By Alan
Caruba
September
19th was an anniversary you did not read or hear about in the
nation’s news media. It marked six years—2008—since the first permit
application for the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline was submitted to
the federal government. Can you imagine how many jobs its construction would
have created during a period of recovery from the 2008 financial crisis?
President Obama is universally credited with delaying it.
Thomas
Pyle, the president of the American Energy Alliance, pointed out that World War
II, the construction of the Hoover Dam, and the Lewis and Clark Expedition all
took place in less time. In a September Forbes article, he noted that “Earlier
this year a Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 65 percent of Americans
support building the pipeline, while only 22 percent oppose it. In Washington
three-to-one margins are usually referred to as mandates.”
In
contrast, in March 2013 the then-Interior Secretary of the Interior, Ken
Salazar, boasted “In just over four years, we have advanced 17 wind, solar, and
geothermal projects on our public lands.”
It is not these projects that Americans depend upon for energy. The
opposite is a stark explanation why coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear energy
remain the heart blood of the economy.
The Daily Caller reported in July that the “U.S. Bureau of Land Management is currently
sitting on a backlog of 3,500 applications that need approval to move forward
on drilling for oil and natural gas on federal land,” just part of Obama’s war
on U.S. energy.
According
to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, fossil fuels met 82% of U.S. energy demand in 2013.
Petroleum,
primarily used for transportation, supplied 36% of the energy demand in 2013.
Natural gas represented 27%. Coal represented 20% and generated almost 40% of
all electricity. In the six years since Obama took office that is a loss of
10%!
The much
ballyhooed “renewable sources” of energy, justified by the false claim that carbon
dioxide emissions are causing global warming or climate change, are a very
small part of the nation’s power providers. Wind power represented 1.6% and
solar power represented three-tenths of 1%! Hydropower supplied 2.6% making it
the largest source of so-called renewable energy.
Politically,
it has been Democrats advocating renewable sources and siding with the
President’s delay of the oil pipeline and the Environmental Protection Agency’s
assault on coal-fired plants to produce electricity. By contrast, the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives has been busy putting forth
legislation to fix aspects of our energy problems and needs.
Some of
the bills that were introduced included H.R. 2728: The Protecting State’s
Rights to Promote American Energy Security Act; H.R. 3: The Northern Route
Approval Act (regarding the keystone XL Pipeline; H.R. 1900: The Natural Gas
Pipeline Permitting Reform Act; H.R. 2201: The North American Energy
Infrastructure Act; and H.R. 6: The Domestic Prosperity and Global Freedom Act,
intended to expedite the export of liquefied natural gas to our allies around
the world. The global market is growing at a colossal pace.
These
bills will likely all die in the U.S. Senate, controlled by the Democratic
Party. The Nov 4 midterm elections can change that if enough Republicans are
elected to gain control.
It’s not
just natural gas that is helping the economy improve. The Financial Times
reported in late September that “The U.S. is overtaking Saudi Arabia to become
the world’s largest producer of liquid petroleum, in a sign of how its booming
oil production has reshaped the energy sector.” Why? “The U.S. industry has
been transformed by the shale revolution, with advances in the techniques of
hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling enabling the exploitation of
oilfields, particularly in Texas and North Dakota.”
The only
places you won’t find oil drilling are on federally controlled lands. The same
holds for coal and natural gas.
This is in
keeping with a virtual war on U.S. energy waged from the White House. Consider
what we have witnessed:
# Obama
has refused to let the Keystone XL pipeline be built.
# Billions
wasted on loans to renewable energy companies, many of which like Solyndra and
Solar Trust of America went bankrupt.
# Obama
made electric cars like the Chevy Volt part of his energy policy, providing
subsidies but their high cost and low mileage capacity has resulted in few
sales.
# Obama
and the EPA advocated a cap-and-trade tax on greenhouse gas emissions when
there has been no global warming for 19 years and carbon dioxide plays no role
whatever in the Earth’s climate.
# The
Obama administration terminating the construction of a nuclear waste repository
at Yucca Mountain in Nevada despite nearly $15 billion already spent on this
necessary repository.
These are
just a few examples, but in the meantime, the U.S. still requires that a
valuable food commodity, corn, be turned into ethanol, an automotive fuel
additive, that (a) reduces the millage in every gallon and (b) increases its
cost at the pump. As Seldon B. Graham, Jr., a longtime energy industry
consultant and observer, notes that “Ethanol production peaked in 2011 at 6% of
total oil demand.” Favoring replacing imported foreign oil with American oil,
Graham says “Americans would have saved $64.7 billion on the oil price since
2009.”
Americans
are afflicted by a President and his administration that for political and
environmental reasons are costing them trillions in needless, senseless energy
costs, loans and subsidies, and efforts to impose laws that have no basis
whatever in science.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
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