LOCAL News :: Climate Change
labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
moritorium on fossil fuels... gone by lunchtime?
Scrapping the thermal moratorium is a bad idea
Does National have coal on the brain? Does Labour still want a coal fired power station on the West Coast? Whats really behind ETS policy and intentions? Gas first, then coal, then what?
frogblog reports on the newest development and suggestions of some not so likely allies....
Friday May 9th, 2008 @ 10:16 am by frog
The NBR reports that the Nats are doing a deal with Labour to scrap the moratorium on new thermal generation in exchange for supporting the ETS through the House. In truth, only a grand coalition could possibly get an ETS through the House. However, I still think that the moratorium, (it’s not a ban, just a pause), is the right way to go.
I don’t often make predictions here on frog, but I feel inclined to do so today. I predict that if the Nats succeed in killing the moratorium in any meaningful way, we will end up with the Contact/Genesis LNG plant in New Plymouth and all kiwi consumers will be screwed by exposure to the international price of gas. Most kiwis will not be aware that natural gas prices are as out of control as oil prices are. We are not exposed to that because our own gas market is insulated from the world market.
Genesis will build their Rodney gas fired plant, (480 MW), while the gas is still cheap and local. This will displace the geothermal baseload plant that is scheduled to come online during the same time frame but which takes longer to build. Then Genesis will demand that the LNG terminal gets built in order to feed the Rodney plant, calling it security of supply for both Rodney and e3p. Once that happens, the huge volume of LNG available will swamp the market, enable the Motonui methanol plant to reopen, (not that this is bad, just unnecessary), and we poor homeowners will pay the full international retail price for our gas. Oh, and of course our electricity costs will skyrocket because our marginal electricity generation will be tied to the international gas price.
The moratorium, (not a ban, remember?), will allow geothermal baseload generation to be developed which is as cost effective in the short term as gas fired plant, but in the long term is much, much cheaper. No one can argue that geothermal will not be the cheaper and more secure baseload generation in the medium to long term. It is only greed and short-sightedness that is driving the current frenzy surrounding the ETS. The Nats are making a move because they sense that the Minister is on the back foot.
I beg the Minister to stand strong and keep the thermal moratorium intact within the legislation.
Comments
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
It's not just the generals in Myanmar who are prepared to sacrifice ordinary people to their political goals.
Winter Death Toll rate
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Power boss exits with $350k
5:00AM Sunday May 11, 2008
By Stephen Cook
Ralph Craven. Photo / Paul Estcourt
Former Transpower boss Ralph Craven exited the job with a $350,000 golden handshake - despite questions over his performance and assurances such payments would cease under Labour.
The State-owned-enterprise yesterday defended the deal amid criticism from National that taxpayers had again been left out of pocket.
The details of Craven's exit package are disclosed in a Listener article this week which examines the "parlous state of New Zealand's electricity supply" and the resulting fallout from problems associated with the Cook Strait cable.
Documents obtained by the Listener under the Official Information Act show Craven was paid out $202,000 for the final three months of his five-year contract, which he never worked.
On top of that, the former chief executive received a $150,000 annual performance bonus, despite lingering questions over Transpower's handling of the Cook Strait cable crisis.
Transpower owns and operates New Zealand's high-voltage electricity transmission grid, providing bulk electricity to towns, cities and industries.
Last October, Craven made the bombshell announcement that half the Cook Strait cable was to be shut down because of old age, but gave assurances there was more than enough capability in the other cable to keep the market going without causing power price rises.
Since then, a combination of factors such as low hydro-electric lake levels and the closure of Contact Energy's Stratford power station for maintenance has seen an increase in wholesale electricity prices - with predictions of up to 10 per cent increases in the next few months.
National's state services spokesman Gerry Brownlee said most people would struggle with the idea of Craven receiving a golden handshake.
The payment also made an absolute joke of claims by Prime Minister Helen Clark that there would be no more gratuitous payments for state sector employees under a Labour Government, Brownlee said.
Clark could not be reached for comment last night, but in 2000 she said Labour was going to "abandon the culture of golden handshakes, negotiated in secrecy and paying people for doing nothing".
