If Biden Were Serious About Energy Policy, Here's What He'd Propose
Blaming oil companies and Vladimir Putin for our current energy woes is dishonest and unhelpful.

When President Joe Biden chastises oil companies for profiteering, he evokes a J.R. Ewing–style caricature of a greasy, greedy executive sneering in a giant Stetson. Satisfying as it may be, this narrative is unmoored from economic reality. As with any other commodity, oil producers are price takers, not price makers; oil and gas shortages inevitably mean paying more at the pump. Prices will come down when demand doesn't outpace supply, but that relief is unlikely to arrive as long as this administration actively cultivates a climate of energy scarcity.
Before I moved to West Texas, I pictured it as a dry and dusty land floating on a sea of murky oil. In fact, the black gold is trapped in dense, brittle shale rock until fracking cracks it open and a mixture of oil, water, and natural gas flows two to four miles up the wellbore to the surface. According to one industry insider, the cost of drilling a horizontal shale well has risen from $8.5 million last year to $11 million today. The price of steel pipe has doubled in the last year, and other supply chain issues—coupled with shortages of skilled labor—have made drilling a new well more difficult than it's been in decades. Getting more oil isn't a matter of just flipping a switch when times are tough; it can take nine months from the time planning and permitting begins until you're actually extracting the resource from a functioning well.
On June 21, Biden claimed he isn't impeding domestic oil production in the middle of an energy crisis, but his actions speak louder than his words. Since taking office, he has suspended new drilling permits on federal lands, revoked significant existing leases in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska that were already paid for, canceled a strategic pipeline that would have imported secure Canadian heavy oil more safely than rail or trucks, and stayed cozy with the environmental activists who use lawsuits and protests to impede new development.
Biden has called for increasing refining capacity, but his administration makes it nearly impossible to permit a new refinery and refuses to budge on easing environmental regulations that could extend the operational lives of old refineries. The federal Energy Information Agency reports that the U.S. has closed 79 domestic refineries since 1992, and the last new refinery was completed in 1977. Industry leaders don't think refineries are coming back. Chevron CEO Michael Wirth recently told The Washington Post he doesn't expect ever to see another refinery built in the United States: "In a country where the policy environment is trying to reduce demand for these products, you are not going to find companies to put billions and billions of dollars into this."
In addition to regulatory hurdles, producers face capital starvation. Banks steered by environmental, social, and corporate governance goals don't want their hands dirtied by oil. They aren't the only ones: Coastal pension funds with a distaste for fossil fuels (though presumably not for electricity), BlackRock zero-carbon goals, and similar restrictions have caused significant decreases in investment in new wells. Forcing companies to drill solely out of cash flow inherently cripples their capacity to respond quickly to market conditions.
While he's blaming producers for the crunch, Biden is trying to offer consumers relief, pushing for a gas tax holiday (much to the chagrin of his environmentalist base). While lowering taxes might save consumers a few cents at the pump, it won't fix the supply shortages. And releasing oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, another one of Biden's alleviation measures, doesn't offer long-term relief either. Depleting reserves of oil that's harder to replace is both shortsighted and potentially destabilizing.
In 2020, when the price of a barrel of oil dipped negative, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) said in a since-deleted tweet, "You absolutely love to see it." At the time, I thought her schadenfreude was the most dangerous thing about the tweet, but now I see it is the recklessness that such a perspective embodies.
Biden wants us to look for the bright side in this difficult economic moment: "We have a chance here to make a fundamental turn toward renewable energy." That may be the case, but the public needs leaders who are honest about what this "fundamental turn" is going to cost ordinary Americans: sustained high energy and fuel costs, rolling blackouts, and high food prices.
When oil and gas supplies are depleted, the void isn't immediately filled by renewables. We get shortages. For example: Even on the sunny, windy days that offer peak renewable generating opportunities, we lack the infrastructure (such as transmission lines) to move the power from the rural areas where it's generated to the urban areas where it's needed.
When it comes to energy policy, progressives too often make perfect the enemy of the good. East Coast regions don't want natural gas pipeline expansion, so heating oil, which emits 40 percent more carbon dioxide than natural gas per unit of heat, is delivered via diesel trucks to cities like New York and Boston. Few environmental activists seem willing to pursue nuclear energy, arguably the only feasible alternative to fossil fuels that could currently meet demand. Germany's current circumstances offer a cautionary tale: "Deep-rooted anti-nuclear orthodoxy" has made nuclear energy "political heresy," so after getting cut off from Russian gas, Germany had to turn back to coal.
Renewables aren't always as green as they sound either. Solar panel manufacturing in China relies on coal to melt down silica. (It also relies on forced labor.) Clearing the land for lithium mines uses diesel-powered earth-movers and destroys CO2-absorbing forests. Natural gas and coal power 60 percent of the American electric grid, which technically means electric vehicles are nearly as dependent on fossil fuels as gas guzzlers. Wind turbines require oil to build, transport, and operate. The battery technology to store renewable energy for more than a few hours of demand does not yet exist.
