Romney’s Historic Opportunity: Low-Cost Energy Fuels Economic Recovery

Editorial by Dr. Fred Singer

Romney can clinch the election by detailing an energy policy that restores jobs, prosperity, and American economic leadership. “To be credible, a reform agenda must have some reform substance.”
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Energy, the life-blood of the economy, is the Achilles heel of President Barack Obama. Mitt Romney can win the November election if he concentrates his campaign on a sensible energy policy.

Mr. Romney will have to make a case not merely against Mr. Obama’s failings but also for why he has the better plan to restore prosperity.” [WSJ 4-26-12] “…optimistic conservative vision that can inspire the party faithful, appeal to swing voters and set out a governing agenda should he win in November …”  source NYT

As a presumed candidate for the US presidency, Romney should spell out now a coherent policy of low-cost and secure energy that would boost the US economy, ensure jobs and prosperity, and raise people up from poverty. Fundamentally, he and his surrogates must educate and inspire the public. 

He should pledge specific goals: Lower gasoline prices; cheaper household electricity; cheaper fertilizer for farmers and lower food prices for everybody; cheaper transport fuels for aviation and for the trucking industry; lower raw material costs for the chemical industry. He should also indicate the kind of people who would be part of his team, who would fill the crucial posts and carry out these policies. His running-mate should have a record of endorsing these goals.

Obama has made it easy for Romney

It’s a winning situation for Romney; Obama has already provided him most of the ammunition:

**Under Obama, the price of gasoline has more than doubled, from $1.80 (US average), and is approaching $5 a gallon. His Secretary of Energy, Dr. Chu, wanted the price to rise to “European levels of $8 to $10.” It is really hurting the middle class, particularly the two-car couples who must commute to work. Yet everything Obama has done or is doing is making the situation worse.

**He has vetoed the Keystone pipeline, which would have brought increasing amounts of oil from Canada to Gulf-Coast refineries, created ‘shovel-ready’ jobs, and improved energy security.

** He has kept much federal land off limits for oil and gas production — particularly in Alaska and offshore. The Alaska pipeline is in danger of running dry. Even where exploration is permitted, drilling permits are hard to obtain because of bureaucratic opposition.

** To Obama, oil is a “fuel of the past;” not so to millions of drivers. He’s looking to put algae in their gas tanks – the latest bio-fuel scheme! In his 2008 campaign, Obama promised that under his regime electricity prices would “skyrocket.” He seems to have kept his promise — with help from the misguided ‘Renewable Electricity Standard,’ which mandates utilities to buy costly ‘Green’ energy from solar/wind projects and effectively become tax-collectors.

**He also promised that potential builders of coal-fired power plants would go “bankrupt.” That too would happen, thanks to extreme, onerous EPA regulation. The latest EPA plan would stop the construction of new coal-fired power plants by setting impossible-to-obtain emission limits for carbon dioxide. True, EPA has made exceptions if the power plant can capture and sequester the emitted CO2; but the technology to do this is not available and its cost would be prohibitive.

**It seems likely that, if Obama is re-elected, his EPA will use the CO2 excuse to also close down existing coal-fired plants — and may not permit the construction of any fossil-fueled power plants, including even those fired by natural gas, which emits only about half as much CO2 as coal. The Calif PUC has already banned gas plants (on April 19, 2012) in order to reach their unrealistic goal of 33% Green electricity.

**One can see the signs of impending EPA efforts to stop the exploitation of shale gas by horizontal drilling, using the claim that ‘fracking’ causes water pollution.

The only explanation for this irrational behavior: The Obama administration, from top to bottom, seems possessed by pathological fear of catastrophic global warming and obsessed with the idea that no matter what happens to the economy or jobs, it must stop the emission of CO2.

