Planet of the Stupid

Exhautive, devastating and much-deserved point by point takedown of Michael Moore’s sadly bogus energy doc. This is the the one I’ll be linking people to, for now.

The fact-checked response is, a film that is not just stupid, but lazy.
“Not only is the documentary bad, it’s old bad.

“All of the stuff in this documentary is ancient”

Ketan Joshi:

The film ‘Planet of the Humans’ opens with the director, Jeff Gibbs, operating a fossil-fuelled combustion engine vehicle, on a road full of combustion engine vehicles, followed up with some footage taken from the International Space Station (fossil fuelled rockets put that in space).

This is not a documentary about the environmental damage that had to occur for Gibbs to go on his drive – it is not mentioned. Nor is it about the harm from fossil fuels.

It is about why renewable energy is bad. I used to work in the renewable energy industry – first, with wind farms and later in research, government agencies and advocacy groups. So it was hard to resist both watching and reviewing this one, considering it launched on ‘Earth Day’, and it has been widely promoted.

Not only is the documentary bad, it’s old bad. Please join me on this journey back in time. It won’t be fun, but I’m glad you’re here with me.

All of the stuff in this documentary is ancient

It is clear that Gibbs has been trying to make this documentary for a long, long time.

“He is currently working on a film about the state of the planet and the fate of humanity”, read his bio, in 2012. It is clear, digging into these early posts, that he very passionately loathes the burning of trees to generate energy – a wildly controversial and genuinely problematic thing, for sure.

But as early as 2010, Gibbs was posting HuffPost blogs extending that into wind and solar, too.

This one, for instance, repeats a bog-standard list of anti-wind and anti-solar memes that, back in 2010, were fashionable among climate deniers. The ‘wind and solar are too intermittent’ meme, for instance, is a great hallmark of that era. “How much variable energy can a grid accept? Around ten percent, twenty percent tops it appears”, he wrote back then. I’d include examples of grids with higher percentages operating without a hitch today, but it feels almost cruel.

The extreme oldness of this documentary stands out. In one instance, he tours a solar farm in Lansing, Michigan, in which a bemused official states that a large farm can only power ten homes in a year.

It is the Cedar Street Solar Array, a 150 panel 824 kilowatt (that’s small) farm in downtown Lansing. Guess when that bad boy was built? 2008. Twelve years ago – an absolute eternity, in solar development years.

As PV Magazine writes, “The film reports on a solar installation in Michigan with PV panels rated at “just under 8 percent” conversion efficiency. It’s difficult to identify the brand of panel in the film (Abound?) — but that efficiency is from another solar era”. Efficiency gains in solar have been so rapid that by leaving the dates off his footage he is very actively deceiving the audience. The site generates 64-64 MWh a year, according to the owner – a more recent installation in the same area generates around 436. The footage really is from another era. It’s like doing a documentary on the uselessness of mobile phones but only examining the Motorola Ultrasleek.

Later, they visit the Solar Energy Generating System (SEGS) solar farm, only to feign sadness and shock when they discover it’s been removed, leaving a dusty field of sand. In the desert. “Then Ozzie and I discovered that the giant solar arrays had been razed to the ground”, he moans. “It suddenly dawned on me what we were looking at. A solar dead zone”.

Which is a weird one, because the latest 2020 satellite imagery shows a site full of solar arrays, and a total absence of any “dead zones”. The damn thing is generating electricity.

Without knowing when the footage was taken, the only likely explanation for this is the pair of dudes visited the site midway through the point at which one of the fields was being removed and replaced with newer models, something which has happened several times over the past few decades.

In a red flag for any veteran of the wind farm debate, Gibbs then uses footage of a collection of old wind turbines – rusted, gross and horrible – to illustrate the short life and lasting damage of these huge spiky bastards.

