Obama By-Passes Gas

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

President Obama continues his Global War on Cheap Energy™, this time under the guise of avoiding “spikes” in gasoline (petrol) prices.  He wants to pass gas without regrets and move post-haste to electricity and biofuels, although both are more expensive than gasoline and diesel for road and rail transport. According to the Associated Press, in a speech at the Argonne National Laboratories Obama said:

The only way to break this cycle of spiking gas prices — the only way to break that cycle for good — is to shift our cars entirely, our cars and trucks, off oil.

Let me start by saying that I’m greatly encouraged to hear that Obama has solved the problem of price variation in capitalist societies. It’s simple. Are you like me, bothered by gas prices going up and down, tired of seeing peaks and valleys in the cost of gasoline, fed up with price spikes because of e.g. unregulated speculation in commodities? The answer is obvious.

Stop using gas.

corn as food not fuelFigure 1. Unrefined Corn Ethanol.

SOURCE: Oxfam, Burning down the house: Corn as fuel, not food

We can extend that to other areas, of course. Food prices spiking? Turn your food into gasoline, where there are no longer any price spikes. I see a future industry here …

I must protest, however, that his claim that shifting cars and trucks to electricity and biofuels will break the cycle of spiking gas prices is all too true … and that’s very bad news.

It’s bad news because the way he plans to get past spiking gas prices is to go to high, constant alternative fuel prices, higher than even the spikes of today. And just as he promised … no spikes. The high prices, just like the outrageous thirty-cent per kilowatt-hours electricity prices in California resulting from this same kind of backwards thinking, get locked in by long-term contracts.

No more price spikes. What’s not to like?

Unfortunately, the brilliant Obama plan is the same trademarked plan the Government always seems to have, to wit:

THROW MONEY AT THE PROBLEM™

In this case, it’s two BILLION dollars. With a B. If your family had started a business when Christ was born and made a million dollars profit per year, a huge sum of money, imagine what that could buy, you’d have been millionaires … well, after two thousand long years of running your business, stacking up a million bucks every year, year after slow year, centuries pass, finally a millennium. You’re still running the business, more years go by, dark ages and renaissance and finally, ten centuries after the first endless millennium, right about now you’d be hitting two billion in total profits.

Now imagine what that could buy. It is a huge sum of money.

They say the first time history repeats, it’s as a tragedy. The next time, it’s a comedy. I suppose this is the first repeat. When this circus originally debuted, unfortunately, Obama was only fifteen years old, and from reports, the head of the choom gang. Not that that is a black mark to a reprobate like myself, we’ve all been young, but it increases the chances that he might have missed the urgency and the drama of the moment when Jimmy Carter delivered a televised speech announcing his new official Energy Policy and the formation of the Department of Energy on April 18, 1977. The entire talk is here. It’s long, I will only discuss certain points. I’ll indicate where I’ve skipped over text with the ellipsis (three periods, or three full stops for our UK cousins). I’ll start from his opening.

Tonight I want to have an unpleasant talk with you about a problem unprecedented in our history. With the exception of preventing war, this is the greatest challenge our country will face during our lifetimes. The energy crisis has not yet overwhelmed us, but it will if we do not act quickly.

It is a problem we will not solve in the next few years, and it is likely to get progressively worse through the rest of this century.

We must not be selfish or timid if we hope to have a decent world for our children and grandchildren.

OK, that’s it. Time out. I’ve heard this nonsense enough. I hereby declare Willis’s Rule of Degenerations, which states:

Whenever some rich guy says he’s doing something for “the grandchildren”, you can make money betting that the poor, who too often are people of color, will get shafted.

and also Willis’s Rule of the Worst Danger, which states

Whatever a rich guy says is the worst danger we face this century, the challenge of our generation, unprecedented in our history … almost certainly isn’t.

I’m sorry, but those claims just can’t continue, it’s cruel to the grandchildren to keep exhibiting them like trained monkeys that way. But I digress … Carter goes on to say:

We simply must balance our demand for energy with our rapidly shrinking resources. By acting now, we can control our future instead of letting the future control us.

Two days from now, I will present my energy proposals to the Congress. Its members will be my partners and they have already given me a great deal of valuable advice. Many of these proposals will be unpopular. Some will cause you to put up with inconveniences and to make sacrifices.

The most important thing about these proposals is that the alternative may be a national catastrophe. Further delay can affect our strength and our power as a nation.

