Gone Green: Electricity should flow like a river in
developed nations. It's a basic good that ought to always be available in whatever
quantities consumers will pay for. But in Germany, it's now something else: a
luxury item.
This isn't failure of the market. It's a failure of the
country's green energy agenda called Energiewende, or energy revolution or
transformation.
Germany's goal is to end its reliance on nuclear energy by 2022.
The plan is to replace the lost nuclear power with wind, solar and other
renewables, and to have these sources provide 80% of the country's energy by
2050. So far, the effort has flopped.
"German consumers already pay the highest electricity
prices in Europe," Der Spiegel reported earlier this month. "But
because the government is failing to get the costs of its new energy policy
under control, rising prices are already on the horizon. Electricity is becoming
a luxury good in Germany, and one of the country's most important
future-oriented projects is acutely at risk."
Talk about turning back the clock.
Der Spiegel reports that German Environment Minister Peter
Altmaier is asking his countrymen to live as if they are trapped in a backward
Third World economy that can't keep the lights on. He has put together a list
of energy-saving tips that surely makes the average German think he's living in
Uganda rather than Europe.
Sounding a lot like Jimmy Carter, Altmaier suggests consumers
avoid preheating ovens, fuzz their television pictures (because poor picture
quality requires less energy), cook with lids on the pots and live with
refrigerators that don't keep perishable items quite so cool. Sounds like East
Germany all over again.But this is what the Germans wanted — in fact, it's what they almost rioted for.
After Chancellor Angela Merkel, just re-elected in a landslide, ordered a 12-year delay of the previous government's directive to shut down nuclear power in 2010, 100,000 marched against the change.
A 28-mile human chain was formed from a nuclear power plant in southwest Germany to Stuttgart. The Economist reported that the activists were driven by "outright hostility" and recounted "angry blockades" that tried to stop the transport of nuclear waste.
Some will call this "progress." It's not. It's a reversal, a regression, a return to a more primitive time.
"Going green" means depending on energy sources that are unreliable, weak — and antiquated. Consumers in wealthy nations shouldn't have to think about electricity. They should just be able to turn it on on demand.
Source: Investor's Business Daily: 9/25/13 http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials/092513-672498-germany-goes-green-and-lights-go-out.htm#ixzz2gJl42s7y
Comments:
Obama
and the EPA are following the failed European energy boondoggle at breakneck
speed. This fact should be enough to
create 100% turnover in Congress in the up-coming elections.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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