Via the Global Warming Policy Foundation

A careful look at the history of environmental activism shows how the movement has been unravelling. Now it seems to be dead in the water.
In 2012, three years into President Barack Obama’s first term, green activists are asking, “What went wrong?” Where are all the new laws and regulations regulating energy use and the natural resource production? Where are the public-private partnerships signalling a new era of enironmentalist problem-solving? Where’s Al Gore? Shouldn’t he be lurking over President Obama’s shoulder, smiling, as the President signs yet another green jobs bill into law?
The question is a good one but one not easily answered. In the decades since the birth of the environmental movement, something’s clearly gone wrong. Other movements pushing for political and social change have altered the national discussion and elected candidates at every level of government.
Look at the Tea Party. Born only in 2009, it’s pushed back against the agenda of Barack Obama and congressional Democrats, forcing Congress to heel and almost sending the federal government into default.
But the environmental movement seems dead in the water.
Environmentalism Fails: Legislation
In late 2010 Al Gore offered three reasons why the U.S. Senate failed to enact into law a cap-and-trade bill: Republican partisanship, the recession, and the influence of special interests. He had a point. Despite endorsements from such Republican senators as John Warner, John McCain and Lindsay Graham, every effort to pass comprehensive climate change legislation during the preceding five years had floundered in the Senate.
In 2007 Connecticut senator Joseph Lieberman (Independent) and Virginia Republican John Warner introduced a cap-and trade bill called the Climate Security Act. Their Lieberman-Warner bill was approved by the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) committee and sent to the floor by the committee chairman, Barbara Boxer of California. The bill’s advocates said “prompt, decisive action is critical, since global warming pollutants can persist in the atmosphere for more than a century.”
The Lieberman-Warner bill aimed to cap greenhouse gas emissions, lowering emission levels each year until 2050, when emissions were supposed to be down to 63 percent below 2005 levels. To achieve that goal, the federal government would issue right-to-emit permits to electric utilities and plants in the transportation and manufacturing industries. The bill also provided financial incentives to companies and families to reduce emissions.
The bill was doomed. Full Senate debate took place in the summer of 2008, when the average price of gasoline was well above $4 per gallon. Republican opponents successfully labeled it the biggest tax hike in history, one that imposed an enormous tax and regulatory burden on industries that would pass the cost burden onto consumers already struggling to pay for gasoline at the pump.
Republicans beat the 2007 climate change bill because they argued that it would raise gas and home heating prices, cost jobs and cripple the economy. It didn’t help that 31,000 scientists rejected the notion of man-made global warming in a letter signed and circulated two weeks before the start of the Senate debate.
The next attempt came in the summer of 2009. On June 26, the House of Representatives passed the American Clean Energy and Security Act, otherwise known as Waxman-Markey after its authors, Democratic Reps. Henry Waxman of California and Edward Markey of Massachusetts. For the first time a chamber of Congress passed a law meant to curb carbon emissions linked to climate change. Yet the Senate once again refused to follow through.
The Senate version of Waxman-Markey was shepherded by Democratic Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham, and Connecticut Independent Joseph Lieberman. (Sen. Warner did not seek reelection in 2008.) Once again, a complex and messy mix of partisan politics, constituent pressures, and special interests combined to thwart passage of the bill.
Even though the Senate was controlled by Democrats, the sponsors of the bill knew they needed Republican votes, which required that certain bill provisions would have to be modified or weakened. But every tweak of the legislation designed to placate a Republican risked losing a Democrat, and every Democrat lost meant finding another Republican.
Kerry, Lieberman and Graham began bargaining with lawmakers. Some Republicans wanted guarantees that the bill would subsidize nuclear power. Lawmakers catering to agricultural interests wanted incentives or offsets for farmers who would be required to purchase emissions-reducing equipment.
