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Net Zero is the Greatest Folly Since the Children’s Crusade |
Saturday, 1 July 2023 — South Melbourne  | By Nickolai Hubble | Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia |
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[6 min read] Quick summary: Six months of research, a book and eight interviews later, I’m finally putting together my results: net zero is the biggest imposition of government into our lives perhaps ever, but it isn’t viable and cannot be reached, it presents a major threat to our quality of life and political institutions, and investors need to radically shift their portfolios to protect themselves from the consequences. |
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Dear Reader, I’ve just finished editing seven hours of interviews with net zero experts, including James Cooper of Diggers and Drillers. So, you’ll have to forgive me for being a bit myopic about my topic. The good news is that I learned quite a lot about net zero’s impact on us, even after writing a book about the topic in the six months before the interviews. More on the book and the interviews in the coming weeks. Today, let’s focus on what I learned from my guests. The first lesson is that the inherent complexity of the topic makes it easy to reach any conclusion you’d like. For example, when comparing the cost of energy from a variety of sources, the conclusion is entirely determined by what is included in the calculation. There is simply no fair way to compare the various energy sources if you ask me. This is partly because of the second thing I learned. While we currently use fuel to feed our energy demand, the transition to renewables is a transition to ‘solids’, for want of a better term. Instead of using up fuels like coal, gas and oil, renewable energy uses up commodities like steel, copper, cobalt, lithium and many more. This completely mucks up the comparison between fossil fuel energy and renewables. This is because the key cost of running a coal or gas power plant is the fuel input, which is a recurring variable cost. The key cost of renewables is the initial construction and sourcing of materials needed, after which the power is theoretically free. But how do you compare the cost of building something to the ongoing cost of fuelling something? By having to make so many assumptions that your assumptions end up defining the analysis. Each different type of energy also has its contingent costs. Renewable energy needs power storage because of intermittency. There simply isn’t any form of storage that’s viable, scalable and cost-effective for an economy, even if we could find enough resources to build it. So how do you compare a renewables system to a fossil fuel system? Ironically, countries with high renewables levels currently use a fossil fuel grid as renewable energy’s backup. Which adds vast costs of having to keep it ready. That’s why places with high levels of renewables have high power costs. They need two grids, one of which is only called on sometimes. We source a lot of fossil fuels from places with a lot of geopolitical risks. An interruption of supply completely shuts down energy markets, which wouldn’t be true of renewables because windmills would keep on turning and solar panels keep on burnin’. There are many other reasons why, but the point is that it’s nigh impossible to compare the various systems fairly. Their features are just so different. Nuclear really throws a wrench into this because its fuel, uranium, and is a very small part of the cost of a nuclear plant. Meanwhile, ridiculous overregulation and unnecessarily tight safety standards are the major part of costs. But those costs are entirely arbitrary. Comparing nuclear costs depend entirely on how it is executed by governments. Another big lesson, which came largely from Diggers and Drillers’ James Cooper, is that the world has cut investment in fossil fuel energy and mining over net zero constraints without having the replacements ready. We are in for energy crises and commodity shortages that’ll take many years to fix. That’s how long it takes to get mines and wells up and running. This is now baked in. The UK’s Nigel Farage, an expert in spotting gaps between what people want and what politicians are giving them, reckons that a sudden shift in net zero is imminent amongst the population as the realities kick in. Energy bloggers extraordinaire Doomberg explained why: you can’t transition to a less dense form of energy without sacrificing living standards. If we constrain ourselves to net zero, that has consequences for our day-to-day lives which are not going to be acceptable to voters. They won’t stand for it. This political shift has already begun. Especially in the UK, where the Government has legally committed itself to net zero in a way that allows environmental groups to challenge decisions in court if they are inconsistent with net zero. Airport runways, for example, are not consistent with net zero laws. In fact, not much economic development is…and so the people who want it will begin to feel the impact. And if you think the Western citizens of developed countries won’t accept this, just wait till you see what the developing countries will do. As Doomberg pointed out, when Germany found itself without Russian gas, it soaked up supply from the rest of the world. But this left other countries without. They couldn’t compete with Germany