Home Editors' Picks Economic basis of net zero is zero

Economic basis of net zero is zero

Bienvenido-Oplas-Jr-121917

My Cup Of Liberty

We go straight to the numbers. I constructed two tables that accompany this piece. The first shows that in Group A countries that have fast 鈥渄ecarbonization鈥 and are weaning themselves away from coal consumption measured in terajoules (TJ) per person from 2002 to 2022 or over two decades, their overall electricity generation either flatlines or declines. Then their GDP per capita at purchasing power parity (PPP) values over two decades have expanded by two times at most.

Group B countries are Europeans that have high coal consumption plus South Africa. Their coal use per capita has either declined or increased a bit, their overall electricity generation increased (except South Africa) and their per capita GDP has doubled or tripled.

The Group C countries are in Asia. They all have expanded their coal consumption per capita, their electricity generation has doubled or quadrupled (except Pakistan), and their per capita GDP has expanded up to five times (See Table 1).

Next table shows countries that have had huge expansions in wind plus solar from 2007 to 2022 or over 15 years. Then I compare their GDP growth during the 10 years before 2007 and 10 years before 2022. There are many reasons why a country鈥檚 economic performance is good or bad, and the quality of power generation (coming from stable and conventional sources vs intermittent sources) and electricity prices are among the important contributors.

Group A countries have had a high jump in solar + wind use and have shown growth deceleration.

Group B countries in Asia showed little expansion in solar + wind use (except Japan and China) and they showed high average GDP growth (See Table 2).

The wild pursuit of 鈥渘et zero鈥 and decarbonization has no economic basis for developing countries that need to create more jobs, more businesses, and more streetlights. Dark streets at night 鈥 which lead to more road accidents, more crimes like stabbing, abduction, and murder 鈥 are fatal today, not 50 or 100 years from now.

Meanwhile, here are some recent developments in the Philippines energy sector as reported in 大象传媒 and mostly written by Sheldeen Joy Talavera: 鈥淓RC extends suspension of FIT-All collection鈥 (Aug. 22), 鈥淔IT-All collection freeze not seen affecting RE developers鈥 (Aug. 27), 鈥淓PIRA changes should focus on tax 鈥 Congress think tank鈥 (Aug. 28), 鈥淐oal-fired capacity for retirement in clean-energy shift seen at 5,000 MW鈥 (Aug. 30), 鈥淓nergy infra enhancements, streamlined permits seen attracting more investment鈥 (Aug. 31), 鈥淓nergy dep鈥檛 awards 77 offshore wind contracts鈥 (Aug. 31), 鈥淓RC grants Meralco-PEDC move to end supply deal鈥 (Sept. 1), and, 鈥淔urther consultation needed on gas-power quota for Luzon grid鈥 (Sept. 3).

The Department of Energy plan to retire more coal capacity is dangerous and anti-growth. As shown by the numbers in the tables, more coal use leads to more electricity generation and higher GDP per capita income. In contrast, adding more intermittent solar + wind share to the grid means a decline or the flatlining of electricity generation and per capita income.

We should prioritize our national agenda 鈥 more sustained growth, more job creation, more electricity for rising demand from households and industry. The global agenda of global ecological central planning should take a backseat.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. Research Consultancy Services, and Minimal Government Thinkers.

[email protected]