In
this hyper-partisan environment, it is good to know that a majority of Senators
can still agree on an issue. When such a rare moment happens, the rest of us should
pay attention, as it is probably something very important.
On
September 11, 53 Senators (43 Republicans and 10 Democrats) signed a letter to Gina
McCarthy, Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), begging
for a 60-day extension of the comment period for the “Carbon Pollution Emission
Guidelines for Existing Stationary Sources: Electric Generating Units”—also
known as the Clean Power Plan (CPP). The original 120-day comment period—which
is already longer than the traditional 60-day comment period—is coming to a
close within the next 30 days (October 16).
Regarding
the EPA’s new plan, the letter calls the coordination needed between multiple
state agencies, public utility commissions, regional transmission
organizations, and transmission and reliability experts: “Unprecedented,
extraordinary, and extremely time consuming.” The Senators ask for more time so
that states and stakeholders can “fully analyze and assess the sweeping impacts
that the proposal will have on our nation’s energy system.” It also points out:
“The EPA proposal provides no mechanism for adjusting the state emission rate
targets once they are adopted”—which makes it imperative that the states can
fully “digest” the rule, review the 600 supporting documents, and collect the
data and justification for the states’ responses.
It
is not just the majority of Senators who have concerns about the EPA’s proposed
rule, a diverse and growing coalition,
including the Exotic Wildlife Association, the
Foundry Association of Michigan, California Cotton Growers Association, Texas
Aggregates and Concrete Association, The Fertilizer Institute, Georgia Railroad
Association, Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation, electric utilities and co-ops,
and city and state Chambers of Commerce from coast-to-coast, has sprung up in
opposition to the plan. Yet most people are unaware of the potential impacts or
of the pending deadline for public comment.
I
have written on the CPP twice in the past few months—originally when
it was first announced on June 2 and then after I
gave testimony in Atlanta at one of the EPA’s four scheduled “listening
sessions.” Upon release, we didn’t really know much—after all, it is, as the
Senators’ letter explains, complex and sweeping. But as more and more
information is coming out, we see that the impact to the economy and U.S.
energy security will be devastating.
Despite
my efforts to spread the word—with my second column on the topic being one of
my most popular ever, I find that the CPP isn’t even on the radar of the
politically engaged (let alone the average person). Because this is an issue of
utmost importance, I am, once again, bringing it to the attention of my readers
with the hope that you will share it with everyone you know. At this point, we
don’t know if the EPA will extend the comment period, so please take time now
to get your comments in.
The Hill reports:
“Adding 60 days to the comment period could make it harder for the EPA to
finalize the rule by June 2015, as President Obama has ordered.”
I’ve
written this week’s column with the specific intent of giving you verbiage that
you can simply cut and paste into the comment form.
The
CPP will radically alter the way electricity is generated, transmitted,
distributed and used in America—all with dramatic cost impacts to the consumer.
It is based on the discredited theory that climate change is a crisis caused by
the use of fossil fuels emitting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. It aims to
reduce overall carbon dioxide emissions by 30 percent below 2005 levels by
2030. The combination of the CPP and previous regulation will shut down more
than 40 percent of coal-fueled generation—representing 10 percent of all
electricity-generation capacity—within the next 6 years.
What
will this forced, premature elimination of America’s electric capacity do?
The
proposed EPA plan will seriously threaten America’s electric reliability
Unless
the EPA backs down on its harsh regulations and coal-fueled power plants get a
reprieve, blackouts are almost guaranteed—especially in light of the projected
cold winter. About the 2014 “polar vortex” that crippled the U.S.,
Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski, at an April Senate hearing on grid
reliability, stated:
“Eighty-nine percent of the coal electricity capacity that is due to go offline
was utilized as that backup to meet the demand this winter.” Murkowski’s
comments were referencing coal-fueled power plants that are already due to be
shut down based on regulations from five years ago, before the proposed CPP
additionally reduces supply. Affirming Murkowski’s comments, Nicholas Akins,
president and CEO of Ohio-based American Electric Power Company Inc., sees the
2014 near crisis as a warning sign. At that same hearing he said: “The weather events
experienced this winter provided an early warning about serious issues with
electric supply and reliability. This country did not just dodge a bullet—we
dodged a cannonball.” And, Federal Energy Regulatory Commissioner Philip
Moeller said: “the country is undergoing an unprecedented energy shift in a
very short time frame.” And added: “grid operators in the Midwest are
struggling to gauge whether they will have sufficient capacity to handle peak
weather during the next five years.” While these comments are about the 2014
severe cold, Texas experienced a similar scare in 2011,
when a protracted heat wave resulted in razor-thin reserve electric capacity
margins. A Reuters report titled: “Heat waves pushes Texas power grid into red
zone,” stated: “Texas
has the most wind power in the country, but the wind does not blow during the
summer.” Just a few months earlier, Texas ice storms forced rolling blackouts
for hours because electric supplies dropped below demand.” All of these reports
are before the projected closure of an additional
75 megawatts of coal-fueled electricity generation due to the new regulations.