Note the false urgency, the false claims of the huge importance of the issue. This is characteristic of the alarmist style. The banner is “WE MUST DECIDE NOW!” … but no, actually, we didn’t have to decide anything about energy. And we didn’t decide much of anything about energy, despite Carter’s urgings.

He goes on:

Our decision about energy will test the character of the American people and the ability of the President and the Congress to govern. This difficult effort will be the “moral equivalent of war” — except that we will be uniting our efforts to build and not destroy.

Since I’m on a roll, let me propose Willis’s Rule of Moral Equivalency, which states:

Whatever a rich guy says is morally equivalent to war … almost certainly isn’t.

But again I digress … here’s President Carter continuing his roll:

I know that some of you may doubt that we face real energy shortages. The 1973 gasoline lines are gone, and our homes are warm again. But our energy problem is worse tonight than it was in 1973 or a few weeks ago in the dead of winter. It is worse because more waste has occurred, and more time has passed by without our planning for the future. And it will get worse every day until we act.

The reference to 1973 is to Nixon’s short-lived attempts at gasoline price controls. Predictably, these led to shortages and huge lines at the pumps. And all of this, of course, is more false urgency. Here’s the reasoning he adduces to support it (as always, emphasis mine)

The oil and natural gas we rely on for 75 percent of our energy are running out. In spite of increased effort, domestic production has been dropping steadily at about six percent a year. Imports have doubled in the last five years. Our nation’s independence of economic and political action is becoming increasingly constrained. Unless profound changes are made to lower oil consumption, we now believe that early in the 1980s the world will be demanding more oil than it can produce.

Is this sounding familiar to anyone? I fear it’s the usual doom merchant’s snake oil … the sky is falling. Well, modern doom merchants have gotten smarter, at least. They now say “the sky will fall in two decades”, trusting correctly that people will have forgotten their failed doomcast by then … see Paul Ehrlich as the modern holotype.

The world now uses about 60 million barrels of oil a day and demand increases each year about five percent. This means that just to stay even we need the production of a new Texas every year, an Alaskan North Slope every nine months, or a new Saudi Arabia every three years. Obviously, this cannot continue.

And yet … here we are , and it has continued right up to 2013, thirty years past when Carter said we’d run out. And with the advent of fracking providing huge untapped resources of both natural gas and tight oil, and with the Canadian tar sands online, and with the recent Japanese extraction of methane from undersea hydrates, and the discoveries in Brazil and elsewhere, and with stated reserves no smaller than they were when Carter spoke, I see every reason to think that fossil fuel use can continue for at least a half century at a minimum, and potentially much more. Folks, if you are worried about running out of fossil fuel, you can relax. The world is awash in fossil energy. There is no urgency regarding running out, that is 100% hype, both in Carter’s time and today. He goes on:

We must look back in history to understand our energy problem. Twice in the last several hundred years there has been a transition in the way people use energy.

The first was about 200 years ago, away from wood — which had provided about 90 percent of all fuel — to coal, which was more efficient. This change became the basis of the Industrial Revolution.

The second change took place in this century, with the growing use of oil and natural gas. They were more convenient and cheaper than coal, and the supply seemed to be almost without limit. They made possible the age of automobile and airplane travel. Nearly everyone who is alive today grew up during this age and we have never known anything different.

Because we are now running out of gas and oil, we must prepare quickly for a third change, to strict conservation and to the use of coal and permanent renewable energy sources, like solar power.

(In passing I note the repeat of the “must prepare quickly” meme to reinforce the false sense of urgency.)

My main comment on this, however, is that the first two transitions proceeded seamlessly, without the slightest bit of government interference, or as it is known in some quarters, “government assistance”. I continue to make the assumption that the same is true about the future transition from fossil fuels to X, that it can happen without the Government’s involvement … but there’s a small problem. We don’t know what X is yet. I trust that the market (with appropriate regulation as all markets need) will sort it out quite nicely. I discuss these options below.

He continues:

The world has not prepared for the future. During the 1950s, people used twice as much oil as during the 1940s. During the 1960s, we used twice as much as during the 1950s. And in each of those decades, more oil was consumed than in all of mankind’s previous history.

World consumption of oil is still going up. If it were possible to keep it rising during the 1970s and 1980s by 5 percent a year as it has in the past, we could use up all the proven reserves of oil in the entire world by the end of the next decade.

… All of us have heard about the large oil fields on Alaska’s North Slope. In a few years when the North Slope is producing fully, its total output will be just about equal to two years’ increase in our nation’s energy demand.

