by Paul Driessen
Between 1989 and 2010, Congress rejected nearly 700
cap-tax-and-trade and similar bills that their proponents claimed would
control Earth’s perpetually fickle climate and weather. So even as real
world crises erupt, President Obama is using executive fiats and
regulations to impose his anti-hydrocarbon agenda, slash America’s
fossil fuel use, bankrupt coal and utility companies, make electricity
prices skyrocket, and “fundamentally transform” our economic, social,
legal and constitutional system.
Citing climate concerns, he has refused to permit construction of the
Keystone XL pipeline, and blocked or delayed Alaskan, western state and
offshore oil and gas leasing and drilling. He’s proud that US oil
production has climbed 58% and natural gas output has risen 21% since
2008. But he doesn’t mention that this is due to hydraulic fracturing on
state and private lands; production has actually fallen in areas
controlled by the federal government, and radical environmentalists
oppose fracking all over the USA.
Above all, the President’s war on hydrocarbons is a war on Coal
Country families. For 21 states that still rely on coal to produce
40-96% of their electricity, it is a war on people’s livelihoods and
living standards – on the very survival of small businesses and entire
communities. The price of electricity has already risen 1-2 cents per
kilowatt-hour in those states, from as little as 5.6 cents/kWh in 2009.
If it soars to the 14.6 to 15.7 cents/kWh paid in “job-mecca states” like California
and New York – which rely on coal for less than 3% of their electricity
– the impacts will churn through coal-dependant states like a tsunami.
Yet that is where rates are headed, as the Obama EPA’s carbon dioxide
and other restrictions kick in. Hundreds of baseload coal-fired power
plants (some 180 gigawatts of electric generation capacity) will be
forced into premature retirement between 2010 and 2020. That’s more than
15% of the United States’ total installed capacity – enough electricity
to power nearly 90 million average homes or small businesses. EPA
assumes it can be replaced by expensive, unreliable, habitat-gobbling
wind and solar power. It can’t.
...So how do the EPA, IPCC, Michael Mann, Al Gore and other Climate
Armageddonites deal with all these inconvenient truths, questions and
skeptical researchers?
They hide their data and computer codes. Complain that they are being
picked on. Refuse to debate “dangerous manmade global warming” skeptics.
Harass and vilify contrarian experts, and boot them off university
committees. Refuse to attend conferences where they might have to defend
their manipulated data, junk science and absurd assertions. Al Gore
won’t even take questions that he has not preapproved.
They have no cojones. They hide behind their sinecures the way Hamas terrorists hide behind children.
EPA won’t even hold hearings in Coal Country or states that will be
hardest hit by soaring electricity costs. It hosts dog-and-pony shows
and “listening sessions” in big cities like Atlanta, Chicago, San
Francisco, Seattle, Washington, DC and Pittsburgh – where it knows
passionate lefty students and eco-activists will dominate. People who
will be grievously impacted by the draconian job-killing regulations
must travel long distances and pay for expensive hotels and meals … or
remain silent and ignored.
This is a powerful column, please read in its entirety.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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