When the Lights Go out in Sydney

Monday, 11 October 2021 — 

 

By Dan Denning

Editor, The Rum Rebellion

Some days you wake up and make the mistake of reading the news. And then the thought crosses your mind that maybe the human race ‘peaked’ with the Moon landing in 1969. That was the apex of our ability to accomplish complicated things. It’s all been downhill since.

Not everyone might think that way. After all, today seems pretty amazing, if you measure it by the quantity and quality of our gadgets. Our mobile phones, for example, would probably blow away NASA engineers from the Apollo missions. The devices would seem almost magical to someone living just 50 years ago.

But did you know the lights went out in Lebanon this week? All of them. Everywhere. And it was the second time this month it’s happened. The country’s two main power companies ran out of fuel.

The army saved the day eventually, delivering 160,000 gallons of fuel to get the plants running. But you have to wonder, at least I wonder, if the world is too complex and interconnected now to survive major disruptions. Complexity can make a system more fragile. Soaring energy prices, clogged ports worldwide…yes…it’s all looking very fragile.

In Europe, benchmark natural gas prices are up 500% this year. Regulators in France, Spain, and Italy have intervened to cap retail electricity prices. They’ve also removed some charges paid by small- and medium-sized businesses that were earmarked to subsidise renewable energy. A long, cold winter approaches, and Europe finds itself with too little gas set aside in reserve.

To be fair, no one in Australia is probably going to Europe anytime soon. It’s Europe’s problem. And if you’re reading this from Australia, you can’t leave the country yet anyway. And summer is coming in the Southern Hemisphere. Let the Europeans shiver in the dark, right?

But the energy ‘crisis’ is a worldwide affair now. Why? Two reasons. First, rising gas prices are having knock-on effects for coal and oil. Those old fossil fuel standbys are rising in price too, whether you’re in Europe or not. Global energy markets — including pipelines, LNG terminals, and ships that carry LNG — are interconnected and interdependent.

For example, China may have to ‘unpunish’ Australian coal producers. Earlier this year, China cut off imports of Australian thermal coal as a way to punish Australia for its support of an investigation into the origins of the Wuhan virus (hint: it came from a Chinese lab in Wuhan). Now, faced with slower GDP growth from the forced deleveraging in the real estate sector (Evergrande), reduced electricity output threatens to slow down Chinese factory productivity (and perhaps drive export prices higher). Expect China to import more Aussie coal to fill the gap.

The second reason that the energy ‘crisis’ is global is that people have begun to realise the so-called ‘energy transition’ — where we move to a net-zero world of carbon emissions and everything is clean and electric — is a big, fat fraud. The dawn of this fantasy world is neither imminent nor inevitable.

And if it does happen, and even if you stipulate it’s a desirable outcome, it will take decades — not years — to ‘transition’ from fossil fuels to renewables. Many industries will be caught off guard dealing with unintended consequences and problems. What do I mean?

Take electric vehicles. If you have a Chevy Bolt — Chevrolet’s flagship EV — you’ve been told by the manufacturer not to park it within 50 feet of other cars in a parking garage. Park it on the top floor if you can.

And try not to park your Bolt close to anything that you value which could catch fire. This is all according to guidance sent out by GM earlier this week in response to 12 confirmed battery fires in the company’s EVs. GM had already issued a recall of 141,000 vehicles to fix the problem.

The good news? After a bitter and brutal decade, energy stocks on the S&P 500 are off to a ripper this year. The second is outperforming both the broader index and even the tech sector. See the chart below:

 

Source: StockCharts.com

[Click to open in a new window]

Energy is our ‘Trade of the Decade’ at The Bonner-Denning Letter. If we’re right, you’ll see a renaissance in ‘old economy’ industrial stocks and energy companies. They’ve been starved of capital by fund managers and analysts who’ve bought into the hype about the energy transition. Now, when we need it most, we find you can’t flick on the supply of energy like a light switch.

It takes years of finding resources. It takes billions in exploration budgets and then capital investment to bring those resources to the market. It doesn’t just happen. And when it doesn’t happen, the lights go out.

Not that the lights will go out in Sydney anytime soon. Australia has abundant energy resources. But don’t put it past the country’s politicians to inflict some economic self-harm by committing to stupid and unattainable emissions goals. Why on Earth would they do that?