Each new inventory of world oil reserves has been more disturbing than the last. World oil production can probably keep going up for another six or eight years. But some time in the 1980s it can’t go up much more. Demand will overtake production. We have no choice about that.

Again we see the techniques of the alarmists in action. It’s all about must act now, can’t wait, need to move, values are in conflict, world oil production will peak in the 1980s, stakes are huge, decisions are urgent, all the usual catch-phrases of post-normal “science”. At least Carter had the excuse that it was kinda new stuff back then … but in 2013 that kind of alarmism is well past its use-by date.

Then Carter paints the bleak future if nothing is done. Do remember when evaluating his forecast that in fact nothing was done, nothing substantial was accomplished by his Energy Plan.

And despite that, world oil production didn’t peak in the 1980s as he forecast. Global energy use has continued to rise at about the same rate, and world oil production is still rising as we speak … but that is reality, here’s Carter’s bleakly incorrect vision of the future without his energy plan …

… Now we have a choice. But if we wait, we will live in fear of embargoes. We could endanger our freedom as a sovereign nation to act in foreign affairs. Within ten years we would not be able to import enough oil — from any country, at any acceptable price.

If we wait, and do not act, then our factories will not be able to keep our people on the job with reduced supplies of fuel. Too few of our utilities will have switched to coal, our most abundant energy source.

We will not be ready to keep our transportation system running with smaller, more efficient cars and a better network of buses, trains and public transportation.

We will feel mounting pressure to plunder the environment. We will have a crash program to build more nuclear plants, strip-mine and burn more coal, and drill more offshore wells than we will need if we begin to conserve now. Inflation will soar, production will go down, people will lose their jobs. Intense competition will build up among nations and among the different regions within our own country.

If we fail to act soon, we will face an economic, social and political crisis that will threaten our free institutions.

But we still have another choice. We can begin to prepare right now. We can decide to act while there is time. That is the concept of the energy policy we will present on Wednesday. Our national energy plan is based on ten fundamental principles.

Job loss, intense competition between nations and regions destabilizing the planet, multiple socioeconomipolitical crises, can’t run public transportation … ACT NOW OR BE DOOMED!!!

Meanwhile, let me take a deep breath, step away from the urgency, and pause to keep all of this in context.  In James Hansen’s Policies Shaft The Poor, I showed that per-capita income and per-capita energy use are inextricably linked. Let me repeat that graph here, it’s an important one:

energy use vs incomeFigure 2. Energy use per person (tons of oil equivalent, TOE) versus average income, by country. Colors show geographical regions. Size of the circle indicates population. The US is the large yellow circle at the top right. Canada is the overlapping yellow circle. China is the large red circle, India the large light blue circle. Here’s a link to the live Gapminder graph so you can experiment with it yourself.

As you can see, energy use and income are two sides of the same coin.

And finally, with that as prologue, here’s the Carter energy plan (emphasis as always is mine). Or more specifically, what he calls the “principles”. And despite Carter’s alarmism, and his general pro-government-assistance/intervention stance, he raises some interesting issues and has a few good principles. Mixed in with horrible principles, of course. Here goes (all emphasis in Carter’s words is mine):

The first principle is that we can have an effective and comprehensive energy policy only if the government takes responsibility for it and if the people understand the seriousness of the challenge and are willing to make sacrifices.

Damn, what is it with these guys? Their guiding thought seems to be that the Federal Government should take responsibility for every single non-problem, and that the people should take it in the shorts … same old same old.

The second principle is that healthy economic growth must continue. Only by saving energy can we maintain our standard of living and keep our people at work. An effective conservation program will create hundreds of thousands of new jobs.

Finally, some things we can agree on. Healthy economic growth is the key to any nation raising its standard of living, which in turn means less avoidable deaths.

And saving energy is good … the only problem is that people do that all the time, because energy costs money. And most folks want to save money. So as a principle, conservation is good. As a point of entry for Federal regulation into people’s lives … not good. Saving energy is already happening, what reason is there for government intervention?

Next, poor folks already “save” all the energy they possibly can because energy costs money. Preaching energy savings to them is just cruel.

He also floats the concept now known as “green jobs” … and it had about the same effect then as now. Because while the Federal Government can hire people to do something, the idea that regulations actually create jobs is always suspect. I’ve seen very few true examples of that. The particular regulations may be necessary, because humans are pigs, we need regulations … but creating jobs? Doubtful. This illusion that regulations create jobs is widespread in government, see my post Browner, Colbert, the EPA, and Broken Windows

In Carter’s case, nothing happened, same as with Obama’s green jobs plans.