The starkest illustration of this came in his [Obama’s] answers to questions about climate change in which he promised to make this article of faith for the left a central issue in the coming campaign. This may play well for the readers of Rolling Stone. But given the growing skepticism among ordinary Americans about the ideological cant on the issue that has spewed forth from the mainstream media and the White House, it may not help Obama with independents and the working class voters he needs as badly in November as the educated elites who bludgeoned him into halting the building of the Keystone XL pipeline. This conflict illustrates the contradiction at the core of the president’s campaign

Source Commentary Magazine

The situation is tailor-made for Romney to launch an aggressive campaign to counter current energy policy — and the even worse one that is likely to be put in place if Obama is re-elected.

What Romney must do to win the November election

Romney has to make it quite clear to potential voters why low-cost energy is absolutely essential for economic recovery, for producing jobs, and for increasing average income– especially for the middle-class family, which is now spending too much of its budget on energy essentials. Romney should hold out the entirely realistic prospect of US energy independence – often promised but never before achieved – or even of the US becoming an energy exporter.

**Romney can confidently promise to reduce the price of gasoline to $2.50 a gallon or less, with a gracious tip of the hat to Newt Gingrich, who had proposed such a goal in one of his campaign speeches. To accomplish this, the world price of oil would have to fall below $60 a barrel from its present price of $110.

**But this bright energy promise is entirely possible due to the low price of natural gas, which has fallen to $2 from its 2008 peak of $13 per mcf (1000 cubic feet) — and is still trending downward. All that Romney has to do is to remove to the largest extent possible existing regulatory roadblocks.

It is essential to recognize three important economic facts:

**Since many of the newly drilled wells also produce high-value oil and NGL (natural gas liquids), natural gas becomes a by-product that can be profitably sold at even lower prices.

**Natural gas currently sells for less than 15% of the average price of crude oil, on an energy/BTU basis. This means that it pays to replace oil-based fuels, such as diesel and gasoline, with either liquefied natural gas (LNG) or compressed natural gas (CNG). This may be the most economical and quickest replacement for heavy road-vehicles, earth movers. diesel-electric trains, buses, and fleet vehicles.

**It also becomes profitable to convert natural gas directly to gasoline or diesel by chemical processing in plants that are very similar to refineries. Forget about methanol, hydrogen, and other exotics. Such direct conversion would use the existing infrastructure; it is commercially feasible, the technology is proven, and the profit potential is evident — even

if the conversion efficiency is only modest, say 50%.

Thanks to cheap natural gas, Romney’s promise for lower gasoline prices is easily fulfilled: With reduced demand and increased supply globally, the world price of oil will decline and so will the price of transportation fuel. So by satisfying transportation needs for fuel, it should be possible to reduce, rather quickly, oil imports from overseas; at present, 60% of all imports (in $) are for oil. At the same time, oil production can be increased domestically and throughout North America. The US is on its way to become not only energy-independent but also an exporter of motor fuels – with a huge improvement in its balance of payments.

Billionaire oilman Harold Hamm, CEO of Continental Resources and discoverer of the prolific Bakken fields of the northern Great Plains, complains about current energy policy that’s holding back development. “President Obama is riding the wrong horse on energy,” he adds in an interview with Stephen Moore. We can’t come anywhere near the scale of energy production to achieve energy independence by pouring tax dollars into “green energy” sources like wind and solar. It has to come from oil and gas. Hamm is an energy advisor to Romney. Similarly, Governor Bob McDonnell, intent on making Virginia the energy capital of the East Coast by developing offshore oil and gas, complains, in a WSJ op-ed, that Obama’s words are “worlds apart from his actions.”

Another promise Romney can confidently make is that he will cut the price of electricity in half — or even lower. This promise can be fulfilled not only by the low price of natural gas but also by the much higher efficiency of gas-fired power plants that can easily reach 60% or more, compared to the present 35-40% for nuclear or coal-fired plants. Higher efficiencies reduce not only the cost of fuel (per kilowatt-hour) but effectively lower the capital cost (per kilowatt).

Efficiencies can be raised even higher with ‘distributed’ electric generation, if such gas-fired power plants are located in urban centers where co-generation becomes an attractive possibility. This would use the low-temperature heat that is normally discharged into the environment (and wasted) to provide hot water for space heating and many other applications of an urban area: snow and ice removal, laundry, and even cooling and water desalination. Again, this is proven technology and the economics may be very favorable. Distributed generation also improves security (against terrorism) and simplifies the disposal of waste heat.