If you’re familiar with the network of anti-wind farm groups, you’ll recognise that they’re old machines from South Point on Big Island, Hawaii. They were removedin 2012, by the owner of the facility. All that is left now are small hexagonal pads on farmland used by the cattle that roam it:

“Why for most of my life, have I fallen for the illusion that green energy would save us?” It sounds like he’s saying this in 2020, but he is saying it well in the past. Gibbs was posting anti-wind memes roughly 23 full epidemics ago.

Nothing in this is new. With regards to its wind and solar parts, it smacks of 2010s era climate change denial, in which renewables were seen by detractors as expensive, wasteful, low-capacity, heavily corporatised and destined to fail. Things are different in 2020, but the director isn’t. He doesn’t need to be.

Even the ideas are old.

Putting aside the sites they visit and the footage they use, there are some ideas in this documentary that are well worn and highly recognisable memes from the 2009 – 2013 climate denial wonder years.

You can tell when someone’s knowledge of this has formed solely from doing a Google search for “solar panels bad don’t like”, and it really shows in this film.

Early on in the documentary, Gibbs has an exchange with an anti-wind farm protester about coal-fired power:

Protester: You need to have a fossil fuel power plant backing it up and idling 100% of the time, because if you cycle up or cycle down as the demand on the wind comes through, you actually generate a bigger carbon footprint if you ran it straight”

Gibbs: Do you ever go to things where they just go “Oh, that’s not true, it doesn’t matter we’re going to have a smart grid”?

Protester: Doesn’t make any difference, they still gotta– they’re using it. You gotta have it idling. Because, let’s just say the wind stopped right now. Just stopped for an hour. You’ve got to have that power

This extremely silly concept – that coal-fired power stations run at 100% capacity all the time regardless of how much power they output – is so old it hurts my brain. In fact, it was big in 2012, when I came across it in Australian media. It’s wrong. If the power plant generates less electricity, it uses less coal. Gibbs is putting this eight-year-old meme in the microwave and serving it up in for his audience.

Later, he presents the work of a researcher named Richard York, who claims that the addition of renewable energy has no impact on fossil fuel output. I can’t access the paper, which is from – you guessed it – 2012, but the premise is mind-numbingly silly.

Electric grids match supply and demand at all times. Energy generated from one new source has to replace energy generated from an existing source – the grid would collapse, if it didn’t. That is why South Australia’s grid looks like this:

And Denmark looks like this:

Things start to get into proper, outright, anti-vax / climate denier grade misinformation when producer Ozzie Zehner comes in.

“One of the most dangerous things right now is the illusion that alternative technologies like solar and wind are somehow different from fossil fuels”, he tells Gibbs. “You use more fossil fuels to do this than you’re getting benefit from it. You would have been better off just burning fossil fuels in the first place, instead of playing pretend” .

It is, in fact, possible to scientifically examine the emissions associated with making, transporting and erecting renewable energy, and compare it to the emissions saved by using it. There are just so many studies on this, but here’s the Breakthrough Institute’s Zeke Hausfather:

It’s important to be really clear about this: Zehner’s remarks in this film are toxic misinformation, on par with the worst climate change deniers. No matter which way you look at it, there is no chance that these projects lead to a net increase in emissions.

Gibbs attends a solar conference – again in some non-specific year – and is told by a bunch of obviously well-meaning and slightly baffled young renewable energy experts (literally the only young, diverse people in the film) that battery storage is a way of managing intermittency.

“When I looked up how much battery storage there is, it was less than one-tenth of one percent of what’s needed”, he says, presenting a pie chart (augh) of IEA data with a minuscule slice from batteries. But grid scale of batteries doesn’t need massive capacities to be functionally useful for managing the integration of renewables – so it’s a deeply misleading chart.

In checking the information, I can’t find International Energy Agency data for “51 giga BTU” of battery capacity anywhere on their site. 546,000,000 “Giga BTUs” is 546,000,000,000,000 BTUs. which is 160,032,600,000,000 watt hours, or around 160 terawatt hours.

This is ‘primary energy supply’ – how much energy was generated, but includes the quantity of energy wasted through inefficiency. If you only look at global annual electricity – the field in which batteries play – it’s around 20 TWh (they use a similar deception for Germany’s biomass share). So it’s an extra dodgy comparison.

