Editor' Note: I recently met and talked to Stephen and asked his permission to republish his work, which he graciously permitted. RK
"The United States of America cannot afford to bet our long-term
prosperity, our long-term security on a resource that will eventually run out,
and even before it runs out will get more and more expensive to extract from
the ground." -- Barack Obama, 2011.
In August 1859 on the eve of the Civil War, Col. Edwin Laurentine Drake
completed the first commercial oil well in the United States on Oil Creek just
outside of Titusville, Pa. Over the next century and a half, oil and gas
companies have extracted tens of billions of barrels of oil from the ground
from California to New York and nearly everywhere in between.
During that time period, one thing has been constant: Doomsayers and
declinists have predicted that we would soon drill the last barrel of oil. Famously
in the 1920s, the U.S. Department of Interior projected less than a few decades
worth of recoverable oil in the United States. Jimmy Carter declared in 1980
that by 2000 we'd be nearly out of oil -- running on empty.
Last month, the Department of Energy reported that the U.S. hit a new
energy milestone: We produced 9.52 million barrels a day. That was very close
to the highest output level in recorded history. So much for running out.
Something else has happened in recent weeks that almost no one -- least of
all President Obama -- would have predicted. The price of oil fell below $40 a
barrel. Adjusted for inflation, that makes oil cheaper today than at almost
anytime in history. Adjusted for wages, we work less to buy gasoline and oil
today than nearly ever before.
Welcome to the age of oil and gas abundance. One of the people who
predicted all of this 40 years ago was the late, great economist Julian Simon.
When cultural icons like doomsayer Paul Ehrlich of Stanford University were
assuring us that the end was nigh when it came to oil, food, copper, tin and
farmland, and that the earth would soon be freezing over because of cooling
trends, it was Julian Simon who declared they were all wrong. He was regarded
as a lunatic, in today's left-wing jargon, a "denier," but he was
right, and the "scientific consensus" was entirely and almost
negligently wrong.
The experts at the Institute for Energy Research recently published an
inventory of American energy given current technological capabilities. Their research
shows that we have 500 years worth of coal and natural gas and at least 200
years worth of oil. The wellspring of energy in America will never run dry.
The reason we never run out of "finite" resources is that human
ingenuity runs forward at a far faster pace than the rate we use up oil, gas or
food. The shale oil and gas revolution -- thanks to fracking technologies --
nearly tripled overnight our oil and gas reserves. We now produce three times
as much food with one-third as much manpower at one-third the cost than we did
in 1950.
That the left-wing doomsayers have been time and again discredited in their
Malthusian warnings has several policy implications. First, would you keep
buying stock from a broker who kept giving you all the wrong advice and losing
your money?
Then why do we listen to the same crowd of doomsayers who still say we are
running out of oil or that the earth is going to heat up into a fireball? Their
credibility and their "scientific consensus" have rarely been right.
They are like the boy who cries wolf over and over.
Second, there are high costs to false fears. President Obama has many times
justified the $100 billion we've wasted on renewable energy subsidies by the
claim that we're running out of oil.
Third, many of the same Malthusians who told us we were running out of oil
and food are the intellectual giants behind the global warming industry. These
are the ones who say that the debate is over on global warming, that they can't
possibly be wrong, that the science is settled and that those who question
their religious-like conviction have been bought off by the Koch brothers or
big oil. Given their abysmal track record, is it asking too much of them to
consider that they might just be wrong?
Several years ago, I declared on a television show that America will never
run out of oil and gas, and that our supplies are inexhaustible. I was flooded
with angry letters and emails. My favorite note came from a junior high school
science teacher who wrote me: "How could you say such a stupid thing? Even
my sixth-graders understand that oil is a finite resource." Well, a
sixth-grader might believe that tripe.
What is disconcerting is that the president of the United States, the media
and many "scientists" still believe it. Paul Ehrlich once said that
one thing the world will never run out of "is idiots." Alas, he was
right for once.
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