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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conradg says:
May 30, 2012 at 7:08 pm
Can you name a single thing Obama has done that is Marxist (and not of the Groucho variety)?
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Better question: Can you name a single thing Obama has done that isn’t Marxist?
While you’re at it, look up the definition of Lenin’s “useful idiots”.
Bernd Felsche says:
May 30, 2012 at 9:43 am
What? This is done all the time in smaller co-gen plants; one of the things that makes them attractive and increases overall efficiency. Yale University installed their first 16 megawatt co-gen plant in 1993 and a second 10 megawatt one some years later.
So-called “waste” heat can be used as, well, heat for example. Yale has an existing steam distribution infrastructure to heat its buildings in New Haven, so waste heat off the co-gen plant is used in the winter to provde building heat which would otherwise require burning additional fuel.
In the summer when heat is not needed the waste heat can be used to drive an ammonia gas absorption cycle and produce refrigeration (counter-intuitive I know, but it works). In some locations (middle east), the waste heat can be used for de-salinization.
The problem with using waste heat on a large scale is heat does not transport well so the usage site must be close to the production site. This is not the case for commercial power plants, so I expect they would continue to dump waste heat to the ambient air.
The combined cycle natural gas co-gen plant is not a replacement for major utility generation plants, but a supplement. Universities, office parks, and large hotel complexes can profitably run their own co-gen plants assuming they already have the natrual gas supply, taking peak time load off the grid.
But I think the main point is: if you get burdensome regulations out of the way, major energy consuming businesses will look at available technology on their own and pick what they believe is optimal for them. And if they decide a co-gen plant makes sense, they will invest their own money to build it.
Romney isn’t going to do any of that. His buddies are strongly invested in Green crap. He will give occasional vague lip service to the non-Green side, but his actual policies will return to Bush-era tight restrictions on production and increased subsidies for wind and solar.
Remember: He’s not about improving the American economy, he’s only about maximizing profit for the financial sector.
Obama is mostly the same, but has to satisfy unions as well. This modulates his policies slightly toward improving the actual American economy.
Curt:
At May 30, 2012 at 3:31 pm you say;
I would appreciate a citation for the source of this information.
Please not that I am NOT disputing what you say. On the contrary, it would be useful information for me to use in dispelling false statements about solar power.
I have expended some hours unsuccessfully trying to track-down the source of the information you provide. So, I would be grateful if you could cite its source.
Richard
Zeke says: @ur momisugly May 30, 2012 at 6:10 pm
….I couldn’t even have fun and become a Paulistinian, because he (conveniently for Romney) dropped out. Maybe I will take you up on the bumpersticker.
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Given the general disgust with politicians in the USA it might actually sell well.
I agree with the essay. Cheap, plentiful energy should be the goal of federal policy, not expensive, constricted supplies.
Related, Here is another step toward cheap solar power:
http://cleantechnica.com/2012/05/31/sharp-hits-concentrator-solar-cell-efficiency-record-43-5/
“Better question: Can you name a single thing Obama has done that isn’t Marxist?”
Since nothing Obama has done is Marxist, that’s easy. Let’s start, say, with creating a health care plan based on Gov. ROmney’s Massachusetts plan. If that’s Marxist, then Romney is a Marxist also.
But I still demand that you name something, anything, that Obama’s done that is Marxist. You do know what that would mean, I hope? And stop trying to shift the burden of proof. You made the claim that Obama is a Marxist. Now back it up with evidence.
Convert the 5th paragraph to a numbered list and use it often in speeches:
1. Lower gasoline prices;
2. cheaper household electricity;
3. cheaper fertilizer for farmers and
4. lower food prices for everybody;
5. cheaper transport fuels for aviation and for the trucking industry;
6. lower raw material costs for the chemical industry.
Thank Komrade Obama for giving us a great platform.
You know I first started reading this blog because I thought it was scientific. I used to believe in Global Warming too until Anthony Watts’ blog gave me pause to reconsider. Now I’m starting to wonder if this isn’t some cheap political schill site for the GOP. Anthony if you consider AGW types to be ideologically liberal then you need to remove shameless political BS like this from your site. It damages your credibility. I think it is important to have a sincere debate on the climate and what if any impact human endeavor has on it via the burning of hydrocarbons. There is no basis for claiming that the president’s policies have raised the price of gas. That’s a free market enterprise, and oil companies have never seen bigger profits. If the government were truly to blame then there wouldn’t be those profits. Not to mention all the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons on US soil. If you’re gonna go political, please state that at the top of the website, in big letters. This is not a place for sincere discussion only politics as usual.
