President no longer worried about CO2: focus on alternative energy is economic says Obama, no mention of climate

Photobucket

Guest post by Alec Rawls

“President no longer worried about CO2!” That’s what the headlines should have read last week after Obama presented an elaborate argument that alternative energy is the only viable response to high energy prices without ever once mentioning CO2, global warming or climate change. Instead, he presented the need to lessen our reliance on oil purely as an economic imperative.

Back when he thought that global warming was a winning concern Obama used to acknowledge that his anti-CO2 policies were going to cause high energy prices (forcing them to “necessarily skyrocket“). Now he is trying to use the high energy prices that he intentionally caused as a reason to get away from fossil energy. But if we are no longer worried about climate, how about just undoing the anti-fossil-fuel policies that drove prices up in the first place?

Obama’s silence on climate is a testament to how thoroughly the alarmists have lost the climate debate in the eyes of the voting public. Obama can’t even mention climate change (never mind global warming), even in a speech about his own climate-driven policies.

To make his economic argument, Obama puts forward two glaring lies.  Let’s take these whoppers one at a time.

The lie that we are already aggressively developing our fossil resources

From the President’s March 15th energy policy speech at Prince George’s Community College in Largo, Maryland:

Under my administration, America is producing more oil today than at any time in the last eight years. (Applause.) Any time. That’s a fact. That’s a fact. We’ve quadrupled the number of operating oil rigs to a record high. I want everybody to listen to that — we have more oil rigs operating now than ever. That’s a fact. We’ve approved dozens of new pipelines to move oil across the country. We announced our support for a new one in Oklahoma that will help get more oil down to refineries on the Gulf Coast.

Over the last three years, my administration has opened millions of acres of land in 23 different states for oil and gas exploration. (Applause.) Offshore, I’ve directed my administration to open up more than 75 percent of our potential oil resources. That includes an area in the Gulf of Mexico we opened up a few months ago that could produce more than 400 million barrels of oil.

So do not tell me that we’re not drilling. (Applause.) We’re drilling all over this country.

That’s chutzpah, bragging about opening up drilling in the Gulf after using the Deep Horizon spill as an excuse for wiping out the Gulf drilling industry with an illegal moratorium.

Everyone knows about the big anti-oil moves from Obama and the Democrats, like rejecting the Keystone pipeline and continuing to block drilling in ANWR, but if you want a picture of how systematic and extreme their anti-fossil-energy policies have been, take a look at the list compiled by House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings. As soon as they got in the Obamatons started revoking all the permits that were in the pipeline: for exploration, for mining, for drilling, for building power plants. Everything was shut down to almost nothing, and that is the way it has stayed.

Speaker John Bohner put a few of the highlights onto a timeline along with gas prices. Cause and effect:

Photobucket

What about that record amount of oil production? From Tina Korbe:

Energy experts say the president’s rhetoric isn’t exactly forthright. It’s unfair for the president to take credit for record high oil production. Not only does it take oil three to five years to come online, which means the previous administration was responsible for approving the exploration and drilling permits that led to increased production, but oil production on federal lands actually declined from 2010 to 2011. Oil production on private lands is responsible for the increase.

She quotes CNS for the specifics:

As CNSNews.com has reported, oil production on federal lands declined in fiscal year 2011 from fiscal year 2010 by 11 percent, and natural gas production on federal lands dropped by 6 percent during the same timeframe.

In contrast, oil production on private and state lands accounted for the entire increase, reported the IER, as production was up 14 percent from 2010 to 2011. Natural gas also was up 12 percent from 2010 to 2011.

The energy boom from advances in fracking technology are so massive that Obama has not been able to suppress them entirely, but he sure is trying, and we know why. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu was up-front about this as recently as two weeks ago when he testified before the House Appropriations committee:

“Is the overall goal to get our price [of gasoline] down,” Nunnelee began. “No,” interrupted Chu, “the overall goal is to decrease our dependency on oil, to build and strengthen our economy.”

Chu’s goal is less oil consumption, which of course requires higher prices, “to strengthen our economy.” (Note that Chu is a physicist, not an economist.) Chu has been saying for years that:

Somehow we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe.

That’s $7 to $9 per gallon. Under duress he recanted last week and said that he no longer wants higher prices, but that just stripped away his last remaining virtue, which was his honesty.