The third principle is that we must protect the environment. Our energy problems have the same cause as our environmental problems — wasteful use of resources. Conservation helps us solve both at once.

I agree with that principle entirely. Indeed, we must protect and avoid un-necessary damage to the environment. And conservation is an integral part of that, it is the cheapest way wherever it is possible.

The fourth principle is that we must reduce our vulnerability to potentially devastating embargoes. We can protect ourselves from uncertain supplies by reducing our demand for oil, making the most of our abundant resources such as coal, and developing a strategic petroleum reserve.

Note that this was from that simpler time before the demonization of fossil fuels. I agree that we should reduce our dependence on overseas oil. That’s why I support the Keystone Pipeline, as well as expanded drilling both on and offshore. Nobody was surprised when, after discovering massive offshore fields, Brazil immediately began to develop them. We should do the same. We should drill offshore wherever the oil is.

And I say that as a fisherman and a man who is passionate about the eternal sea and has spent his life on and around and under the ocean. I say that because the world needs more cheap oil, people around the globe are dying for the lack of cheap oil, and meanwhile, rich 1%ers like Bill McKibben and President Obama and Hollywood celebrities and lots of un-indicted climate alarmists are doing their very best to make oil as expensive as possible … I warn you folks who support high energy prices through restricting drilling or by any other way, history will not judge you lightly. But I digress … back to Carter’s principles.

The fifth principle is that we must be fair. Our solutions must ask equal sacrifices from every region, every class of people, every interest group. Industry will have to do its part to conserve, just as the consumers will. The energy producers deserve fair treatment, but we will not let the oil companies profiteer.

Oh, please. When in history has that ever been even remotely true? Sacrifices always fall disproportionately on the poor and people of color. Look, as a principle I like it, just like I’m up for mom and apple pie. I do think it’s good to call for fairness. But in reality, expensive oil is so far from fair as to be laughable. Plus the obligatory demonization of the oil companies is ritualistic and unpleasant. They’re not the problem, they’re just businessmen like every other.

The sixth principle, and the cornerstone of our policy, is to reduce the demand through conservation. Our emphasis on conservation is a clear difference between this plan and others which merely encouraged crash production efforts. Conservation is the quickest, cheapest, most practical source of energy. Conservation is the only way we can buy a barrel of oil for a few dollars. It costs about $13 to waste it.

Again, I like the principle, and have preached it for years.  If it is available, conservation is always cheaper than purchase. Two problems. First, I just don’t think that it is the government’s job to enforce it. The government can advocate for it, but it most always jumps right to enforcement.

Second, Carter just said that the burden would fall equally. But poor people don’t waste energy. They already consume as little as they can, and far too many of them sit shivering in the dark as a consequence as we debate this very question. So for the poor, this is just another rich man’s good idea gone nowhere.

(In passing, let me note that the $13/barrel that Carter refers to, adjusted for inflation, is about $50/barrel.)

The seventh principle is that prices should generally reflect the true replacement costs of energy. We are only cheating ourselves if we make energy artificially cheap and use more than we can really afford.

In general I’m in favor of that, if I understand his meaning. It argues for less government subsidy and price support by any means. He is absolutely correct that we cheat ourselves when we make solar and ethanol and wind artificially cheap.

The eighth principle is that government policies must be predictable and certain. Both consumers and producers need policies they can count on so they can plan ahead. This is one reason I am working with the Congress to create a new Department of Energy, to replace more than 50 different agencies that now have some control over energy.

I must admit that for a peanut farmer, Jimmy had a keen grasp of salesmanship. The government was dabbling in energy in a whole host of ways. That makes sense, energy impacts a lot of things, and decisions are made on the basis of the local situation and the local impact. The system worked well for oh, about two hundred years at that point … so Jimmy declares that it is bad and wrong, it’s a huge problem.

And to solve the problem that only he has noticed, some lack of un-needed uniformity in government rules, he declares that we need a Department of Energy. Declare a problem, declare your solution. All we need is more bureaucracy, problem solved.

Really? How about some clear principles in place of a whole wasteful new government Department? In fact, it strikes me that I need to propose a new rule for this, Willis’s Rule of Government Departments, which states that

If your Government names a new Department after something, you can kiss it goodbye.

I submit the US Departments of Energy and Education as prima facie evidence … but again I digress, it’s hard not to get sidetractored in the midst of Carter’s Ten Principles. Here’s number nine:

The ninth principle is that we must conserve the fuels that are scarcest and make the most of those that are more plentiful. We can’t continue to use oil and gas for 75 percent of our consumption when they make up seven percent of our domestic reserves. We need to shift to plentiful coal while taking care to protect the environment, and to apply stricter safety standards to nuclear energy.