Gibbs has created a self-sustaining argument here. If someone builds a battery storage installation, he can visit the site and monotone sadly about its presence. If someone decides to not build that battery, he can look up the statistics and monotone sadly about the lack of battery capacity.

In an earlier scene, at the launch of the General Motors Chevy Volt (2010, of course), he complains that the cars are being charged by the coal-sodden electric grid of that state – another great example of the infinite loop Gibbs has created for himself, considering his reaction if more wind and solar were built to make that electricity cleaner.

There’s gas, too. They repeatedly claim that shutting down coal plants results in replacement with gas. And in the US, gas has indeed expanded to fill a decent proportion of the gap left by coal:

The UK has a similar thing too, where both renewables and gas are squeezing out coal. But scroll back up to Denmark, above, where a combination of interconnection with other countries, massive wind build-out and coal and gas shutdown has cleaned up the grid. Or Germany, where gas output remains unchanged as coal plants shut down.

There is nothing inherent to renewable energy that makes gas compulsory. All that matter is how the transition is managed. For a long time, gas was sold as a transition fuel, including by organisations like the Breakthrough Institute. But it is becoming increasingly clear that while it might ease change, it isn’t compulsory, and the urgency of decarbonisation has increased.

This film is a long, slow painful monument to laziness

It feels so weird writing about these things again. I feel like I’ve been transported back in time ten years, back to my early days in the renewable energy industry. We’d combat these viral memes every single day.

The industry looks different now. Many wind companies have learnt that insensitive, clumsy development leads to backlash that is harmful for everyone, so they’ve started to clean up their act. Solar developers are figuring out more sustainable pathways than the boom and bust of government subsidies. The human rights issues around mining and materials are becoming more prominent. Renewable companies are taking waste removal seriously.

And then this documentary comes along – a dumb old bull in the china shop that is 2020’s hard-earned climate action environment. There’s a lot of fragile, hard-fought stuff to wreck in there, and Gibbs goes absolutely wild. He’s bulldozing a lot of hard work.

Gibbs obviously has a long-running gripe with biomass, which has a whole range of serious issues associated with it. Though I don’t know the industry well, I suspect many of his gripes there are valid.

But the outright lies about wind and solar are serious and extremely harmful. Wind and solar aren’t just technological tools with enormous potential for decarbonisation. They also have massive potential to be owned by communities, deployed at small scales with minimal environmental harm, and removed with far less impact on where they were than large power stations like coal and gas. They do incredible things to electricity bills, they decentralise power (literally and figuratively), and with more work they can be scaled up to properly replace fossil fuels.

Gibbs isn’t interested in this stuff. No one in 2012 was. He’s armed with a list of dot points from climate denier blog Watts Up With That, and he’s ready to go. The key harm of this documentary is that it does what so many communicators struggle, but fail to do – it presents ideas from one ideological cluster into the world of another. It is very actively and successfully escaping the ‘bubble’, and selling far-right, climate-denier myths from nearly a decade ago to left-wing environmentalists in the 2020s, and going by much of the comments, it seems to be doing well. Gibbs is transcending both time and ideological space, held aloft by a system that provides prominence to mediocrity.

It’s tough to look past how popular this has been. The film’s been boosted because many interviews feature the popular and well-known producer Michael Moore, including on Stephen Colbert’s Late Show. Ludicrously, it received four stars (four. fucking. stars.) in the Guardian, a media outlet normally careful to not boost climate-denier grade misinformation.

All this prominence despite the fact that the film failed to find a distributor, and was dumped onto Youtube instead. “We’ve talked to sales agents. We believe that there will be a tremendous amount of interest in this film… This is going to get distributed. It will be seen”, Moore insisted last year.

It is clear that Gibbs’ starting point was a loathing of biomass, which then turned into a loathing of every single decarbonisation technology (except nuclear power, which isn’t mentioned in the film).

But he ends up at population control – a cruel, evil and racist ideology that you can see coming right from the start of the film. I wish I had the emotional energy to go into it, but I have spent it all. Earther’s Brian Kahn writes:

“There’s a reason that Breitbart and other conservative voices aligned with climate denial and fossil fuel companies have taken a shine to the film. It’s because it ignores the solution of holding power to account and sounds like a racist dog whistle”

The film features a parade of – solely – white Americans, mostly male, insisting the planet has to reduce its population. There is no information provided on which people in the world need to stop fucking, but we can take a guess, based on the demographics of the people doing the asking.

This documentary – particularly the parts on energy, renewables and industry- is extremely bad. It is Jeff Gibb’s 2010 Huffington Post blog drawn out in one hour and forty minutes, which feels like like a decade. I knew it would be lazy, but the magnitude of laziness here is incredible. It it mostly old. It is obviously re-hashing some specific gripes, like its attacks on the nicest guy in the whole of climate activism, Bill McKibben. I feel like I’ve barely scratched the surface and I’m like 2,000 words in. I don’t have the energy to glue together every single fragile thing that this bulldozer has destroyed.

It is the ultimate expression of lazy privilege to make something so void of effort, but so widely viewed and promoted. Criticism will be rebuffed as Not Being Able To Handle The Truth, or the classic We Just Wanted To Start A Discussion. It is still a package of old, dead ideas reheated by someone who knew that he did not need to put any effort into updating his thinking. There was no chance he would be talking to climate activists, talking to young people, talking to experts, talking to community advocates, talking to people from other countries, or really talking to anyone who wasn’t already mostly in his vicinity.

It should have faded off into the pit of Youtube’s unwatched terabytes, but it didn’t, because mediocrity is celebrated, boosted and broadcast if it comes from someone who looks and sounds the right way. That is a serious vulnerability. The hard work of climate and energy advocates, as they grapple with challenges like corporate malfeasance, the impacts of mining and bad development can be shattered by the monotone arrogance of a single person inflicted with the Dunning Kruger effect.

Somber music.

27 thoughts on “Planet of the Stupid”


    1. BTW, I didn’t mean that only your latest two articles are well spotted. Your blog offers a real enrichment of knowledge concerning climate change (denial). So please keep up your high spirit!