Gulf Coast state politicians wanted to protect off-shore oil drilling, and politicians from Kentucky, West Virginia, and Ohio refused to discuss anything that put restrictions on coal plants, which cap-and-trade does by definition. Every special interest had its own demands. For instance, the powerful Edison Electric Institute, which represents shareholder-owned electric power companies, wanted guarantees that carbon costs would never rise above a certain point. To cushion the blow of higher energy costs, it proposed that through the year 2030 electric power companies receive free emission credits worth billions of dollars.
The White House proposed a “grand bargain”: expand off-shore oil drilling in return for lawmaker support for cap and trade. But the timing couldn’t have been worse. A short time later an oil rig exploded into flames and the Deepwater Horizon well started gushing thousands of gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Under pressure from Senate Republican colleagues and his South Carolina constituents and suspicious of White House double-dealing, Senator Graham pulled his name from the bill, which eventually died without coming up for a vote.
Envirionmentalism’s Bright Beginnings Turn Pale
The sputtering of the environmental movement and the ignominious collapse of its signature legislation could not have been predicted. But a careful look at the history of environmental activism shows how the movement has been unravelling.
Like the civil rights and antiwar movements, environmentalism’s origins lay in the 1960’s. In June of 1969, the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland, Ohio burst into flames. Toxic waste had so befouled the water that it ignited.
Only six months earlier the nation witnessed a massive oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, the third largest oil spill in American waters after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon and 1989 Exxon Valdez spills. The imagery of burning rivers and miles of polluted beaches provoked public outrage and photos of dying sea birds covered in oily muck became a staple of nightly news coverage.
Highly visual incidents like the Santa Barbara oil spill and the burning Cuyahoga River didn’t create the modern environmental movement, but they were catalysts that thrust it into public awareness. Earlier, Rachel Carson’s 1962 book Silent Spring had claimed that man-made chemical pesticides like DDT were killing birds and other wildlife, and issues like air pollution and toxic waste aroused public anxiety. Groups like Get Oil Out! (GOO) and the Environmental Defense Center were created in the 1960s, and in 1972 California voters approved a ballot initiative creating the California Coastal Commission with vast powers to regulate economic activities and land use along the state’s coastline.
In April 1970 the first Earth Day was proclaimed by city mayors and celebrated on college campuses. Green activists established radical nonprofits like Friends of the Earth (1969), the Natural Resources Defense Council (1970) and Greenpeace (1971) which challenged older conservation groups to become more aggressive in lobbying politicians and harrassing corporations.
At the federal level President Richard Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by executive order in 1970, and in that same year Congress authorized amendments to the Clean Air Act (passed in 1963) that imposed new regulations, the first of their kind, on industrial and mobile sources of air pollutants. The Clean Water Act (1972) and Endangered Species Act (1973) followed.
By the late 1970s environmentalists were trying to maintain their early successes, but the movement was increasingly institutionalized and bureaucratized. Most groups were headquartered in Washington, DC, where they spent their energies in fundraising and adapting to political pressures. The Carter administration created a Department of Energy and mandated corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standards to make cars more fuel-efficient. President Carter tried to set an example by wearing sweaters and installing solar panels on the roof of the White House, but most Americans did not like being told to lower their thermostats and buy smaller cars.
In the 1980s and 90s environmentalism began to lose its glamour and popular appeal. Ronald Reagan put energy policy on the back burner when he became president in 1981 and he tried with limited success to emphasize deregulatory policies. Federal agencies were embroiled in constant litigation and controversy whenever they tried to limit environmental rulemaking. A new set of difficult and often unpopular issues-the ozone hole, global warming and population growth-crowded onto the environmentalist agenda.
The War on Terror dominated the public agenda during the presidency of George W. Bush despite efforts by Al Gore and others to focus public attention on global warming. Gore’s 2006 documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and his efforts to attribute Hurricane Katrina, melting ice caps and summer heat waves to man-made climate change failed to generate the crisis atmosphere needed to achieve social and political change.
