By Mark Krebs and Tom Tanton
“The Deep State is cancer-like in nature. Like cancer, it must be rooted out before it metastasizes—as it would have if subject to another four years of a Harris (Obama 4.0?) Administration.”
“It’s time to go big. Scrap DOE and part-out whatever missions are worth saving. And whatever missions are deemed worth saving should be saved only with thorough scrutiny of zero-based budgeting.”
Our March 2017 post, DOE’s EERE: Reform Ideas for Secretary Perry, stated that while “a trace of consumer focus still exists,” the department’s heavy bias was towards society-wide electrification under the guise of “Net Zero”.
Whatever trace of consumer focus may be remaining within DOE is not worth salvaging. In fact, eliminating the pipe dream of an all-electric society would likely save US citizens $18 to 29 trillion in capital costs alone. Other analysts have estimated far higher cost inflation, while others conclude that total electrification cannot be accomplished at any cost.
While there was some initial lip service about DOE reform from a few politicians (which we documented in the above article), little actual reform took place. Congress slow-walked appointments, while DOE ‘s so-called “career professional” staff resorted to traditional tactics of placating eventual appointees. And what reforms did occur under then Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE) Daniel Simmons (not sworn in until January 16, 2019) were quickly jettisoned by the Biden (mis)Administration.
We tried again to make our case on October 24, 2019, in EERE Reform: Brouillette’s Turn (‘deep decarbonization’ threat still alive). Little if anything meaningful occurred under Dan Brouillette either. In fact, he moved to the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) and was soon fired.
Brouillette has also been mentioned as possibly resuming being at DOE as Secretary. If so, since EEI stands to gain immensely through vehicle and building electrification, Brouillette at least has some major explaining to “we the people” for differentiating himself from the swamp.
Real Reform Opportunity
The incoming Administration can and should do far more than just trim back the overgrown greenery; it should serve the legitimate interests of the American citizenry and American prosperity. However. details in our previous recommendations (cited above), are worth reviewing by the incoming Trump Administration if for no other reason than to document historical mistakes and avoid them going forward. Regardless, our old recommendations are no longer sufficiently ambitious in terms of best serving the American public and drastically reducing the National Debt’s deadly inflation.
But how should we move forward for “deep reform” versus the meager results from before? After all, the incoming Trump 2.0 Administration much better understands the depth and breadth of the Deep State and its joined-at-the-hip “Uniparty” cohorts. The options range from modest “reform” to scrapping DOE and parting out its truly vital missions to other Federal agencies or private sector competition.
In essence, it’s time to go big. Scrap DOE and part-out whatever missions are worth saving. And whatever missions are deemed worth saving should be saved only with thorough scrutiny of zero-based budgeting.
Given we the people hold the House, and lead the Senate, this is a unique opportunity that must be exploited to the full extent feasible. After all, the world has fundamentally changed since DOE was formed to address certain issues: low supplies and scarcity, coupled with cartel behavior by foreign actors. Today we have robust supplies that mainly just need regulatory relief.
“With money we will get men”
A little Thomas Jefferson and Karl von Clausewitz guidance may provide instruction to get us started. Thomas Jefferson cited those words “With money we will get men” in Volume 4 of Notes on Virginia. In full context:
Nor should our assembly be deluded by the integrity of their own purposes and conclude that these unlimited powers will never be abused, because themselves are not disposed to abuse them. They should look forward to a time, and that not a distant one, when a corruption in this, as in the country from which we derive our origin, will have seized the heads of government, and be spread by them through the body of the people; when they will purchase the voices of the people, and make them pay the price.
Human nature is the same on every side of the Atlantic and will be alike influenced by the same causes. The time to guard against corruption and tyranny, is before they shall have gotten hold of us. It is better to keep the wolf out of the fold, than to trust to drawing his teeth and talons after he shall have entered.
Moving on to Clausewitz:
- The statesman who, seeing war inevitable, hesitates to strike first is guilty of a crime against his country.
- The first, the supreme, the most far-reaching act of judgment that the statesman and commander have to make is to establish the kind of war on which they are embarking; neither mistaking it for, nor trying to turn it into something that is alien to its nature.
- Many assume that half efforts can be effective. A small jump is easier than a large one, but no one wishing to cross a large ditch would cross half of it first.
At least arguably, we are living Jefferson’s prophecy. We need to fully consider how the Deep State has been scheming to force its “Great Reset” upon our country. The “Deep State” is cancer-like in nature. And like cancer, it must be rooted out before it metastasizes—as it would have if subject to another four years of a Harris (Obama 4.0?) Administration.
Deep State Foe
Clausewitz was all about winning. If Trump is too (he is), rearranging DOE’s “deck chairs” is just a short step across a large chasm. The Deep State cancer would likely just go into a four-year remission only to return with a vengeance with a return of another Democrat Administration down the road someday.
Ultimately, the choice comes down to serving the Deep State/Uniparty or serving the legitimate best interests of “we the people.” There is no “live and let live” middle ground as the present Biden (mis)Administration has abundantly demonstrated in words and deeds. Nor is there sufficient funding for “all electric” or even “all the above” energy policies.