If McCarthy was serious when, prior to the release of the proposed regulations,
she stated:
“Nothing we do can threaten reliability,” she’d withdraw this plan, as it will
do just that.
The
proposed EPA plan will chase away more American industry
While
the CPP appears to be about forcing the power sector into reducing
carbon-dioxide emissions, there are spillover impacts of higher electricity
rates on overall economic activity—especially energy-intensive industries such
as steel, manufacturing, and chemicals. America’s abundance of affordable,
reliable energy provides businesses with a critical operating advantage in
today’s intensely competitive global economy. The EPA’s proposal will reduce
America’s advantage, as it’s acknowledged that the proposed regulations will
raise electricity rates in the contiguous U.S. by 5.9% to 6.5% in 2020.
Europe, and especially Germany, is threatened by an industry exodus
due to its higher energy costs that have been created by its move to increase
green energy. Germany’s pharmaceutical and chemical giant Bayer is already
making significant investment in its Chinese manufacturing operations, with
expansion also taking place in Brazil and India. If industry continues to leave
the U.S., the CPP will have the opposite effect. Emissions will increase as
companies move to countries with lower labor costs, cheaper energy, and lax
environmental policies. An additional unintended consequence will be more jobs
lost in manufacturing.
The
proposed EPA plan will kill hundreds of thousands of jobs
In
late July, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW)
International President Edwin D. Hill said: “If these rules are implemented as
written, dozens of coal plants will shut down and with no plans to replace
them, tens of thousands of jobs will be lost and global carbon emissions will
rise anyway.” Investor’s Business Daily reports: “The
IBEW has now joined the United Mine Workers of America, the Boilermakers and
several other unions opposed to the new anti-carbon rules.” The United Mine
Workers of America has estimated that
the rule will result in 187,000 direct and indirect job losses in the utility,
rail, and coal industries in 2020 and cumulative wage and benefit losses from
these sectors of $208 billion between 2015 and 2035. The EPA rules hitting
industry in rapid succession create uncertainty—and,
as we’ve seen with Obamacare—uncertainty
thwarts investment and hiring. The same industries that will be taking the
regulatory hit from the CPP, are expecting additional impacts from the
follow-on rules that are yet to be promulgated. No wonder the economy is
sluggish and the jobs picture is bleak.
The
proposed EPA plan will cause harsh economic consequences while having virtually
no impact on the reported goal of stopping global climate change
From
increased energy costs to job losses, the CPP will damage the economy. A statement from
the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers on the EPA proposal, points
out: “estimates regarding the damage to jobs and the economy created by poorly
planned climate regulations have consistently been shown to be true in
comparison to the overly optimistic predictions made by the EPA.” Perhaps these
economic consequences would be worth it, if they actually did anything to
really reduce carbon-dioxide emissions—assuming what humans breathe out and
plants breathe in is actually the cause of global warming. But even the EPA
acknowledges that the CPP is less about reductions and more about being a global leader
to “prompt and leverage international decisions and action.” In Hillary
Clinton’s September 4 speech at
Senator Harry Reid’s National Clean Energy Summit, she stated that the U.S.
needs to lead other countries in green energy and that we need to show the
world we are committed. Yet, the U.S., which did not ratify the Kyoto Protocol,
is the first country
to actually reduce carbon dioxide emissions and meet the Kyoto requirements. We
are already a leader, but the other countries aren’t following—instead they are
abandoning the sinking green ship and Germany, which claims to still be
committed to the green ideology, is actually increasing its
number of coal-fueled power plants and CO2 emissions. Carbon dioxide
emissions from non-Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries—such as China and
India—are projected to grow by nine billion tons per year. The Partnership for
a Better Energy Future reports: “for
every ton of CO2 reduced in 2030 as a result of EPA’s rule, the rest
of the world will have increased emissions by more than 16 tons.” Our reduction
in 2030 would offset the equivalent of just 13.5 days of carbon-dioxide
emissions from China. The CPP will become the definition of “all pain and no
gain.” Or, as economist Thomas Sowell calls it: “replacing what worked with
what sounded good.”
The
EPA’s October 16 deadline will be upon us before you know it. Take a few
minutes now to send them your comments. Pick
any of the above suggestions, customize them as you please, and send them on to
the EPA. For America to grow, we need energy that is effective, efficient, and
economical, rather than that which is threatened by the EPA’s flood of
excessive and burdensome regulations.
The
author of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon serves as the
executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc.
and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy
(CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers
regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life. Combining
energy, news, politics, and, the environment through public events, speaking
engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s
voice for energy.
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