These days surveys show Americans worry most about the issues of war and the economy. The environment is far down on the list of concerns. In 2010 a Gallup survey reported that 48 percent of respondents believed the threat of global warming is exaggerated.
Public skepticism has been growing steadily since 2006 when the Gallup poll first reported that 30 percent of those surveyed had doubts about global warming. (The figures increased to 33 percent in 2007, 35 percent in 2008 and 41 percent in 2009.) Similar results were recorded in a March 2011 Gallup poll that asked, “How much do you personally worry about global warming?” Only 51 percent said they worried a great deal or a fair amount, a big drop from the 66 percent in 2008 who were troubled by thoughts of melting glaciers and rising sea levels.
Another indicator of waning public interest in environmental issues is a 2011 Rasmussen poll that asked likely U.S. voters to consider what played a bigger role in global warming: solar activity or human behavior? Sixty percent said it was at least somewhat likely that solar activity plays a role in long-term climate change. Only 22 percent said it was unlikely. This gives no comfort to environmentalists like Al Gore who argue that human activity is the number-one cause.
The Movement Runs Out of Gas
Americans’ interest in taking action against global warming is waning, but environmental groups insist that public opinion plays no role in explaining Congress’s failure to enact comprehensive climate change legislation. Instead, green groups attribute the failure to achieve their goals to the money and power of their opponents. According to their reckoning, environmental groups are stymied by what amounts to a conspiracy of the oil industry, global warming deniers, and the Koch brothers’ vast right-wing network.
In the summer of 2011, Dr. Matthew Nisbet of American University released a pioneering 80-page report, which undermines this argument. Nisbet’s report, “Climate Shift: Clear Vision for the Next Decade of Public Debate,” rejects the argument that the environmental movement has been outspent by right-wing donors like the Koch brothers. It says the data is inconclusive on how much supporters and opponents of a cap-and-trade bill are spending to affect the outcome. For instance, Nisbet compared the budgets of the conservative movement (think tanks, advocacy groups and industry associations) to national environmental organizations. He found that in 2009, major conservative outlets took in a total of $907 million in revenue, and spent $787 million. By comparison, green groups took in $1.7 billion that year and spent $1.4 billion. Another $394 million went specifically to climate-change related programs.
Nisbet also looked at lobbying. In the aggregate, conservatives spent a bit more: $272 million vs. $229 million. But in election spending, they far outspent environmentalists in 2010. For instance, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce spent $33 million, the Karl Rove-advised American Crossroads spent $22 million and its affiliated Crossroads GPS spent $17 million in political contributions. By contrast, the League of Conservation Voters spent $5.5 million, Defenders of Wildlife spent $1 million and the Sierra Club only $700,000.
However, state ballot initiatives tell a different story. California’s Proposition 23 is a case in point. The 2010 initiative, heavily funded by Texas-based oil companies, would have halted California regulations on greenhouse gas emissions until there was a decline in the state’s rate of unemployment. Supporters of the measure raised about $10.6 million. But opponents raised $25 million, with significiant sums from environmental groups. The National Wildlife Foundation reported spending $3 million, the National Resources Defense Council $1.67 million, and the League of Conservation Voters $1.1 million.
Nisbet also looked at foundation funding for climate change projects. What he found confirmed a 2007 study, “Design to Win: Philanthropy’s Role in the Fight Against Global Warming,” which noted that philanthropists are strategic funders of environmental causes and seek to achieve specific policy goals.
It’s clear that overall, the environmental movement does not have a money problem. So what’s the problem? One prominent environmentalist, Daniel J. Weiss of Center for American Progress Action Fund, argues that the recession has played an outsized role in thwarting environmental goals. “It makes people more sensitive to the argument that various proposals will cost jobs,” says Weiss. “Oil and coal industries have made these arguments every timebut they’re falling on more receptive ears now.”
