Monday, 27 August 2012


Friday, August 24, 2012 11:22 AM Subject: "...

huge fields of solar panels all rotting away in the sun" 

http://thebiggreenlie.wordpress.com/2012/08/22/the-green-revolution-like-a-dead-man-walking/


The Big Green Lie The Green Revolution ………

like a "dead man walking"! 

August 22, 2012 By thebiggreenlie 

How many decades will we all endure paying for this absolute lunatic act of "Going Green"? Thousands of derelict Wind Turbines, huge fields of solar panels all rotting away in the sun and huge consumer bills for electricity that have doubled and basically caused most lower income people to accept "Energy Poverty"! 

Our politicians who bought into this insanity will be long gone but their actions by accepting the "Green Scam" as part of their tenure will live long afterwards! 

Many politicos will go gently into the night with cushy appointments within the "Green Cabal" and will no doubt suck more hard earned tax payers dollars from honest citizens even after they have been thrown in the "voters dumpster". 

Enron was the beginning of this failed experiment in wholesale "highway robbery" and even though jail was waiting for the movers and shakers, their legacy lives on within a very shady and dishonourable group of business people and politicians all using the Enron formula to bilk massive $$$ from innocent people. 

Too bad the rhetoric in Ontario from our Liberal Government doesn't reflect the reality of the times! 

That's why this next story is bitter/sweet. 

Germany's Great Energy-Jobs Destruction Revolution – Green Energies In Collapse 

By P Gosselin on 22. August 2012 

The European Institute for Climate and Energy here (EIKE) sums up the bad news in Germany's energy industry, all brought on by failed green energy policies. What a mess! And things are set to get a lot worse. 

Bad news have been rolling in from all fronts over the last months and weeks. The green energy generals are now in their bunkers with trembling hands. Oh the agony when reality turns out to be the opposite of what the models projected. Countries contemplating Germany's green, centrally planned energy path really need to rethink! 



EIKE writes an overview of headlines from the last 14 days (translated and condensed): 

On the bankruptcy of solar company Sovello, 1000 employees are getting a pink slip. Earlier, RWE announced 2400 would lose their jobs. That mans the number of layoffs at RWE is now up to a whopping 10,400. Former RWE boss not long ago was high as a kite on green. The Handelsblatt quotes: 

In my eyes, the energy revolution is a fascinating event. Of course it's a challenge – like putting a man on the moon…RWE is forging ahead with the energy revolution at full throttle." 

Siemens and its boss Peter Löscher were also recently big proponents of the green energy revolution in Germany. But now, according to the Berliner Morgenpost, up to 10,000 employees are about to get the boot: 

Large projects like power plants and railcars have eluded the company. Its customers are cutting back investments. 

But there are also self-made problems: The management completely underestimated the difficulties of hooking up offshore windparks in the North Sea. Because Siemens is behind schedule, the Munich-based company threw 500 million euros into the wind by the end of June…." 

Stern magazine writes that wind generator builder Vestas is cutting 1400 jobs. 

The crisis-hampered Danish wind generator builder Vestas wants to cut another 1400 jobs by the end of the year in order to save 250 million euros." 

Vestas competitor Nordex is also struggling in the highly subsidized wind energy sector, too: 

Der Aktionär Online writes that Nordex: 

Share price is hovering just above its low for the past years. Because of price pressure, Nordex for the first half of the year has posted another loss." 

The Finanical Times on Solarworld: 

For Solarworld things look even gloomier. After millions in write-offs and deep red figures over the first 6 months, Chairman Frank Asbeck again expects another operating loss this year. 

Share prices collapsed on Monday, falling 11.5 percent to €1.17.