Natural Gas Now Best Picks – January 28, 2023
Tom Shepstone
Shepstone Management Company, Inc.
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Readers pass along a lot of stuff every week about natural gas, fractivist antics, emissions, renewables, and other news relating to energy. This week; Mississippi solar madness, fat cat power seekers, water questions and tipsy towers.
Look for these stories below, including links to the original articles!
Solar Energy Is Far From Free; Real Expensive in Fact!
This a terrific summary of why green energy is anything but and nothing more than a scam intended to put trillions more into the pockets of corporatists whose grifting is a part of the massive corruption of our institutions that we see everywhere today:
Wind: Yet Another Damned Problem!
They aren’t economical, they’re not reliable, they’re not dispatchable, they’re usually not recyclable, they’re environmental killers and, now we know they’re dangerous, too:
On a calm, sunny day last June, Mike Willey was feeding his cattle when he got a call from the local sheriff’s dispatcher. A motorist had reported that one of the huge turbines at a nearby wind farm had collapsed in dramatic fashion. Willey, chief of the volunteer fire department in Ames, 90 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, set out to survey the scene.
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The steel tower, which once stood hundreds of feet tall, was buckled in half, and the turbine blades, whose rotation took the machine higher than the Statue of Liberty, were splayed across the wheat field below. The turbine, made by General Electric Co., had been in operation less than a year. “It fell pretty much right on top of itself,” Willey says.
Another GE turbine of the same model collapsed in Colorado a few days later. That wind farm’s owner-operator, NextEra Energy Inc., later attributed it to a blade flaw and said it and GE had taken steps to prevent future mishaps. A spokesperson for GE declined to say what went wrong in both cases in a statement to Bloomberg.
The instances are part of a rash of recent wind turbine malfunctions across the US and Europe, ranging from failures of key components to full collapses. Some industry veterans say they’re happening more often, even if the events are occurring at only a small fraction of installed machines. The problems have added hundreds of millions of dollars in costs for the three largest Western turbine makers, GE, Vestas Wind Systems and Siemens Energy’s Siemens Gamesa unit; and they could result in more expensive insurance policies—a potential setback for the push to abandon fossil fuels and fight climate change.
Enough already with this nonsense we cannot afford, all serving only the purpose of enriching grifters.
Hat Tip: T.M.
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