Tom Borelli, a climate-change skeptic at the National Center for Public Policy Research, agrees that a weak economy explains environmentalism’s downward spiral. “All along they were riding the wealth of our nation,” says Borelli. “Now the whole green bubble is exploding.” He points out that the movement’s energy agenda-the war on fossil fuels and the push for renewable energy-have always been unsustainable. “That’s where they failed.”
No One to Blame But Itself
But there’s yet another reason, one that activists are loathe to acknowledge, and it’s this: Their scare tactics have backfired. Environmental groups have done nothing but create enemies by labeling as “global warming deniers” anyone who dares to ask questions about man-made climate change. Critics like Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, who in 2005 called global warming the “greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people,” remain a minority in Congress.
Far more typical is Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, who in 2009 said, “The scientific aspect that I’m still reserving judgment on is the extent to which it’s manmade or natural.” Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey actually agrees the data is “pretty clear” that there has been an increase in the earth’s surface temperature, but he adds that “the extent to which that has been caused by human activity I think is not clear. I think that is very much disputed and has been debated.”
Extremist rhetoric has badly damaged the environmentalist cause. The Danish environmental writer Bjorn Lomborg and two enlightened environmentalists at the Breakthrough Institute, Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger, put the blame squarely on the environmental movement. It has no one to blame but itself.
In his latest book, Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist’s Guide to Global Warming, Lomborg observes that that there are more important scientific problems to tackle than global warming. Activists should work to provide clean water and address public health issues around the world. By calling for government mandates costing billions of dollars in an implausible attempt to lower the earth’s temperature Lomborg says environmental activists are squandering the public’s goodwill and exhausting its patience.
Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger urged environmentalists to abandon their doomsday fantasies in “The Death of Environmentalism,” a 2004 paper they wrote for the Environmental Grantmakers Association. It made them outcasts in the environmental movement. Last February, in a speech at Yale University, they revisited the paper and concluded that the problems they identified had only worsened in the years since.
Nordhous and Shellenberger said that when Al Gore attacks Republicans for waging a war on science and calls on Americans to “change the way we live our lives,” he is undermining the public’s “need to maintain a positive view of the existing social order” and guaranteeing that millions of Americans will reject his counsel.
Greens reacted to these developments not by toning down their rhetoric or reconsidering their agenda in a manner that might be more palatable to their opponents. Instead, they made ever more apocalyptic claims about global warming claims that were increasingly inconsistent, ironically, with the scientific consensus whose mantle greens claimed.
In 2012, it’s clear that scare tactics and apocalyptic predictions have failed to persuade. The environmental movement is not gaining traction with either legislators or the public. As Tom Borelli puts it, “They’re now going to be playing defense. And they’re not used to that.”
Amanda Carey is a Washington, DC-based journalist and a frequent contributor to Green Watch.
Global Warming is the Vietnam of the environmental movement.
Since when does reducing expenditure cause an increase in employment? Wealth is created with ENERGY. The cheaper the energy the more wealth – the more buying of goods – the more employment to create the goods. Welcome to earth.
Richard G., amen. What Democrats fail to realize is that Tea Party’s biggest effect was/is a conservative revolt against a Republican establishment that keeps dishing up RINOs. Democrats need a Tea Party of their own. Maybe their version is Occupy Wall Street, who should take some lessons from Tea Party about affecting elections rather than traffic. THEN we’d have a national conversation about the very real differences between the two outlooks, rather than one politician after another being barely distinguishable from the guy we just voted out.
The Ds need to dump the Greens. Greens are much better at attacking policy than creating it, and much better at disrupting commerce than finding environmentally friendly ways to -increase- productivity and wealth creation.
Under pressure from Senate Republican colleagues and his South Carolina constituents and suspicious of White House double-dealing, Senator Graham pulled his name from the bill, which eventually died without coming up for a vote.
