Following my appearance on the Daily Show, I’ve received emails and phone calls from people who don’t agree with my views about energy and the advantages America’s energy abundance provides—benefits that drive both progress and prosperity.
Some
of the emails can’t be read in polite company, but one that can asked: “Please
explain how energy from mountain top removal, fracking, and tar sands makes
America great.” The word choices Greg selected tell me that he isn’t truly
seeking enlightenment and is instead aiming to antagonize me. The next day, he
sent another: “I have yet to hear back on this simple question. Please
respond.”
It
does seem like a simple question. One I should be able to answer in an instant.
But I didn’t want to offer platitudes. I felt the question deserved a
thoughtful answer. So, Greg, here you are.
I’ve
spent the past couple of days at a conference on “Energy, Economics and
Liberty.” There discussions took place on the energy debate, government’s role,
market solutions, and the geo-politics of energy. About twenty men—all experts
in various aspects of energy—attended. I wasn’t just the only female I was the
only energy advocate. The topics brought Greg’s request to mind and the
conversations helped form the answers.
One
of the participants, Jim Clarkson, wrote an article titled: “The Shale Gas
Paradigm,” in which he states: “Increased access to energy
is a key to economic progress in the undeveloped world.” Similarly, in my book,
Energy Freedom,
I quote Robert Bryce, author of Power Hungry,
who says: “Electricity is the energy commodity that separates the developed countries
from the rest. Countries that can provide cheap and reliable electric power to
their citizens can grow their economies and create wealth. Those who can’t,
can’t.”
Senate
Major Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) once said: “Oil and gas are making us sick.” But
I contend that they—along with coal—are the very things keeping us well. In Energy
Freedom’s introduction, I point out: “Energy saves lives. When fire
strikes or hurricanes are bearing down upon a city, it is energy—in this case
in the form of gasoline—that allows people to drive away and escape death. …
When weather is extreme, it is energy—usually in the form of electricity (most
frequently from coal or natural gas)—that keeps people alive. Air conditioning
allows people to live in comfort in Arizona in the summer. Heating keeps people
from freezing to death in Alaska in the winter. Energy keeps us well. Energy
makes us comfortable.”
The
Energy, Economics and Liberty conference was hosted by the Liberty Fund. On its
website, it offers this definition of
liberty: “the beginning and the source of happiness from which all beneficial
things flow in return.” Much like liberty, energy is the source from which many
beneficial things flow. Energy has been a source of America’s freedom, a big
part of what has made America great.
The
conflicts in Ukraine have made the importance of energy freedom clear. Because
of being on the Daily Show talking about fracking, I’ve been given other
opportunities to address the topic. One was with former Minnesota Governor
Jesse Ventura for his show Off the Grid. At the end of the
twenty-minute interview, he asked me for closing comments. I said something
like: “Because of fracking, OPEC would never be able to use energy as a weapon
as it did to America in 1973 and as we see Russia doing to Ukraine today.”
Greg’s
email to me used terms that lead to three different energy sources: coal,
natural gas, and oil—and each have been big contributors to America’s progress
and prosperity. Each has made the personal lives of Americans more pleasant and
less painful. Together these energy sources have made America energy secure.
The
email used the term “mountain top removal,” which is a method by which coal can
be mined. It is safer than underground mines because it removes the risk of
mine accidents, the horror of which we’ve recently witnessed in Turkey. (Note: America has far more
stringent mining regulations today than does most of the world.) Greg likely
selected the term “mountain top removal” because it sounds harsh. In fact, in
the mountainous regions of Eastern Kentucky and West Virginia, this surface
mining process allows for hospitals, housing developments, shopping centers to
be built—all which bring more economic development and much needed jobs.
I’ve
toured regions where “mountain top removal” is being done and stood on top of
the massive coal seam. The procedure is amazing. Picture the region like lots
of upside down ice cream cones next to each other. Hills and valleys—but no
place to create a community. In that mountain is a thick layer of coal that
goes all the way through the mountain, north to south, east to west. To access
it, the dirt, the tip of the ice cream cone, is taken off and the coal is
removed.