  1. There’s a standard scaling error (very common issue in fast response).
    “546,000,000,000,000 BTUs. which is 160,032,600,000,000 watt hours, or around 160 terawatt hours.” S,B.
    “is 546,000,000,000,000,000 BTUs. which is 160,032,600,000,000,000 watt hours, or around 160 petawatt hours”.
    Assuming the claim here is 12.5% of the total for “global annual electricity” (which I find surprisingly small but I’ve never studied) then
    “global annual electricity – the field in which batteries play – it’s around 20 TWh” S.B.
    “global annual electricity – the field in which batteries play – it’s around 20,000 TWh”.
    Really this comment is an excuse to type my excellent numbers again which so far received the total plaudits “Loses something in translation”.
    Here are the actual energies, all accurate within +/- 10% for little numbers and +/- 0.1% for big numbers:
    Gigawatts
    173,300,000 Sun’s input towards Earth at top-of-atmosphere (TOA)
    50,800,000 Sun’s input towards Earth reflected back to space.
    122,500,000 Sun’s input to Earth that isn’t reflected back to space (gets absorbed & heats).
    6,000,000 Moved to Northern latitudes by atmosphere (~90%) and oceans.
    1,000,000 The Gulf Stream water heat moved north (included in the 6,000,000 above).
    2,200,000 Moved to land from oceans by atmosphere.
    396,000 Heater heating Earth ecosphere (oceans) for the last 22 years because “greenhouse gases (GHGs)” have increased, net of pollution chilling.
    393,000 Extra would be heating Earth ecosphere if all “global dimming” atmospheric aerosols air pollution was cleaned up back to 1750 AD pristine per IPCC AR5
    745,000 Extra would be heating Earth ecosphere if all “global dimming” atmospheric aerosols air pollution was cleaned up back to 1750 AD pristine per
    Daniel Rosenfeld, Yannian Zhu, Minghuai Wang, Youtong Zheng, Tom Goren & Shaocai Yu February 8, 2019 paper.
    51,400 HYPOTHETICAL EXAMPLE being the heat addition to the massive 125 Sv flow of the Antarctic circumpolar current (easily the biggest
    flow of water on Earth) for each +0.1 degrees increase of its average water temperature. The top 1,000 m depth of the global ocean
    has warmed on average by +0.10 degrees in the last 22 years.
    43,000 Non-volcano geothermal heat seeping to surface (it’s 0.12 w/m**2 for the ocean sea bed, much smaller on land).
    16,000 Total human electricity production 2018
    18,000 Total human energy production 2012 (IEA) I found a few years ago
    18,266 Total human energy “use” per some April 2020 movie claiming IEA
    8,000 Volcano heat blasting to surface from the lava from 3,000,000 or whatever land & undersea volcanoes.
    It totals ~300,000,000,000 tonnes / year of lava at say 1,000 degrees reaching the surface (per detailed
    plate tectonics calculations below). The heat from this tiny amount of hot rock is utterly negligible as you see from the numbers.
    4,000 Example of what would be added to Earth ecosphere if volcanoes increased a ludicrously huge 50% (they haven’t)
    a ludicrously huge 50% (they haven’t)
    2.5 The active volcanic heat source beneath the Pine Island Glacier on Antarctica.
    -1.04 The dimming shadow of 60,000 Starlink satellites in low earth orbit 630 km up with 100 m**2 of solar PV panels each.
    0.377 Biggest solar mirror concentrator (in some California desert).
    0.06 Fukushima Daiichi reactors Unit 1, 2, 3 total warm cooling water heat into the Pacific Ocean.


    1. I hadn’t realized that steam turbine electricity generating plus line losses was so inefficient & I never bothered to adjust for it in my global heating table. Apparently, it’s actually ~58,000 gigawatts which is 15% of the causes of the present global warming rather than the 4.5% I had before. I was starting to type that if all human energy production was thermal nuclear fission and/or fusion then the global warming would continue at 15% of the current rate but that’s wildly incorrect because it’s a one-shot (phew!) causing GMST to bump +0.09 degrees over a hundred years and then global warming happens in response only to any *increase* in human matter—->energy.


  2. Every critiques of this documentary that I’ve seen does not get the simple FACT that we are massively in ECOLOGICAL OVERSHOOT. Virtually everything advocated by “eco-modernists”, “techno-optimists”, “environmentalists”, “clean energy” champions, and “sustainable civilization” cheerleaders will just exacerbate overshoot. The most important point of “Planet of the Humans” is that we are in ecological overshoot. Everything else — and I do mean *everything* — follows from this. Abrupt climate change is a symptom of overshoot, and it’s a predicament, not a problem.

    I tell people all the time that if they read only one book for the rest of their life, I suggest it be William R. Catton, Jr.’s paradigm shattering 1980 classic, “Overshoot: The Ecological Basis of Revolutionary Change.” It’s the single most important book that my science writer and climate activist wife, Connie Barlow, and I have ever read (nothing else even comes close). You can READ what I have to say about it here: http://thegreatstory.org/sustainability-audios.html#catton and if you want to LISTEN to my audio narration of the entire book, the files have migrated here: https://soundcloud.com/michael…/sets/william-r-catton-jr

    If someone is an environmentalist, liberal, or progressive, the inner emotional and psychological drive to deny, resist, or reject Michael Moore’s movie will be so strong as to be essentially compelling. Why? Because really the only other option is to genuinely allow yourself to grieve, and then perhaps join the ranks of those of us who find ourselves in a “post-doom” world of compassion, generosity, and fearless reverence for life: https://postdoom.com/


  3. The graphs are easier to read in the original posts. On the bottom one, that whitish blue band is about 3/4 nuclear. I think tripling or quadrupling it would be the most effective thing that could be done in the way of reducing CO2.