Again, this was before the globe developed carbophobia and an unreasoning (but understandable) fear of nuclear energy. Carter’s prescription is far too logical for the current Administration. The new standard seems to be tax and cap and restrict the fuels that are the cheapest and subsidize those that are most expensive

The tenth principle is that we must start now to develop the new, unconventional sources of energy we will rely on in the next century.

Dang, and he was doing so good on number nine there … no, Mister President, we didn’t need to “start now” at the time, nor did we need to do a damn thing to prepare for the 21st century except continue to explore for oil in new and imaginative ways. As we had always done.

Not only that, but the preparations were overwhelmingly wasted. Based on this speech, Carter spent millions and millions of dollars on solar and wind and allied unconventional energy sources … and we’re now in the next century he warned us about. Look around you.

total world energy consumption 2010

Figure 3. Total world energy consumption by source. In the upper right circle showing renewables, the large dark red area is biomass for heat (home heating, cooking, etc.), 11.4% of total energy. Light blue is hydropower, 3.3% of the total. Each of the other unconventional sources are only half a percent or less of the total.

Do you see any sign of the money Carter spent? People are STILL subsidizing the sun and the wind, the Government is subsidizing rich people to buy $50,000 electric cars, and after thirty-five years of studies and millions of dollars in subsidies, wind and sun and biomass for electricity and biodiesel all added together still total less than 1% of global energy production. And despite that pathetic record of wasted subsidies, the proponents like Obama claim success is just around the corner … the same corner it’s always been just around …

So that’s Jimmy Carter’s Ten Principles of Screwing Up Your Energy Supply. Near the closing he says:

… And we have been proud of our vision of the future. We have always wanted to give our children and grandchildren a world richer in possibilities than we’ve had. They are the ones we must provide for now. They are the ones who will suffer most if we don’t act.

I’ve given you some of the principles of the plan.

I am sure each of you will find something you don’t like about the specifics of our proposal. It will demand that we make sacrifices and changes in our lives. To some degree, the sacrifices will be painful — but so is any meaningful sacrifice. It will lead to some higher costs, and to some greater inconveniences for everyone.

But the sacrifices will be gradual, realistic and necessary. Above all, they will be fair. No one will gain an unfair advantage through this plan. No one will be asked to bear an unfair burden. We will monitor the accuracy of data from the oil and natural gas companies, so that we will know their true production, supplies, reserves, and profits.

The citizens who insist on driving large, unnecessarily powerful cars must expect to pay more for that luxury.

Here we go again, heading towards the grand finale. Drag the poor grandchildren back out on stage where they sweat and fidget under the bright lights, tell people they can expect to suffer, the plan is for energy to become more expensive, and chastise them, tell them that they will have to “pay more” for their “luxuries” … always the paternalistic preaching, the inevitable claim of high moral ground, and always to the same end. More government involvement and more importantly, higher energy costs.

Now, you may recall that I got into Carter’s speech by saying that this is the second time that we’ve heard this exact same horse-puckey, these same lame excuses for jacking up the cost of energy. Once again, Obama and Chu and James Hansen and the rest are peddling the same New! Expensive! Renewable! snake oil as cure-all patent medicine, nothing it won’t fix, makes the lame to see and the blind to talk …

And there is no more urgency now than there was in Carter’s time. Despite all of his claims of how the energy world was going to end, we continued with business as usual and the fossil fuel didn’t end. Same thing today.

And Carter touting the fact that his plans will result in raised prices, so we should bend over and get ready to make sacrifices? He, like Obama, thinks cheap gas is a luxury to be weaned off of. It is not. Cheap energy is the savior of the poor. It is the only way nations can become more developed. Making energy more expensive should be listed by the UN as a crime against humanity, and looking at the various mortality rates among the poor, I’m dead serious.

In that regard, note that the avowed goal of the recent Secretary of Energy, Steven Chu, was to get US gas prices up to European levels (~ $8 to $10 per gallon).

As I showed in Figure 2, for most of the world, you can’t increase national income without increasing energy use. They are the flip sides of the same coin.

I also said that increasing energy prices harm and impoverish and kill the poor. I’m sure some people took that last one as hyperbole, about killing people … so let me show you a very, very ugly graph:

child mortality vs gdp per capitaFigure 4. Child mortality rates versus income. Circle size shows crude birth rate.  Nobody has figured out how to have low child mortality with low income (empty lower left half of the graph). Live Link 

The equation is simple.

