A DIESEL IN THE SHED
Welcome to a new contributor, Viv Forbes founder of Carbon sense. This is an organisation formed to debunk the misleading myth that carbon dioxide is responsible for our “Climate Change”, which this monkey, and anyone, man or monkey, with an operating brain, can see is a hoax of giant and sinister proportions. I know my readers will enjoy this tale of a diesel in the shed……
Gibber! Gibber!
Chugley
A Diesel in the Shed.
You can have your solar panels
and your turbines on the hills;
You can use the warmth of sunshine
to reduce your heating bills.
You can dream you’re self-sufficient
as you weed your vegie bed;
As long as you make sure to keep
A diesel in the shed.
When I was a kid living on a small dairy farm in Queensland, we relied on green energy – horses and human muscles provided most motive power; fire-wood and beeswax candles supplied heat and light; a windmill pumped water and the sun provided solar energy for drying clothes and growing crops, vegies and pastures. The only “non-green” energy used was a bit of kerosene for the kitchen lamp and the dairy lantern, and petrol for a small Ford utility for a trip to town every fortnight.
Our life changed dramatically when we put a diesel in the dairy. This single-cylinder engine drove the milking machines, the cream separator and a small electricity generator, which charged 16 lead-acid 2 volt batteries sitting on the veranda. This is the exact same diesel engine (built in Toowoomba) we had in our dairy in the late 1940’s:
Our 32 volt DC system powered our “modern” marvel – bright light, at any time, in every room, at the touch of a switch.
There were no electric self-starters for diesels in those days – just a heavy crank handle and a big fly wheel. But all that effort, noise and fumes were superseded when the house and the dairy got connected to clean silent “coal power by wire”. Suddenly the trusty “Southern Cross” diesel engines disappeared from Australian sheds and dairies.
In less than one life-time, fire wood, candles, horses and kerosene were replaced by diesel and petrol engines plus clean, silent coal-powered electricity.
Today, after Aussies have enjoyed decades of abundant reliable cheap electricity from coal, green energy gambling has taken Australia back to that era which kept a diesel in the shed.
Green energy has a union that works to rules. If winds are too strong or too weak they down tools and the turbines go silent. And their mates running the solar panels won’t work at night and also produce nothing on cloudy days. Then if we try to fill the gaps with battery power, where do we get the electricity to recharge the batteries, AND pump the hydro water back up the hill AND keep the lights on?
Tasmania and South Australia are the greenest states of Australia. SA demolished their last coal-fired power station with glee and Tasmanian Greens even oppose hydro and wind power.
Tasmanians get their electricity mainly from hydro assets created long ago by their more productive ancestors. When a long drought caused a shortage of hydro-energy they became reliant for up to 40% of their electricity needs on the Bass-link undersea cable bringing electricity from reliable coal-fired stations in Victoria and NSW. However the overloaded Bass Link cable failed, and an old gas-powered station was brought back into service to keep the lights on (importing gas from Victoria). Subsequently Tasmanian politicians hurriedly put 150 diesel generators in their sheds.
South Australia is the next greenest state in Australia, hosting about one third of Australia’s wind turbines. These were force-fed into existence by mandatory green energy targets and tax benefits. In a burst of green destruction they also closed their gas-fired power stations and gleefully demolished their last coal-fired station. However they were left in the dark when wind power failed and a storm tore down their life-line bringing reliable coal power from Victoria . So Green South Australia also bought a heap of diesel generators for their shed. Many residents followed this lead.
Question: “What did South Australians have before candles?”
Answer: “Electricity”.
The UK has also been badly infected by the green energy virus. Engineers warned that this intermittent and unpredictable supply had increased the risk of blackouts, so the UK government offered subsidies for emergency backup power. This subsidy, plus consumer concerns, put so many diesels in British sheds that they now provide a major backup capacity for UK electricity.
Many Spaniards also found a diesel in the shed was very profitable. Their government had been drinking green-ale and offered attractive subsidies for any solar power produced. The subsidy was very successful – so successful that someone eventually noticed that some suppliers were even producing “solar” power at night. It was coming from the diesels in their sheds.
Here is our pictorial comment::
https://saltbushclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/diesel-in-shed.jpeg
Feel free to use this cartoon with no alterations, (see print at top of this post. Ed)
Finally, our green media likes to feature some green energy enthusiast who is “off the grid”. But it usually emerges later in the show that there is a diesel in their shed too.
Those who remember the days of relying on a noisy smelly diesel in the shed have no wish to be dragged back there by green zealots.
(803 words)
Viv Forbes
vforbes@carbon-sense.com
Rosevale Qld Australia
Viv Forbes managed to turn the crank handle of that big Southern Cross diesel in his father’s shed when he was about 8 years old. He and his wife Judy have spent their lives in exploration (coal, uranium, oil and gas), investment analysis, political agitation, watching the weather and managing pastures for grazing cattle, sheep, hares, wild ducks, wallabies and kangaroos. They keep a diesel in the shed.
4 thoughts on “A DIESEL IN THE SHED”
Some even go one step further than “keeping a diesel in the shed”, and make their own diesel fuel. We have a very resourceful and creative friend from our Sydney days who is given the used cooking oils from cafes, fish shops and restaurants in the area. He had the know-how to refine and clean these oils to make all the diesel fuel he wanted. I’m sure that saves lots of money over the years, as well as clever re-use of cooking oils.
Great comment Paul thanks! What resourceful friends you have, Gibber! Gibber! Chugley
“Hear Hear” All this green energy is a very expensive and greed driven policy. If 1/10 of the money that is spent in trying to find life on some distant star, or building a great collider thing in Switzerland to find “the God particle”, was spent on research, I feel sure that we could have found a way to clean the dreaded “coal fired power stations” to satisfy the greenest Greenie.
Great comment! Thanks Milton the Mandril! Gibber! Gibber! Chugley
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