South Carolina has a growing population. Graham needed Cap & Trade to insure the nuclear power plants that were proposed in South Carolina would be economically viable. The price of coal has been increasing in the US for a solid decade with the increase most pronounced east of the Mississippi river. The new nuclear power plant in South Carolina doesn’t need ‘Cap and Trade’ to be economically viable.
Sometimes ‘market forces’ actually end up doing what controversial legislation might hope to accomplish. Coal’s share of the US electricity market has dropped from 49% to 43% in 6 years without ‘Cap & Trade’,
Cap & Trade permits in the US would be selling at zero value because coal use is declining anyway. The environmentalists have spent a lot of effort trying to pass legislation that would be ‘symbolic’ at best.
The reality of coal mining is we dig the easiest coal, closest to it’s intended place of use first. At this point in history the only ‘easy’ coal left is in Gillette,Wyoming which is a very long way from where most people live.
The mention of West Virginia reminds me of the late Robert Byrd. Whatever else you might say about him, he had the reputation of a savvy politician. So, how could he fail to notice, until actually faced with the legislation, that the administration he helped put into office was bent on destroying his state’s biggest industry?
Reason.com has an interesting review of the new book from Shellenberger and Nordhaus. Keep an eye on these guys, their ideas could become very influential once the current environmentalist paradigm has finished collapsing.
harrywr2 says:
January 7, 2012 at 7:24 am
“The reality of coal mining is we dig the easiest coal, closest to it’s intended place of use first. At this point in history the only ‘easy’ coal left is in Gillette,Wyoming which is a very long way from where most people live.”
This problem is solved by running 150 car coal trains from Wyoming to wherever I see a lot of coal trains in Texas. Southbound they’re loaded, northbound they’re empty.
harrywr2 says:
“Sometimes ‘market forces’ actually end up doing what controversial legislation might hope to accomplish. Coal’s share of the US electricity market has dropped from 49% to 43% in 6 years without ‘Cap & Trade’, ”
Sorry Harrywr2, it isn’t market forces driving the cost of energy from coal higher. It’s the EPA and their ridiiculous regulations. Coal is by far still the most economical source of energy if you would apply only reasonable regulations. There is no shortage of coal and one only has to look to China to see where they plan on getting vast quantities of reliable and cheap energy over the next 50 years to prove the point.
Coal has been “demonized” by the left and democrats.It is not market forces driving the cost of electricity from coal.
It’s really dead in the water? Truly? Then, this is a happy day!
But, has anyone told the US Environmental Protection Agency about this yet? Because, last time I looked, they’re still pushing through their own unilateral regulations shutting down whatever they can shut down in the name of lessening carbon dioxide generation.
I was thinking about planning a big “AGW Debunked!” party a few months out from today, but I’m going to wait a bit until I’m sure the EPA is going to let us keep our electricity. And our heat. And our cars. And farm-raised foodstuffs. It could end up being the grimmest party I’ve ever thrown.
Dead in the water…well maybe but they might start to make a big deal out of…Methane or something…Mann, can you believe these guys?
An Arctic methane worst-case scenario
Filed under: Climate Science — david @ur momisugly 7 January 2012
“Let’s suppose that the Arctic started to degas methane 100 times faster than it is today. I just made that number up trying to come up with a blow-the-doors-off surprise, something like the ozone hole. We ran the numbers to get an idea of how the climate impact of an Arctic Methane Nasty Surprise would stack up to that from Business-as-Usual rising CO2”
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2012/01/an-arctic-methane-worst-case-scenario/#more-10411
No comments on the thread over there…maybe we could give them a friendly spike on Alexa…just to share some love! In a ‘Summer of Love’ kinda way…Peace Mann!