Expensive energy = Less energy use = less income = more children dying.

And that is why I find the insistence that we have to rush to replace fossil fuels to be a lethal conceit of a small group of rich people, the 1%ers who will never feel the pinch. Carter tried it thirty-five years ago. We are still paying the price in the form of a useless “Department of Energy”, headed until recently by an idiot savant Nobel Laureate, Steven Chu. The Government is still trying to sell the same stale alarmist line, the bizarre, death-dealing claim that we need to increase the cost of energy. When Chu made that claim I wanted to scream “You idiot! The Department of Energy was supposed to argue and lobby and work for CHEAP ENERGY to lift the masses out of poverty, not strive to make it more expensive!!”

I say again. If you argue for any form of increase in the price of energy, whether through more renewables, subsidies for “unconventional” energy, renewable “standards”, required percentages of unconventional energy, cap-and-trade schemes, carbon taxes, or anything else that raises energy prices, you are harming and impoverishing and killing the poor today. 

Now, I don’t think CO2 is a problem, for a host of reasons I’ve discussed elsewhere in numberless posts.

But if you think it will be a problem for the poor fifty years from now, and if you truly care about the poor, then you owe it to the less fortunate of our planet to figure out a plan for allaying your CO2 fears that doesn’t involve hurting, impoverishing, and killing poor people right now.

w.

PS—I did love the logic. According to the Associated Press:

The initiative, proposing to spend $200 million a year on research, would be paid for with revenue from federal oil and gas leases on offshore drilling and would not add to the deficit.

Good to know … I guess he just forgot to mention what he is going to divert the funds from …

PPS—Can the government play a beneficial role in the process ? I’d say cash prizes are the way to go. Get a panel of experts to identify the bottlenecks in various potential energy processes—artificial photosynthesis, algae-based biofuels, battery storage, whatever. Then offer prizes for any one who can show a cost-effective path past the bottlenecks. If you gave me two billion in prizes to distribute, I’ll guarantee you that we would see some forward progress. Forgets about using the funds for grants, that just leads to more paperwork. We’re interested in results, right? Then let’s pay for results.

That’s what I’d do with two billion, and it is a way that I think the Government could actually be of use rather than a hindrance. I’m not of the “government is bad” or the “regulation is bad” school. I’m an advocate of directed, appropriate government. Plus I don’t want to repeat history a la Carter. We just need to think up new ways to encourage entrepreneurial activity. I’m greatly in favor of the government spending money on basic scientific research … but only for results, for practical answers to the important bottleneck problems. And two billion dollars, in say a hundred prizes of twenty million dollars each could buy a reasonable of those answers. Put a time limit on them, if not solved in ten years shift the prize to some newly identified problem. Or announce half the prizes now, fifty of them, and reserve half for the next fifty really tough problems that show up. Seriously, wouldn’t each twenty million dollar prize for solving an agreed-upon bottleneck guarantee advancing the development of whatever type of energy was involved? And since we only pay for success, where’s the downside?

So please, don’t misconstrue this as a complaint about government—it’s just about bad government. Offering prizes in my book would be good government.

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E.M.Smith
Editor
March 18, 2013 3:27 pm

