Posted on 07/01/2013 8:02:01 AM PDT by IbJensen
(After four and a half years, Barack is catching on.)
In a "groundbreaking" speech Tuesday at Georgetown University, Barack Obama rehashed the same anti-Big Oil themes and half-baked energy policies that have marked his Administration since 2009. (See here and here for historical examples.)
One change: President Obama has decided he likes natural gas*, and credits "Federally supported technology", an implicit endorsement of fracking (its name is still as taboo as that other F-word). Hes still not crazy about oil, but since were producing more of it, he may as well claim credit. As for the Keystone Pipeline, more equivocating: this Administration has dithered about the XL permit for longer than it took to build the Trans-Alaska Pipeline over eight frozen mountain ranges.
Now, one thing I want to make sure everybody understands [transitioning to a clean energy economy] does not mean that were going to suddenly stop producing fossil fuels. Our economy wouldnt run very well if it did. And transitioning to a clean energy economy takes time.
I put forward in the past an all-of-the-above energy strategy, but our energy strategy must be about more than just producing more oil. And, by the way, its certainly got to be about more than just building one pipeline [the Keystone XL]. (Applause.)
Now, even as were producing more domestic oil, were also producing more cleaner-burning natural gas than any other country on Earth. And, again, sometimes there are disputes about natural gas, but let me say this: We should strengthen our position as the top natural gas producer because, in the medium term at least, it not only can provide safe, cheap power, but it can also help reduce our carbon emissions.
The bottom line is natural gas is creating jobs. Its lowering many families heat and power bills. And its the transition fuel that can power our economy with less carbon pollution even as our businesses work to develop and then deploy more of the technology required for the even cleaner energy economy of the future.
Beyond the sloganeering, Mr. President, how are we going to do that?
And because billions of your tax dollars continue to still subsidize some of the most profitable corporations in the history of the world, my budget once again calls for Congress to end the tax breaks for big oil companies, and invest in the clean-energy companies that will fuel our future. (Applause.)
Where to begin?
To the extent that the petroleum industry benefits from current tax law which allows some accelerated cost recovery to the industry, which is not unique among industries and not a subsidy the net effect is the current uptick in domestic production of oil. Increase the tax burden, and you decrease the incentive to drill. So you might kill the current boom youve become so proud of.
Plus which, the oil and gas industry is already the second highest- (arguably the highest-) taxed segment of the economy. And the profit numbers are big, not because the percentage profit margins are high, but because American oil companies are among the largest concentrations of private capital on the planet.
Plus which, many of those tax breaks have already been taken away from the "majors", the large, integrated multinational companies that are household names.
Plus which, oil and natural gas are inextricably linked. It would be well-nigh impossible to "split the baby", to tax oil without taxing natural gas.**
So the plan Im announcing today will help us double again our energy from wind and sun. Today, Im directing the Interior Department to green light enough private, renewable energy capacity on public lands to power more than 6 million homes by 2020. (Applause.)
Ive spent too much of my Saturday trying to ferret out the numbers for wind and solar. The Energy Information Administration, the governments compendium of energy statistics, makes it a challenge because they lump wind and solar energy into the category "Renewable Energy". As a category renewables account for about 9% of the nations total energy supply; the lions share is made up of geothermal, hydroelectric and "biomass" (wood and plant-derived ethanol). Wind and solar combined are at the 1-2% level, so doubling their capacity will not be a game-changer.
Since they are not transportation fuels, growth in wind and solar does not displace crude oil as is often suggested. Rather, they will displace the cheapest electricity generating fuel, coal, with the most costly and highly subsidized source.
* Natural gas was never part of Obamas strategy. It kind of snuck up on him, and as it has displaced coal and significantly reduced carbon emissions its appeal is impossible for them to deny. Now he has to embrace it.
Heres an excerpt from my review of Obamas 2010 State of the Union address:
Natural gas is the 800-pound gorilla that the President struggles to avoid. Natural gas delivers everything the President says hes looking for in an ideal fuel: it is abundant, clean and American. Its infrastructure is in-place and the means to exploit it is off-the-shelf. Innovation and technology have increased the assessed resource base by over a third in just four years; we think we have a 100+ year domestic supply at current consumption rates. A commitment to natural gas would put people to work immediately, not speculatively and not years from now.