“Let’s suppose the Real Climate started to get Web Traffic 100 times faster than normal TODAY. I just made that number up trying to come up with a blow-the-doors-off surprise, something like the “Mike’s Nature Trick. We ran the numbers to get an idea of how the Watt’s Up With That impact of an Web Traffic Methane Nasty Surprise would stack up to that from Business-as-Usual downward trending Real Climate Alexa stats…I mean it looks like a Hockey Stick facing left…”
” environmental groups have been hijacked by extremists”
oh, ha ha.
henry ford hijacked the car industry, too.
isn’t it always ‘radicals hijacked the religion of peace’? isn’t it always just a matter of spillng enough blood or money at the proper altar? it couldn’t be that every -ism is a religious machine made for the purpose of extracting sacrifice? nah- that would leave john q publique with nothing at all to believe in, wouldn’t it? that’s something devoutly to be feared by all – especially those who would claim morality as the justification for your sacrifice. why, the lawyers from fairfax california whose son became ‘the american taliban’ – they were profoundly pleased that ‘he had something he believed in’ – something a whole generation seems to feel a want of…
but snarlifying the term ‘extremism’ is necessary to elevate the notion of compromise. truth is absolute and extreme. if that can’t be compromised, how can virtue be reduced to a blend of this vice and that? sanity is absolutely extreme – if that can’t be compromised, what kind of society would we have? if the deranged are denied equal time, they’ll feel opressed. that makes the opressors liable for damages. but that’s where we go when we move from monotreme to extreme…
“Andrew Newb says:
7 Jan 2012 at 1:59 PM
Didn’t Pink Floyd write a song about this?
I think they did…”
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2012/01/an-arctic-methane-worst-case-scenario/comment-page-1/#comment-224242
http://youtu.be/F7Q-41Rd_Bc
Pigs on the wing (part 1) Lyrics
Artist(Band):Pink Floyd
“If you didn’t care what happened to me,
and I didn’t care for you,
we would zig zag our way through the boredom and pain,
occasionally glancing up through the rain
wondering which of the buggers to blame
and watching for pigs on the wing.”
I took a screen shot of my post on “Real Climate”…it will be funny to see if they pull it…
Even funnier if somebody over their clues in…or is a Pink Floyd fan…
I mean doesn’t everyone know Pink Floyd and Flying Pigs are highly correlated?
Alcheson says:
January 7, 2012 at 9:40 am
Sorry Harrywr2, it isn’t market forces driving the cost of energy from coal higher. It’s the EPA and their ridiiculous regulations
Coal mine productivity east of the Mississippi has dropped from more then 4 tons per man hour to less then 3 tons per man hour in the last 10 years. The drops in productivity are for the most part a ‘World Wide’ phenomenon. I.E. We dig the easiest stuff out of the ground first.
West Virginan coal production peaked in 1997 at 181 million tons. In 2009 that was down to 144 million tons. http://www.wvminesafety.org/historicprod.htm
In China and Europe coal mine productivity is now measured in hours per ton. Rather then the American and Australian measurements of tons per hour. The average depth of a Chinese coal mine is now more then 500 meters.
Secondly, transportation costs for coal have increased because
1) Trains run on diesel and diesel is more expensive
2) The distance from mine-market has increased because productivity east of the Mississippi river has gotten so low.
Coal can be dug out of the ground in Wyoming at a handsome profit for $15/ton. To make a profit in West Virginia the price needs to be $80/ton. The ‘easy stuff’ is gone in West Virgina, we burned it all up.
I just read this very long article and must say I am not impressed. She has some very unwarranted interpretations and ignores all the GHG regs that are being enabled across the world at the state/province/city level, not to mention the Airline ETS thing in Europe (and of course, the fiascos unfolding in Australia and the UK). Here in Canada, our government continues to create new GHG regulations sector by sector across the country.
Vast sums are still pouring into the climate scare and, with public support for alarmism in the US now rising (see http://tinyurl.com/nej8zl), we have a long war ahead of us. It is just not true that we have even come close to “winning”, no matter what optimists like to assert.
