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“Green” Calculations: Wrong Again | Power Line

Pretty much every calculation you have ever seen relating to “green” energy–cost estimates, productivity claims, and so on–has been wrong. “Green” energy really is a scam, as President Trump says. It is consistently sold on the basis of fake science.

The latest case in point comes from Great Britain, via the Telegraph: “Miliband admits wind power less reliable than expected.”

The Government has slashed forecasts for the amount of electricity it expects wind farms to generate in a blow to Ed Miliband’s net zero plans.

In documents published before an auction of green energy subsidies this week, officials said they were revising down the predicted efficiency of wind turbines by more than a quarter as a result of “updated modelling”.

Presumably that “updated modelling” is the result of experience and observation rather than the pie-in-the-sky models on the basis of which wind energy was sold.

The Government’s new estimates slashed the predicted “load factor” – the proportion of the year turbines are expected to generate power – from 61pc to 43.6pc for offshore wind. The estimated load factor for onshore turbines was also revised down, from 48.7pc to 33.4pc.

Those are major changes. Apparently the industry had been aware of the shortfall for a while, but the Labour government has only now acknowledged it:

Industry sources claimed developers had previously warned officials that estimates for power generation were unrealistic, but that the Government had stuck with them anyway. One said: “The numbers were statistically absurd.”

“Statistically absurd” sums up most of what we are told about “green” energy by liberals.

One might assume that this downward revision, along with all the other blows wind energy has suffered in recent years, might cause the British government to climb down from its unobtainable and economically devastating “net zero” commitment. But no:

Experts said the change would mean that the Energy Secretary would have to pay higher subsidies to wind farms to secure the same amount of energy, making it harder to hit Labour’s clean power targets.

Sure: if wind energy works significantly worse than we thought, spend more money on it. This is the path to permanent British decline.

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