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Steve Cattell
  • 56, Male
  • Hougham, near Grantham
  • United Kingdom
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Democracy

Started Nov. 28, 2008

Can we stop this stupid PC action?

Started Nov. 9, 2008

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Steve Cattell added a blog post
The real climate change catastrophe In a startling new book, Christopher Booker reveals how a handful of scientists, who have pushed flawed theories on global warming for decades, now threaten to take us back to the Dark Ages Next Thursday marks...
October 26
Steve Cattell added a blog post
Meanwhile, back in cold reality... For the third year running there are signs of an abnormally hard winter in many parts of the world, says Christopher Booker. By Christopher Booker Published: 6:18PM BST 17 Oct 2009 Not many people in Britain ...
October 18
Steve Cattell added a blog post
Sceptics welcome BBC report on 'global cooling' Climate change sceptics have welcomed a “surprise” BBC decision to give prominence to evidence from leading scientists that there could be 30 years of “global cooling”. Under the headline `Whatever...
October 13
Steve Cattell added a blog post
Caroline Spelman has responded to new evidence that emerged today of Gordon Brown’s secret plans for council tax hikes on family homes. A new electronic Government tax handbook, complete with audio commentary, reveals how taxmen are being trained...
September 13
Steve Cattell added a blog post
The extent of the sea-ice is now half a million square kilometres more than it was this time last year, says Christopher Booker. BBC viewers were treated last week to the bizarre spectacle of Mr Ban Ki-moon standing on an Arctic ice-floe making ...
September 7
Steve Cattell added a blog post
please, can anyone tell me why we are in Afghanistan? They still haven't fixed the election results and what is so important about elections anyway - they never had them before? Why do the troops go out - kill a few taliban, take casualties thems...
September 3
Steve Cattell added a blog post
Dear Minister I'm in the process of renewing my passport but I am a total loss to understand or believe the hoops I am being asked to jump through. How is it that Bert Smith of T.V. Rentals Basingstoke has my address and telephone number and kno...
August 31
Steve Cattell added a blog post
Charges for Car Parks at hospitals in Lincolnshire are to be increased with Grantham Hospital the worst hit. Parking for between an hour and four hours at the hospital car park will increase by 50 per cent from £2 to £3. Parking at Lincoln and Bo...
August 30

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At 8:34am on September 15, 2008, Steve Cattell said…
As motorists, we are told to take steps to reduce our fuel consumption - slow down, remove roof racks, lighten the car yet airlines are going bust blaming the high fuel costs yet allow passengers to take over 10 kg of extra weight each on board in the form of bottles of duty free alcohol as well as carrying extra weight themselves in the form of drinks trolleys and their contents.

Hold luggage weight is strictly controlled and supposedly only one item of hand baggage is allowed but this is before the security checks - after the checks, passengers can carry more than the one item in the form of carrier bags of heavy glass bottles. Why? Alcohol on aircraft is not an essential.
At 12:26pm on September 14, 2008, Steve Cattell said…
Wind farms fail to deliver value for money, report claims
Wind farms are failing to deliver value for money and distorting the development of other renewable energy sources, a report claims.

By Patrick Sawyer
Last Updated: 9:24AM BST 14 Sep 2008

Comments 10 | Comment on this article

Excessive subsidies make them an expensive and inefficient way of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, a study by the Renewable Energy Foundation (REF) think-tank says.

The report comes amid mounting disquiet over the number of wind farms planned for Britain.

Energy companies want to erect more than 3,000 turbines over the next five years, leading to fears that hundreds of acres of rural landscape will be blighted.

Critics insist that wind energy is too inefficient to replace the creaking network of fossil fuel power stations. Even with modern turbines, wind farms are unable to operate at full capacity because of the unreliable nature of Britain's wind.

The industry admits that for up to 30 per cent of the time, turbines are idle because wind speeds are either too low to turn the blades, or too high, risking damage to the machines.

Without any suitable method of storing the excess power produced when winds are blowing but electricity use is low, many turbines also have to be turned off for fear of overloading the grid.

The report says that wind farms are unprofitable and rely on hefty subsidies that ultimately come from consumers in the form of rising energy prices. This cost comes on top of increases in gas and electricity prices caused by the high price of oil. They risk leaving the poorest members of society struggling to heat their homes.

The report, written by John Constable, of REF, and Robert Barfoot, the chairman of the North Devon branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England, says that the subsidy scheme is encouraging energy firms to build as many wind farms as possible because it is more profitable than investing in other more expensive forms of renewable technology, such as wave power.

They say: "The market for renewable energy is an artificial one created and maintained by government legislation. The question is whether this consumer-derived money is well spent. It is worth noting that the excessive subsidy offered to onshore wind development has drawn developers even to sites where the wind resource is very weak and the environmental impact severe."

