Call it the Gruberization of America’s energy and environmental policies.
Former
White House medical consultant Jonathan Gruber pocketed millions of taxpayer
dollars before infamously explaining how ObamaCare was enacted. “Lack of
transparency is a huge political advantage,” he said. “It was really, really
critical to getting the bill passed.” At least one key provision was a “very
clever basic exploitation of the lack of economic understanding of the American
voter.”
The
Barack Obama/Gina McCarthy Environmental Protection Agency is likewise
exploiting its lack of transparency and most Americans’ lack of scientific
understanding. EPA bureaucrats and their hired scientists, pressure groups and
PR flacks are getting rich and powerful by implementing costly, punitive,
dictatorial regulations “for our own good,” and pretending to be honest and
publicly spirited.
EPA’s
latest regulatory onslaught is its “Clean Power Plan.” The agency claims the
CPP will control or prevent “dangerous manmade climate change,” by reducing
carbon dioxide and “encouraging” greater use of renewable energy. In reality,
as even EPA acknowledges, no commercial-scale technology exists that can remove
CO2 from power plant emission streams. The real goal is forcing coal-fired
power plants to reduce their operations significantly or (better still) shut
down entirely.
The
agency justifies this by deceitfully claiming major health benefits will result
from eliminating coal in electricity generation – and deceptively ignoring the
harmful effects that its regulations are having on people’s livelihoods, living
standards, health and well-being. Its assertion that reducing the USA’s
coal-related carbon dioxide emissions will make an iota of difference is just
as disingenuous. China, India and other fast-developing nations must keep
burning coal to generate electricity and lift people out of poverty, and CO2
plays only a tiny (if any) role in climate change and destructive weather
events.
The
new CPP amplifies Obama Administration diktats targeting coal use. Companion
regulations cover mercury, particulates (soot), ozone, “cross-state” air
pollution, sulfur and nitrogen oxides that contribute to haze in some areas,
and water quality. Their real benefits are minimal to illusory … or fabricated.
American’s air is
clean, thanks to scrubbers and other emission control systems that remove the
vast majority of pollutants. Remaining pollutants pose few real health
problems. To get the results it needs, EPA cherry picks often questionable
research that supports its agenda and ignores all other studies. It low-balls
costs, pays advisors and outside pressure groups millions of dollars to support
its decisions, and ignores the cumulative effects of its regulations on energy
costs and thus on businesses, jobs and families.
Now, for the first
time, someone has tallied those costs. The results are sobering.
An exhaustive
study by Energy Ventures Analysis, Inc. tallies the overall
effects of EPA regulations on the electric power industry and provides state-by-state summaries
of the rules’ impacts on residential, industrial and overall energy users. The
study found that EPA rules and energy markets will inflict $284 billion per
year in extra electricity and natural gas costs in 2020, compared to its
2012 baseline year.
The typical
household’s annual electricity and natural gas bills will rise 35 percent or
$680 by 2020, compared to 2012, and will climb every year after that, as EPA regulations
get more and more stringent. Median family incomes are already $2,000 lower
since President Obama took office, and electricity prices have soared 14-33
percent in states with the most wind power – so these extra costs will exact a
heavy additional toll.
Manufacturing and
other businesses will be hit even harder, the study concluded. Their
electricity and natural gas costs will almost double between 2012 and 2020,
increasing by nearly $200 billion annually over this short period.
Energy-intensive industries like aluminum, steel and chemical manufacturing
will find it increasingly hard to compete in global markets, but all businesses
(and their employees) will suffer.
The EVA analysis
calculates that industrial electricity rates will soar by 34 percent in West
Virginia, 59 percent in Maryland and New York, and a whopping 74 percent in
Ohio. Just imagine running a factory, school district or hospital – and having
to factor skyrocketing costs like that into your budget. Where do you find that
extra money? How many workers or teachers do you lay off, or patients do you
turn away? Can you stay open?
The CPP will also
force utility companies to spend billions building new generators (mostly
gas-fired, plus wind turbines), and new transmission lines, gas lines and other
infrastructure. But EPA does not factor those costs into its calculations; nor
does it consider the many years it will take to design, permit, engineer,
finance and build those systems – and battle Big Green lawsuits
over them.
How
“science-based” are EPA’s regulations, really? Its mercury rule
is based on computer-generated risks to hypothetical
American women who eat 296 pounds of fish a year that they
catch themselves, a claim that its rule will prevent a theoretical reduction in
IQ test scores by an undetectable “0.00209 points,” and similar absurdities.
Its PM2.5 soot
standard is equivalent to having one ounce of
super-fine dust spread equally in a volume of air one-half mile long, one-half
mile wide and one story tall.
No wonder EPA has
paid its “independent” Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee $181 million
and the American Lung Association $25 million
since 2000 to rubberstamp its secretive, phony “science.”
Rural America will
really be walloped by the total weight of EPA’s anti-coal regulations.
Nonprofit electricity cooperatives serve 42 million people in 47 states, across
three-fourths of the nation’s land area. They own and maintain 42 percent of
America’s electric distribution lines and depend heavily on coal. They have
already invested countless billions retrofitting coal-fired generators with
state-of-the-art emission control systems, and thus emit very few actual
pollutants. (CO2 fertilizes plants; it is not a pollutant.)
EPA’s air and
water rules will force these coal units to slash their electricity generation
or close down long before their productive lives are over – and before
replacement units and transmission lines can be built. Electricity rates in
these rural areas are already higher than in urban areas, but will go much
higher. Experts warn that these premature shutdowns will slash electricity
“reserve margins” to almost zero in some areas, make large sections of the
power grid unstable, and create high risks of rolling blackouts and cascading
power outages, especially in the Texas panhandle, western Kansas and northern
Arkansas.
The rules will
thus put the cooperatives in violation of the Rural Electrification Act and 16
other laws that require reliable, affordable electricity for these far-flung
communities. EPA’s actions are also putting rural hospitals in greater
jeopardy, as they try to cope with “Affordable Care Act” rules and other
burdens that have already caused numerous closings. As USA Today
reported, the shuttered hospitals mean some of the
nation’s poorest and sickest patients will be denied accessible, affordable
care – and people suffering strokes, heart attacks and accidents will not reach
emergency care during their “golden hour,” meaning many of them will die or be
severely and permanently disabled.
EPA never bothered
to consider any of these factors. Nor has it addressed the habitat, bird, bat
and other environmental
impacts that tens of thousands more wind turbines will have;
the “human health
hazards” that wind turbines have been shown to inflict on
people living near them; or the high electricity costs, notorious
unreliability, and increased power grid instability
associated with the wind and solar installations that EPA seems to think can
quickly and magically replace the coal-based electricity it is eliminating.
Congress, state
legislators and attorneys general, governors and courts need to stop these
secretive, duplicitous, dictatorial Executive Branch actions. Here’s one
thought. Heartland Institute Science Director Jay Lehr helped organize the
panel that called for establishing the Environmental Protection Agency. In a persuasive
analysis, he says it’s time now to systematically dismantle
the federal EPA and replace it with a “committee of the whole” of the 50
state environmental protection agencies.
The new
organization would do a far better job of protecting our air and water quality,
livelihoods, living standards, health and welfare. It will listen better to We
the People – and less to eco-pressure groups.
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