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Calling All Consumers: It’s Time To Recall Our Failing Energy Policies

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Calling All Consumers: It’s Time To Recall Our Failing Energy Policies

Authored by David Holt via RealClear Wire,

Last year was the latest in a string of bad years for energy proposals. Before we continue down this path, it’s time to add a healthy dose of reality to the national conversation about energy and environmental policy.Β 

Make no mistake, we are in an exciting, evolutionary moment for energy and the environment. Wind and solar power are coming onto the grid at a breakneck pace, carbon capture and storage is taking off, emissions are continuing their rapid decline.Β America is helping lead the world in carbon reduction, and innovations in energy technologies are improving performance and efficiency.Β 

Our national issue with all this is how to properlyΒ captureΒ theseΒ advancesΒ in a smart, consistent and reality-based way, so we canΒ meetΒ our economy’s growing energy demands without hurting families by making energy less affordable and reliable. This isΒ aΒ scientific and engineering challenge atΒ aΒ grand scale, something America has traditionally excelled at solving.

TheΒ greatΒ disconnectΒ is howΒ our energy discussion is framed. Β 

For too many years,Β theΒ fact-free,Β illogicalΒ andΒ ideological demandsΒ ofΒ extremistsΒ have played an oversized role in our energy policy dialogue.Β The modern formΒ ofΒ extremeΒ activism is rarelyΒ about the stated goal – in this caseΒ environmental protection. It is increasingly designed toΒ block economic activity, thwart responsible solutions, andΒ scold people into making radical changes.Β 

The simple fact is we can, must andΒ are marching towardΒ a lower carbon future, while producing more oil and natural gas than ever, and diversifying our energy economy with more wind, solar and soon, nuclear.

I’ve often wondered why the marketplace of ideasΒ is not whereΒ extreme activist groupsΒ want to make their case. TheyΒ preferΒ creating villainsΒ and false choices,Β pittingΒ energy progressΒ and environmental progress against each other,Β stokingΒ emotions, orΒ turning to ad hominem attacks.

Tiresome andΒ solutionless,Β disaster strikes whenΒ theirΒ false furorsΒ holdΒ too muchΒ sway:Β In 2022, we got a year ofΒ near-recordΒ energy pricesΒ thatΒ fueled the highest inflation in 40 years, dozens of statesΒ warning ofΒ electricity brownouts or blackouts, andΒ decliningΒ emissionsΒ performance.Β 

Rather than following this false narrative, data, economic impactsΒ andΒ rigorous, continualΒ testingΒ (i.e.,Β theΒ scientific method)Β should beΒ centralΒ tenets of ourΒ energy and environmentalΒ conversation.

IfΒ they were,Β no one wouldΒ entertainΒ attempts to ban natural gas,Β asΒ has been proposedΒ in New York, CaliforniaΒ and other states. Nor would anyoneΒ consider attemptsΒ to ban gas stovesΒ and appliancesΒ based on discredited studies,Β as has been proposed in dozens of jurisdictions as well asΒ byΒ the current Administration.

Add inΒ the labyrinth ofΒ regulatory hurdles for domesticΒ oil and natural gasΒ production, failureΒ to fixΒ energy projectΒ permittingΒ andΒ suddenΒ activistΒ opposition toΒ removingΒ carbon from our environment viaΒ carbon capture and storageΒ – long seen asΒ one of mostΒ indispensableΒ paths to helpΒ manufacturers, steelmakers, cement producers and other energy-intensive industriesΒ cutΒ their carbon footprint at scale and speed.Β 

Similar contradictions abound. AΒ day after Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm tooled around in an all-electric Ford pickup, the Biden AdministrationΒ blocked mining on one America’s largest combined copper and nickel deposits.Β EVs require three times as much copper as traditional vehicles, so why not have American workers mine it under our strict environmental protections? Why not β€œMake It in America” as the president urged in successive State of the Union Addresses?Β 

The usual anti-everythingΒ gang thatΒ wantsΒ to replaceΒ internal combustionΒ vehiclesΒ with electric also oppose U.S. development of the metals including anΒ importantΒ EVΒ component mineral, cobalt. It’sΒ mainly sourcedΒ fromΒ Chinese-ownedΒ mines inΒ Congo thatΒ use child labor.Β At the same time,Β theyΒ urgeΒ the U.S. government to take it easy on ChinaΒ while supporting policies that give China control of our future energy.

Where we live,Β how we get around, the energy weΒ choose toΒ use are all freedomsΒ improvingΒ our quality of life.Β No one – least of all those living at or near the poverty level whoΒ feel it the mostΒ when energy prices skyrocket – should support policies thatΒ raise prices byΒ limitingΒ energy choice and supply.Β 

EuropeanΒ nationsΒ did, enactingΒ production bansΒ andΒ retiring functioning, always-onΒ energy assetsΒ too early. These energy policiesΒ failedΒ at a catastrophic cost toΒ taxpayers, a familiar feeling to Californians.Β 

European Union nations andΒ theΒ UK haveΒ budgetedΒ at least $756 billion – roughly last year’s U.S. defense budget – toΒ offsetΒ recordΒ energy bills.Β Still, someΒ electedΒ leadersΒ want us to accept thisΒ intentional economic self-harm in America.Β 

It’s time for consumers everywhere – families, farmers, truckers, organized labor, manufacturers, retailers, environmentalists – toΒ demand a consumer recall forΒ anyΒ idea that makes energy less affordable, available,Β reliableΒ or environmentally responsible.

David Holt is president of Consumer Energy Alliance, a U.S. consumer energy and environment advocate supporting affordable, reliable energy for working families, seniors and businesses across the country.Β 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/05/2023 – 17:40

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