Lie number 2: that America is energy poor, so there is not much we can gain by drilling anyway

Someone who knows absolute nothing about anything might find this Obama riff compelling:

There’s a problem with a strategy that only relies on drilling and that is, America uses more than 20 percent of the world’s oil. If we drilled every square inch of this country — so we went to your house and we went to the National Mall and we put up those rigs everywhere — we’d still have only 2 percent of the world’s known oil reserves. Let’s say we miss something — maybe it’s 3 percent instead of 2. We’re using 20; we have 2.

Now, you don’t need to be getting an excellent education at Prince George’s Community College to know that we’ve got a math problem here. (Laughter and applause.) I help out Sasha occasionally with her math homework and I know that if you’ve got 2 and you’ve got 20, there’s a gap. (Laughter.) There’s a gap, right? …

We will not fully be in control of our energy future if our strategy is only to drill for the 2 percent but we still have to buy the 20 percent.

Obama’s 2% figure refers to “proven reserves,” and the smallness of this particular number is actually a measure, not of our resources, but of how little they have been developed. Investors Business Daily explains:

The U.S. has 22.3 billion barrels of proved reserves, a little less than 2% of the entire world’s proved reserves, according to the Energy Information Administration. But as the EIA explains, proved reserves “are a small subset of recoverable resources,” because they only count oil that companies are currently drilling for in existing fields.

We have very little “proved reserves” because we have developed only a small fraction of our resources into active fields. The relevant number to look at is the amount of oil we could produce if it were allowed, and here we are proverbial thousand pound gorilla. Again, from IDB:

Photobucket

We actually have the world’s largest fossil energy resources, and the “recoverable” part is rapidly expanding as the technology for extracting it advances. Estimates for technically recoverable shale gas reserves increased 134% in 2010, and we’ve hardly begun on shale oil. Then there are methane hydrates, which according to the Department of Energy contain “more energy potential … than all other fossil energy resources combined.”

In short, the United States, and the entire world, have only been tapping the planet’s most easily accessible fossil energy supplies, and even those are far from running out, while vastly larger resources wait in store. Obama’s claims about the impossibility of relying on fossil energy are a fairy tale for childish green adults who want to see themselves as saving the planet. They dream of going “forward” to windmills and absorbing solar radiation like a snake on a rock, yet none of them have enough confidence in the saving-the-planet part to even mention it anymore.

The war on CO2 is over! Tell the EPA!

Obama’s lies about fossil resources are just supporting lies. His big lie is his pretense that his anti-CO2 policies are not about CO2. So take him at face value. He has apparently surrendered his claim that CO2 is dangerous. From his energy-policy speech, it seems that global warming is no longer a motivating concern.

THAT is a big story. Quick, tell the EPA. With this change in the administration’s position there should be no more regulation of CO2 and Obama should rescind his promise to bankrupt the coal industry:

So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can. It’s just that it will bankrupt them because they’re going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that’s being emitted.

That war against coal is proceeding apace, every bit as much as Obama’s drive for higher gas prices. And all for nothing, since even Obama is no longer worried about CO2.

At some point—long before we run out of fossil energy—a cheaper source of energy will be developed and fossil fuels will go by the wayside. The only reason to interdict that natural progression and try to go backwards to wind and solar is a belief that fossil fuels imperil the planet. For that to be true, human effects on climate would have to dominate natural effects, a hypothesis that has already been falsified by 15 years of no warming. The only people who believe it at this point are the paid shills of our lavishly funded climate-alarm industry and their anti-capitalist allies. It has actually become unmentionable, which really does warrant some mention.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

235 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
March 20, 2012 1:17 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
“European governments tax oil to regulate behavior, just like we tax cigarettes to regulate behavior. Same thing.”
Yes, same thing, Mr Hansson: for MONEY. But regulating behavior has nothing to do with it; that’s just the cover story. Political greed is the motive.
Governments don’t give a damn about people, except insofar as people are taxpayers. Oil is taxed for MONEY, and cigarettes are taxed for MONEY.
Governments are as addicted to tobacco money as a heroin addict is hooked on heroin. If governments wanted to protect the health of taxpayers, they would simply outlaw cigarettes completely. But they don’t: that would cut off their tax MONEY.
The Obama Administration has reduced oil drilling and exploration far more than any previous administration because Obama is in thrall to the anti-American eco-nazi cult. President Bush handed Obama a gasoline price of only $1.89 a gallon… and Obama blew it, big time. That’s what happens when you’re dancing to the tune called by the self-serving eco crowd. Obama is just a stooge of the anti-human enviro cult.