We can’t afford the self-indulgence of environmental virtue signaling. We need only to pursue energy policies that objectively and comprehensively focus on economic least-cost planning (and bidding) so we can avoid the looming reality of economic collapse. And yes, there is still room for objective energy efficiency; if it is market-based (as opposed to “big brother” dictates to throw money at an illusionary problem). There is even room for least-cost environmental progress. As RFK Jr. knows, soil regeneration is one of these.
It is imperative that the Trump 2.0 Administration achieve and demonstrate tangible and substantial results for energy consumers as soon as possible. Immediate actions should include clawing back the tragic Inflation Reduction Act, an all-you-can eat funding buffet for a myriad of parasitic “clean energy” zealots. These zealots have already received enough (unwitting taxpayer) IRA funding to plague “we the people” for decades to come.
The most efficient tactic (but not necessarily easiest) would be to simply eliminate DOE departments that oversee such funding. And along with that, repeal equally corrupted legislation that authorized DOE’s regulatory mission creep, such as the obsolete Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975 (EPCA) and self-serving, loophole riddled revisions thereof.
In short and in closing, DOE is not worth trying to salvage, because its cancer culture is immune to modest political reforms and intervention. Thus, like a junk car, part out what can be safely and economically salvaged and eliminate the rest. Assuming control of the House and Senate, this is, for the first time, entirely doable; given the will to persevere. So let’s declare victory over the gas lines of the 1970s and move on to overcoming House and Senate resistance for dramatically reducing the economic threatening cholesterol of excessive spending.
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Mark Krebs, a mechanical engineer and energy policy consultant, has been involved with energy efficiency design and program evaluation for over thirty years. Mark has served as an expert witness in dozens of State energy efficiency proceedings, has been an advisor to DOE and has submitted scores of Federal energy-efficiency filings. His many MasterResource posts on natural gas vs. electricity and “Deep Decarbonization” federal policy can be found here. Mark’s first article was in Public Utilities Fortnightly, titled “It’s a War Out There: A Gas Man Questions Electric Efficiency” (December 1996). Recently retired from Spire Inc., Krebs has formed an energy policy consultancy (Gas Analytic & Advocacy Services) with other veteran energy analysts.
Tom Tanton (tantontwitter@gmail.com) is Director with Energy and Environmental Legal Institute. Mr. Tanton has 45 years in energy and environmental policy, focused on enabling technology choice and economic development. Mr. Tanton has testified to numerous state Legislatures and Congress as an expert on energy policy. He formerly served as Principal Policy Advisor at the California Energy Commission.
[3] Tension with utility chiefs marked Dan Brouillette’s short stint atop EEI
Excellent article and advice.
The incoming Administration can and should do far more than just trim back the overgrown greenery
Starmer is doing the opposite encouraged by a donor who has grown rich on green stuff.
“”Put cigarette-style warnings on bacon, says top Labour donorDale Vince wants processed meat to carry health advice on packs because of its cancer risk””
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/11/17/bacon-cigarette-health-warnings-labour-donor-dale-vince/
Vegans and their fellow eco travellers feel compelled to impose their righteous lunacy on everybody else. If that isn’t authoritarian what is?
Vance needs a health warning stapled to his forehead
I tend to disagree with this post. Has DoE overstepped on Occaision? Yes. But that is easily fixable. Can it be downsized? Yes. But Trump’s appointment of Chris Wright to head DoE means it will have a significant energy role going forward.
Agreed and EEI is just a $2 billion part of a $30 something billion agency. A big chunk ($8 billion?) is nuclear weapons. Another ($8 billion) is basic research especially in physics and computers. However the FF research program has been forced to focus on CCS instead of production and use. That should be fixed.
When it was formed in 1977, the DOE took over the Atomic Energy Commission including the National Labs. The original mission of these Labs was the development of nuclear weapons. As funding for nuclear energy decreased with the implementation of the nuclear test ban treaties and the end of nuclear reactor development after 3 Mile Island, the Labs jumped on the climate bandwagon. The climate modeling activities at DOE are essentially government welfare for otherwise unemployed government ‘scientists’. The Labs are also private companies run by consortia. They are government contractors that are not part of the US Government. Lab employees are not protected civil servants. For many years, Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos were managed by the University of California. A simple first step is to cancel the climate modeling and the appliance efficiency standards contracts for fraud. The Labs should be limited to work on nuclear energy. As private companies, it should also be easier to sue them for damages related to the climate modeling fraud compared to US government agencies such as NASA and NOAA.
Climate modeling should be stopped or directed to include natural factors but it is just a few hundred million dollars. DOE’s Office of Science is the world’s biggest funder of basic physics and computer research which is fine by me. I have had a few pioneering contracts with them myself.
I’ve noticed that the DOE energy standards seem to be connected at the hip with
industry. The life of newish appliances are a fraction of ones I bought back in the’70’s.