I know this was addressed to Watts, but I’m trying to figure out why you are angry that politics has something to do with beliefs about AGW? If a person is left, politically, then they also generally dislike oil companies, free markets, low taxes, and on and on and on. Political party affiliation is highly correlated with views on a large range of topics, and complaining that no such associations should ever be made on this site because to do so is “shameless political BS” is, frankly, unrealistic and naive, and bit strident. Is there really any doubt that the current Administration hasn’t made petroleum exploration and development as difficult as possible, or that they are committed to “green” energy to the point that they cannot see the perils of over-committing to such?
richardscourtney says:
May 31, 2012 at 7:23 am
Here’s the source:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=90714692
It was a story on the morning news show of America’s National Public Radio, not exactly a right-wing source…
Curt:
Thankyou for your reply to me at May 31, 2012 at 3:50 pm that says:
The link says;
Excellent! That is exactly what I wanted. Thankyou.
And I hope you will not be offended that I ask what you are suggesting when you write;
” not exactly a right-wing source”.
As I said, I asked you for the citation because I want to use it. You have kindly supplied the citation but I wonder if you are you suggesting the source is loony (I have no means to find out for myself).
Richard
@conradg says: May 31, 2012 at 11:36 am
“Let’s start, say, with creating a health care plan based on Gov. ROmney’s Massachusetts plan. If that’s Marxist, then Romney is a Marxist also.”
The accusation of being a Marxist is not negated by anyone else doing the same thing. There can be (and are) more than 1 Marxist. You failed logic.
Richard – I know that there are those that would tend to dismiss a story like that outright if it came from a “right wing” source like Fox News, so I was simply trying to point out that NPR does not have that reputation at all (I would call it “soft left” in orientation.)
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conradg says:
May 31, 2012 at 11:36 am
“Better question: Can you name a single thing Obama has done that isn’t Marxist?”
Since nothing Obama has done is Marxist, that’s easy. Let’s start, say, with creating a health care plan based on Gov. ROmney’s Massachusetts plan. If that’s Marxist, then Romney is a Marxist also.
But I still demand that you name something, anything, that Obama’s done that is Marxist. You do know what that would mean, I hope? And stop trying to shift the burden of proof. You made the claim that Obama is a Marxist. Now back it up with evidence.
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Impeccable logic there. /sarc
You must’ve forgot to look up “useful idiot”.
Severe recession now unfolding in Europe where they have a common currency and monetary policy but unlike America, lack a common fiscal policy to deal with the mess. It’s looking more like Gary Shilling is going to be right about a hard landing in China. And we will double dip into a moderate recession. SpaghettiO will likely be toast. Personally, I hope the world gets together on a debt forgiveness reset with individual currencies leveled to the assets countries possess and just start over.
Curt:
Thankyou. You have been a great help and I am grateful.
Richard
Re: Curt & richardscourtney
Yes thank you Curt, that was most interesting. The interview also touches on why Europe and Japan do a lot more waste heat recycling than the US (no surprise):
That’s right, many industries are prohibited from utilizing waste heat to produce electricity.
So by some simple changes in the law, we could get private industries to invest their own money in systems to produce electrical power from waste heat.
We could eliminate all subsidies for wind and solar projects and yet have more available electrical energy than we do today with zero additional pollution, regardless of what you consider pollution.
Further, the industries which produce a lot of heat also tend to be major blue collar employers, which is the segment really hurting today with the loss of manufacturing jobs. Allowing these types of industries to be more competitive by recapturing some of their fuel costs would improve the employment outlook for their workers.
So let’s see — we have a strategy which (a) is funded by the private sector [no new federal outlays], (b) increases the electrical supply, especially at peak times by more than enough to compensate for halting subsidies of wind and solar projects [federal savings], and (c) strengthens industries which tend to be major blue collar employers [it’s a jobs program!]. This is such an obvious no-brainer you really have to wonder how our government could be so dumb to actually prohibit it.
And this is the same government we expect to solve hard problems?
Alan Watt:
In your post at June 3, 2012 at 11:46 am you say
Indeed.