Tom Harris
International Climate Science Coalition
http://www.climatescienceinternational.org
PS: Unfortunately, Carey’s article may be used now as a rallying cry for climate alarmist fund raisers, not to reflect what is really going on. I note its original source as http://capitalresearch.org/2012/01/out-of-gas-the-environmental-movemement-is-running-on-empty/ and I am suspicious they are spinning this topic in a way to boost their business (issuing an article like this gets a lot of attention, whether it is right or wrong, and so accomplishes great PR).
someone forgot
[FIXED. Thanks. -REP]
When Amanda Carey says “Green Movement Dead In The Water”, I think she should change it to “US Green Movement Dead In The Water”.
Because it is certainly not dead in Europe. It is alive and well.
And it arises from the inner urge from the human brain that we need a common organisation
( The State) to lead and control us all.
Well said, but there are a couple of things to add to the reasons why the environmental movement is dead in the water:
(1) The ideological, almost religious cast of the movement as it currently stands – all the talk of Gaia, etc. The American people, who are still, as a whole, religious (and even Christian, believe it or not) in character, are beginning to see the pagan elements of this movement in its worst manifestations. Environmentalism has offered itself as an alternative religion; most people see that as ridiculous and not to be taken seriously.
(2) Insofar as current environmental policy issues go, back in the 60s and 70s it was obvious something was wrong when the Cuyahoga River caught on fire and Lake Erie was turning into a large swamp instead of a lake. But now that positive actions have been taken, with (generally) positive results of cleaner air and water in the United States compared to previous decades, the question became, what do you do for an encore? As a result, the environmental groups look for new frontiers to conquer. In light of this goal, the reasons for the extremist apocalyptic rhetoric by many environmental groups are simple: they want to see things wrong that really aren’t; the love of the power and influence these groups achieved in the 1970s make them unable to see themselves as less relevant than in say, 1972. The persistence of this type of apocalyptic rhetoric also has roots in one central myth many of the activist groups have attempted to foster over the years – the myth (or goal) of a “pristine nature,” and the corollary that mankind is the only one responsible for whatever degradation is occurring in nature. This myth has been debunked to some extent, but it remains a troublesome issue. The goal is a false one, because as we have seen, the more policymakers try to further and further “clean up,” the more expensive and intrusive the planned solutions for a much smaller (or no real) benefit. The law of diminishing returns applies here in many respects. The people of the world, and particularly the American people in their current difficult economic state, are beginning to see this law of diminishing returns in action, and they do not like what they see.
Some stats about WV Coal:
Forty-three counties have reserves of minable (economic) coal. WV Coal Resource Table
There are 117 named coal seams in West Virginia.
Sixty-five seams are considered minable.
In 2009 coal was produced from 51 different coal seams in West Virginia.
The Pittsburgh coal seam accounted for nearly 31 million tons of production in 2009.
West Virginia has 4% of all coal reserves.
There is still an emormous amount of coal in WV. However, It is NOT market forces (lack of coal) making it expensive but rules and regulations put into place as to where and how you can mine have made it economically expensive to obtain. Examples: Mountain top removal mining is being shut down by EPA forcing more expensive methods to mine for coal; Ever increasingly stringent rules by EPA on sulfur make mining of more plentiful higher sulfur content coal non-profitable.
And as you have said “Coal can be dug out of the ground in Wyoming at a handsome profit for $15/ton.” Even this could undoubtedly be done cheaper if only reasonable environmental regulations were put place rather than regulations meant to “drive coal out of business”. After all, it was Obama who said that he would make coal power so expensive that it would drive coal out of business. He is instructing EPA to do just that.
I like this article better:
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100127634/ha-ha-warmist-losers-for-you-the-war-is-over/
My take away from this is that it is probably not in your best interest to hire a “green” PR firm. They aren’t very good despite having the entire current administration behind them.
The bottom line is that the environmental movement, as with the EPA, if it is effective and successful will and should work itself right out of a job. It now has the appearance of seeking job security.
Real Climate Alexa Data:
Upstream Sites
Which sites did users visit immediately preceding realclimate.org?