Energy Minister David Parker also declined to comment last night.
Transpower chairman Wayne Brown said while he expected he would cop flak over Craven's payment, he said he had nothing to do with the decision.
It had been in the hands of previous chairman David Gascoigne, whom Brown replaced in November.
Gascoigne said Craven agreed last year that he would not seek to renew his contract and would leave by April this year. But last July 20, Craven gave six months' notice - a day after striking a deal with Gascoigne whereby he would work three of those months but be paid for the entire period.
Gascoigne said the payment was part of Craven's settlement package which had been negotiated in good faith and "checked out legally".
Asked why he was paid for three months he didn't work, Gascoigne said: "The contract required that that payment be made."
Gascoigne also defended the performance bonus, saying it was "for a variety of achievements".
* PAYOUTS UNDER LABOUR
January 2000: New Zealand Post manager Robyn Leeming paid $150,000-$180,000 to leave her job.
January 2000: Police Commissioner Peter Doone hired to work in the PM's office for six months and kept his $275,000 salary for that period.
July 2000: Healthlink South chief executive Jane Parfitt paid $265,000.
July 2000: Air New Zealand chief Jim McCrea leaves with a $3.87m payout.
October 2003: Departing Tranz Rail chief executive Michael Beard paid $3.37m after the company came close to financial collapse.
December 2004: Cambridge High principal Alison Annan receives up to $50,000 after reaching a confidential mediation agreement with the school.
June 2007: Telecom head Theresa Gattung gets a leaving payment of $3.9m on top of her $1.25m salary.
December 2007: Kapiti Coast former chief executive Leigh Halstead received a $280,000 golden handshake and new car.
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
It won't mean you won't have to pay your bill be it might just save a life.
Do you have asthma, the flu or a mental illness?
These are legitamate reasons and if your DOCTOR refuses, post their name etc and see your health advocate.
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Carbon capture and storage a “scam”
Monday, 12 May 2008, 1:10 pm
Press Release: Greenpeace New Zealand
Carbon capture and storage a “scam” says new report
Auckland, 12 May 2008 – Big business and policy-makers must not succumb to the elusive promise of carbon capture and storage (CCS) to solve the climate crisis, says Greenpeace in a major new report (1).
‘False Hope: Why carbon capture and storage won’t save the climate’ relies on independent, peer-reviewed scientific sources and details why CCS is a dangerous distraction in the fight against climate change. It reveals that the technology is unproven, risky, and expensive, and will be developed to the detriment of sustainable solutions.
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“Relying on CCS to tackle carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of coal is about as smart as wilfully contracting a disease in the hope that medical science may one day provide a cure,” said Greenpeace New Zealand Climate Campaigner Susannah Bailey.
“The unproven technology for capturing carbon dioxide then dumping it underground remains very much on the drawing board, yet is being promoted by big polluters such as Solid Energy as a way for them to proceed with coal expansion plans (2). Carbon capture and storage is the ultimate coal industry ‘greenwash’ tool.
“The priority should instead be investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency.” Fraught with uncertainties over practicality and cost, CCS technology is not expected to be commercially available before 2030. By then it will be too late for it to play a role in combating climate change. Climate experts agree that global greenhouse gas emissions must peak by 2015 and be at least halved by 2050.
“It is insanity verging on criminal negligence to pass over clean energy and pin hopes on an unproven technology instead,” said the report’s author, Emily Rochon, Climate and Energy Campaigner at Greenpeace International. “Businesses need to reduce their emissions not search for excuses for continuing polluting.
“Enthusiasm for CCS is reaching fever pitch among coal and oil advocates who have lost the battle over whether climate change is a problem. Unable to look beyond the carbon economy, they are desperate to project CCS as the way to continue with ‘pollution-as-usual’,” said Ms Rochen.
“Just as there is no guaranteed safe way to bury nuclear waste, there is no guaranteed safe way to bury carbon. No matter how much research goes into CCS, the ability to keep this carbon stored under ground for thousands of years can never be guaranteed,” said Ms Bailey. “Even Solid Energy Chief Executive Don Elder acknowledges this (3).