Low-cost natural gas can also provide the basic raw material for cheap fertilizer for farmers, thus lowering food prices, and feedstock for chemical plants for cheaper plastics and other basic materials. Industries can now return to the United States and provide jobs locally — instead of operating offshore where natural gas has been cheap.

With the exploitation of the enormous gas-hydrate resource in the offing, once the technology is developed, the future never looked brighter. Somehow, Romney must convey this optimistic outlook to the voting public.

“Natural gas is a feedstock in basically every industrial process,” and the price of gas in the U.S. is a fraction of what it is in Europe or Asia. “This country has an incredible advantage headed its way as Asian labor costs rise, as the cost to transport goods from Asia to the U.S. rises, as oil prices rise, as American labor costs have stagnated or gone down in the last 10 years. We have a really wonderful opportunity to kick off an industrial renaissance in the U.S.” [Aubrey McClendon, CEO of Chesapeake Energy, WSJ 4-26-12]

Slaying the ‘Green Dragon’

Romney should speak out on the “hoax” (to use Senator Inhofe’s term) of climate catastrophes from rising CO2 levels. He should also make it clear that there is no need for large-scale wind energy or solar electricity — and even the construction of nuclear plants can be postponed. Many environmentalists will be relieved to avoid covering the landscape with solar mirrors, windmills and – yes — hundreds of miles of electric transmission lines and towers.

In his book Throw Them All Out Peter Schweizer reports that 80% of the Department of Energy’s multi-billion Green loans, loan guarantees, and grants went to Obama backers. Romney should proclaim that there will be no more Solyndras or other boondoggles, and no need for government subsidies for ‘Green energy’ or for crony capitalism. The marketplace would decide the future of novel technologies, such as electric cars, solar devices, etc. Many Washington lobbyists will lose their cushy jobs.

There’s absolutely no need for bio-fuels either. Yes, that includes algae as well as ethanol, which is now consuming some 40% of the US corn crop. The world price of corn has tripled in the past five years – even as EPA plans to increase the ethanol percentage of motor fuels from 10 to 15%! True environmentalists are well aware of the many drawbacks of bio-fuels, the damage they do to crop lands and forests in the US and overseas, and to the vast areas they require that could be devoted to natural habitats.

Finally, Romney should make it clear that if elected he would appoint a secretary of energy, secretary of interior, administrator of NOAA and administrator of EPA who share his convictions about energy. Above all, he should recruit a White House staff, including a Science Advisor, who will bring the promise of low-cost, secure energy to the American economy.

Perhaps the WSJ (April 27) said it all: Did you like the past four years? Good, you can get four more”

S. Fred Singer is professor emeritus at the University of Virginia and director of the Science & Environmental Policy Project.  His specialty is atmospheric and space physics.   An expert in remote sensing and satellites, he served as the founding director of the US Weather Satellite Service and, more recently, as vice chair of the US National Advisory Committee on Oceans & Atmosphere. He is a Senior Fellow of the Heartland Institute and the Independent Institute. Though a physicist, he has taught economics to engineers and written a monograph on the world price of oil. He has also held several government positions and served as an adviser to Treasury Secretary Wm. Simon. He co-authored NY Times best-seller “Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1500 years.” In 2007, he founded and has chaired the NIPCC (Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change), which has released several scientific reports [See www.NIPCC.org]. For recent writings see http://www.americanthinker.com/s_fred_singer/ and also Google Scholar.

