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America's Energy Policy: Obstruct Supply, Marvel at Price
HUMAN EVENTS ^ | Jan 30, 2006 | Mac Johnson

Posted on 01/30/2006 9:07:06 AM PST by neverdem

High energy costs are a mystery. It seems like no matter how much we prohibit domestic energy production, energy prices just keep going up -- and we just keep getting more dependent on foreign sources. There is no law of economics that can explain it, no hypothetical relationship between supply and demand that could predict price. Bill O’Reilly must be right. High prices must be the result of a secret plot by big oil, or perhaps the freemasons.

Well, that’s one explanation. Or we could consider a radical alternative: energy prices are high because Americans object to every possible source of energy known to mankind. Energy, it seems, is icky. Not so icky that we want to use less of it, mind you. But icky enough that we don’t want to make it ourselves. Instead, we fantasize about utopian energy sources of “the future,” and pay through the nose today for limited supplies of foreign energy that originate in the most backward, unstable, and faraway places imaginable.

For example, there is oil off the coast of California, but we will not drill for it for fear of disrupting Barbra Streisand’s Feng Shui. We pretend that it is concern for the environment that stops the drilling, but does anyone really believe that it is more dangerous to transport oil for a few miles from an offshore rig to the coast than it is to transport oil from 10,000 miles away to the same coast?

There is oil off the coast of Florida, but we will not drill for it for fear the occasional tar ball might wash up in the front yard of some environmentalist’s million dollar fantasy home, built atop the eroding sands of a once grassy shore. Also, there is a small chance that, on a clear day, a vacationing snowbird might see the distant outline of the rig, thus preventing him from communing with nature while basking cheek by jowl with 500,000 other sunburned barking tourists waddling around the artificial beach like a colony of strange pink walruses.

There is oil in the farthest frozen north of Alaska, but we will not drill for it for fear of offending caribou or Kennedys. And having (more than once) seen abundant deer graze just a few feet from active oil wells in Texas, I can’t believe the caribou will be the ones that actually care.

But that’s OK, because America has enough coal to last for centuries. Except we can’t mine it lest we make a hole. And we can’t burn it because it really is unpleasant to be around. Well, that’s not entirely true. We can burn some coal but not other coal. For example, I once saw a power plant in Indiana that cannot burn the coal mined in Indiana because it is too dirty for the EPA. So instead, they ship in trainloads of “clean” coal from Colorado, which makes less pollution --especially if you don’t count all the diesel fuel that was burned by the train hauling it across half the continent.

Natural gas is a good alternative. It burns cleanly, but nobody wants it transported through their neighborhood. New England still relies upon noxious home heating oil, in part, because none of the states whining about pollution and price want terminals to be built for liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers. They’re scary. Not as scary as Iran building a nuclear bomb with oil money, but scary. So LNG is obstructed at every turn. In one case, Reps. Barney Frank and James McGovern of Massachusetts took a break from bloviating about heating oil costs to propose that a decrepit condemned bridge across the Fall River be preserved as a bicycle path, solely because the bridge is too low to allow LNG tankers to pass on their way to an approved new terminal site, thus killing the terminal. Think of it as Massachusetts’ bridge to the 19th Century. Home heating oil forever! (Or at least as long as Hugo Chavez says it’s OK.)

But we can live without domestic fossil fuels because we are willing to produce practical alternative fuels, right?

Hydropower is emission-free and practical, but it stops up rivers and impedes travel by fish -so no more of that.

Wind power is a great idea -practical in select sites, renewable, and pollution free. But the windmills are ugly. In one of the greatest examples of elitist hypocrisy known to all history, a proposed wind power site off the coast of windy Martha’s Vineyard is being opposed by the wealthy environmentalists that can afford to live there -- people like Walter Cronkite -- because it might interrupt a tiny part of their view of the distant horizon. Sure it might make the world a better, cleaner, safer place -- but what about the beautiful peoples’ ocean views? Also, windmills can chop up errant birds. So that’s out.

Solar? Expensive and impractical in most places, so it’s currently a favorite. It would be perfect for providing electricity to isolated areas -- a market that could fuel the development and practicality of the technology for use elsewhere. But this market is being subsidized onto the general electric grid by the rural electrification act. So instead we’ll just have to subsidize the grid to half-heartedly experiment with solar and feel good about that.