“Every dollar invested in carbon capture and storage research is a wasted dollar if it diverts money away from renewable energy and energy efficiency.”
The Greenpeace report shows that carbon capture technology falls short on numerous counts. Carbon capture has not been made to work on anything approaching the scale needed for a full-scale power plant. And no one has yet successfully combined the ‘capture’ with the ’storage’ elements of the concept.
The process of capturing and storing carbon is also highly energy intensive. The increased energy requirements of CCS would effectively wipe out the power plant efficiency gains of the last 50 years. For every four CCS-equipped coal-fired power plants, a fifth would be needed just to make up the energy shortfall. CCS could also double plant costs and lead to electricity price hikes estimated between 21 and 91 per cent.
Greenpeace’s Energy Revolution scenario (4) shows that greatly improving energy efficiency and relying on renewable energy could halve global greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the timeframe for preventing the worst impacts of climate change. Global renewable energy resources are sufficient to meet the world’s energy needs six times over.
Over 85 non-governmental organisations have joined Greenpeace in demanding that CCS not be used as an excuse for building new coal-fired power plants. The signatories include the Environmental Defence Society of New Zealand.
Notes to Editors:
(1) “False Hope: why carbon capture and storage won’t save the climate”, Greenpeace International. May 2008 is available at: www.greenpeace.org/ccs. Also available: the Executive Summary of the report, an information sheet on CCS, three graphics (as PDFs) showing: the process of carbon capture; an overview of geological storage options and leakage pathways and potential impacts of CO2 escape, plus the NGO statement on carbon capture and storage.
(2) Solid Energy recently announced a $100 million investment in clean coal and alternative energy research over the next 20 years, in a bid to develop cleaner ways of burning coal and capturing and storing C02 emissions. Solid Energy is involved in the trial of CCS in Nirranda South, 240km west of Melbourne. The Otway Basin pilot project is the world’s largest demonstration of the deep geological storage of carbon dioxide. It’s partly funded by the New Zealand government and state-owned miner Solid Energy and will inject 100,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide 2km deep over the next two years.
(3) Solid Energy chief executive Don Elder told NZPA last month that it was impossible for industry to guarantee no leakage. In relation to Otway Basin (2) he said: “it is likely that only tiny, almost negligible, amount of the carbon dioxide pumped underground will escape.” He stated that there’s no guarantee that they could abide by regulations that required 99.99 per cent storage over thousands of years. Yet as is noted in False Hope, even if just 0.01 per cent leaks per annum, 50 per cent of the stored carbon dioxide will have leaked within 7000 years. If 1 per cent leaks per annum, 50 per cent will be lost within 70 years.
(4) www.greenpeace.org/new-zealand/press/reports/nz-energy-revoluti on-report
ENDS
treesoftomorrow Says:
May 12th, 2008 at 10:14 pm
“Every dollar invested in carbon capture and storage research is a wasted dollar if it diverts money away from renewable energy and energy efficiency.”
Trevor29 Says:
May 12th, 2008 at 11:08 pm
Wairaki was one of the world’s first geothermal power stations. If I recall correctly, it is being replaced by an air-cooled station above the wells that will use reinjection wells - and deliver more power.
While reinjection may not be required by law, it is almost essential to get through the RMA. (The exception might be sites where the hot water escapes into the countryside anyway.)
Trevor.
treesoftomorrow Says:
May 13th, 2008 at 3:06 pm
genesis Energy has some opposition:
Opposition voiced to Rodney power station
A large number of submissions to a Rodney power station proposal are expected by the time submissions close at 4pm on Friday.
Genesis Energy is seeking a private plan change for a site on State Highway 16 about three kilometres south of Kaukapakapa to allow a 480 megawatt gas-fired station proposal to proceed.
The plan change request is before the Rodney District Council, while 15 resource consent applications are being considered by the Auckland Regional Council.
A number of people attended a submission writing workshop in Kaukapakapa on
Saturday.
“We had the hall booked for two hours,” says Kaukapakapa Residents and Ratepayers Association committee member Pip McAlwee. “But people were still writing furiously an hour after we were supposed to leave.”