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Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 2:36 pm

Unfortunately this is what Romney is fighting or at least he thinks he is:
TOP new articles on Google:
Polling results suggest that public support for steps to curb global warming has dropped from 72% to about 62% since 2010: http://content.usatoday.com/communities/sciencefair/post/2012/05/reaction-roundup-climate-steps-support-poll/1#.T8aSWh-wcxI
Tracking Public Attitudes — Latest Polls: from the US Climate Action Network: http://www.usclimatenetwork.org/hot-topics/climate-polling
NYT: In Poll, Many Link Weather Extremes to Climate Change: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/18/science/earth/americans-link-global-warming-to-extreme-weather-poll-says.html
Poll: Americans’ Understanding of Climate Change Increasing With More Extreme Weather, Warmer Temperatures: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/02/29/434563/poll-americans-understanding-climate-change-increasing-with-more-extreme-weather-warmer-temperatures/

The number of people who believe that the planet is warming is at its highest level since the fall of 2009. According to a survey conducted in December 2011 by the National Survey of American Public Opinion on Climate Change, 62% of Americans say they think global warming is happening. That’s up 7% from last spring….

Of course the change in name from Global Warming to “Climate Change” really confuses the issue. I would have to lie to say I do not believe there is “Climate change”

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 2:43 pm

SocialBlunder says:
May 30, 2012 at 9:11 am
From an economic perspective, the cheap natural gas is forcing consolidation in the natural gas industry…..
_______________________________
Once coal is gone Natural gas is the next target. Sierra Club is already gearing up:
Wall Street Journal, Sierra Clubs Natural Gas: The green lobby picks its next fossil fuel target. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304363104577390432521371296.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop

May 30, 2012 2:48 pm

Fred nails this. There is nothing green about a policy that wastes 40% of a major foodcrop to turn it into a lower density energy that increases ozone pollution. Gasoline/diesel are used because they are the best sources of high density energy.
Romeny could make a huge difference on this, if he shows some backbone. Let’s all hope that he manages that.

Curiousgeorge
May 30, 2012 2:51 pm

tonyb says:
May 30, 2012 at 2:15 pm
From this side of the pond I am astonished and disappointed that the US has a choice of electing one of two lightweights. Leaders of the Western World-only in name.
*************************************************************************************
This might be an epiphany for you. We like lightweights. That’s the way our system was designed. We view government as subservient to the will of the people as opposed to the European model, in which the people are subservient to the government. Unfortunately, the current occupant of the White House seems to prefer the European model. We are about to fire him.

Follow the Money
May 30, 2012 2:54 pm

“From this side of the pond I am astonished and disappointed that the US has a choice of electing one of two lightweights.”
It could have been worse. It could have been Gingrich, a featherweight who thinks himself an Einstein. But Obama is a known quantity now, albeit as a revealed liar. The only people who still believe him are the goofier fringes of urban liberals, national news media robots, and Rush Limbaugh.

clipe
May 30, 2012 2:54 pm

May 30, at 1:56pm
I was thinking more of Hydro than oil.
Specifically Muskrat falls as one example. Ontario, Manitoba and British Columbia also want in on the game.
http://www.gov.nl.ca/lowerchurchillproject/backgrounder_3.htm

Zeke
May 30, 2012 3:19 pm

Romney has a consistent past in both his statements as a candidate and policies as governor. He has been deeply involved in energy and health mandates. He has re-affirmed in his books and in his presidential campaigns that he supports emissions reductions for greenhouse gasES. He has expressed support of worldwide emissions reductions agreements and of a carbon tax.
Keep in mind that NO Republicans voted for the final passage of Obamacare. Now Obama is making statements that the health mandate is “a republican idea” and has strong “bipartisan support.” If no Republicans voted for the final passage of Obamacare, how is it that Republicans are picking up a Presidential candidate who wrote Romneycare, and is running on its success as part of his executive experience as a governor? He has not signed the repeal pledge, and his campaign has said that they would keep components of the bill.
A vote for Romney is a vote for what, precisely? He has a deep history with mandates, ghg regs, the bailouts, and has made statements that were consistent with these positions, along with occasional campaign promises to the contrary. Fred Singer is giving advice, and that is all this is. Ignorance of Romney’s actual positions is not a very encouraging sign on the part of the electorate. Being desperate to get rid of Obama is not an excuse to act irrationally and vote for an energy and health mandate politician.