    1. Even here, right-clicking on a graph and selecting “View Image” will bring it up with somewhat higher resolution.


          1. I’d take any study of how big a carbon footprint a power source has, with a grain of salt, … even ones from my side.There’s just too much emotional investment and ego involved, that makes supposed scientists throw in things like smoke from a-bomb incinerated cities.


          2. There is a vast difference between independent studies going though robust peer-review and industry studies which very often don’t deserve to be called that name.

            Unfortunately, most of the research in investigated meta-studies about the carbon footprint of nuclear are carried out by the industry. And that’s what is ending up in Wikipedia et al. Most of these studies (even independent ones) don’t account for dismantling because it’s “too far in the future” to examine. The Energy Post has a sobering article on this issue => Nuclear power in crisis: we are entering the Era of Nuclear Decommissioning

            Waste management is also missing in many studies. For more than 60 years, the industry can still not provide one final repository for nuclear waste on the whole planet. The German tax payer has to throw billions of euro into the recovery (and they still don’t know whether they actually can recover all waste) of nuclear waste stored in an old salt mine, which was once pronounced as “safe for hundreds of thousands of years”, where now for several years an increasing amount of groundwater is running in. New Scientist has an article about => Radioactive waste dogs Germany despite abandoning nuclear power


    1. 4 billion is a great throw away number. Especially when 7 billion are already depleting the planet to the point the biosphere is collapsing. No. Don’t talk about population. Someone will get upset.


  4. Michael Moore’s own documentaries are very factual so I wonder why he decided to attach his name (eg. “Michael Moore presents”) to this one. Of course, the political-right is already having a “field day” with this offering. Seems right up there with the Climate Gate emails in 2009


  5. I haven’t seen Moore’s documentary, so I can’t speak to how Richard York’s 2012 paper was used, but did you read the abstract of the paper? It does not claim that renewable energy *cannot* replace fossil fuels, it reports that over 50 years each unit of non-fossil-based energy introduced *did not* displace an equal unit of fossil-based energy. His point is that increasing the supply of non-fossil energy, ceteris paribus, does not displace fossil-based energy. In other words, and contrary to the Latour and the Breakthrough Institute’s faith in technological solutions, addressing climate change requires more than just plugging everything in to a different outlet and then going ahead with business as usual.

    Also, York and his colleagues have been pretty staunch critics of the over-population argument, so I would caution against lumping him in with that crowd.


  6. You have countered what you perceive to be misleading and cherry-picked data with your own misleading and cherry-picked data.

    https://ens.dk/sites/ens.dk/files/Analyser/deco19.pdf – Page 21: The Danish government, according to its own data, gets just under 50% of its TOTAL energy from oil and natural gas, and is projected to do so beyond 2030. As an informed commentator you will understand that our atmosphere doesn´t care whether the emissions were produced by electricity or any other purpose.

    https://www.macrotrends.net/2562/us-crude-oil-production-historical-chart – Please explain why US oil and gas production has expanded massively over the last decade (begun under Obama)

    https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics/charts/world-oil-supply-and-demand-1971-2018 Global oil production data from the IEA. Please give your prediction as to when it will start falling.

    You can find Ozzie Zehner on Youtube giving lectures on this topic going back to 2012, with more detailed information, if that is what you are looking for. Or read his book and review that.

    I have checked the data of energy portfolios of Denmark, the Netherlands and Germany and they all confirm what Gibbs is saying. Even in Denmark oil and gas provides more than 40% of final energy consumption and this is not projected to decrease. In the Netherlands it is 82%. So it doesn´t matter that we improved the relative share of renewable energy, because we have not decreased the absolute level of consumption, which continues to rise. There are a wealth of arguments from economics and geopolitics which support this premise which are not even mentioned in the movie. Taken together, the broad weight of evidence supports Gibbs´ and Moore´s argument: renewable energy cannot replace fossil fuel consumption.

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