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A 'Never Mind' Energy Policy
Townhall.com ^ | December 3, 25010 | Jonah Goldberg

Posted on 12/03/2010 7:36:48 AM PST by Kaslin

"Never mind." That, in a nutshell, is the White House's new position on domestic oil exploration. In March, President Obama announced that he would allow -- or at least entertain -- some new oil development off the Atlantic Coast and in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. This week he reversed himself, saying such exploration is now off the table for at least five years.

Only the most black-hearted cynics among us would even contemplate the notion that Obama had his re-election prospects in, say, Florida in mind when he made his decision. Then again, some believed that Obama's initial decision to consider expanded oil exploration was a political pander, too. So let's assume sincerity all the way down the decision tree.

The real problem with the White House's attitude toward oil, and energy generally, is how deeply ideological it is. Few presidents have talked a bigger game about pragmatism while pursuing a dogmatic agenda.

To be fair, the White House is hardly as radical as many of the Greens descending on Cancun this week for the next round of fruitless climate-change talks. For instance, Kevin Anderson, director of Britain's Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, recently authored a paper in which he argues that Western nations should use WWII-style rationing to simply halt economic growth for the next 20 years in order to curb greenhouse gas production. There's a winning political agenda!

Obama doesn't advocate anything so stark, but that's not necessarily a point in his favor. Radicals like Anderson are honest about the trade-offs between climate-change policies and economic growth. To listen to Obama, however, dismantling our fossil-fuel industries would be an unalloyed economic boon, generating countless lavish, rewarding green jobs that would replace those dirty, icky carbon-intensive jobs. It's not just an argument for a free lunch, it's an argument for a magic free lunch.

Obama admits he has no idea how to get to this Brigadoon-like green economy, and his Energy secretary has conceded it will take quite a few Nobel Prize-worthy scientific breakthroughs to even get close. Details, details.

The only detail missing is evidence. A friend of mine once ran a painting service in college whose unofficial motto was "We may be slow, but we're expensive." That's the story of Europe's pursuit of green jobs. They're inefficient, producing meager amounts of energy at high costs.

It wasn't supposed to work like this. According to Al Gore, we were going to have an energy version of Moore's Law (though not actually a scientific law, Moore's Law refers to the trend of computers to get twice as powerful every 18 months). Gore argued that solar cells and wind power would get drastically more efficient very quickly. Nothing like that has happened or is likely to happen, as the University of Manitoba's Vaclav Smil has demonstrated at great length. Transitions from one form of energy to another, Smil writes at The American (american.com), are "inherently protracted affairs" requiring "decades, not years." And let's remember that Gore once insisted that ethanol subsidies were a fast track to a green economy. He said, in effect, "never mind" about that last month.

Obama won't admit it, but his moratorium is simply supply-side rationing. America should deny itself economic growth despite the fact it has potentially massive oil reserves. Democrats uniformly insist they are fixated on creating good jobs that cannot be shipped overseas. But they're intent on killing oil-industry jobs, which by definition cannot be sent overseas and also pay twice the national average.

Meanwhile, it's becoming clear that the U.S. could be the Saudi Arabia of cleaner-burning natural gas, with an estimated 100-year supply of the stuff (and possibly more). And yet roadblocks to natural-gas development grow by the day. We could make realistic progress on reducing our carbon emissions if we set about replacing coal with natural gas. (At minimum we could and should phase out mountaintop removal coal mining, which among other things would make natural gas more competitive.)

Of course, greens say that climate change trumps such considerations, and that's a principled argument -- flawed in my view but principled. But mainstream politicians and pundits with the courage to make the principled case for rationing are hard to come by.

I'd have a lot more respect for Obama if he came out and said, "You know all that stuff I said about doing everything possible to create good jobs here at home and get this economy moving again? Well, never mind."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: obamaenergy; obamaenergypolicy

1 posted on 12/03/2010 7:36:49 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

The real problem with the President’s energy plan is that it is a bet the farm strategy that leaves our economy estremely vulnerable to the whims of OPEC, leaves energy costs too high for the economy to recover, and funds production costs instead of research costs for energy schemes that aren’t viable yet.


2 posted on 12/03/2010 7:46:03 AM PST by DannyTN
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To: Kaslin

A large portion of this country’s strength relies on plentiful and cheap energy. We are too spread out. We are distant from many of our friends and enemies.

Without plentiful and cheap energy, we become second rate.

But then again, perhaps that is the goal.


3 posted on 12/03/2010 7:57:22 AM PST by cicero2k
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To: cicero2k

Perhaps you would like to delete the “...perhaps...” in you last sentence, then it would be correct!


4 posted on 12/03/2010 8:08:16 AM PST by jennings2004 (Sarah Palin: "The bright light at the end of a very dark tunnel!")
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To: Kaslin

****...wind power would get drastically more efficient very quickly. Nothing like that has happened or is likely to happen...****

Forget those monstrous bird killing and hearing-assaulting wind farms; There is so much wind power (air disturbance) all about - that has not been harnessed or trapped in small, efficient turbines.

Just stand on the shoulder of a busy interstate and realize that a few turbines installed under bypasses and bridges could trap masses of energy from gas-burning trucks and autos just passing through.


5 posted on 12/03/2010 8:29:26 AM PST by sodpoodle (Despair; man's surrender. Laughter; God 's redemption.)
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To: Kaslin
What President 0bama doesn't realize is that oil prices are going to be a huge issue in the 2012 elections. Right now, most of the Pacific rim is in economic recovery and global oil consumption is growing. OPEC believes that oil prices should be higher and is not increasing production. Many other oil producing countries are not increasing their production because of either incompetancy (Venezuela & Mexico), oil depletion ((UK) or a lack of money for investment.

In 2012, oil prices will be significantly higher and those voters in Florida are going to be more concerned about that than environmental issues. 0bama is sealing his own fate by taking an adversarial stance towards domestic energy production.

6 posted on 12/03/2010 9:03:50 AM PST by NRG1973
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To: Kaslin

The Obama/Greenie policy towards energy is NOT an energy policy, but blathering,s from the fairies livin’ in their trees.


7 posted on 12/03/2010 9:23:59 AM PST by rockinqsranch (Dems, Libs, Socialists, call 'em what you will, they ALL have fairies livin' in their trees.)
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To: cicero2k

“But then again, perhaps that is the goal.”
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

Now you’re startin’ to catch on! I’ll offer another clue, you can drop the perhaps.


8 posted on 12/03/2010 1:32:21 PM PST by RipSawyer
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