Oh, the Carter Malaise… I remember it well. That was what started me on a long series of experiments with various fuels and engines. (The conclusion of which is that with nuclear process heat we can turn coal and trash in to gasoline at about $2.50 / gallon for the next several hundred years). And my ‘tag line’ that “There is no energy shortage, there never has been and their never will be. -E.M.Smith” often followed by “Only a shortage of immagination and willingness to act.”
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2009/03/20/there-is-no-energy-shortage/
FWIW, VW figured out how to do the nuclear / coal bit. Methanol at about 50 cents / GGE (Gallon of Gasoline Equivalent) IIRC in mid ’70s dollars, then Mobil Oil came up with a zeolite catalyst (mollectular sieve) that turns that to gasoline for cheap. Last time I ‘did the math’ it was about $2.50 to $2.75 in current money.
IMHO, every alternative ought to be measured against that benchmark.
Oh, and FWIW, that was using a High Temperature Gas Cooled reactor for the heat (with Thorium – yes it was in use way back when. The first commercial full scale nuke, Shippingport, was a Thorium burner…) Using a modern Molten Salt Reactor would be even cheaper as a lot of high pressure and high temp gas sealing and handling can be avoided. Also catalysts have improved, so many of the chemical steps now proceed at lower temperatures so less heat used.
The answer to that “other” 1970s worry-question of “Do you think technology can keep saving you forever?!” is, it turns out, “Yes.”
I would love to see a program of taking each Presidential Legacy Program / Department, one at a time, and just axing them. The nation worked fine before each one was created, and has generally had each thing “addressed” by them get worse after the creation. Commerce and Industry were growing ore BEFORE the Department of Commerce than after. My very good public education came BEFORE the “Department of Education”, now the education in public schools is worse. Energy worked better BEFORE the “Department of Energy”. Baby Bush and Nickle-B (NCLB – No Child Left Behind) has been a horrid thing for teachers and schools and children – no just ‘teaching to the test’ instead of learning to think.. Etc. etc. The only thing the Federal Government can do that the States can not do for themselves is National Defense and International Relations. They ought to stick to that. (with a very few minor exceptions).
BTW, on CNBC (financial news show) they were interviewing an oil guy. He talked about horizontal drilling and how it let them, now, access oil that was considered “immoblie” before, and that the oil produced until recently had all been “mobile”. He stated, rough quote, ~”The total immobile oil is greater than all the mobile oil”. So much for peak oil. All prior consumption has now been replaced with one technological step…

March 18, 2013 5:21 pm

So we’ve had no warming for 16 years, food is getting harder to grow, sunspots are nosediving, people and wildlife are already dying in Africa due to the growing of biofuels and yet this buffoon wants to increase the cultivation of food to put into machinery instead of mouths.
Stop the world, I want to get off!

george e. smith
March 18, 2013 10:36 pm

“””””…..george e. smith says:
March 18, 2013 at 12:15 pm
“””””…..TimO says:
March 18, 2013 at 10:54 am…..”””””
The cognoscenti, having read my piece on the problem of thermo-nuclear fusion, and the likely impossibility of it (here on earth), may have noticed that I left an escape route.
The hooker, is in that word “thermo”; the use of HEAT to rile up a plasma and get collisions going.
Now by anybody’s standards, doing stuff with “heat” is a pretty crappy way of doing any sort of stuff. Heat is a very poor excuse for energy.
Take semiconductor processing for example; doping of semiconductive layers, to get desired electronic energy level properties. Well we used to dope silicon with Boron and Phosphorous to make p-type, and n-type silicon layers to get diodes. And we did that doping process thermally. We heated the wafer in the presence of a gas copntaining boron or phosphorous, and the thermal energy drove some of the dopant atoms into the crystal, to make a thin but statistically distributed layer of dopant atoms, maybe 10^19 or 10^20 per cc or so. And while we were at it we grew an oxide (or nitride) on top of it, to seal it up, and then we did a “drive in diffusion” where we reheated the wafer to a lower temperature, but for a longer time, and the dopant atoms diffused, driven by the concentration gradient, into a deeper layer of lower dopant densty. Well as a result of the thermal distribution of energies, those doping atoms went all over the place, and the whole thing was pretty untidy. Thermal processes are a crappy way to use energy.
So along came ion implantation, and we used a pellet gun, to shoot those ionised boron or phosphorous atoms, into the silicon, all of them with pretty much the same kinetic energy. Well they still peppered the target all over the place, due to the statistics of hitting stuff on the way in, but it was no where near as fuzzy as the thermal process had been.
So back to our fusion reactor; nyet on the blow torch heat, get out the pellet gun, and just shoot those protons or deuterons at each other with an accelerator. Well you can get a lot of energy into the bullets that way, but it is hard to hit anything, so you don’t get a lot of collisions; but hell, it isn’t as hot either.
So then somebody came up with the idea of “laser confinement”. You make yourself a little multilayer glass marble; hollow inside and you fill it with Hydrogen/deuterium/whatever. Then you surround the marble with a bunch of laser beams, 4096 or how ever many you can round up, and you blast them all simultaneously, and they all push and shove on the glass marble, and start to squish the deuterons. Well then the glass gets hot, and vaporises, and basically blows itself to smithereens, and while it is all blowing outwards, the reaction blows the deuterons inwards, so you end up getting a very high density of deuterons, all crashing into each other at high velocity generated by the lasers pushing and shoving.
Are you catching on to the problem here; gravity SUCKS ! and that is good. Elecromagnetism pushes and shoves, and that is very bad, because if you get it a bit off center, and the whole thing goes pear shaped, and half of the deuterons squirt out of one side or the other.
But let’s say, we get it all right, and everybody pushes together and the whole thing implodes properly and we get fusion reactions and a whole lot of energy released. Well hopefully the energy released is at least enough to build another one of those little glass marbles full of hydrogen et al..
So what is wrong with laser confinement fusion. Well you see, you have to hire a minimum wage leaf blower chap, to come along, and blow away, all the shards of glass from that shattered marble, and then he has to deftly place a new marble on the anvil; and yell out; “Fire in the hole”, and duck while you smash the next one.
Is this any way to run a power station ?
Now at a conference on laser confinement many years ago, (I believe it was in Texas), the keynote speaker was Charles H. Townes; one of the fathers of the laser.
And he basically told the delegates; if you people out there think that laser confinement is a way to get fusion energy, you are all crazier than a bunch of loons ! Well I’m sure he used nicer language than that.
He made the point, that laser implosion is a process that can let you study the physics and properties of very high density high temperature plasmas (which you can’t make in a Tokomak); but it is simply not going to lead to a fusion reactor design. Who would want the job of feeding fuel pellets to the cruncher, and taking out the garbage.
You see, in the sun core, you have so much damn fuel, and you only have to burn a little bit of it at a time, and the garbage you make is Helium (at first), which is pretty harmless as effluent, so it isn’t going to gum up the works too much. But the key to the success of stars, is that gravity sucks!, it does not push and shove like electromagnetism, and you need so much fuel all at once, that you don’t need the leaf blower chap, to clean up after the mess.
So one might ask; just what are those guys over at Lawrence Livermore doing with that big marble smasher anyway. They surely aren’t going to make a fusion reactor out of it.
So I say, nyet! on fusion energy for the future.