Backed by large subsidies, companies have put in planning applications for 235 wind farms. The plans would see 3,189 turbines, many more than 400ft tall, installed by 2013. At present, there are 176 wind farms operating 2,033 turbines onshore and at sea, providing power for the equivalent of 1.42 million homes.

In 2006-07 more than £217 million was paid to energy firms under the subsidy scheme, known as the Renewables Obligation. Under the scheme, energy companies must obtain a proportion of their power from renewable sources, 6.7 per cent at present rising to 15 per cent by 2015. Those that fail to meet these targets pay a fine that is then shared between all the companies that have obtained energy from "green" sources. For every megawatt of green energy they sell, a company receives about £50 at present.

The Renewable Energy Foundation says that consumers ultimately end up funding the subsidies because energy firms that pay fines pass the costs on to customers.

The Campaign to Protect Rural England, which campaigns against the building of wind farms, attacked the rapid growth in the number being constructed.

A CPRE spokesman said: "There is a role for wind energy in providing electricity in the UK, but its intermittency and major visual impact limit the potential contribution of onshore turbines."

Other critics claim that wind farms pose a risk to wildlife such as birds and bats.

A spokesman for the British Wind Energy Association, which represents the wind power industry, defended the Renewable Obligation payments, claiming that they were necessary to help provide energy security. He said: "The question is whether we want to pay moderately higher prices to secure a secure and clean domestic energy source, or do we want to be dependent on imported fossil fuels?"

Critics have estimated that by 2020 the cost of the Renewables Obligation could rise to more than £3 billion.

The Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform is reassessing the Renewables Obligation scheme. Proposed changes could mean that bands are introduced for different sources of renewable energy.
From the Sunday Telegraph
At 12:18pm on September 4, 2008, Linsey Robinson said…
Sorry Steve,
It's been one of those weeks.
At 9:45am on September 3, 2008, Steve Cattell said…
I spend all day in as close as the sun I can - a very large conservatory. I miss Cape Town LOL. Nice today but the wind is a bit blustery although the forecast is not good. Taking it easy as usual - wife is in town and I am on my 4th large mug of coffee!!
At 5:13pm on September 1, 2008, Linsey Robinson said…
Hello Steve,
Welcome to JournalWorld.
Hope you enjoy the site.

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Steve Cattell's Blog

Steve Cattell

The real climate change catastrophe

The real climate change catastrophe
In a startling new book, Christopher Booker reveals how a handful of scientists, who have pushed flawed theories on global warming for decades, now threaten to take us back to the Dark Ages


Next Thursday marks the first anniversary of one of the most remarkable events ever to take place in the House of Commons. For six hours MPs debated what was far and away the most expensive piece of legislation ever put before Parliament.

The Climate Change Bill laid dow… Continue

Posted on October 26, 2009 at 8:55pm —

Steve Cattell

Meanwhile, back in cold reality...

Meanwhile, back in cold reality...
For the third year running there are signs of an abnormally hard winter in many parts of the world, says Christopher Booker.

By Christopher Booker
Published: 6:18PM BST 17 Oct 2009



Not many people in Britain were aware, I suspect, that 20 per cent of the entire United States was last week covered in snow, the greatest October snow cover the country had known for years (for details see the Watts Up With That website). Similarly unseasonable snowfalls blanket… Continue

Posted on October 18, 2009 at 4:49pm —

Steve Cattell

Sceptics welcome BBC report on 'global cooling'

Sceptics welcome BBC report on 'global cooling'

Climate change sceptics have welcomed a “surprise” BBC decision to give prominence to evidence from leading scientists that there could be 30 years of “global cooling”.

Under the headline `Whatever happened to Global Warming?’, the BBC has reported that the warmest year recorded globally was 1998, and for the last 11 years no increase in global temperatures has been observed.

The report by the BBC climate correspondent, Paul Hudson, which provok… Continue

Posted on October 13, 2009 at 1:29pm —

Steve Cattell

Taxman planning room-by-room inspections of family homes

Caroline Spelman has responded to new evidence that emerged today of Gordon Brown’s secret plans for council tax hikes on family homes.

A new electronic Government tax handbook, complete with audio commentary, reveals how taxmen are being trained to conduct inspections of people’s homes and tax every home improvement and room.

Caroline Spelman MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Communities & Local Government, said that Labour Ministers have been "caught red-handed" in training a "cadre of s… Continue

Posted on September 13, 2009 at 6:20pm —

Steve Cattell

Arctic ice proves to be slippery stuff

The extent of the sea-ice is now half a million square kilometres more than it was this time last year, says Christopher Booker.


BBC viewers were treated last week to the bizarre spectacle of Mr Ban Ki-moon standing on an Arctic ice-floe making a series of statements so laughable that it was hard to believe such a man can be Secretary-General of the UN. Thanks to global warming, he claimed, "100 billion tons" of polar ice are melting each year, so that within 30 years the Arctic could be "ice-… Continue

Posted on September 7, 2009 at 12:36pm —

 
 

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