on the market for gas because they were poor, and Germany was willing to pay ridiculous prices. What should’ve been energy shortages in Germany because of a bad German energy policy became an unaffordable bill for Germans. Meanwhile, Pakistanis got left out in the cold. Now the Pakistani Government will have noticed that the Germans went back to burning coal, and even mining it! What do you think the developing world will conclude and do when they see all this? Do you think they’ll position their economies for Californian and German-style energy systems, with ridiculously high prices? Or will they go with what the Germans had to turn to when their systems failed? A lesson I learned from Mark Mills and Simon Michaux, who have studied the resource challenges which net zero poses, is that net zero isn’t viable for the simple reason that we can’t mine the number of resources needed. There just isn’t the metal…at viable prices. Consider what this means for the cost of living generally, given that everything in the world around us comes out of a mine to some extent, directly or indirectly. If we make a pitch for net zero and this forces up commodity prices, we could end up with an inflationary shock. But here’s what I learned from one of the interviews which terrified me. If you accept that net zero is a constraint that we must meet in order to save the planet, then this justifies reaching it with any means necessary. Saving the planet is, after all, a good excuse. Combine this with the political backlash against net zero because of the impact on living standards and you have a terrifying set of possible outcomes…energy poverty, a dystopian government in the name of saving the planet, or we are going to run the great carbon experiment and see what happens if we continue to pollute… While society doesn’t really face any optimal choices here, investors face a long list of them. Each of the implications above has huge investment opportunities tied to them. Especially the resources angle. And so, you’ll be hearing more about all of this in the coming months.
Regards, Nickolai Hubble, Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia Weekend Welcome to the Global Financial Crisis of 2023 (Part Five) |
 | By Jim Rickards | Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia |
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Dear Reader,
Former House Financial Services Chair, Barnett ‘Barney’ Frank, who was co-author of the 2010 Dodd-Frank banking reform legislation, also served on the board of directors of the failed Signature Bank.
Frank claimed that the New York bank was hit with a run generated by ‘the nervousness and beyond nervousness from SVB and crypto.’ The bank’s digital assets business made it the ‘unfortunate victim of the panic that really goes back to FTX.’
With reference to the Sunday night closure, Barney Frank went on to say, ‘We were fine until the last couple of hours on Friday.’ Sorry, Barney. If you were only fine until late Friday, that means you were never fine to begin with. That’s risk management 101.
Other corrupt facets of the SVB collapse are breaking daily. It’s reported that top insiders of SVB sold millions of dollars of SVB stock over the course of January and February ahead of the recent disclosures. Did they see this meltdown coming?
Insider sellouts
One of those insiders was the CEO of SVB, Gregory Becker. As noted above, Becker sold US$3.5 million of SVB stock on 27 February 2023, just two weeks ahead of the collapse.
Becker was on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, which was the primary supervisor of SVB. In effect, Becker was regulating his own bank.
His name abruptly disappeared from the Fed website on 10 March, the same day SVB was taken over by the FDIC.
The Fed had just weathered an insider trading scandal in 2022 when it was revealed that several Fed Governors and Presidents of regional Federal Reserve Banks had engaged in insider trading using information gained about the extent of the pandemic in 2020.
Becker’s sales of SVB stock ahead of the meltdown look like more of the same insider trading by Fed officials.
It gets worse.
The President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco is Mary Daly. What was she doing in the weeks ahead of the SVB collapse? She was engaged in activism related to climate change, George Floyd, Black Lives Matter (BLM), LGBTQ plus rights, and other woke social justice causes.
The New York Post describes Daly as the ‘poster child’ for the trend toward wokeness instead of competence in banking officials. Post reporter Paul Sperry wrote, ‘Daly has no background in banking or managing risk’, although she makes US$422,000 per year as a bank supervisor.
Her only claim to fame is that she was the ‘first openly gay’ regional Fed bank president as if that has anything to do with risk management.
In the end, we have the SVB CEO dumping his stock ahead of the crash while serving on the board of his own lead regulator, the San Francisco Fed…while the President of that Fed bank, with no experience in risk management, was promoting climate change and BLM.
This is deeply corrupt and incompetent. Perhaps the only surprise is that SVB didn’t collapse sooner.
As various investigations and hearings proceed, we’ll learn more about the corruption and conflicts surrounding this collapse.
Regards,
Jim Rickards, Strategist, The Daily Reckoning Australia
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