Same deal with things like gas boilers. A new gas boiler used to be good for 20+ yrs
now half that. The green blob has infiltrated into far too many parts of my life
and that needs to change. A federal judge just ruled about trapping here in MT and
now we can only trap coyotes from January 1 to February 15 over a lawsuit from
some eco nuts and grizzly bears.
Very nice Tom and Mark. The majority of the problems we face today are from unaccountable bureaucrats and administrators. Many of these bureaucrats and administrators are heading up or working in departments that never should have been created. Few things that sound like a good idea actually are good ideas. Time to get rid of dead weight.
If you wonder why newer appliances do a worse job and break much faster than old ones, thank the DOE for their contributions to the EPA’s Energy Star programs.
Please show me the line in the Constitution that authorizes the national government to do anything regarding education. Thanks in advance.
There are a few articles that roughly outline the Federal Government’s responsibilities, followed by an amendment that specifically states that everything else should be reserved to the States or the People.
Frank, you’re on the right track. The national government has no authority to meddle in education (or medicine, or insurance, or retirement, or space exploration, or even “roads and bridges” except Post roads.)
To put it in everyday language, the Department of Education is illegal.
Electric power can be shut off with the click of a computer mouse. My daughter suffered just such a fate when she switched electric power service providers. The email from the new provider requiring her to acknowledge the transfer went to her spam folder while she was on vacation. The old provider shut off her power, but because she wasn’t aware of the need to acknowledge the email from the new provider while on vacation, she lost all of her perishable foods in the freezer and refrigerator. She returned home to no power in the house. We were about to move her to a hotel when she checked her spam folder, replied to the email, and the power came on momentarily.
An all-electric consumer is utterly at the mercy of whoever can hijack or control the internet. On the other hand, natural gas cannot be shut off remotely. Stoves & water heaters will continue to run, and if a backup generator is attached to the house that runs off of natural gas, the consumer can make themselves immune to a disruptive hacker or obnoxious bureaucrat. This, of course, is the last thing a sociopathic or narcissistic bureaucrat wants.
Reform. Yes. Remove, no. Nuclear weapons development falls under the DOE, As does nuclear power. Put them back on the track of development of nuclear power.
Per unit of energy, the energy needed to heat a hot water heater using electricity will consume probably three times as much natural gas if it is burned at the generator site than if the water heater were natural gas powered. The same can be said of home furnaces, stove tops, and ovens. This is because the unavoidable losses in the Karnough cycle at the primary mover (i.e.,. the natural gas turbine), the generator, steup transformer up-converting the voltage to the grid, down conversion at the residence, and grid transmission losses.
So much for efficiency.There is another, more insidious reason why the DOE wants all consumers to be all electric. Its because they can remotely turn off power to anyone who they don’t like, much like FEMA skipped giving aid to disaster victims with Trump signs in their yard.
I had a house heater powered by natural gas. Burning natural gas creates a lot of water vapor. If you want a top efficiency, you have to condense it. I hope that industrial scale power generators do it, but it is not easy at a small scale.
Most all new gas furnaces and boilers and many water heaters are condensing type and achieve efficiencies in of >90%. These started to appear in the 1970s & ’80s after the OPEC oil embargo. DOE has continually tried to ratchet up efficiency even though the technology has already reached a diminishing returns Costs continue to increase with minimal benefit in efficiency or performance.
The physicist who pushed froward thermodynamics was Carnot.
Repeal whatever laws the DoE is operating under, and RIF the current employees. Undoing whatever regulations their predecessors did should be the sole goal of their temporary replacements.
I was under the impression that the primary purpose of the DOE was to ensure sufficient material for nuclear weapons. Isn’t that so??
DoE, Interior, Education, HHS and about 200 other agencies should be rolled into the federal bureaucracy department, be staffed by 200 people reporting only to the executive. No regulatory, enforcement or extra-judicial power. No firearms. No junkets. They must be legally proscribed from meeting with ANY lobbyist. They can only meet with politicians from the executive branch of any state. All states have the option to adopt and enforce the regulations at the state level that must be abandoned by the agencies.
oh well back to reality
Thanks for all the comments, even the less than supportive ones. I routinely ask WUWT to carry my MasterResource articles because of the comments I receive here. I learn a lot from them. I realize that DoE has some missions that need to be continued, like being the head custodian of nuclear waste. While that mission could be transferred to DoD, that would not guarantee better management.
Big oil and gas companies will do well under Chris Wright. My concern is that direct use of fossil fuels by consumers might be overlooked again. EERE’s “career professionals” may scurry and hide for a while, but they will continue to work in the shadows to advance “net-zero” control of “we the people.”
Thanks again.
Mark
I agree with your goals 100%.
I disagree on how you see Trump, as if he is truly someone who wants what you want and would take strong and powerful action to accomplish it.
He does not care enough to do anything more than give strong lip service and possibly put a token idiot in position so they will espouse the right things, and be 100% impotent in accomplishing them.
If he accidently puts someone in who becomes effective, he will abandon them and allow them to be thrown from their position with little effort by the people you wish to remove from powerful positions within the government.
Best of fortunes, and may I be wrong. But I do not think I will be found to be wrong in the end.