ENERGY ENIGMAS It's curious how the transition to renewable energy is working out in practice from what I see of it here in rural Victoria, Australia. It's still a novelty to see an electric car, but they are starting to appear in places that aren't obvious destinations for tourists from Melbourne. On the other hand there seems to be a rapid surge in construction of new petrol stations, which is a clear bet against any widespread change to electric vehicles in at least however long it takes to recoup those construction costs. I can think of three new petrol stations built in country towns over the last twelve months, and those are all but a couple of the country towns that I see regularly enough to keep track (the other towns are too small for a petrol station these days anyway). They're often big petrol stations too, betting on visits from lots of cars and trucks, presumably for at least the rest of the decade. None of the new stations sell LPG though, even where they're replacing an old one which did. That's odd really, because with petrol prices having rocketed up again you'd think LPG conversions would be more popular than ever. Although more recently gas prices have gone up a lot too apparantly, and the difference was always about tax rather than anything practical anyway. Speaking of gas, it was rather shocking to hear a few weeks ago that the Victorian government has banned installing new gas appliances in homes, starting next year. Apparantly this is their answer to getting people onboard with renewable energy, at least after we stop generating most of it from coal or gas power plants (particularly in evenings when people would use gas most for cooking and heating). The credibility of their commitment to the energy transistion is still hampered by the recent introduction of taxes on electric vehicle drivers to make up for lost revenue from highly-taxed fuel sales (except for LPG, to which somehow they never applied the same logic). Australia is still a major gas exporter too, shipping it overseas where other countries buy it much cheaper than what they charge us here domestically (sort of an inverted Saudi Arabia model - what a fair distribution of wealth we have in this healthy democracy of ours!). Anyway I recently took a walk through a new housing estate that's been very slowly going up in the face of all the building industry's recent supply and finance disasters. Facinatingly, all those new houses seemed to have gas meters, and all the hot water services that I saw were gas ones. I don't know about the economics of it all (my place is all-electric anyway - the model of modern 1970s living that it is), but this forced switch away from gas looks like a real about-face for the industry. I find that interesting. That new housing estate actually joins onto an old one from around the 1940s which was built of identically-designed houses for the workers of a nearby coal mine. The mine closed years ago and the houses were then used by the government for public housing, but now most or all of them seem to have been sold off (cue other news articles about massive public housing shortages). It used to be known as 'chinatown', in a probably-racist reference to the disarray resulting from public housing tennants stuck in a small country town without much industry. It still has a distinctively different feel compared to the new estate bolted onto its formerly dead-end roads. It's less dead, really, at least in the middle of a weekday. I went to visit what's left of the abandoned coal mine Saturday before last. As an extension of my dam tours because it was open-cut and apparantly flooded once they turned off the pumps that kept it dry. It's now on the boundary of a state park and the map seemed to show a forest track running alongside it, as well as a road running right up to it. The gravel road that the mine road turns off from had been built up so much along the top of the hill that the turn-off was barely even visible amongst all the gumtrees, and what's left of the road was gated off anyway. I found a place to park the Jag while narrowly avoiding getting it bogged, and left it looking strikingly elegant in contrast to the rough terrain, as it so often does on my adventures. Then I spent an hour or so walking deep down some seemingly endless bush tracks until I eventually conceeded that all paths leading to the mine were gated off or adorned with large "NO TRESPASSING: Private Property" signs. So that chapter in local energy history remains off limits for me. But it was a nice stroll through the bush, and I gave the kookaburras something to laugh about. I'm still reading about the history of fusion reactor research, so sooner or later I'll probably post about all the wonders of energy technology due in the next 30 years (counting those years from 1950, of course). - The Free Thinker