I’m talking about the direct subsidies including failure to enforce our own laws and letting serial criminals make a mockery of us. I’m talking about actual waivers of legal consequences, direct and indirect corruption, and straight up cash infusions, tax waivers, and bailouts during tight seasons.
You are welcome to share a trustworthy resource that comes to similar findings but I’ve never seen anything like that from a reputable source. IMF is pretty decent and calculates the vast majority of the costs as climate externalities. (ie, the tragedy of the commons.)
And right now, your entire claim seems to rest on this shadowy secret costs that are separate from the often cited climate externalities.
No, that’s a significant oversimplification of how markets and investments work.
You are similarly welcome to share why you believe you have a project that is a viable, long term profitable green energy approach that is simultaneously uninvestable. But so far, your only given reason is this nonsense that “we’re too obsessed with selling our fossil fuel reserves. " That’s not at all how markets work, not even in a simplified child’s model.
And i the vast majority is counting loan guarantees and preferential rates as subsidies. And instead of calculating the subsidy as say, the difference between the standard and preferential rate, they’ve taken the entire loan value, which is some nonsense accounting, good for rabble rousing I guess but not applicable for even a child’s understanding of investment and subsidies.
Edit: Also, wildly, choosing to count funding green tech like carbon capture as a subsidy.
Carbon capture is dubiously green, there’s little evidence it’s more than kicking the can down the road, but hey so are tailing ponds and current “remediation” standards. We’re very good at overvaluing short term band-aids and not looking the bigger picture.
Okay, and the drastically overcounted billions as noted before?
And the vast majority is counting loan guarantees and preferential rates as subsidies. And instead of calculating the subsidy as say, the difference between the standard and preferential rate, they’ve taken the entire loan value, which is some nonsense accounting, good for rabble rousing I guess but not applicable for even a child’s understanding of investment and subsidies.
You can cut down the calculation to the difference between standard and preferential rate and still have enough to build half a dozen geothermal/syngas plants along the Trans-Canada corridor, which will in turn provide a foundation for more industrial expansion and transport infrastructure the west so desperately needs, create tens of thousands of new, high productivity jobs, and future-proof us for generations as a global energy hub. Once they have made back the initial investment+interest, privatize them and let the market do its job, we just need that initial surge to reach escape velocity. You want a Western Canadian moon-shot that can bring the country together, there it is.
What on Earth are you ball parking the preferential rate, the commercial rate and the difference to come to that conclusion?
My back of the envelope math puts the cost of a half dozen projects at a less than ten million apiece. If you can’t find 10 million in funding for a profitable green tech in this day and age, that says there’s something sketchy about the projects.
Edit: Jesus, closer to 5 million. If you can’t find backers for a project that costs a little more than a year of goaltending from Tristan Jarry, that says a LOT about those projects.
Because every time someone says “Hey lets try geothermal” the UCP screams “NO MUST BE NATURAL GAS!!!” Why? Because their donor base doesn’t want to spend a decade waiting for returns to break even on a bunch of new infrastructure, they want returns next quarter. The idea of a long-term investment in anything but AI is a non-starter in the current market so something that takes a decade to break even on is completely out of the question. Do you want me to go line by line explaining this to you, or do you even care? We’re in the middle of internet nowhere and no one here has the power to make any of this happen. We’re at what, 20 replies deep on an obscure forum no of consequence uses? You’re not saving the world by casting doubt on a solution no one can see, so why do you care?
There’s a delightful irony considering you started the exchange with:
but believing something that is demonstrably false isn’t an “opinion”, it’s a delusion. I find it hard to believe we’re suffering from an epidemic of psychosis for no discernible reason, so where is it coming from and how do we mitigate it.
And then, when we dove into your claims about billions of subsidies, we’re down to a handful of millions (in other words, you were arguing for a demonstrably false claim, which according to you is delusional.)
I’m not sure how we mitigate this silliness. Financial literacy? People willing to point out that “hey, those billions aren’t quite what you think they are?”
I mean, wild claims like
The idea of a long-term investment in anything but AI is a non-starter in the current market
are just lunacy.
And now, when confronted with the reality of your position its “why do you even care, we’re on an obscure forum.”
