Fires. Crime. Bad roads, bad schools. Deficits. Illegal aliens. Homeless. City Hall corruption, State corruption. Regulations that caused fires. Government limits on water, causing intensity of fires. This is just some of the disasters facing California due to Gavin Newsom.
“The smoke from these fires is extremely toxic. Hence, to “save” the planet from increased levels of CO2, which is an oxymoron considering the real threat to the planet is when CO2 levels get too low, we are classifying these batteries as green energy. Heck, I remember when increased CO2 levels – greening the planet – was settled science, and greening the planet was a good thing.
Nonetheless, according to a global catastrophic risk analysis we are now threatening neighborhoods with a ticking time bomb that can feature high percentages of hydrogen, and compounds of hydrogen, including hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen chloride, and hydrogen cyanide, as well as carbon monoxide, sulphur dioxide, and methane, among other dangerous chemicals. On exposure to skin or by inhaling, hydrogen fluoride can result in skin burns and lung damage that can take time (hours to weeks) to develop following exposure. Hydrogen fluoride can be quickly absorbed by the body via skin and lungs, depleting vital calcium and magnesium levels in tissues, which can result in severe and possibly fatal systemic effects.”
Everywhere you turn Newsom and his Democrat buddies are killing off California. It is time to turn California from Blue to Red—just to save lives and jobs.
California Chickens Come Home to Roast
by Andy Caldwell, Santa Barbara Current, 1/26/25/ https://www.sbcurrent.com/p/california-chickens-come-home-to?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=2074654&post_id=155741080&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=x9o3&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
Q. What burns hotter than a disco inferno?
A.Fire in a battery energy storage system designed to store electricity from intermittent sources such as wind and solar.
Both Goleta and Nipomo have these battery energy storage facilities and Lompoc may soon have one too; Morro Bay may have dodged the bomb, er bullet. What was once the largest battery energy storage facility in the world just went up in flames and toxic smoke at Moss Landing near Monterey, affecting upwards of 100,000 residents. This latest catastrophe is very important to the renewable energy scheme because solar farms produce too much electricity during mid-day and virtually nothing the rest of the day. If the mid-day surge can’t be stored, the solar energy source must either be shut off or the electricity virtually given away to other states lest it destabilize the CA grid.
In a previous life, I was an industrial relations and safety manager at Union Sugar in Santa Maria. As a result of the passage of Prop. 65 in 1986, along with a series of other regulations, we were required to have extensive safety measures in place to prevent explosions and hazards from harming our employees, our neighbors, and first responders. These CA laws were passed after a horrific industrial-scale accident in Bhopal, India.
Emergency Response Protocol Failure
The premise behind the laws is that protocols and safeguards should be in place to ensure surrounding communities are not endangered by the off-site consequences of industrial accidents. Yet, what was the emergency response protocol for the event that just happened at Moss Landing? Evacuate, shelter in place, and close all the schools in a 70-mile area surrounding the facility. In other words, the plan is to run for your life!
This, even though Gavin Newsom, on Oct 9, 2023, signed legislation to enhance battery storage safety standards after a series of similar mishaps in the state. SB38 requires battery storage facilities to develop an emergency response plan in coordination with local emergency response agencies. That begs the question, why weren’t these facilities already required to have these plans because of the pertinent laws passed nearly 40 years ago? SB38 was only introduced in Sept. of 2022 after a previous fire broke out at the same battery storage facility at Moss Landing.
Then again, what did emergency personnel do to squash the inferno that erupted on Jan 16 at Moss Landing?
Nothing.
They waited for it to burn itself out. This has to do with the fact that these fires are chemical-reaction fires, and throwing water on them can make things worse, via a phenomenon known as thermal runaway. There is no technology known to man to put out these industrial-scale fires. Interstate 15 was closed for two days last summer when a truck carrying lithium batteries caught fire. Other fires, like the one in San Diego this past May, burned for about two weeks. Hence, there is no realistic requirement that these battery facilities have a cogent plan to prevent fires and to ensure there are no off-site consequences.
Yet, our fire departments are signing off on these facilities?
Elevated Toxicity Levels in “Green” Energy
The smoke from these fires is extremely toxic. Hence, to “save” the planet from increased levels of CO2, which is an oxymoron considering the real threat to the planet is when CO2 levels get too low, we are classifying these batteries as green energy. Heck, I remember when increased CO2 levels – greening the planet – was settled science, and greening the planet was a good thing.
Nonetheless, according to a global catastrophic risk analysis we are now threatening neighborhoods with a ticking time bomb that can feature high percentages of hydrogen, and compounds of hydrogen, including hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen chloride, and hydrogen cyanide, as well as carbon monoxide, sulphur dioxide, and methane, among other dangerous chemicals. On exposure to skin or by inhaling, hydrogen fluoride can result in skin burns and lung damage that can take time (hours to weeks) to develop following exposure. Hydrogen fluoride can be quickly absorbed by the body via skin and lungs, depleting vital calcium and magnesium levels in tissues, which can result in severe and possibly fatal systemic effects.
As I indicated in a previous column, these industrial-scale battery energy storage systems are not the only problem having to do with our effort to “go green.” Specifically, in addition to using batteries to store energy, the major efforts to replace the use of fossil fuels relies on the use of lithium batteries in cars, trucks, and bicycles. There are myriad problems associated with the use of these batteries.
Additional hazards arise charging the vehicles, not to mention that dead batteries constitute a toxic waste stream. Regarding battery production plants, there have been several explosions at these plants including in South Korea where 22 workers were killed after a single lithium battery set off a series of explosions.
Western Journal reporter Jack Davis writes that Seneca Insurance company, citing data from across the U.S., reports “there have been 445 lithium-ion battery fires, 214 injuries, and 38 deaths. In New York City, E-bikes were responsible for 267 fires in 2023, 18 deaths, and 150 injuries, citing data from the Fire Department of New York. Over the past three years, lithium-ion battery fires have been the top cause of fatal fires in New York City.”
As Kermit the Frog used to say, “It’s not easy being green.”