Congrats to readers who have developed their Critical Thinking skills and can recognize my provocative, but ultimately false, title of this post. The falsehood is the appearance of a dichotomy between clean power and reliable power. We can probably have both, but do we have them right now? The big outage in downtown San Mateo is almost five hours old as I type. I am just opening the glossy brochure that arrived in the mail from Peninsula Clean Energy courtesy of the SMC Office of Sustainability. Based on the massive traffic jam on El Camino, the extra car emissions and likelihood of a lot of spoiled food and health emergencies, one has to wonder if the County and various City Councils are focused on the right thing? I'm glad it wasn't pouring rain without working sump pumps. Personally, I vote for reliable power first. One of the few worthwhile things ex-councilwoman Terry Nagel advocated for was more reliable electricity in town. I'm not sure we ever got it, but the aspiration was good.
In the fun facts from Germany department, we get this
The mindless (German) rush to renewables has already done tremendous damage to the German standard of living, with 300,000 households each year having their electricity turned off for non-payment. With the cost of consumer-born subsidies at 25 euros bln per annum and surcharges of 6.88 euro cents per kWh, or twice the market price of a kilowatt, Germans pay three times more than Americans today.
Worse is to come. According to the German consumer agency NAEB, by 2020, they will be paying 45 euro cents per kWh, compared to 10 cents for the U.S. and 20 cents in France.
Lest we digress too far, take a look at your PG&E bill. "Delivery" is the bulk of the cost and that is where the power failures originate. You can feel free to stay enrolled in the I-didn't-ask-for-this "Clean Power" program and save 5% on the minor part of the bill, but don't lose sight of the real issue– reliable first world electricity. Councilwoman Donna Colson has promised me an article about the benefits of Clean Power–which we will publish. This post is just contextual background for that future post.



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