But, why do I care? I’m always curious, you seemed fairly rational at first and I believe we learn best when challenging or examining our ideas, I wondered if you knew something I didn’t. It turns out, you just haven’t really looked into the things you claim. Maybe you’ll examine them a bit more carefully in future? Maybe not. But I believe the only way to mitigate folks believing things that are demonstrably false is rational discourse.
Again… To the actual questions…
You are welcome to share a trustworthy resource that comes to similar findings but I’ve never seen anything like that from a reputable source. IMF is pretty decent and calculates the vast majority of the costs as climate externalities. (ie, the tragedy of the commons.)
And right now, your entire claim seems to rest on this shadowy secret costs that are separate from the often cited climate externalities.
You are similarly welcome to share why you believe you have a project that is a viable, long term profitable green energy approach that is simultaneously uninvestable. But so far, your only given reason is this nonsense that “we’re too obsessed with selling our fossil fuel reserves. " That’s not at all how markets work, not even in a simplified child’s model.
Oh, and as for the findings on direct subsidies, you can get a more nuanced breakdown here: https://environmentaldefence.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Canadas-Fossil-Fuel-Subsidies.pdf
And i the vast majority is counting loan guarantees and preferential rates as subsidies. And instead of calculating the subsidy as say, the difference between the standard and preferential rate, they’ve taken the entire loan value, which is some nonsense accounting, good for rabble rousing I guess but not applicable for even a child’s understanding of investment and subsidies.
Edit: Also, wildly, choosing to count funding green tech like carbon capture as a subsidy.
Carbon capture is dubiously green, there’s little evidence it’s more than kicking the can down the road, but hey so are tailing ponds and current “remediation” standards. We’re very good at overvaluing short term band-aids and not looking the bigger picture.
Okay, and the drastically overcounted billions as noted before?
You can cut down the calculation to the difference between standard and preferential rate and still have enough to build half a dozen geothermal/syngas plants along the Trans-Canada corridor, which will in turn provide a foundation for more industrial expansion and transport infrastructure the west so desperately needs, create tens of thousands of new, high productivity jobs, and future-proof us for generations as a global energy hub. Once they have made back the initial investment+interest, privatize them and let the market do its job, we just need that initial surge to reach escape velocity. You want a Western Canadian moon-shot that can bring the country together, there it is.
What on Earth are you ball parking the preferential rate, the commercial rate and the difference to come to that conclusion?
My back of the envelope math puts the cost of a half dozen projects at a less than ten million apiece. If you can’t find 10 million in funding for a profitable green tech in this day and age, that says there’s something sketchy about the projects.
Edit: Jesus, closer to 5 million. If you can’t find backers for a project that costs a little more than a year of goaltending from Tristan Jarry, that says a LOT about those projects.
Because every time someone says “Hey lets try geothermal” the UCP screams “NO MUST BE NATURAL GAS!!!” Why? Because their donor base doesn’t want to spend a decade waiting for returns to break even on a bunch of new infrastructure, they want returns next quarter. The idea of a long-term investment in anything but AI is a non-starter in the current market so something that takes a decade to break even on is completely out of the question. Do you want me to go line by line explaining this to you, or do you even care? We’re in the middle of internet nowhere and no one here has the power to make any of this happen. We’re at what, 20 replies deep on an obscure forum no of consequence uses? You’re not saving the world by casting doubt on a solution no one can see, so why do you care?
There’s a delightful irony considering you started the exchange with:
And then, when we dove into your claims about billions of subsidies, we’re down to a handful of millions (in other words, you were arguing for a demonstrably false claim, which according to you is delusional.)
I’m not sure how we mitigate this silliness. Financial literacy? People willing to point out that “hey, those billions aren’t quite what you think they are?”
I mean, wild claims like
are just lunacy.
And now, when confronted with the reality of your position its “why do you even care, we’re on an obscure forum.”
But, why do I care? I’m always curious, you seemed fairly rational at first and I believe we learn best when challenging or examining our ideas, I wondered if you knew something I didn’t. It turns out, you just haven’t really looked into the things you claim. Maybe you’ll examine them a bit more carefully in future? Maybe not. But I believe the only way to mitigate folks believing things that are demonstrably false is rational discourse.