Larry in Texas
March 20, 2012 1:17 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 19, 2012 at 11:42 pm
“Governments lie. Get used to it.”
Au contraire, Mr. Hansson. This is not “government” lying. This is a candidate for political office in the United States this year. Barack the Usurper’s own government has put plenty of facts out there to contradict the bald-faced lies he has been telling. So this is quite foolish of you to be insulting the intelligence of the rest of us with dismissive statements like yours.
Bottom line: with the current price of a barrel of oil, it is now easier to develop new resources that were more expensive to reach. If this government will stay the heck out of the way and quit revoking and denying more drilling permits on federal lands, this will, eventually, increase the supply of oil to the point where gas prices can come down. It has been proven with natural gas in this country. If the Democratic Party in this country hadn’t spent as much time halting exploration efforts in this country for the last 40 years, we would not be talking about gasoline prices here like we are now. As James Sexton also said, Europe has its own problems, most of them of their own making, so please stifle the urge to sound ridiculous.

Larry in Texas
March 20, 2012 1:21 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:01 am
You either live in another country or you haven’t been paying attention to what has been going on in this country for the past 40 years or so. It HAS mattered which party has been in power; it has also mattered how much influence the environmental lobbyists have had for years both within EPA and the Department of the Interior. I will give you the benefit of the doubt that you live in another country. Otherwise, it is more proof of your inability to see reality.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:23 am

Hello Alec:
What Obama is saying is that drilling in the U.S. will not solve the short-term price issue at the pump. And he’s right. We do need more alternative sources, such as nuclear, wind, and solar, and everything else we can come up with—biofuels from pig manure and all the rest of it. We need to use all available resources to succeed.
I will have to take issue with the notion that the Obama Administration is out to deceive everybody. They are trying to solve the issues that are facing us, based on the best information available, just as I believe the Bush Administration tried to do the same, and every Administration before it. I will not follow you into the assumption that this Administration is out to ruin the country. That is a toxic notion.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:27 am

Hello Larry:
I stopped reading at “Barack The Usurper.”
Take your atavistic attitudes somewhere else.

Larry in Texas
March 20, 2012 1:29 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:07 am
Taxing behavior usually ends up creating unforeseen consequences that defeat overall policy on a particular subject. I’ve never been a big advocate of taxing to regulate people’s behavior, unlike you. We’ve been taxing gasoline in this country for years; about one-third to one-half of the price of gas at the pump is gasoline taxes, depending upon what state you are in. And yeah, it has an effect – in Texas, for example, gas tax revenue has gone down in recent years, and has created a budget crunch for highway construction and maintenance. Like it or not, people will drive and have to drive. It does little good to cut your nose off to spite your face.
Now, Europeans may be desperate with respect to oil, because they are “regulating behavior” in spite of the fact that they have mass transit systems that are far more comprehensive than those in the United States. Maybe THEY should try finding more oil in their own backyards.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:33 am

Dear Smokey:
Governments need money to function. You may not like it, but governments are the agents of the people. Both driving and smoking cost money to society, as there are cheaper alternatives. Governments are completely in their right to institute such policies, and defend them in elections. If people agree, these governments are given a new lease on power. If not, they are voted out. That’s still the way it works last time I checked.

March 20, 2012 1:35 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 19, 2012 at 9:39 pm
The Obama Administration has slowed down the permitting process after the Deepwater Horizon disaster, but that doesn’t seem entirely out of line to me. That was a bad one, and to take a little time to reconsider safety measures and slow down the permitting process was not a bad idea.

He didn’t slow the process down, he called it to a complete halt.
This does not mean that no permits have been issued by the way—far from it. A little south of fifty permits have been issued.
You’re thinking of leases — the BSEE’s site lists 69 deepwater permits approved of 107 submitted.
http://www.bsee.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Permits/Status-of-Gulf-of-Mexico-Well-Permits.aspx
Problem is, the majority of them are permits to *resume* drilling at existing sites…

March 20, 2012 1:37 am

Torgir Hansson says:
“What Obama is saying is that drilling in the U.S. will not solve the short-term price issue at the pump.”
How utterly naive and credulous. If there is a shortage of a commodity, then ANYTIING done to alleviate that shortage is a good thing. If drilling in the U.S. will not completely solve the problem, it will solve a large part of the problem. Do you not understand that Obama is simply making excuses, and lying to the public?

