If only he had not spent all that time asleep during
sessions of the European Parliament, UKIP MEP Roger Helmer might have been a
little quicker at spotting a flagrantly dishonest headline when he saw one.
Instead, he has converted himself, in just one Tweet, from mildly controversial
man of the people to a combination of gullible fool and certified laughing
stock.
Not engaging brain before shooting gob off
“Wow! Estonia becomes
the first country to get all its power from shale gas ... and much cheaper than
Russian gas” he enthused, which will raise a few eyebrows, not least in
Estonia, because there is no shale gas extraction there. None. Not a sausage.
Nada. Bugger all. And, had Helmer
bothered to read beyond the headline of Ambrose Evans-Pritchard’s article, he
would have found out for himself.
That headline, “Estonia
becomes self-sufficient on shale gas boom”, was fraudulent. What
Evans-Pritchard is describing is the use of oil
shale, a rock which can be dug out of the ground, pulverised and then
heated to yield energy. It is a particularly crude and inefficient way of doing
so, and the technology was bequeathed Estonia by the former Soviet Union.
Lots left over? They import natural gas ...
Moreover, the idea that there is lots left over after using
oil shale for power generation is an interesting one. The country, certainly
until 2012, imported
all its natural gas – from Russia – despite Evans-Pritchard suggesting
otherwise. Estonia also
imports electricity. It also imports crude oil.
So the Telegraph piece is about
rather more than a dishonest headline.
... they import electricity ...
What the Tel is
also not letting its readers know is that Estonia produced
as much as 17% of its power from renewable sources as far back as 2004.
That’s rather better than many other EU member states, such as, oh I dunno, the
UK for instance. And the continued use of oil shale in Estonia is
controversial, which the Tel article
manages to mention towards the end.
... and they import crude oil
As a former environment manager for Estonia’s state power
company put it, “We inherited this
infrastructure from the Soviet Union so there was some justification at first,
but now it doesn’t make any sense. We are linked to electricity from Finland
and we can offset wind intermittency with Nordic hydro-power. We should be
switching everything to offshore wind and biomass”.
He also pointed out that, while he was in that job, he was
his country’s biggest polluter. Energy from oil shale, despite recent
improvements in filtering out the worst emissions, is not exactly a clean
technology. But none of this has concerned Roger Helmer, who has seen the
headline and allowed the Tel,
together with it being the kind of news he wants to see, to con him something rotten.
Something to think
about when you even consider voting for these clowns.
Portugal managed to achieve c.70% of its electricity from renewables this year (but still imports energy).
ReplyDeleteNo UK MSM has reported this but more annoying are 'green' sites who, with their own headlines, manage to obfuscate by using terms such as 'power' and 'energy'.