We now have evidence that will enable National Party spokespeople in Parliament to expose the anti-social and cost-crippling changes that the Green Party wants to inflict on New Zealanders, and I look forward to Oral Questions in Parliament by either or both Barbara Kuriger (energy) and Stuart Smith (climate change) at their earliest opportunity.

My friend and colleague Bryan Leyland, one of our country’s most experienced and distinguished independent experts on the generation and reticulation of electricity, whose skills have been used by power-hungry countries overseas, has been unable to persuade what passes for mainstream news media these days to present this evidence of the Greens’ plans to triple the cost of electricity supplied to our homes.

But thanks to the open-mindedness of The BFD we can do so, and hopefully motivate a revitalised National Party in opposition, now led with vigour and concern for people’s rights by Judith (“Crusher”) Collins to expose the shallow, unscientific and uneconomic lunacy of the loony Greens who don’t seem to know whether they are led by an out-and-out woke socialist Marama Davidson bent on condemning our poor to a lifetime of welfare dependency, or a pie-in-the-sky destroyer of our rural economy James Shaw.

The very first point to note in Bryan’s analysis is the utter disregard of the Labour Party for the considered opinions of its qualified official advisers. An example of this is the recent announcement by the Government of its intention to eliminate emissions of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) from the generation of electricity by the burning of coal and gas. When it referred this issue to its own Interim Committee on Climate Change, that committee warned of colossal technical problems from abandoning present sources that yield 3000 megawatts (MW) of cheap and reliable electricity.  And this at a time when, leaving aside the need to maintain uninterrupted power supply for homes and businesses, the same government is talking about its desire to increase demand by as much as 1000MW for electric transport.

To get the full details of Bryan’s expert analysis, I urge BFD readers to visit his website.

Bryan is absolutely correct when he concludes that the Government is left with only two realistic options: accept the conclusions of the ICCC report and abandon its dream of emissions-free electricity or decide to adopt nuclear power supplemented by hydropower.

Coincidentally in the UK, the Global Warming Policy Foundation has just published a report by a distinguished Kiwi expatriate academic, Professor Michael J Kelly, Emeritus Prince Philip Professor of Technology at the University of Cambridge and former Chief Scientific Adviser to the Department for Communities and Local Government, who repeats the warning above by Bryan Leyland about the huge costs and technical implausibility of the “zero carbon” fantasy. The massive problems for the UK explained by Prof Kelly in his revealing essay are a preview of what would happen here in New Zealand if our government’s plan is allowed to proceed.

Prof Kelly’s article, which was originally published in The Spectator behind a paywall, says:

“Boris Johnson’s ‘green industrial revolution’, which was announced this week, looks doomed from the outset. From our heating to how we transport food, the proposals would mean a complete overhaul in the way we live. Yet barely a word has been said about the immense practical difficulties involved in Johnson’s ten-point plan for Britain to go carbon neutral by 2050. Make no mistake, it will be close to impossible to achieve – and even trying could prove catastrophic.

“Nowhere is the flaw in the government’s plan more clearly exposed than in the announcement that sales of new petrol, diesel and hybrid cars will be banned by 2030. There are more than 38.9 million cars, vans and lorries on our roads today. We would likely need to build over ten million charging points – amounting to thousands a day between now and 2030 – to totally switch over to electric vehicles. Is this really realistic?

“And can our current infrastructure cope with this surge in demand? Typical UK homes use a daily average of 2kW of electricity throughout most of the year, which rises to a peak of around 7kW during winter. Most cars charge at 7kW for a typical eight hours, and get anything from 30 miles of range per hour for a small car, to less than 20 miles for a larger car. In other words, every time an electric car is charged, it requires more than double the amount of electricity an average home uses now. And faster chargers are not a solution, either, for they draw more current, which will cause infrastructure challenges.

“Johnson’s green revolution would mean that we would need to completely upgrade electric wiring in our homes, streets, substations, and transmission lines. To meet demand would require enormously costly upgrades to local electricity grids, which we would all ultimately pay for through higher energy bills. If this really is part of the plan, then the government must be honest about who is to foot the bill.

“We also won’t have to wait for long to see other massive infrastructure problems confronting us. Many people don’t have the luxury of a driveway where they can charge their vehicles; four in ten cars today are parked on the road. So how, when, and where are these cars going to be charged? And what would electric vehicles mean for the haulage industry? Electric trucks will need to be charged for 24 hours, resulting in less time on the road, unless there is a huge infrastructure for battery swapping. 

“Then there is the problem with the nature of the batteries electric vehicles use. How will we manufacture the gargantuan number required, for the UK, as well as the rest of the world, which is supposed to follow our lead? To build, maintain and dispose of these batteries on the scale required for an electric fleet of UK vehicles would mean the world’s supply of lithium, cobalt and nickel would need to increase overnight. Who will ensure the correct number of batteries are available? And what happens if they are not? You won’t hear it from Extinction Rebellion, but the mining of cobalt often has a high human cost: children as young as six are among those already risking their lives in the Congo to ensure that supply can keep up with demand.

“Even if the plan to go for electric-only new vehicles by 2030 succeeds, would it make any difference at all to the global climate? It’s unlikely, especially if 40 per cent of the world’s poorest population (50 times the UK population) is still aspiring to a European standard of living, with greater energy consumption using mainly fossil fuels.

“There is the awkward fact too that scrapping petrol cars and manufacturing new ones is no way to reduce emissions. And for the next 50 years or more, it is highly unlikely that there will be any measurable change to the world’s climate as a direct consequence of all our actions in the UK. In short, the end of our climate mitigation actions will not justify the means.

“There is, though, a simpler and less costly behaviour change which could have a much greater impact on energy consumption and CO2 emissions than Boris’s grand plan. Nearly half of all UK CO2 emissions come from heating air and water in buildings: 27 per cent in homes and 18 per cent in all other types of building. One report from the Green Alliance has already suggested that merely reducing the use of transport and insulating our homes would go a long way to meeting the 2050 target. Should the Government be focusing on more realistic ambitions by encouraging us to take fewer journeys by car, or by better insulating our homes, rather than indulging in grand green projects?

“The decision this week seems to have been made by climate scientists who have little practical understanding of their proposals. During my time as a government advisor, this was a constant theme. There is little sign of any project engineering input into these plans. There should have been integrated advice from both the Royal Society and the Royal Academy of Engineering, but they remain virtually silent on achieving the grand ambition. 

“I have no problem with this idea, provided that the mass switch over happens when we are actually ready. The pace of the uptake of fossil fuels was determined by many individual actions, not government diktat. The pace of abandoning fossil fuels should be the same. We simply have no comprehensive and agreed blueprint of how we all switch over to electric cars by 2030. In light of this, the Government’s latest announcement is reckless, unscientific and certain to fail.”

Terry Dunleavy, 93 years young, was a journalist before his career took him into the wine industry as inaugural CEO of the Wine Institute of New Zealand and his leading role in the development of wine...