Archive for March, 2010

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Back from the Birkie

March 1, 2010

Lynne Kiesling

This weekend the KP Spouse and I headed six hours north into northwest Wisconsin and joined a cabin-full of friends in the American Birkebeiner cross-country ski race, although my pace was not so racelike! We did the half distance (the Kortelopet), which is 23km (14.26 miles), classic style (i.e., not the skate style that you’ve been seeing on the Olympics). I was slow, even slower than my running pace, but it was a gorgeous course and the weather was beautiful. In terms of fitness I was in good cardiovascular shape for it (and from a cardio perspective could have done the full 54km Birkie), but my x-c skiing technique is poor, and it sure did challenge my muscles! My natural tendency is fast-twitch muscle activity and things like downhill skiing, so long-distance cross-country slow-twitch endurance is not my thing. But it was fun, especially the big party in Hayward afterward and then pizza that night with our party … although I am sure having some trouble moving today!

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Health care: end third-party payer, or stop wasting my time and money

March 1, 2010

Lynne Kiesling

I continue to be thoroughly disgusted by the disingenuousness of the health care policy debate in Washington. From a public choice perspective I understand why the debate continues to focus on what I think are the tangential and ancillary questions, and the attempts to tweak and improvise around the edges … but my opinion long has been, and continues to be,

Unless and until we change the differential tax treatment of employer-funded health insurance and remove the third-party payer incentive problems embedded in it, we will have no meaningful change in health care costs or affordability.

Therefore, all of the time and resources that Congress and the administration are pouring into forcing a health care bill are just wasting my tax money and the time and effort of my elected representatives. What they are doing right now is expensive and wasteful wheel-spinning, well deserving of the name “political theater”.

Arnold Kling made a related point on Thursday:

There are two ways to approach reducing the use of high-cost, low-benefit procedures. You can have the government tell people what they can and cannot have. Or you can have individuals pay for a larger fraction of the medical procedures that they consume. It really comes down to those choices.

Advocating either one of those is political suicide, and talking about anything else is a waste of time. The Democrats will not advocate government rationing, and the Republicans will not advocate scrapping most of our current system of third-party payment in medicine. Instead, the summit, like the entire “health reform debate” this year, will be a waste of time.

I do, though, think that Arnold is being too generous when he gives the health care summit participants grades ranging from D+ to F-. They are wasting our time and money by refusing to confront and address the core incentive problem, which is the staggeringly distortionary and inefficient coupling of employment and health insurance.

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Bloom off the rose

March 1, 2010

Michael Giberson

After eight years in stealth mode, Bloom Energy had a big week in the media last week.  They opened up on 60 Minutes and picked up mentions everywhere from the New York Times to local newspapers to a zillion blogs (us included).  Much of the discussion was a bit over-excited.  At Green Chip Stocks, Chris Nelder noted that environmental blogs seemed particularly agog over the announcement (“The green blogs fell all over themselves repeating the breathless ‘Holy Grail’ speculations in Lesley Stahl’s 60 Minutes report, which was indistinguishable from an in-house marketing puff piece.”).

But a few analysts, Nelder included, managed to run the numbers on the handful of specific claims sprinkled within the public relations blitz.  The exercise has left them less impressed.

Nelder, “Is the Bloom Box Energy’s Holy Grail?“:

Fuel cells aren’t new…. None have achieved real commercial viability yet…. What’s new about the Bloom Box is that it claims to be high efficiency (producing more power with less waste heat than other fuel cells), small, relatively cheap, and able to run on a variety of fuels including natural gas, landfill gas, and biogas….

Let’s have a look at the numbers….

And then, after chomping on a few numbers, he concludes the estimated “payback period” is longer than the product’s estimated lifespan (meaning you won’t have recovered your initial investment by the time comes that you need to buy a new one), the capital costs are high even compared to solar PV, and the emission reductions are good but not great.

In addition, Nelder notes, this fuel cell is unlikely to run on anything other than natural gas in residential use – how many homes will ever be served by a landfill gas pipeline? – and for similar gas supply reasons  it is unlikely to light up the dark in many developing countries.

Sam Jaffe, Renewable & Distributed Energy Blog, gives us “Four Things Bloom Energy Forgot to Tell the World,” namely that the fuel cell ”does not produce electricity more efficiently than centralized generation, isn’t much cleaner than centralized generation, and is more expensive to produce than most other forms.  Finally, Jaffe notes the process theoretically has energy storage capability*, but it isn’t clear when the capability may be made available.

*Instead of producing power, theoretically the technology can consume power and produce hydrogen, which can be stored for later use as a fuel.  But no information seems to be available about the efficiency of the system as a storage device, and the apparent lack of a willingness to speculate on the availability of the feature is not encouraging.

(HT to Kate Mackenzie at FT Energy Source for the Nelder link.)

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