Jack Wurts
March 19, 2013 5:35 am

Willis
Perhaps I am too late entering a comment on this thread, if not…
This is about your comment on previous threads that – perfect is good enough.
Above you wrote…”Healthy economic growth is the key to any nation raising its standard of living, which in turn means less avoidable deaths.”
I expect you meant to say…fewer avoidable deaths or less avoidable death.
I know that you know how to use fewer vs less, you were just a half bubble off perfect.
I am a big fan
jack

beng
March 19, 2013 6:59 am

george e. smith says:
March 18, 2013 at 12:15 pm
I’d have to agree — confined fusion energy seems more & more intractable. The only success might be fusion “rockets” where the plasma can be immediately exhausted thru a rocket nozzle. The nozzle would have to be extremely well-cooled to keep it from melting, but at least seems plausible.

george e. smith
March 19, 2013 8:13 am

“””””…..beng says:
March 19, 2013 at 6:59 am
george e. smith says:
March 18, 2013 at 12:15 pm…..”””””
I have seen it stated numerous times, that the world can get all of the fusion energy it needs, out of the top 1/16th of an inch of San Francisco Bay. Now I haven’t done the math myself to see how much Hydrogen or Deuterium that is and figure out if that is enough, but I’ll take their word for it; heck, take an eighth of an inch if you need it. In fact that would help with San Francisco’s drowning problem when the sea level rises.
There is just one problem with that picture, if you are planning to use the laser confinement method.
You see, the real fuel that you need is NOT the Hydrogen isotopes out of San Francisco Bay; that stuff just goes along for the thrill of getting crushed.
The thing that you are going to need many many tons of, is those little glass marbles that you packed the Deuterons into. Those are what is going to be hard to come by in sufficient quantity to generate much power. And think of all the energy that it takes to run the factory that makes those little glass spheres.
The Physicists, think that they have reached “break even”, when the fusion reaction releases as much energy as was in the laser beam optical blast, that homogenised the Deuterium.
Well just how energy efficient do you think high powered lasers are anyway. I’ve designed power supplies for one milliWatt He-Ne lasers, and the conversion from wall plug electric in to one mW of 6328 laser beam was pitifully low. So after they get past that additional loss factor, then they have to deal with the glass marble factory and all the energy it takes to run it.
Well I’m not even sure you ever break even, whether you can make the thing run or not.
So let’s NOT have a Manhattan type program to chase a will o’the wisp. Please don’t spend any of my tax dollars on such a boondoggle. I’ll go with fracking and horizontal drilling, any day.

rogerknights
March 20, 2013 12:30 am

Willis, re your PPS, what did you think of the article I linked to upthread advocating the awarding of prizes by gov’t., at https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http://64.62.200.70/PERIODICAL/PDF/WashingtonMonthly-1980jul/19-22/ ?

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