Its as if a profitable, healthy domestic gas industry would create a problem for the President. As illogical as it may seem, his policies discourage domestic exploration. Obama seems to think that profitable, productive capitalists are a symptom of, not a cure for, the disease that ails our economy.
My message in these pages has been consistent since 2009. Its nice that the Administration is finally coming around, four years late, to embracing the obvious.
** Which reminds me of the story of a one-time leading second-tier integrated energy companies; lets call them Moon Oil Corporation. Along about the late 60′s, early 70′s Moon hired a major management consulting firm to advise it on how best to structure its exploration and production (E&P) business. The consultants ultimate recommendation ran counter to the conventional wisdom of industry old-timers: the shiny-pants MBAs told Moon management that they should restructure their upstream arm into two separate and distinct parts, Moon Oil Company and Moon Natural Gas Company.
It worked about as well as if you split KFC into Kentucky Fried White Meat and Kentucky Fried Dark Meat. Oil and gas are almost always found together, and it is impossible to segregate gas drilling and production from oil drilling and production, no matter how hard you try and no matter how much sense it might seem to make at Harvard Business School or in Washington, DC.
The division of Moon was, of course, impractical, inefficient and duplicative. The separation lasted a few years before the pieces were merged. The company exited the E&P business for good in 1988.
Most of the people in politics couldn't have taken half of the personal character assassination or having their family attacked like Sarah. Yet she still goes after the enemies of the state with vigor. I'm guessing with all the venom spread about Sarah Palin that people are content with Barack Huessian Obama and probably will vote for Hilary Clinton in 2016.
Palin is the one candidate that many of us here know would have moved the stagnant energy status were she in office.
She has an internal integrity to keep on the right track and not get off into the deep end of overreach with government too.
What a refreshing change Sarah would bring to the presidency, but to unravel the web spun by the White Hut denizen will take decades.
Ive spent too much of my Saturday trying to ferret out the numbers for wind and solar. The Energy Information Administration, the governments compendium of energy statistics, makes it a challenge because they lump wind and solar energy into the category “Renewable Energy”.
- - - - - - -
Took me less than a minute.
Table 1.1.A. Net Generation by Other Renewable Sources: Total (All Sectors), 2003-April 2013
http://www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/epm_table_grapher.cfm?t=epmt_1_1_a
“Now, one thing I want to make sure everybody understands [transitioning to a clean energy economy] does not mean that were going to suddenly stop producing fossil fuels”.
“transitioning to a clean energy economy” is a red herring. We are in a clean enetgy economy in every way. Saying we are not makes the falsehood believable, and furthers the notion that “something” has to be done to preserve the planet, when we have already done more for clean energy than econmics should allow and now we are to the point of ridiculous, when contemplating furher measures to cure what isn’t a problem, and will surely cause more trouble economically if pursued base on a falsehood.
First off, who knew that an eia existed? Talk about your bureacratic alphabeticals.
Secondly I value your opinion, what does the chart tell you?
Anyone reading my FreeRepublic posts for years. ;-)
I probably post more information from that source than any other.
what does the chart tell you?
The information this author claimed he could not find, the break down of energy produced by the different renewable energy sources. Wind has grown more than the other renewables, both in percentage growth and actual Megawatthour growth
I remember the cries of Drill Baby Drill as Palin encouraged America to produce its own fuel. And I remember the derision of the Democrats that it would take 12 years of drilling to begin to make a dent.
Well, 6 years later, we are turning the tables with the Democrats doing everything they can to stop it.
Whole lot of treason going on, some for greed, some for Communism, some for the new world order and some are just plain evil.
And we cannot just label it Democrat, because the GOPe is on their side by their actions. We can however label it evil because that label fits all categories.
Anyone reading my FreeRepublic posts for years. ;-)
That would be me, or is that an aye.
Anyway, sometimes the info produced can hide the obvious.
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