In
the past, when the coal had been extracted, a private landowner could ask the
mining company to level out the land—making it economically productive.
However, today’s regulations take away that property owner’s rights and require
that the mountain be rebuilt and put back to its original condition. If the
landowner wants to turn his land into a housing development, he then has to
incur the expense of, once again, removing the peak and leveling the land.
The
coal provides, and has provided, America with low-cost, base-load
electricity—which, as we’ve already addressed, has given us a competitive
advantage in the global marketplace and unmatched personal progress. And,
therefore, energy from mountain top removal makes America Great.
Fracking—short
for hydraulic fracturing—combined with the amazing technology of horizontal
drilling, has brought America into a new era of energy abundance. Clarkson
states: “Gas using industries are expanding while we enjoy a distinct advantage
over the rest of the world.” He explains: “Shale gas lay worthless beneath the
earth’s surface for the whole of man’s previous existence until human
intelligence made it valuable”—and that was done with fracking.
One
of the definitions of liberty found at Dictionary.com is: “freedom from
arbitrary or despotic government or control.” Clarkson points out: “There were
no federal programs with subsidies, tax breaks, and mandated markets to favor
the shale industry. …The new shale order of things is a triumph of free
enterprise over government planning. The shale revolution shows that the good
old American know-how and individual initiative that made this country great
have survived the burden of big government and can still create economic
miracles.” Clarkson closes with: “Some observers are already calling this the
century of natural gas. This could also be the century of prosperity, free
markets, and optimism as America regains its energy mojo.”
Unlike
the pariah Greg presumes fracking to be, it is responsible for the shale gas
phenomana.
Last,
Greg asked about tar sands and how they make America great. Tar sands, or oil
sands, allow America to get oil from our friendly Canadian neighbor and reduce
our need to import OPEC’s oil. We then refine that oil into gasoline, diesel,
and jet fuel that fuels our transportation fleet—something that wind and solar
power cannot do.
I
have been to the oil sands of Canada and what they are doing there is, like
fracking and horizontal drilling, a technological miracle.
If
you have ever walked on a California beach and stepped on a tar ball (created
when the oil seeps out of the ground and is washed ashore mixed with sand), you
have a clue what the tar sands are like. The naturally occurring tar sands are
a layer in the earth (much like coal). This layer has raw crude oil mixed with
the dirt/sands. I recall driving to the tar sands from the town where we
stayed. As the elevation increased, I noticed that trees reached a certain
height and then died. It was explained that as soon as the roots hit the
bitumen (or tar) it kills the tree.
At
the extraction site, the tar sands are bulldozed and dumped into giant trucks
(much like surface coal mining). The tar and sand mixture is processed to
separate the oil and the sand. (Think of taking that tar ball from the beach
and boiling it. The oil melts and floats while the sand drops to the bottom.)
The oil is now available for use and the clean sand is put back into the
earth—only now the trees can actually grow. The reclaimed land is teeming with
wildlife that lives in the healthy forest the extraction process provides. As a
result, when the Keystone pipeline is approved, America would be far less
dependent on people who aim to do us harm and OPEC couldn’t cause an instant
recession as it did in 1973. Plus, Keystone will be safer and cheaper—not to
mention creating more jobs—than shipping the oil via rail as we are currently
doing.
And
that, Greg, is how tar sands can make America greater.
Yes,
mountain top removal—or coal; fracking—or natural gas; and tar sands—or oil,
make America great. The use of natural resources are a part of liberty: “freedom from control,
interference, obligation, restriction, hampering conditions, etc.; power or
right of doing, thinking, speaking, etc., according to choice.”
People
like Greg want to interfere, restrict, and hamper North America’s energy
abundance—which will take away America’s ability to provide cheap and reliable
power to her citizens and take away the ability to grow the economy and create
wealth. Why would anyone want to do that?
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment