This is the case against Kingsnorth?
Jane wrote:
'the proposed kingsnorth station will release more carbon
dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere than Ghana's total emissions pa.'
'The amount of C02 emmited is the combined total of the 30
poorest developing nations in the world'
Unless you can show that these countries deliver as much secure and reliable electricity supply to their citizens as Kingsnorth will to the UK, this comparison is entirely irrelevant. If Greenpeace's intention is that energy use in this country should be reduced to levels comparable to those enjoyed by the people of the poorest counties in the world, let them say so.
'The Renewable Energy Association estimates that the UK could get 49%
of it's energy from renewables'
Over what timescale? At what cost? At what level of security? On the basis of what demand assumptions? And where do they think the remaining 51% is going to come from?
'On average, up to 30% of elecricitytransmitted over 400kms is lost.'
what clv said
Behind all this is the point that preventing the construction of coal fired power stations will have no impact on total carbon emissions at all. This is because total carbon emissions from electricity generating and other heavy industry is constrained by the EU Emissions Trading Scheme, specifically the number of allowances to emit carbon. This total is reducing and will continue to do so. If Kingsnorth gets built, it (in common with other electricity generators) will receive no allowances after 2012, so for every tonne of caron it emits it will have to buy an allowance from somebody else, which will mean that somebody else cannot emit carbon.
This system is designed to force participating industries to find their own way towards the most cost effective way of achieving carbon emissions reduction. Why would you want to force them towards one particular means of reduction if there are others which are more cost effective?
This isn't something which is necessarily immediately obvious to a non-specialist. But Greenpeace's economists and policy advisers must understand it and I find it profoundly demoralising that they choose to conceal that behind specious and illfounded argumentation.