Greenpeace representatives attended to show their support and help with questions.
“We are aware that many Rodney residents are extremely concerned about the environmental impacts of the proposed gas-fired power station,” says Greenpeace climate campaigner Simon Boxer.
“Greenpeace supports the vital campaign work local residents are undertaking to oppose this climate polluting plant,” he says.
“The Rodney power station is a real test of the Government’s commitment to tackling climate change.”
Six of the resource consents applied for directly affect the Kaukapakapa River, an inland water protection zone area, says Mrs McAlwee.
Of particular concern to residents is Genesis Energy’s proposal to take 2400 cubic metres of river water, and discharge 1900 cubic metres of power plant wastewater back into the river daily.
Locals opposing the proposal have had messages of support from individuals and environmental groups throughout New Zealand.
“Many were amazed when told that the power station was still going ahead” says Mrs McAlwee.
“The government imposed a 10-year moratorium on new baseload thermal plants in October, and advised state-owned generators in a letter that the government ‘doesn’t expect new thermal capacity to be either economic or necessary to ensure security of supply’.”
Genesis Energy has retained the original baseload configuration for the thermal plant. It maintains the power station is essential for security of the power supply north of Auckland.
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Carbon capture and storage a “scam”
Monday, 12 May 2008, 1:10 pm
Press Release: Greenpeace New Zealand
Carbon capture and storage a “scam” says new report
Auckland, 12 May 2008 – Big business and policy-makers must not succumb to the elusive promise of carbon capture and storage (CCS) to solve the climate crisis, says Greenpeace in a major new report (1).
‘False Hope: Why carbon capture and storage won’t save the climate’ relies on independent, peer-reviewed scientific sources and details why CCS is a dangerous distraction in the fight against climate change. It reveals that the technology is unproven, risky, and expensive, and will be developed to the detriment of sustainable solutions.
SEARCH NZ JOBS
Search Businesses FindA
Check Your SALARY Level
Click Here
“Relying on CCS to tackle carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of coal is about as smart as wilfully contracting a disease in the hope that medical science may one day provide a cure,” said Greenpeace New Zealand Climate Campaigner Susannah Bailey.
“The unproven technology for capturing carbon dioxide then dumping it underground remains very much on the drawing board, yet is being promoted by big polluters such as Solid Energy as a way for them to proceed with coal expansion plans (2). Carbon capture and storage is the ultimate coal industry ‘greenwash’ tool.
“The priority should instead be investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency.” Fraught with uncertainties over practicality and cost, CCS technology is not expected to be commercially available before 2030. By then it will be too late for it to play a role in combating climate change. Climate experts agree that global greenhouse gas emissions must peak by 2015 and be at least halved by 2050.
“It is insanity verging on criminal negligence to pass over clean energy and pin hopes on an unproven technology instead,” said the report’s author, Emily Rochon, Climate and Energy Campaigner at Greenpeace International. “Businesses need to reduce their emissions not search for excuses for continuing polluting.
“Enthusiasm for CCS is reaching fever pitch among coal and oil advocates who have lost the battle over whether climate change is a problem. Unable to look beyond the carbon economy, they are desperate to project CCS as the way to continue with ‘pollution-as-usual’,” said Ms Rochen.
“Just as there is no guaranteed safe way to bury nuclear waste, there is no guaranteed safe way to bury carbon. No matter how much research goes into CCS, the ability to keep this carbon stored under ground for thousands of years can never be guaranteed,” said Ms Bailey. “Even Solid Energy Chief Executive Don Elder acknowledges this (3).
“Every dollar invested in carbon capture and storage research is a wasted dollar if it diverts money away from renewable energy and energy efficiency.”
The Greenpeace report shows that carbon capture technology falls short on numerous counts. Carbon capture has not been made to work on anything approaching the scale needed for a full-scale power plant. And no one has yet successfully combined the ‘capture’ with the ’storage’ elements of the concept.
The process of capturing and storing carbon is also highly energy intensive. The increased energy requirements of CCS would effectively wipe out the power plant efficiency gains of the last 50 years. For every four CCS-equipped coal-fired power plants, a fifth would be needed just to make up the energy shortfall. CCS could also double plant costs and lead to electricity price hikes estimated between 21 and 91 per cent.