Clearly, you have understood why I was so interested to obtain the citation for the illustration which Curt so helpfully provided.
But I write now to suggest that there is a more important question than how to change the law.
That more important question is ‘Why were such laws introduced?’
This is the issue that I touched on in my post at May 30, 2012 at 11:49 am when I wrote
My “more important question” pertains to the “cultural reasons” I mentioned.
As several discussions on WUWT demonstrate, many Americans fail to distinguish between cultural and political issues. And that failure is why I suspect any attempt to repeal those laws would be difficult in the US although – as you say – it is economically desirable.
Richard
Um, as opposed to where, exactly?
Brian h:
If you cannot recognise it then there is no point in directing you to examples.
Richard
Those claiming to be above cultural influence or conditioning are the least self-aware and generally are attempting to appoint themselves as sole rational critics and adjudicators of cultures. Post-modernists come to mind; unwarranted intellectual arrogance is their most obvious and obnoxious characteristic.
Brian H:
North American (i.e. US) culture is essentially ‘individualistic’ and sees ‘competition’ as always being desirable. This is exhibited in several ways.
Commonly known examples of the US ‘individualist’ culture include
• The US Constitution seeks to protect the populace from government power instead of demanding government has and uses powers to protect the public.
• ‘Cowboy’ or “frontier’ myths are seen as ideals by many Americans.
• Many Americans see any attempt to constrain ownership of firearms as an inhibition to them protecting themselves.
• etc.
Each national culture has advantages and disadvantages.
A disadvantage of the American culture of ‘individualism’ is that it encourages the US government to ‘game’ the system so it can protect the US public with changing circumstances. One consequence of this is that successful ‘gaming’ becomes adopted by bureaucracies to advance their own interests (e.g. the existing EPA proposals for constraint of anthropogenic Hg emissions).
And the ‘competitive’ culture has direct political effects. For example, in the US rich e.g. industrialists pay for political campaigns with the expectation of financial rewards from elected politicians whom they thus supported. This is a direct inducement to political corruption which is endemic in US politics. But constraint on the monies expended on elections (as exists in several countries including my own, the UK) would be difficult to obtain in the US because it directly inhibits a form of ‘competition’ (i.e. obtaining maximum campaign funds).
Of importance to discussion in this thread is the imposition of laws which inhibit adoption of cogeneration. Such laws exist to encourage ‘individualism’ with resulting increase to ‘competition’. Large scale cogeneration requires a large degree of cooperativeness from all in the community (e.g. town) which adopts it, and this cooperativeness is inhibited as a by-product of laws which enhance individualism and competition.
Any opposition to the laws and policies I have here mentioned would be perceived as political action. But, as I have explained, the opposition is culturally-based.
Your ridiculous implications that I am post modernist etc. are not worthy of discussion.
Richard
Richard: Whatever the validity in general of your analysis of US culture and its implications, I don’t think it’s too valid here. In the NPR story, they are talking about the legal problems in using waste heat from industrial processes to generate electricity. But the legal restrictions in this case are designed to protect the electric utility monopolies — hardly a case of individualistic competition.
In the US, dating from Edsion’s time, electrical generation and distribution has overwhelmingly been allocated to regulated public utility monopolies. There are some valid reasons for it, but certainly not every decision made in this venue has been in the best interest of the public.
I will say, however, that there are real technical, and therefore, policy challenges in opening up electrical generation to sources outside the regulated utility monopoly. If you recall, California totally botched this a decade ago, and we’re still paying for it…
If the utility distribution system must take the electrical power that, for example, a steel mill generates from its waste heat, this gives the utility less flexibility in choosing what the rest of its sources are. (The utilities are driven nuts by similar “must take” regulations for solar and wind sources.) The key problem is that these sources are typically unrelated to demand, tending to unbalance the grid. These objections should not be dismissed lightly.
When cogeneration works the other way — waste heat from electric generation used for low-grade heating needs — the US is hampered by its dearth of “district heating” systems as compared to Europe and Japan. Fundamentally though, this can be simply explained by the lower population density in the US. High-density Manhattan, for example, has a lot of district heating. Now, whether this lower population density is a cause or effect of “rugged individualism”, or unrelated to it, is a very interesting question. But as a “fact on the ground”, it simply means that there are relatively fewer opportunities to use this waste heat.
Curt:
Thankyou for your informative post at June 6, 2012 at 11:27 pm.
Richard