Monday, July 8, 2013

Energy Future Gloomy Thanks To Obama

When you declare war on energy, the outcome will be a loss of jobs. Cheap energy allows employers to hire, when expenses go up, employment goes down. However, that does not effect our "job destroyer in chief."


Conservative Tom


Obama’s war on energy intensifies

By MacKubin Owens 07/08/13 03:30 PM ET
Speaking at Georgetown University recently, President Obama made it clear that he plans to intensify his war against American energy producers. That’s right. The American economy may be limping along, with sustained unemployment at record levels; American foreign policy may be in shambles as the Middle East is in flames; and the administration’s domestic scandals may continue to simmer, but the president chooses to use his bully pulpit to announce that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will, in effect, be taking over the American economy to protect “humankind” from climate change. Denouncing those who reject climate change alarmism as akin to the “flat earth society,” President Obama made it clear that he intends to raise energy prices for American consumers. Of course, the inconvenient truth for the president is the fact that, in defiance of “consensus” climate temperature models, global temperatures essentially have been flat for the last 15 years.

The purpose of such models is to predict future outcomes. The problem for the alarmists is that that the gap between their models, which continues to predict that the earth’s temperature will rise because of increased carbon emissions, is so great as to call into question the models themselves. The New Republic, a long-time bastion of global warming alarmism, gets to the heart of the issue when it notes that “scientists themselves aren’t entirely sure what the evidence [of lower than predicted global temperatures] means. If scientific models can’t project the last 15 years, what does that mean for their projections of the next 100?”

Nonetheless, the president forges ahead with his plan to save humanity. In implementing its salvation, his main target is coal. President Obama certainly warned us at the beginning of his first term when he said  “Go ahead and build a coal-powered plant — but it will bankrupt you.”   In conjunction with the president’s speech at Georgetown, his climate adviser, Daniel P. Schrag, stated unequivocally that the administration needs to start shutting down conventional coal plants.
“Politically,” he said, “the White House is hesitant to say they're having a war on coal. On the other hand, a war on coal is exactly what's needed."

Thus the centerpiece of his speech was a directive to the EPA to establish, by administrative fiat, carbon emission standards for power plants, making it unlikely that new power plants will be built. Meanwhile, existing plants, which will have to be retrofitted to comply with new standards, are likely to close. New federal regulations will also affect the construction of factories, commercial buildings, and private homes. In addition, new restrictions on heavy trucks will affect the movement of freight and goods across the country.

The economic costs to the United States will be immense. The Wall Street Journal recently observed that “in general every $1 billion spent complying with an EPA rule threatens 16,000 jobs and cuts GDP by $1.2 billion.” In other words, the net effect of the president’s plan will be to make Americans poorer.

But while the president’s program will drive up the cost of electricity it will have no effect on global climate. Why? Because, even if the climate models were correct in postulating a causal link between increased carbon emissions and higher global temperatures, neither China nor India, countries that rely on coal to generate energy, have any incentive to reduce their emissions, thereby reducing their peoples’ standards of living on behalf of Barack Obama’s policy preferences.

So why would the president insist on forcing such onerous policies upon the United States? One purpose comes to mind: by artificially raising the cost of carbon energy, he can make his beloved, but heavily subsidized, “renewables” competitive. He gave the game away when he said in his Georgetown speech, “the year that I took office, my administration pledged to reduce America’s greenhouse gas emissions by about 17 percent from their 2005 levels by the end of this decade. And we rolled up our sleeves and we got to work. We doubled the electricity we generated from wind and the sun.”

But of course, the reduction in U.S. emissions has little, if anything to do with the miniscule energy derived from wind and solar energy sources. Instead, it has everything to do with something that occurred despite the president’s best efforts: the natural gas revolution, enabled by fracking and multi-directional drilling.

The best commentary on President Obama’s energy policy comes from a mainstream Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV). “It’s not just a war on coal; it’s a war on jobs, it’s a war on America.”
Owens is the editor of Orbis, Foreign Policy Research Institute's quarterly journal of international affairs.


Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/energy-a-environment/309617-obamas-war-on-energy-intensifies#ixzz2YVcl7gMp 
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