Greenpeace’s Energy Revolution scenario (4) shows that greatly improving energy efficiency and relying on renewable energy could halve global greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the timeframe for preventing the worst impacts of climate change. Global renewable energy resources are sufficient to meet the world’s energy needs six times over.
Over 85 non-governmental organisations have joined Greenpeace in demanding that CCS not be used as an excuse for building new coal-fired power plants. The signatories include the Environmental Defence Society of New Zealand.
Notes to Editors:
(1) “False Hope: why carbon capture and storage won’t save the climate”, Greenpeace International. May 2008 is available at: www.greenpeace.org/ccs. Also available: the Executive Summary of the report, an information sheet on CCS, three graphics (as PDFs) showing: the process of carbon capture; an overview of geological storage options and leakage pathways and potential impacts of CO2 escape, plus the NGO statement on carbon capture and storage.
(2) Solid Energy recently announced a $100 million investment in clean coal and alternative energy research over the next 20 years, in a bid to develop cleaner ways of burning coal and capturing and storing C02 emissions. Solid Energy is involved in the trial of CCS in Nirranda South, 240km west of Melbourne. The Otway Basin pilot project is the world’s largest demonstration of the deep geological storage of carbon dioxide. It’s partly funded by the New Zealand government and state-owned miner Solid Energy and will inject 100,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide 2km deep over the next two years.
(3) Solid Energy chief executive Don Elder told NZPA last month that it was impossible for industry to guarantee no leakage. In relation to Otway Basin (2) he said: “it is likely that only tiny, almost negligible, amount of the carbon dioxide pumped underground will escape.” He stated that there’s no guarantee that they could abide by regulations that required 99.99 per cent storage over thousands of years. Yet as is noted in False Hope, even if just 0.01 per cent leaks per annum, 50 per cent of the stored carbon dioxide will have leaked within 7000 years. If 1 per cent leaks per annum, 50 per cent will be lost within 70 years.
(4) www.greenpeace.org/new-zealand/press/reports/nz-energy-revoluti on-report
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...
Opposition voiced to Rodney power station
A large number of submissions to a Rodney power station proposal are expected by the time submissions close at 4pm on Friday.
Genesis Energy is seeking a private plan change for a site on State Highway 16 about three kilometres south of Kaukapakapa to allow a 480 megawatt gas-fired station proposal to proceed.
The plan change request is before the Rodney District Council, while 15 resource consent applications are being considered by the Auckland Regional Council.
A number of people attended a submission writing workshop in Kaukapakapa on
Saturday.
"We had the hall booked for two hours," says Kaukapakapa Residents and Ratepayers Association committee member Pip McAlwee. "But people were still writing furiously an hour after we were supposed to leave."
Greenpeace representatives attended to show their support and help with questions.
"We are aware that many Rodney residents are extremely concerned about the environmental impacts of the proposed gas-fired power station," says Greenpeace climate campaigner Simon Boxer.
"Greenpeace supports the vital campaign work local residents are undertaking to oppose this climate polluting plant," he says.
"The Rodney power station is a real test of the Government’s commitment to tackling climate change."
Six of the resource consents applied for directly affect the Kaukapakapa River, an inland water protection zone area, says Mrs McAlwee.
Of particular concern to residents is Genesis Energy’s proposal to take 2400 cubic metres of river water, and discharge 1900 cubic metres of power plant wastewater back into the river daily.
Locals opposing the proposal have had messages of support from individuals and environmental groups throughout New Zealand.
"Many were amazed when told that the power station was still going ahead" says Mrs McAlwee.
"The government imposed a 10-year moratorium on new baseload thermal plants in October, and advised state-owned generators in a letter that the government ‘doesn’t expect new thermal capacity to be either economic or necessary to ensure security of supply’."
Genesis Energy has retained the original baseload configuration for the thermal plant. It maintains the power station is essential for security of the power supply north of Auckland.
Re: labour and national align to force through fossil fuel energy...