I know: Ethanol! Energy from maize (you call it “corn”) grown in the heartland. Clean burning and good for the family farm. Willie Nelson could finally stop those idiotic “Farm Aid” concerts. Except that modern farming is so dependent upon fossil fuel for tilling, fertilizing, harvesting, and transportation that a recent study showed that it takes more than a gallon’s worth of oil to make one gallon of ethanol -- a lot more. Ethanol as a replacement for fossil fuel is thus a perpetual motion machine, but one with a good lobby in Washington. Being totally unworkable, this is a very popular alternative for “the future”.

But even ethanol isn’t as impractical for the foreseeable future as hydrogen power, which is the President’s favorite idea for “the future”. Hydrogen makes only water when burned. Unfortunately, hydrogen can only be made from fossil fuels (see “perpetual motion machine” above) or the electrolysis of water, which would require an abundant supply of cheap non-polluting electricity, and if we had that, why would we need the hydrogen? Also, if all cars started emitting water vapor, I’m sure water would be reclassified as a pollutant by the “I hate mankind” wing of the environmental movement, complete with terrible predictions about the effects of “global misting.”

There is, though, one source of alternative energy that is practical, economical, well established, and emission-free: nuclear. So of course, that is the one that everybody hates most. Nuclear energy could even fuel a fabled “hydrogen economy” with non-polluting and cheap electricity. But it is scary. The mainstream media has seen to that. It will make you glow in the dark and it could somehow explode for no reason at all, creating three-eyed fish and imparting strange super-powers to anyone bit by the radioactive spiders that would inevitably result.

A coal-fueled power plant emits more radiation than a nuclear power plant (due to uranium ore in the coal), but such facts do not matter in a society that draws its knowledge of nuclear physics from “The China Syndrome” and “The Incredible Hulk.” Nuclear power plants, if built in large numbers, would also make America safer in a little heralded way: they burn the same fuel as nuclear bombs.

Were America to switch from a fossil fuel economy to a nuclear economy for electricity needs, we would consume enough uranium that the world supply would be impacted. Why would the greedy sell uranium to rogue states when America is legally paying top dollar for every kilogram it can find? Such a move could also wreck the economies of the Middle East and make nuclear power too expensive for most third world nations to play with, and I could live with that.

But America will not pursue nuclear energy, any more than it will drill for its own oil. Energy is bad. Instead we will continue to live in a fantasy world in which we do not develop our own oil, coal, gas, hydropower, wind power or nuclear and instead dream about hydrogen and ethanol and solar because we know they are too far off to require us to make real decisions anytime soon. We will continue to restrict supply and then complain about price. We will prohibit domestic energy sources and whine about having to import energy from overseas. And we will continue to stifle our economy and instead fuel the economies of our enemies.

Many critics contend that America does not have an energy policy. But that is wrong. Our policy is clear and has been unchanged for thirty years or more: produce little, use lots, and wonder why things never get better.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: coal; energy; energypolicy; gas; macjohnson; naturalgas; nuclear; oil; wind
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1 posted on 01/30/2006 9:07:08 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem
Our policy is clear and has been unchanged for thirty years or more: produce little, use lots, and wonder why things never get better.
He's right and it's a shame because the GOP is just as guilty as the Dims.
2 posted on 01/30/2006 9:09:49 AM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: neverdem

BTTT.

sigh :(


3 posted on 01/30/2006 9:13:37 AM PST by A message
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To: neverdem
Energy, it seems, is icky.

The left's position in a 'nut'shell! They don't even want windmills spoiling their local vistas!

4 posted on 01/30/2006 9:15:25 AM PST by Rummyfan
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To: oh8eleven

Spot on.

Neither side of the aisle has the backbone to make the correct decision - to become ENERGY INDEPENDENT BY ALL POSSIBLE MEANS.


5 posted on 01/30/2006 9:15:40 AM PST by roaddog727 (P=3/8 A. or, P=plenty...............)
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To: neverdem

Great Post!

Great Article!

President should borrow some for tomorrow night!


6 posted on 01/30/2006 9:16:00 AM PST by The_Republican
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To: neverdem

Wow, that is positively Steynian writing! Great piece!


7 posted on 01/30/2006 9:19:28 AM PST by NonValueAdded (What ever happened to "Politics stops at the water's edge?")
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To: neverdem
we will continue to live in a fantasy world in which we do not develop our own oil, coal, gas, hydropower, wind power or nuclear and instead dream about hydrogen and ethanol and solar

Pretty well sums it all up right there. There are some pretty funny lines in the article though. thanks.

8 posted on 01/30/2006 9:22:05 AM PST by subterfuge (The Democrat party--hating American ideals for 60 years.)
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To: neverdem
"Our policy is clear and has been unchanged for thirty years or more: produce little, use lots, and wonder why things never get better."