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 3:19 pm

Jack Mclaughlin says:
May 30, 2012 at 9:39 am
There is a video of Obama promising…
___________________________
Then add in the DOUBLING of unemployment from the real statistics: http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/unemployment-charts
And include the fact College grads can’t get a decent job: Half of new graduates are jobless or underemployed: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2012-04-22/college-grads-jobless/54473426/1
This not only effects the student but the rest of the family who has to house and feed the kid while he scrambles for the money to pay off his student loan as well as his buddies and the friends of his family who are all going to be hearing the complaining about the situation.

The U.S. college class of 2012 is in for a rude welcome to the world of work.
A weak labor market already has left half of young college graduates either jobless or underemployed in positions that don’t fully use their skills and knowledge.
Young adults with bachelor’s degrees are increasingly scraping by in lower-wage jobs — waiter or waitress, bartender, retail clerk or receptionist, for example — and that’s confounding their hopes a degree would pay off despite higher tuition and mounting student loans….

The Blair-Rockefeller Poll has some interesting information. The Tea Party part of the poll is very obvious propaganda crap but the information on where the support for Democrats is is probably OK because that is information they need to be accurate.

2012 Battlefield
Overall, the results of this survey indicate that the traditional base of support among older voters that Democrats have relied upon since the partisan realignment following the New Deal continues to weaken. While older voters continue to vote in high percentages, compared to younger cohorts, clear support for the Democratic Party is confined largely to African Americans. While older Hispanics generally favored the Democratic Party, they showed substantial willingness to vote for Republican Senatorial candidates in the 2010 midterm election. Further, the traditional Democratic support among older Caucasians continues to decline, particularly among older Caucasians living in the South. If these trends continue, the 2012 presidential election will require the Democratic Party to continue to bring young, and often unreliable, voters to the polls. Further, the Democratic Party must continue to make inroads into the growing Latino/Hispanic population. If the GOP is able to maintain its grip on older voters in the South, that tend to not only vote at high rates, but are also overwhelmingly conservative, Republican and willing to support GOP candidates the Democratic presidential campaign strategy will be forced to continue building winning coalitions without the assistance of most of the southern states. With growing populations and over one-third of the Electoral College votes needed to win the Electoral College, losing support among the elderly is an important trend that scholars must continue to monitor.
http://blairrockefellerpoll.uark.edu/5292.php

With graduates unable to find decent jobs and being saddled with loans that can not be gotten out of, those “young, and often unreliable, voters” make take a good hard look at their future and start questioning all the crap they have been fed including CAGW and killing the energy that fuels their possible jobs. The green energy dream is really turning into a nightmare for a lot of them.
The following is going to be a real bummer for many college students.
Student Loan Bankruptcy Exception
The US Bankruptcy Code at 11 USC 523(a)(8) provides an exception to bankruptcy discharge for education loans.….
Student loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy prior to 1976. With the introduction of the US Bankruptcy Code (11 USC 101 et seq) in 1978, the ability to discharge education loans was limited. Subsequent changes in the law have further narrowed the dischargeability of education debt.
The exception to discharge for private student loans evolved over time. Prior to 1984, only private student loans made by a “nonprofit institution of higher education” were excepted from discharge. This was intended to protect the National Defense Student Loan Program (NDSL), the predecessor to the Perkins Loan Program. Those loans were made by colleges using a revolving loan fund created using matching federal contributions. The Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984 made private student loans from all nonprofit lenders excepted from discharge, not just colleges, by striking the words “of higher education”. The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 expanded this to include all “qualified education loans”, regardless of whether a nonprofit institution was involved in making the loans….
That is going to be a real wake up call!
H.R. 2028: Private Student Loan Bankruptcy Fairness Act of 2011 has been
Referred to Committee where it has pretty much died. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hr2028
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) (whom I really dislike) is trying to revive the idea: http://www.usnews.com/education/blogs/student-loan-ranger/2012/03/28/looming-student-debt-crisis-hits-the-senate
Wether it ever gets any legs especially before election remains to be seen. The total value of student loan debt has passed $1 trillion. So I doubt the bankers want that going down the drain.

