The Net Zero energy revolution is anything but green
Dominic Frisby explains why the world may struggle to hit its Net Zero energy goals as the environmental and monetary costs mount.
Today I wanted to expand on a theme I have been writing about for a while: that the green energy revolution is anything but green.
In fact, the amount of metal required and the amount of fossil fuel needed to be burnt to make it happen means it will be extraordinarily damaging to the environment, releasing unprecedented amounts of CO2.
Moreover, unlike the inflation that resulted from Covid and the Ukraine war, which might yet prove temporary, Net Zero could produce inflation that will be prolonged and entrenched.
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In other words, Net Zero is not only deluded, but it will also be extremely damaging, both to the planet and to people’s lives.
Here we explain why - and what to do to protect your wealth.
The problem with the Net Zero transition
I stumbled across a super talk this week by Mark Mills, author and senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, called "The Energy Transition Delusion: Inescapable Mineral Realities".
He argues that the current energy transition to renewable sources is based on a flawed understanding of the resources required to make it happen. Most of the evidence cited here is cited from that talk.
Today the world gets a little under 4% of its total energy supply from wind and solar. That’s one-third as much energy as it gets from burning wood.
Disclaimer
(1)
I couldn’t believe that stat when I read it, but that’s what the International Energy Agency (IEA) says. Wood still provides 350% more energy to the world than all the world's wind turbines and solar power combined.
To get to this 4% level the world has directly spent something like $5 trillion (more than double UK GDP) in the last 15 years, and probably the same amount again in indirect spending, says Mills.
An electric vehicle requires 400% more metals than a conventional car. To build a machine to replace a gas turbine, you need 1,000% to 2,000% more minerals to deliver the same unit of power. To deliver the same mile of driving, the same hour of heat, the same hour of lighting or the same hour of computer time the extra minerals required amount to 2,000% to 7,000%
Overall this amounts to an increase in mineral demand in the order of 700% to 4,000%.
“Not to put too fine a hyperbolic a point on this,” says Mills, “this would be the largest single increase in demand or supply of metals in all of human history. It's never happened.”
Net Zero will require huge investments
Mining cannot increase output by 700% to 4,000%, not in the next decade, nor in time for the Net Zero deadlines.
We are thinking in terms of kilowatt hours instead of in terms of tonnage - and tonnage is what’s required to get those kilowatt hours. Mills says, “It requires both the extraction and movement of a quantity of materials equal to or greater than the quantities of materials that humanity extracts and moves and grows for all other purposes combined. The world's not capable of doing that with the technologies that exist.”
Where is all this new metal going to come from? To take a mine from exploration and discovery to production takes 16 years. Even if you relax regulation (unlikely) and accelerate investment (not so easy) you are only at best going to shave a few years off that.
To go out and explore for mines and develop them requires investment, which the industry has been starved of since 2011. What’s more, there’s no guarantee you will even get a payback: exploration has a success rate of about one in a thousand and what if commodity prices come down? You lose a lot more than your shirt.
Then there’s the political risk. Burkina Faso's energy & mines ministry issued a statement on Tuesday saying it had "commandeered" 200kg of gold from Endeavour Mining’s operations for "public necessity". The company will be compensated for its value, the statement added without providing further detail.
Mining is starved of finance yet “the mining industry needs to deliver new projects at a frequency and consistent level of financing never previously accomplished,” says energy research company Wood McKenzie. Currently, the world is not even investing 10% of what’s required.
Then there is the issue of refining. This is a major geopolitical and strategic issue. China dominates refining. 40% of the global copper supply is refined there, 35% nickel, 65% cobalt, 87% rare earth, 58% lithium.
Never mind the strategic questions of handing China that much power, how environmentally friendly do you think Chinese refining is going to be? Chinese coal production for power generation hit a record last year.
What will happen to metal prices in all of this? A sustained increase in the price of metals and energy of 300% or 400% will push up overall inflation. There is only so much you can hide with subsidies.
Now let’s look at another cost, the environmental cost.
As humans have extracted natural resources from the earth, they have become increasingly difficult to find and extract. A hundred years ago average copper grades were 4%. That is to say for every hundred tonnes of ore you process you might get four tonnes of copper. Today average grades have fallen to 1%.
“A half tonne battery,” says Mills, “requires 250 tonnes of ore to be processed somewhere”.
Could the energy transition lead to more pollution?
To produce the materials needed to realise Net Zero “will see the world consume fuels and emit carbon dioxide at levels that are unprecedented in mining history”, says Mills. Just nuts.
Every time someone buys an electric vehicle (EV), they are essentially purchasing the previous consumption of 25 barrels of oil equivalent - half oil, half coal and natural gas. These hydrocarbons will have been burnt before even the first electron moves into its batteries on the road.
By the time the electric vehicle first makes it to the parking space outside your home, it has already emitted 14 tons of CO2, compared to the 5 tonnes for the conventional vehicle. It’s not until the vehicle passes 60,000 miles that you end up with a net reduction.
Humans require more and more energy as we grow more sophisticated. The Industrial Revolution increased energy demand and today’s arms race in drones and robots and AI are all going to increase energy demand.
Surely, the answer is not to turn our backs on fossil fuels. The focus should be on developing cleaner and more efficient fossil fuel technologies, as well as improving renewable technologies.
Unfortunately, the focus on renewable energy technologies has diverted attention and investment from the development of the cleaner and more efficient fossil fuel technologies we need.
How to invest in the Net Zero transition
So how to play all this? Do you think Net Zero diktats are going to change? I don’t. Governments are too scared of the environmental lobby to change tack.
The way to protect yourself, I’d say, is to be long energy and long commodities. The likes of BHP or Glencore are at the safer end of the market to junior resource companies at the risker end.
However, what I have described above is not currently being displayed in energy and metals prices.
Either the market has already digested and discounted the story, or it feels it is too far away to matter, or it thinks that governments will pivot, or it is not yet priced in. What do you think?
The case for a secular bull market in commodities remains strong.
Disclaimer
(1) International Energy Agency (IEA). (2020). Renewables 2020: Analysis and forecast to 2025. Paris: IEA. Retrieved from https://www.iea.org/reports/renewables-2020
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Dominic Frisby (“mercurially witty” – the Spectator) is as far as we know the world’s only financial writer and comedian. He is the author of the popular newsletter the Flying Frisby and is MoneyWeek’s main commentator on gold, commodities, currencies and cryptocurrencies. He has also taken several of his shows to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
His books are Daylight Robbery - How Tax Changed our Past and Will Shape our Future; Bitcoin: the Future of Money? and Life After the State - Why We Don't Need Government.
Dominic was educated at St Paul's School, Manchester University and the Webber-Douglas Academy Of Dramatic Art. You can follow him on X @dominicfrisby
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