Doesn't this also pertain to every other product we Americans use? It's all about international trade and one-worldism. Whether Bill O'Reilly's thoughts or yours are the closest to the truth, you just can't get away from the fact that it's the few controlling the lives of the many.

9 posted on 01/30/2006 9:28:53 AM PST by TheCrusader ("The frenzy of the mohammedans has devastated the Churches of God" Pope Urban II ~ 1097A.D.)
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To: neverdem

Man, that's a good article.


10 posted on 01/30/2006 9:30:36 AM PST by PogySailor (Semper Fi to the 3/1 H&S Company in Haditha.)
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To: neverdem

Communists never sleep. They are behind the anti-energy movement.


11 posted on 01/30/2006 9:31:10 AM PST by MonroeDNA (Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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To: The_Republican
President should borrow some for tomorrow night!
With all due respect ... why? Unless he's willing to override the enviro-whackos there's not much left to be said.
Same goes for all the oil companies who said they're not drilling/pumping domestically because it's not profitable. BS.
12 posted on 01/30/2006 9:40:28 AM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: oh8eleven

The people on the Left scream and howl at using our
natural resources and then scream and howl at Bush
for "fighting a war for oil." This country's future
has been hi-jacked by the prissy Left rich whose lives
resemble those of sniffy country squires residing in
private parks, safely removed from the dirty, disgusting
hoi polloi. "Let them eat cake" has become "let them
ride mountain bikes".


13 posted on 01/30/2006 9:41:44 AM PST by Sabatier
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To: PogySailor; NonValueAdded; The_Republican; A message; All
Man, that's a good article.

I thought so too. It seems to have covered all the bases with satire to boot. Yet it got yanked from the editorial sidebar. Go figure. Someone should post it there again.

14 posted on 01/30/2006 9:43:53 AM PST by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem
Expensive and impractical in most places, so it’s currently a favorite. It would be perfect for providing electricity to isolated areas -- a market that could fuel the development and practicality of the technology for use elsewhere.

Still not a favorite in scales that matter. Solar Two can pump 10 megawatts on average, and actually supplies power 24 hours a day, and it's only a technology test bed. But it takes several acres of land covered with mirrors and has a huge tower and a couple of big tanks in the middle of it, so the environuts aren't too happy.

A cool side benefit is that Sandia (which runs Solar Two) has used the mirror array to heat-test things for the DoD, and cooperation with the military is a definite no-no for the environuts.

Speaking of that, when these things go online, computer security should be paramount. Imagine some one hacking in to redirect the mirror array's multi-megawatt beam at a low-flying airplane. Okay, inverse square says at 20,000 feet the beam wouldn't be nearly as strong, but it could still be damaging.

15 posted on 01/30/2006 9:44:22 AM PST by antiRepublicrat
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To: Dog Gone; okie01

A fine bit of satire.


16 posted on 01/30/2006 9:44:58 AM PST by dirtboy (My new years resolution is to quit using taglines...)
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To: neverdem

Excellent article. We've been trying to drill in ANWR for, what, two decades? I despise liberal whackos.


17 posted on 01/30/2006 9:45:23 AM PST by citizen (Yo W! Read my lips: No Amnistia by any name!)
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To: Sabatier
This country's future has been hi-jacked by the prissy Left rich whose lives resemble those of sniffy country squires residing in private parks, safely removed from the dirty, disgusting hoi polloi.

(I'm an equal opportunity finger pointer.)
18 posted on 01/30/2006 9:46:09 AM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: oh8eleven; roaddog727; The_Republican; TheCrusader
He's right and it's a shame because the GOP is just as guilty as the Dims.

You guys aren't paying attention. The Republicans have been trying to change this for years. Most of it is in the President's energy proposal he sent to the hill. I think the House passed it but don't know about the Senate.

I happened upon Bill O'Reilly's radio program yesterday . I had never listened to him and I knew the voice sounded vaguely familiar but I thought it was some local liberal. He was complaining that the government didn't dictate what kind of cars we could drive and bashing "big oil". I thought this is the most ill informed and illogical idiot I ever heard. Several callers had called him Bill but that didn't ring a bell. Finally one called him O'Reilly and the light went on.

19 posted on 01/30/2006 9:51:38 AM PST by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done needs to be done by the government.)
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To: neverdem

Great post!


20 posted on 01/30/2006 10:10:22 AM PST by talleyman (Kerry & the Surrender-Donkey Treasoncrats - trashing the troops for 40 years.)
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