Dean Bubley's Disruptive Environment

Thursday, May 29, 2008

FoE grudgingly mentions carbon sequestration

Friends of the Earth, the evil and duplicitous political organisation masquerading as an environmental lobby group, has made a surprising reference to carbon capture and storage.

In a press comment the misanthropic anti-developmentalists opined against nuclear energy with desperation:

"Rather than trying to breathe fresh life into this dangerous and expensive white elephant, the government should investing in far safer and cleaner solutions such as energy efficiency, clean renewable energy, combined heat and power, and potentially carbon capture and storage"

Up until now, FoE has been a staunch advocate of the sustainability nihilism. At least they've now smelled the coffee and woken up to the idea that CO2 can be managed.

My general view is that FoE is actively malevolent and dangerous, whilst Greenpeace is merely idealistic and misguided.

I'd exhort readers to pick holes in FoE's Stalinist-era ideology at any opportunity. For the sake of humanity, they must be driven to oblivion.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Personal Carbon Allowance - how do you sort Opex and Capex?

I see that the UK's Environmental Audit Commission has been busy blithering away about personal carbon allowances again.

This concept is flawed on so many levels it's unbelievable.

The main issue that I have is that it seems solely based CO2 emissions from the equivalent of what companies call "operating expenditure", or Opex. These are the things that individuals or companies buy on a day-to-day basis - fuel for vehicles, heating bills, holidays, food and so on.

What it excludes is a way to treat CO2 from "Capex" - capital expenditure. This is from the one-off purchases of big things - houses, cars, children, electrical items and so on. These all include a huge amount of CO2 involved in their raw materials manufacture, as well as implicit ongoing "lifecycle" CO2 from their use.

Having a new house made of concrete or brick is probably the least environmentally-friendly thing someone could do in their lives. It would (or should) attract a huge penalty in terms of CO2 credits against your allowance. But how do you deal with people who buy an existing house, made from bricks made years ago? Or people who have an existing property? Do you "amortise" the CO2 emissions in construction over a period of 20 or 50 years? What about if you rent?

This is a huge minefield, which offers great opportunities for the Green equivalent of "creative accounting".

Some other fun things to look out for:

- Whose allowance do gifts come out of? Say I buy you a flight... but you decide not to take it. Do you (or I) get a refund?
- What about family purchases? Say Dad buys a family holiday. Does it come out of his allowance, a pooled family allowance, or each family member's individual quota?
- Do children get a full quota? Can parents use it for their own purposes?
- If I own a company (as I do), how do I treat my business' emissions? If I have to fly to see a client, does it come out of my allowance, my company's, my client's?

Put simply, it's unworkable, and undesirable.

And if they bring it in anyway, I'm going to be the first in line to set up a company to play the loopholes.