the ability to fight COVID-19. Choosing reliable energy sources over renewables that still need decades of research to improve their energy density and reliability is prudent during these nail-biting times.