The Power struggle in Australia.

Date Published:

Former Australian Prime Minister using coal as a ‘prop’ while promoting the industry in parliament.

Australia: The bigger picture.

Australia has solar and wind resources that could enable it to become a renewable energy superpower, but any attempt to make that transition must get past a fossil fuel industry lobby that has proved all powerful in the past.

The result been that Australia is often seen as a climate action ‘pariah’, with both major political parties significantly funded by fossil fuel interests.

I will update this section with more on how Australia has become an outlier on action on climate and has squandered opportunities in renewables over the next few months, as this webpaper is an early version.

The Australian Natural Gas Dilemma of 2022.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has, either intentionally or accidentally, fed into a global inflation crisis, and at the centre, is gas prices, with Russia being the world’s largest gas supplier.

One consequence is a dilemma for Australia: what to do about gas prices.

The price of natural gas in Australia has increased ten-fold (10x) in the past 18 months, while the cost has remained the same.

A significant contribution to rising inflation in Australia, is not increased costs, but soaring profits of a cartel of 5 fossil fuel companies.

The good news for Australia, is that because these profits are based on international prices for natural gas driven up due to the crisis in Ukraine, the result is record export earnings, lifting the Australian export earnings to result in a record trade surplus.

Record trade surplus thanks to Russia.

If only all shareholders of the 5 companies in the cartel were Australians, it would better help the overall economy as much as it helps tax revenues.

Still the bottom line is not just consumers, but also the rest of industry that relies on power prices, are all suffering to support the 5 companies of the cartel, who are already rich from export earnings.

To interfere in the market is against the principles of a free market, but does the market really have to be so much freer than Norway, where all citizens enjoy an improved standard of living because the nation earns are share of the revenues from that which was dug up from under national territory.

In the end, it comes down to the power of influence of the fossil fuel companies, which was demonstrated on a recent new program broadcast on the national news network, the ABC, Sunday October 30th.

The only suggested action on the program, was to support calls by the CEO Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (fossil fuel lobby) for more access to the country’s resources, by overturning regulations by the states limiting exploration.

The logic seems to be:

  1. Future investments in fossil fuel projects are dependent on the increased prices that resulted from the conflict in Ukraine.
  2. Prices in Australia, which currently are set by international prices most set in Europe, will fall if Australia expands its natural gas exploration.

The suggestion seems to be that expansion of exploration in Australia will bring gas prices down in Europe, to the level that was made possible by gas pipelines from Russia. So, there is no need to decouple prices in Australia from those paid in Europe, as the global problem will be solved by a little more exploration in Australia.

Or is it that this will enable even more revenues for that cartel of natural gas suppliers, so there is a lot of money available influences whoever necessary and unlock even bigger profits?

Yet, this was not questioned on the report. Largely because news networks need content fed to them as there is insufficient funding to generate their own content, particularly on weekends, which means they end up being spokespeople for those with the budget to provide content.

Australia as a renewable energy superpower.

Primary Australia: The mentality of fossil fuels and raw materials Australia.

Record trade surplus thanks to Russia.

In April 2022, Australia achieved a record trade surplus, according to the report by Alan Kohler, courtesy of the high global prices of coal and gas.

This would only be possible, if coal and gas make up a significant part of Australia’s exports. A search reveals that, overall, resources, which basically means mining, accounts for over 60% of Australia’s exports, according to the Reserve Bank of Australia.

Prior to 1960, Australian exports were over 60% agriculture, and 10% resources, and in 2021 they were over 60% resources, and 10% agriculture. However, the entire time around 70% of all exports were primary products.

Most products are now exported without further processing. An example of this is steel, which peaked as an export in 1998, and fallen to 1/3 of the level since then despite Australia’s iron ore exports having risen significantly in that period. In contrast, steel imports have risen. Australia exports both iron ore and coal, which are used to produce steel in other countries, and Australia then imports that steel.

However, most steel imported to Australia that began as iron ore and coal exported from Australia, is import as manufactured goods such as cars and white goods.

Hydrogen: Renewables for primary Australia.

A popular concept is that Australia can move from exporting energy as coal and natural gas, to exporting energy as hydrogen. Then Australia’s customer for iron ore and other minerals will still have the energy to process these other resources.

The idea is that the fossil fuel revenues, can be replace by hydrogen revenues and nothing else changes. The problem is, as explained here by Michael Barnard, exporting hydrogen as an energy source simply does not add up.

One attribute of fossil fuels that does not transfer to the age of renewables, is the concept of loading energy on a boat and shipping that energy.

With fossil fuels, the energy was already in stored by photosynthesis hundreds of million years ago. With renewables, energy must be converted into a storable form first, and that always loses a significant amount of the original energy.

Unlike with fossil fuels, which energy rich countries simply mine and export, renewable energy is far better used in the original location.

A renewable energy powerhouse.

Renewable energy is best used closer to the point where it is generated.

This concept really changes, what is an already fast changing world. As a key example, is Australia looks to supply Japan with energy, and iron ore and other resources, in part because Japan is the second largest exporter of cars in the world.

The reality is, Japan is highly unlikely to continue this huge level of car exports, as in the renewable economy, manufacture is best located near the source of renewable energy. While at one time as living standards in Japan rose, it may have become advantageous to relocate manufacturing to a country with lower labour costs, robotics and renewable energy now means the advantage may come from moving manufacturing to a country that is a source of renewable energy.

History:

  • 2022 November 1: First published.
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Table of Contents

Categories

How the ‘basic income’ proposal could change society but not can’t solve the AI problem.

The current wealth distribution system is an already a broken system about to face severe attack. As discussed in Robots & Job Terminators, the role of employment is set to change, making wealth distribution far more challenging.

UBI, or Universal Basic Income, is proposed by many as a solution, but while UBI has been proven to be a great solution many problems society faces right now, that does not mean it will work in the future.

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Opportune Arguments: Confirmation Bias Weaponised.

Most of us have heard of confirmation bias which is a part of human nature that can drive polarisation.

The power to influence is now adoption strategies such as opportune arguments, which are like a weaponisation of Chinese whispers, where the message is intentionally changed before being passed on.

This and other techniques use people’s confirmation bias as a path through their defences. Start with a message accepted through confirmation bias by a person with one set of beliefs, then add a twist designed to take those people down rabbit holes into new beliefs. When the new beliefs can be used to trigger outrage, those pushing opportune arguments can become as manipulated by the ideas as their audience.

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Farming Humans & Trickle Up Economics: How the wealthy get wealthy.

It was a reference to the wonderful children’s politician’s fairy tale of ‘trickle down economics’ that started me on the question: How do the wealthy get wealthy?

The answer is by collecting wealth from many people, the more people contributing wealth, the more wealth to be gained.

The effective path to great wealth is farming humans to collect a small amount of wealth or ‘egg’ from a percentage of humans ‘in the farm’, so the more humans in the farm, the more wealth for the farmer.

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Ageing population: a problem, or only cast as a problem by those with an agenda?

Have you heard of the ‘ageing population problem’? Why is it a problem that people are living longer?

Is the suggestion that retirees can never be productive, but children can be put to work? Really?

Or is the real issue that both sides of the political spectrum find either economic immigration reasons to apply confirmation bias which leads to arguing for a return to the population explosion, and immoral immigration policies that fuel the far right and erode the living standards of societies’ children.

This page looks at the real issues underpinning an ‘ageing population’. The reality is: an ageing population itself is not a real problem, but suggested measures to address it are real problems.

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