DirkH
March 20, 2012 1:42 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:33 am
“Dear Smokey:
Governments need money to function. You may not like it, but governments are the agents of the people. Both driving and smoking cost money to society, as there are cheaper alternatives.”
Name me a cheaper alternative to driving.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:43 am

Larry in Texas says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:17 am
Torgeir Hansson says:
March 19, 2012 at 11:42 pm
“If the Democratic Party in this country hadn’t spent as much time halting exploration efforts in this country for the last 40 years, we would not be talking about gasoline prices here like we are now.”
______________
Dear Mr. Larry in Texas:
Out of the last 40 years there have been Republicans in office for 28 years. Either Republican Presidents are incompetent, or they are part of the problem. Or you didn’t get the memo that oil prices are set by global, and not domestic, factors.
Thanks for playing, Larry.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:46 am

Bill Tuttle says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:35 am
“He didn’t slow the process down, he called it to a complete halt.”
Untrue, Bill. Here:
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2011/mar/29/michele-bachmann/michele-bachmann-claims-there-has-been-just-one-ne/
Try to read up on the facts next time.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 1:51 am

Smokey says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:37 am
“How utterly naive and credulous. If there is a shortage of a commodity, then ANYTIING done to alleviate that shortage is a good thing. If drilling in the U.S. will not completely solve the problem, it will solve a large part of the problem. Do you not understand that Obama is simply making excuses, and lying to the public?”
__________________
Then you explain why oil production has fallen for 23 out of the 30 last years, a majority of which were under Republican Presidents. It’s global pricing, Smokey. That’s what you call the “problem,” which is the international oil market, run mostly out of New York and London. By private entities. Brokers. Speculators. Call them what you want.
Again, check your facts.

March 20, 2012 2:03 am

Regarding the Net Energy Balance (Energy Out – Energy In) of various energy technologies:
In the fifteen years from 1996 to 2011, Canadian light crude production decreased by almost 10%, heavy oil and condensate production each decreased by almost 20%, and oilsands production increased by almost 400%.
Because of the outstanding success of the Alberta oilsands, Canada is now the 6th largest oil producer in the world and the largest foreign supplier of oil to the USA.
Unlike worthless grid-connected wind and solar power that ARE heavily subsidized, Canada is NOT subsidizing oilsands production – it is in fact the mainstay of the Canadian economy and the primary reason Canada has the strongest economy in the developed world.
There may be poor energy fundamentals in some in-situ oilsands projects, since natural gas now costs a small fraction of the energy-equivalent price of oil* – natural gas is burned to raise steam to extract the heavy bitumen in in-situ oilsands operations – not so for oilsands mining projects.
[* at $108 per barrel, the energy-equivalent price of natural gas is $108/6=$18 per GJ, whereas natural gas is now selling at $2-3/GJ)
Grid-connected wind power, solar power and corn ethanol all require huge life-of-project subsidies to survive. This is probably a good proxy to indicate that these technologies have a Net Negative Energy Balance. If not, why do they need the huge life-of-project subsidies? In my opinion, and I have studied energy much of my life, these three technologies are, at this time, counterproductive energy nonsense. Furthermore, wind power can dangerously destabilize the entire power grid.
Much enviro-nonsense has been written about the negative environmental impact of the Alberta oilsands. One example is the cry that the oilsands are draining the Athabasca River by consuming all the water. One would think from all the green alarmist rhetoric that the oilsands consume 99% of the river’s annual flow. The actual figure is 1%. That’s right, 1%. The subject is a bit more complicated than this, but you get the idea.
Green alarmism is big business, fueled by cash donations from gullible donors and great steaming piles of green BS.
To understand the big picture, understand this:
If you live in the developed world and you suddenly lose access to cheap reliable energy, you and your family will probably not survive. When idiot politicians fool around with energy policy and try to pick winners and losers, they are playing a very dangerous game. When they base their energy policy decisions on fraudulent global warming “settled science”, they are playing a fool’s game. Either way, you lose.

March 20, 2012 2:12 am

Torgir Hannson says:
“Out of the last 40 years there have been Republicans in office for 28 years…”
How many of those yeas have been controlled by a DemocRat legislature? Answer: Most of them. But by all means, continue your alarmist propaganda.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 2:16 am

Allan,
I believe solar is a good alternative for many residences. As many homes as possible should have solar. I hear the industry talk about grid parity, but the limitations are obvious. The number of players in the solar industry who talk about “climate change” is dwindling rapidly. It’s all about dollars and cents. Still based, of course, on the 30% Federal tax credit.

