From DMI
Month: February 2019
EU Commission accused of £4.8bn miscalculation over renewable energy subsidies bill
Missed it by just a little …
John Constable of the Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) claims the EU Commission climate policy report contains a “substantive error”, miscalculating the cost of annual levies on UK consumers by £4.8 billion.
He said the initial bill claimed subsidies would be £1.3bn, when the correct figure is closer to £6.1bn.
Mr Constable also received a confirmation from the commission that the error would be rectified.
A spokesman for the EU Commission said: “You are correct that the largest part of the other subsidies was from the Renewables Obligation and that these were not allocated to ‘financed by end users’ as they should have been.
“Thank you for spotting this error, we are correcting the figures and expect a revised report to be online soon.”
Mr Constable said the miscalculation will have “consequences for all sections” of the report’s overall findings and estimates.
He said: “The study is an important and major statement on the economic consequences of the EU’s energy and climate policies, and it is crucial that such work is as accurate as possible.”
Gone Fishin
Sea Ice Extent (Global Antarctic and Arctic) – Day 55 – 2019
Arctic Sea Ice Volume 24-Feb-2019
From DMI
Wait for it …
Not new. But I hadn’t seen it before.
Resident Killer Whales in BC and Transmountain Pipeline
One of the arguments used against the twinning of the Transmountain (TMX) pipeline in BC is that it threatens Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW) with more ship noise. I have my doubts about ship noise being the problem since Orcas (non-SRKW ) are doing ok elsewhere.
The SRKW are a small pod (79?) and are not doing well at all and may go extinct. But they may have reached an evolutionary dead end because they eat fish unlike other Orcas that eat seals etc. And humans are eating the fish.
“Resident orcas [SRKW ] eat exclusively fish with salmon (primarily Chinook) the majority of their diet. Transient orcas prefer to eat other marine mammals like seals, sea lions, and other whales.”
The TMX expansion will result in about 400 addition ship movements per year through the are the Residents feed. About 1 per day. That 400 is a small number compared to all ship movements in the region, but usually the numbers are only mentioned for tankers.
The National Energy Board released a report with recomendations like:
“Trans Mountain must file with the NEB, at least 3 months prior to commencing operations, a Marine Mammal Protection Program that focuses on mitigating effects from the Project and associated cumulative effects, and on fulfilling Trans Mountain’s commitments as a terminal operator with regard to Project-related marine shipping.”
I think there are something 23,000+ ships movements per year in the SRKW territory.
Pretty much the day after the report came out, the current NDP (socialist) government (and their Green allies) announced that they were expanding ferry sailings by 2,700 sailings, many of which are in the SRKW territory.
Amazing.
On top of that, the NEB report had this gem:
“Based on its 2016 analysis, Vancouver Fraser Port Authority forecasts the number of vessel calls to the Port of Vancouver may increase to about 12 ships per day by 2026.”
The big green machine are pulling out the stops. I don’t doubt that a few of them care about the SRKW. But for the most part it is all part of the plan to kill the oilsands in Alberta.
A very interesting blog post on the same subject.
Sea Ice Extent (Global Antarctic and Arctic) – Day 54 – 2019
Arctic Sea Ice Volume 23-Feb-2019
Volume is higher than 2012 2017 2016 2008 2018 2011 2013 2009 on this day.
(Data only goes back to 2003)
From DMI
DMI Arctic Temperatures Feb 22 2019 – Almost 20C Colder Than 2018
Checking in with DMI for the Daily mean temperature and climate north of the 80th northern parallel
Its still cold and only slightly above the mean.

Compare it to last year. It was almost 20C warmer in 2018 on day 53.