% of Unique Visits Upstream Site
34.78% google.com
28.26% wattsupwiththat.com
13.04% scienceblogs.com
8.70% climateaudit.org
8.70% yahoo.com
6.52% twitter.com
WUWT sharing the Love with the Team!!
Steve C
“And so it is with environmentalism. No-one can deny that too many times, where there was profit to be made by doing it and no ‘inconvenient’ regulations applied, corporations have cheerfully trashed local environments and destroyed the lives of local peoples in the name of their cash profit. Look at what Shell has done to great swathes of Nigeria if you doubt that.”
I’m going to have to disagree with that. The problem in Nigeria isn’t solely the oil company’s actions. It turns out that the price of a barrel of oil is about $100 right now and 64.4% and 83.9% of the population live on less than 1.25 and 2 dollars a day. Or in short you can get three months wages by cutting into the pipeline and siphoning oil. Of course even with the price at a more normal level of $40 it is still worth a months wages.
Not surprisingly Shell blames the overwhelming majority of its problems on vandalism, theft and attacks by militants who want the oil wealth more fairly distributed/distributed to them/distributed to the locals. I trust them, if only because the amount of spills is ridiculously high (with oil loses probably exceeding possible saving on maintainance) which suggests the problem isn’t them cutting corners.
Any carbon tax bill will not soon pass in the Senate because heartland Senators (both Dems. and Reps.) who represent energy and farming states would be booted out of office if they voted for a carbon tax bill. Harry Reid never brought the Waxman/Markey bill to the floor in the Senate because at least eight Democratic Senators said that they could not support it.
Also recall that the Waxman bill passed very narrowly in the house! Had the Senate modified the bill to accommodate more conservative Senators, when it was returned to the House of Representatives it would have almost certainly lost the support of enough Dem. HRs to go down in defeat.
Also, note that Lieberman (an Independent) and Graham (a Rep.) both represent states that rely heavily on nuclear power. Both states wanted to construct additional nuclear power plants. However, to afford the current $10B per plant, they wanted government guaranteed funding to lower the interest rates on the bonds. The fact that they had horses of their own in this race was recognized by the other Republican Senators.
Cheap, clean natural gas has forever changed this game now! Obama is already lying low on his Gore_Bull warming rhetoric. He has apparently finally realized that he can not deliver much in the way of new alternative energy programs after the high profile failure of two of his pet projects. Since he needs to make sure he doesn’t alienate the left, I think that he w, so he will likely not promise that which he can not deliver even if he wins in Nov. I think that this entire era of global hysteria is about to just quietly fade into the sunset.
Any carbon tax bill will not soon pass in the Senate because heartland Senators (both Dems. and Reps.) who represent energy and farming states would be booted out of office if they voted for a carbon tax bill. Harry Reid never brought the Waxman/Markey bill to the floor in the Senate because at least eight Democratic Senators said that they could not support it.
Also recall that the Waxman bill passed very narrowly in the house! Had the Senate modified the bill to accommodate more conservative Senators, when it was returned to the House of Representatives it would have almost certainly lost the support of enough Dem. HRs to go down in defeat.
Also, note that Lieberman (an Independent) and Graham (a Rep.) both represent states that rely heavily on nuclear power. Both states wanted to construct additional nuclear power plants. However, to afford the current $10B per plant, they wanted government guaranteed funding to lower the interest rates on the bonds. The fact that they had horses of their own in this race was recognized by the other Republican Senators.
Cheap, clean natural gas has forever changed this game now! Obama is already lying low on his Gore_Bull warming rhetoric. He has apparently finally realized that he can not deliver much in the way of new alternative energy programs after the high profile failure of two of his pet projects. Since he needs to make sure he doesn’t alienate the left, I think that he will likely not promise that which he can not deliver even if he wins in Nov. I think that this entire era of global hysteria is about to just quietly fade into the sunset.