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 3:25 pm

Chuck L says:
May 30, 2012 at 9:55 am
….Governor Romney should declare here and now that if he is elected, before this decade is out, the United States will be energy independent….
______________________________________________
At least that sounds better than Hopey, Changey

Curt
May 30, 2012 3:31 pm

Bernd Felsche says:
May 30, 2012 at 9:43 am
**************
I’m with Richard Courtney on this. Singer is fundamentally correct. This kind of cogeneration is not just theoretical; it is already widely used. Most American universities have an on-campus electrical generation station with the waste heat used for campus heating purposes (both air and water). This started in the “energy crisis” of the 1970s. It was an easy upgrade for the colleges, which generally already had a central steam plant that burned fuel just to provide heat through the campus-wide steam plants.
Remember that steam must leave an electrical generation turbine as a gas — if it condenses in the turbine, it will quickly destroy the turbine blades. So it must still be above 100C and still a gas — this provides a lot of available energy.
Where you have half a point is that this is “low grade” steam, with a lower specific energy than “high-grade” steam directly out of a boiler. And there are trade-offs in reduced electrical energy if you wish to provide higher-grade steam to your heating system. But even the low-grade steam can provide a significant energy source that would otherwise be wasted.
I read recently about a cogeneration system installed at a large midwestern steel mill. The energy savings in that single installation were greater than the supply from all of the photovoltaic systems in the country.

conradg
May 30, 2012 3:33 pm

THe only thing Romney (or Obama) could do to bring down the price of oil and gas is to bring about peace in the Middle East, particularly with Iran. Right now oil trades a speculative premium based on the threat to oil supplies that a war with Iran would bring about. End that threat, and oil drops $20-30 a barrel.
As for Canadian shale and other drilling measures, that’s all a drop in the bucket in the world oil supply and its effect on price would be negligible. Long term, there needs to be other sources of energy, including gas, and some hi-tech miracle which is not really so miraculous if we finance huge research and development (but not subsidies of inefficient technologies). Thorium LFTR power plants, for instance, are a great possibility.
Politicking the climate change issue will help neither side, and just make a mess of things. On the other hand, anything that helps Obama change the conversation from the immediate state of the economy to the future helps him. And since I plan on supporting Obama in the fall, I think it’s a great idea for the conversation to switch over to energy plans for the future. He’s not the greeny many think he is on energy, and getting a chance to air his policies will probably help him.

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 3:34 pm

Jeremy says:
May 30, 2012 at 10:36 am
Sadly it is the media and the powerful people who control the media which determines US Citizen’s thoughts and ultimately who will be the next President. Democracy only exists in name….
______________________________________________
The Best Government Money Can Buy
Donations are flooding in a level unmatched in U.S. history, led by Super Pacs. The intent is for these powerful and wealthy interests to continue to buy control of the U.S. government.

….the developments underscore how dramatically the political landscape has changed since a trio of federal court cases — most notably the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling — paved the way for a flood of campaign cash from corporations and tycoons looking to help their favored candidates…. http://www.thebestgovernmentmoneycanbuy.com/news/

clipe
May 30, 2012 3:45 pm

conradg says:
May 30, 2012 at 3:33 pm
THe only thing Romney (or Obama) could do to bring down the price of oil and gas is to bring about peace in the Middle East, particularly with Iran. Right now oil trades a speculative premium based on the threat to oil supplies that a war with Iran would bring about. End that threat, and oil drops $20-30 a barrel.
How would you propose bringing about peace in the Middle East (“particularly with Iran”)?
Hide the decline?

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 3:48 pm

Doug Proctor says: May 30, 2012 at 10:40 am
With respect to natural gas: the “abundant, cheap” gas from shale gas needs to be checked closely…..
___________________________
What you say makes nuclear, esp Thorium, if we can get it approved, look better and better. Save the organic fuels for transportation needs and for plastics, fertilizers and the many other useful things mankind makes out of organic precursors.

clipe
May 30, 2012 3:49 pm

Mods can you fix the above? in wrong place.
How would you propose bringing about peace in the Middle East (“particularly with Iran”)?
Hide the decline?