First of all, they’re stupid. That applies to all of them generally, regardless of the particular policy. But secondly, at some point, there’s going to be a pivot from the COVID emergency to the ‘climate emergency’. A fully-vaccinated country with freshly opened international borders can’t be kept in permanent fear of the virus.

But — and here’s the important thing — all the same measures taken to control, intimidate, and bully you because of the pandemic can ALSO be used against you because of a ‘climate emergency’.

Restrictions on travel (carbon emissions), on the food you can eat (measured by the carbon it takes to produce that food), and even on how much money you can spend (credit cards and central bank digital currencies where your spending is capped based on your carbon output)…all of these things are on the table for the control freaks and sociopaths who brought you 18 months of lockdowns, public health orders (instead of laws), and numerous mandates of questionable legal validity.

Yeah, there are some days where you can imagine the world would be better off if Facebook crashed and never came back. A world without the constant scream machine of social media would be quieter, more civil, and better informed. That’s why we’ve recommended you delete your social media to improve your quality of life (and the quality of your thoughts).

But if the lights go out and stay out, or we get power rationing and rolling blackouts, well, that’s a different story. That’s the story of the coming digital feudalism — where technology, energy, and wealth are controlled by an elite caste who run government and use the police and the military to keep ‘the people’ in check.

That world is too depressing to contemplate to start off the week. So I’ll leave it for another time. In the meantime, buy yourself a generator just in case. It never hurts to be ready for an emergency…before it’s declared.

Regards,

 

Dan Denning,
Editor, The Rum Rebellion

The Bonner-Denning Letter is co-authored by Port Phillip Publishing founder Dan Denning and legendary investment writer and publisher Bill Bonner. It connects the dots between markets, politics, and history as one of the only macroeconomic, ‘top-down’ newsletters in Australia. For

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Replies

  • Please don't confuse this with a climate change argument.

    This is more about what happens next and how do we control it. Probably more about the climate alarmists than the change.

    i.e. I think we should slow down and let the transition be more evolutionary.

    What any single country or block does will be overun at a whim of what China decides to do.

  • This reply was deleted.
    • I was probably looking at a more Macro response Slugg, but you did double the numbers.

      • Yer the horse paddocks looking good Sluggo.Pops i think the twin and i will leave this one to The Tad and The Daz they will take it over for you . Good Luck to you 

  • This reply was deleted.
    • Yes. Totally shithouse.

      • Didn't mind . David Gilmore lead guitar 

    • Wash your mouth out with soap Sluggo, the Floyd are just epic. DG's sound is one the most imitated in the world.

      Unless of course you're just being sarcastic ????

      • Brett please the twin sarcastic. Naaah

        • Yes, it is alarming, wait to you read my next one published today!

          I will take you all kicking and screaming to the alter.....

      • This reply was deleted.
        • Ok guys, they closed the last blog down.......now for some serious discussion 

          Is Is Rabid Randy Handlinger a relative of Daz's or are they just alter ego's......lots of speculation here both very intelligent but lacking when it comes to telling the real difference between Clark Kent and Superman, in Handlinger's case the word Kent comes to mind in a number of ways.

          • THis a copy of Randy's last post on the closed down blog.

            Poppa, your reply to tragic makes it seem you agree with the bullshit he wrote. Beware being intellectual friends with crazy

            Anyone can factcheck Prof. If you don't know how to do internets good, ask daz really nicely. He will provide citations.

            Pawnbrokers are leechs. Scum who feed off the bottom 5%

            It does imply a close realtionship doesn't it.

            Randy Parramatta Tragic is an iconic poster/member of this site. He has been around a long time and is an extremely intelligent person.He is a great friend of mine and many others, when Sluggy was in hospital PT would drive an hour to visit him and take him little treats. He is a man that has compassion and if I was going over the top he would be beside me, whereas I suspect you may stay behind and linger a little longer.

            For you to say/imply he is crazy shows how out of touch with the site you really are....to disparage me in another way is also something you should be careful of commenting on. Ignorance in your case would be a bliss much better than not understanding what you don't understand.

            I have seen this side of you on a few occasions now, lets hope you learn something about humility.

This reply was deleted.

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