Torgeir Hansson
March 20, 2012 2:26 am

Smokey says:
March 20, 2012 at 2:12 am
“How many of those yeas have been controlled by a DemocRat legislature? Answer: Most of them. But by all means, continue your alarmist propaganda.”
____________________________
You are right. The Democrats held the House for a majority of the last 40 years. Republicans had the majority between 1995-2006. During that time oil production fell every year. EVERY year.
For the Senate, the Republicans had the majority from 1981-86, 1995-2000, 2003-06. Let’s look at the period between 1995 to 2006. During that time oil production fell every year. EVERY year.
Any more demurrers from you, Smokey?

March 20, 2012 2:30 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:46 am
Bill Tuttle says:
March 20, 2012 at 1:35 am
“He didn’t slow the process down, he called it to a complete halt.”
Untrue, Bill. Here:
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2011/mar/29/michele-bachmann/michele-bachmann-claims-there-has-been-just-one-ne/
Try to read up on the facts next time.

*ahem*
“Frustrated twice by the federal courts—which had overturned his original temporary moratorium on deepwater drilling—President Obama Monday evening decided to do what most of us have probably wanted to do when denied by someone in a position of authority: he went ahead anyway. (Sometimes it’s good to be President.) Interior Secretary Ken Salazar directed the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEM)—the government agency formerly known as the Minerals Management Service (MMS)—to issue new suspensions of deepwater drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf, while investigators continue to look at the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe.”
http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2010/07/12/obama-issues-new-offshore-drilling-moratorium/
The Obama administration’s six-month delay in approving new offshore drilling leases in federal waters will become a new three-year ban, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar quietly told reporters last Friday. Which means that no new oil and gas leases will be approved during President Obama’s term…
http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/beltway-confidential/2010/03/obama-moratorium-no-offshore-drilling-while-he%E2%80%99s-office/5916
My emphasis, both quotes.
The top two hits of 856,000 for the query terms “Obama moratorium on offshore drilling” — would you kindly enlighten me as to where I might find the fact that Obama did *not* call a halt to offshore drilling?

Stephen Richards
March 20, 2012 2:32 am

It seemed clear some time ago that Obama had stopped believing in the AGW myth. He has the intelligence and open enough mind to step away from something when the evidence shows it is make-believe.
Politically he can’t yet say this, of course.
Harpo
He is a politician. Itelligence does not come into this equation. Cunning, deceit, lieing yes and very good at he is, at least the straight face bit.

March 20, 2012 2:33 am

Torgeir Hansson,
You are discounting the influence of the eco-retards. Eliminate their vote-buying, and you will understand the problem.
…you are not an eco-retard… are you? Just wondering. I certainly hope not.

March 20, 2012 2:39 am

*blink*
Thanks, Mod!

Stephen Richards
March 20, 2012 2:41 am

I will not follow you into the assumption that this Administration is out to ruin the country. That is a toxic notion.
Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 2:26 am
No and I don’t want you to follow me. Unlike you I have run a business and I know for a fact that the Obama administration has been doing everything it can to destroy the business community in the US. You can start with his unending attacks on the banks and wall st and finish with his Waxman markey, Dodd franks bills. Every business man in america has been slamming these bills from the beginning. A health bill that describes 19 ways to be attacked by a parrot and a finance bill which creates a bureaucracy that will costs millions of $. You my friend have the knowledge of the unemployable.

George Tetley
March 20, 2012 2:51 am

Torgier Hansson,
For the average man in the street ( that I would presume include Smokey ) the most important factor is not who is drilling, or who is producing what, but the price at the pump !
Now good Sir please explain in your infinite wisdom what were the price increases at the pump from 1995-2006 (11 years ) and the increases in the last administration (4 years )?

DirkH
March 20, 2012 2:51 am

Torgeir Hansson says:
March 20, 2012 at 2:16 am
“Allan,
I believe solar is a good alternative for many residences. As many homes as possible should have solar. I hear the industry talk about grid parity, but the limitations are obvious.”
When the solar industry says “Grid parity”, they mean that the solar subsidy cost for the taxpayer or ratepayer per kWh is equal to the ratepayer rate (which is production cost of energy plus xx percent taxes).
In other words, they DON’T mean that the production cost of solar power beomes equal to any other way of producing electricity; their “Grid Parity” is a propaganda term they defined for their own purposes. It is useless for cost considerations.