Editor
May 30, 2012 3:49 pm

I am surprised and disappointed to see a political (as in US Two-Party Politics) piece appear on WUWT. A spoiler for me…..
REPLY: Sorry you feel that way, but we’ve had a politics category for quite some time. It doesn’t get used as much as other categories. Still you are welcome to skip over them when they occasionally appear – Anthony

JKrob
May 30, 2012 3:54 pm

David G said:
“…My own idea for a major energy fix would be to convert the entire American fleet of vehicles to diesel from gasoline over a 10 year time frame.”
Sorry but, no, I’m *not* converting my 2012 Ford Mustang GT 5.0 from gasoline to diesel. That is unamerican! And besides – I’m not sure which of my vehicles is greener; my Mustang or my Suburban.
Jeff

Gail Combs
May 30, 2012 4:35 pm

Zeke says:
May 30, 2012 at 3:19 pm
Romney has a consistent past in both his statements as a candidate and policies as governor. He has been deeply involved in energy and health mandates….
_________________________________
Yeah, Romney seems to be Obama Lite. I Really Really do not like him and I wish we had a better choice. I hate having to pick the lesser of two evils all the time and just getting the same old, same old.
Dr. Evans had it right I am afraid The Climate Coup: How the regulating class is using bogus claims about climate change to entrench and extend their economic privileges and political control. Romney is not a “republican” he is a member of the Regulating Class as is Obama.
Do you want the red poison or the blue poison? is the real question.
NONE of the candidates for president were worth the powder… except maybe Keith Judd better known as federal prison inmate number 11593-051, at least I KNOW what his crimes were. “….extortion connected to making threats at the University of New Mexico in 1999….”
Hey he is a great candidate. After all Judd says he attended the JFK School of Politics at Harvard and that he also attended the University of California Los Alamos, where he took classes in physics. He has more campaign experience than Obama, having run for the White House in every election cycle since 1996. His release date is in June 2013, so he will be able to serve nearly his complete term. Who could ask for more in a US presidential candidate?

May 30, 2012 4:37 pm

“Romney can confidently promise to reduce the price of gasoline to $2.50 a gallon or less.”
No he can’t. Ok, there is a way which involves cutting the US oil market off from the rest of the world and subsidising it. This is like the last days of the Roman Empire with the presidential hopefuls bidding on bread and circuses.

Zeke
May 30, 2012 4:49 pm

<This article is totally silent on Romney's past and present positions on energy and ghg regulations. For example:
1. He supports 20 billion in federal spending on energy and “car technology”
2. A large part of his executive experience as gov of Mass (besides authoring Romneycare) was a regional ghg emissions agreement between northeastern sates
3. He passed co2 emissions standards for cars in Mass that were 30% stricter than federal standards
4. He supports worldwide agreements on ghg emissions reductions, publically, as a candidates. Statements were made specifically in this bid for the nomination in June 2011
5. He supports a carbon tax offset by a payroll tax cut.
Romney is a global warming candidate. This article is 100% advice and has no factual content or basis in the positions held by this candidate.

May 30, 2012 4:52 pm

I don’t like politics here on WUWT. Anything else I can think of to say only furthers this political discussion. Please, fewer articles like this. Leaves a distinctly bad taste in my mouth.

May 30, 2012 4:59 pm

James Hastings-Trew,
I recommend skipping any articles that bother you. Simples.☺

Zeke
May 30, 2012 5:03 pm

European and Southern hemisphere economies and energy supplies are being destroyed by ghg regulations and mandates. A worldwide carbon trading market and a way of taxing carbon dioxide is still a hope for the banks and the governments. Now notice that Romney has outspent real conservatives by a factor of 12, and that Romney does not offer a genuine difference on Obamacare or on ghg reductions.

elbatrop
May 30, 2012 5:17 pm

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=S._Fred_Singer
thought I recognized the writer
[REPLY: An anonymous troll expects US to be impressed with THAT? Given your intellectual band-width, I’m surprised you recognized the name at all -REP]