Paul Driessen
“That’s
not the American way. That’s not progress. That’s not innovation. That’s
rent-seeking and trying to protect old ways of doing business, and standing in
the way of the future.”
That wasn’t the Wall Street Journal lambasting the
mandate- and subsidy-dependent renewable energy consortium. It was President Obama demonizing critics of his plans to replace
carbon-based energy with wind, solar and biofuels, stymie the hydraulic
fracturing revolution that’s given the United States another century of oil and
gas – and “fundamentally transform” and downsize the US and global economies.
The president
thinks this legacy will offset the Iran, Iraq, Islamic State and other policy
debacles he will bequeath to his successors. His presidential library exhibits won’t likely mention those foreign policy
fiascoes or the ways his energy policies mostly benefit the richest 1% of
Americans, especially political cronies and campaign contributors – while crippling the economy and pummeling millions of families
and businesses that depend on reliable, affordable oil, gas and coal energy for
their income and welfare.
Mr. Obama and
his regulators have already imposed enormous financial, labor, ozone, water,
climate, power generation and other burdens on our economy – mostly with
trifling benefits that exist only in computer models, White House press
releases, and rosy reports from advocacy groups that receive billions of
dollars from his Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Energy and
other agencies. On August 24, he announced another billion-dollar program to force America to produce 20% of
its electricity from renewable sources by 2030: mostly wind and solar, plus a
little more geothermal and biomass.
Those sources
now provide less than 8% of all electricity, so this is a monumental increase.
If the president wants to take credit for any alleged benefits, he must also
accept blame for the abysmal failures.
One of the
biggest is Solyndra, the solar company that got $535 million in taxpayer-guaranteed
loans just before it went belly-up. A four-year investigation found that Solyndra falsified its
financials, sales outlook and other business dealings and omitted material
facts. However, the Department of Energy failed in its due diligence
obligations and apparently buckled under White House pressure to approve the
financing.
Par for the
course, though, the Justice Department will not seek criminal indictments of
any Solyndra officials, nor penalize any DOE apparatchiks for their willing
incompetence. After all, a principal investor in the company (George Kaiser)
was a major donor to Obama campaigns.
Of course, dozens of other companies also dined at the federal trough,
before going under and costing us taxpayers many billions of dollars. But the administration wants more
money and mandates – and more rules that destroy conventional energy
competitors – to drive his climate and “transformation” agendas.
Meanwhile, he
ignores the one truly and steadily innovative business that has generated real
energy, jobs, wealth and tax revenues during his presidency – and largely kept
the tepid Obama economy afloat: fracking. In fact, his bureaucrats are working
to ban the technology on federal lands and regulate it into a marginal role
elsewhere, even as the industry reduces its water use, keeps gasoline prices
low, finds ways to produce oil at $45 per barrel, and proves its practices do not contaminate drinking water.
The president
also ignores inconvenient facts about his “clean, eco-friendly” renewable
energy utopia. For example, wind and solar facilities require vast land acreage
and are increasingly moving into sensitive wildlife habitats, threatening
protected and endangered birds, bats and other species.
The proposed
550-mile Atlantic Coast natural gas pipeline from West Virginia shale gas
fields across Virginia to southern North Carolina would impact about 4,600 acres (12% of the District of Columbia), and nearly
all that land would be restored to croplands or grassy habitats as soon as the
pipe is laid. The fuel is destined mostly for existing gas-fired electrical
generating units on a few hundred total acres. If all that gas were used to
generate electricity, it would produce 190,500 megawatt-hours of electricity
per day.
In stark
contrast, generating the same electricity with wind would require 46,000
400-foot turbines on some 475,000 acres of land – plus thousands of acres of
towering transmission lines to urban centers hundreds of miles away. They would
be permanent and highly visible eyesores and wildlife killers, crossing deforested
mountain ridges and scenic areas, and generating electricity maybe 20% of the
time. Building them would require millions of tons of concrete, iron, copper,
rare earth metals from China’s ruined Baotou region, and petroleum for the monstrous bird- and
bat-chopping turbine blades.
Energy analyst Robert Bryce says meeting the Obama EPA’s Clean Power Plan
emission goals would require blanketing 34 million acres (an area larger than
New York State) with wind turbines.
A 2013 study estimates that US wind turbines already kill
some 573,000 birds a year – 83,000 of them bald and golden eagles and other
raptors. Far better data from Europe, however, suggests that the annual US
death toll is closer to 13 million birds and bats. And our wildlife agencies
exempt wind companies from endangered species and other environmental laws.
More turbines will multiply the carnage.
Moreover, we
would still need the gas-fired units, operating inefficiently on standby
spinning reserve status and going to full power dozens of times daily, whenever
the wind stops blowing. Ditto for solar.
Using solar
panels to generate 190,500 MWH per day would require 1.7 million acres of land
– akin to blanketing Delaware and Rhode Island with habitat-destroying panels –
plus long transmission lines and gas-fired units. Los Angeles recently refused
to buy power from a much smaller 2,557-acre solar project proposed for the Mojave Desert, because of
impacts on desert tortoises and bighorn sheep.
President Obama
never mentions any of this – or the fact that greater natural gas use is reducing carbon dioxide emissions, which he claims have
replaced the sun and other powerful natural forces in driving climate change.
This April, US CO2 emissions fell to their lowest level for any month in 27
years. But now that he’s sent coal marching toward history’s ash heap, natural
gas is next on his target list.
To top it off,
all the billions of dollars, crony corporatism, campaign cash for helpful
politicians, feed-in tariffs and Renewable Fuel Standards (mandates and
diktats) – and all the habitat and wildlife impacts – will raise the wind,
solar, geothermal and biomass share of the nation’s energy mix from 8% today to
only 10% in 2040, to supply our growing population, Energy Information
Administration analysts project.
Since 2006, US
households received over $18 billion just in federal income tax credits for
weatherizing homes, installing solar panels, buying hybrid and electric
vehicles, and other “clean energy” investments. But the bottom 60% of families
received only 10% of this loot; the top 10% got 60% of the total and 90% of the
subsidies and tax credits for ultra-expensive electric vehicles, like the
$132,000 Tesla Model S. Worse, that $18 billion could have drilled wells to
provide safe drinking water for five billion people!
The United
States depends on energy-rich fossil fuels, plus nuclear and hydroelectric
power – not pie-in-the-sky ideas or smoke-and-mirrors solutions to imaginary
climate catastrophes. So does the rest of the world. We cannot afford pseudo-environmental
ideologies, climate fabrications and dictatorial decrees.
Germany’s
Energiewende (mandated energy transformation) program also seeks to replace
coal and nuclear energy with wind, solar and biofuels. It has made German electricity
prices (including $31.5 billion in hidden annual subsidies) nearly ten times
higher than in US states that still rely on coal for power generation. The
program has already killed countless jobs and threatens to send still more
energy-intensive companies overseas – to countries that justifiably refuse to
slash their hydrocarbon use, CO2 emissions or economic growth in the name of
controlling Earth’s eternally changing climate.
Every winter,
German, British and other European policies literally kill thousands of poor
and elderly people who can no longer afford to heat their homes properly. Where
is that vaunted liberal compassion?
Why would the
United States want to proceed lemming-like down a similarly delusional energy
pathway to economic ruin and the needless deaths of birds, bats and our most
vulnerable citizens? Other than reelecting Mr. Obama, what did we do to deserve
this? And how can we undo the damage?
Paul
Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive
Tomorrow, author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power - Black death, and coauthor of
Cracking Big Green:
Saving the world from the Save-the-Earth money machine.
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