Turning off coal- and gas-fired plants when we have no scalable alternatives ready in the wings is irresponsible. It merely exports pollution to other countries, where we'll buy our energy at ever-higher prices from places with more lax environmental practices.
Ignoring all this and insisting we move forward with an abrupt transition to renewables at warp speed anyway is a luxury belief. The people most invested in pushing for the change may be able to easily absorb a 38 percent jump in gasoline price in pursuit of ideological purity, but it'll hurt ordinary American families facing stagnating wages and soaring inflation. Not to mention, it's like boarding a plane that will have to be built mid-flight.
Energy scarcity is a global problem that is destabilizing us all. We need honest leaders willing to grapple with such immediate threats, not just the threats we might face tomorrow. We need sober-minded leaders who resist ideological capture, tell the truth about the current energy crisis and their part in it, and work to solve it on multiple fronts. Developing nuclear energy alongside renewables, encouraging Americans to cut consumption, and crafting clear and consistent policies for the oil and gas industry that allow for sustainable development and clean innovation are easy steps the U.S. could take today. Instead, this administration acts as if shortages would resolve themselves if gas station owners and refineries were just less greedy. It is expending a lot of energy to keep Americans in the dark.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
He IS serious about energy policy. It's just that he's serious about pursuing a very destructive energy policy: Deliberately driving up the cost of fossil fuels in the expectation that this will accelerate our transition to the unicorn fart based economy.
Naturally, he can't come out and SAY that. Though some of his flunkies have said as much from time to time.
And also accepting (if not encouraging) that average people will (should) live diminished lives. Smaller housing units, fewer cars (and less elective transportation), home-spun clothes and vegetables, and just plain simple living. A green utopia.
Start now incomes each week extra than $7,000 to 8,000 through doing quite simple and smooth domestic primarily based totally task on-line. (res-12) Last month I've made $32,735 through doing this on-line task simply in my component time for handiest 2 hrs. an afternoon the usage of my laptop. This task is simply wonderful and smooth to do in component time. Start incomes extra greenbacks on-line simply through follow:-
.
commands here:☛☛☛ https://yourjobs85.blogspot.com/
I'll disagree with this. The people pushing this policy (Biden's advisors) know full well that the unicorn fart based economy will never happen.
The real goal is forcing de-industrialization.
No, the real goal is control, and control requires reducing independence. When people can buy what they want, travel where they want, and do what they want, control is impossible.
It's like Bernie complaining of too many choices of deodorants. Choices breed independence, and must be eliminated.
No, the real, real goal is for them and their friends to abscond with all the ill gotten gains they can before anybody's the wiser, their fingerprints are off it, and it's in a Swiss bank account. It's like a game of https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/242/junta , and we're the bananas in the republic. Trust me, that's all there is to it, no ideology (except for what they can sell the suckers), no long-term goal.
Yea, it's not like they fucking talk about it all the time, or coordinate slogans like "build back better"...
JFC
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job (bet-17) achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>>>>>>>>> http://getjobs49.tk
>> No, the real goal is control, and control requires reducing independence. When people can buy what they want, travel where they want, and do what they want, control is impossible.
Bingo!! The left hates the middle class because a rich middle class doesn't need government, which leaves them out of the equation. They can never deliver prosperity with their destructive policies, so they need total control to stay in power. Furthermore, a system like our republic, in which the individual is the organizing principle and not the government, is incompatible with their agenda.
Actually, he has come right out and said it.
As has every democrat that supports the party platform.
Their energy policy, like al their other policies, is aimed at destroying the United States as a political, military, and economic force in the world.
Exactly the case.
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/politicians-are-the-referees-of-america
But even here Biden is undermined by his own actions. If he was actually worried about how high energy prices were affecting Americans, he would reverse the terrible course he’s set us on. Instead, he tells us that high prices will continue ‘as long as it takes’ to defeat Russia.
When asked to clarify, Biden’s aides admit that high prices are simply the cost of the Liberal World Order. (After all, ‘greater good’ doesn’t mean greater for everybody)
Popsicles.
He and Corn Pop can head down to the corner market and get popsicles. It will stimulate the economy and put a real dent in global warming.
Later they can throw some rocks at old lady Smith's greenhouse, to reduce global warming. Plus, broken windows also stimulate the economy.
Ah, yes, Broken Windows environmentalism.
Not to mention, it's like boarding a plane that will have to be built by the government mid-flight.
Boarding a plane that is *only* being built mid-flight allows for the assumptions that it could be completed, on budget, in time to get you where you're going. Care should be exercised to explain that this flight has zero guarantee of getting you wherever you're going even if you were boarding a fully-completed aircraft, almost certainly won't be completed even if you doubled the duration of the flight, and certainly wouldn't be done at less than several multiples (if not orders) of the projected cost.
It's the choice between inflated gas prices that used to get you where you were going at cost, and boarding an unfinished plane that almost certainly won't get you there at anything remotely resembling at cost.
And instead of hiring Boeing to build the plane, they hire Huffy.
Like a couple of bike mechanics could build a plane...
I wouldn't call Huffy a bike. More like a tank. A really, really crappy tank.
We have a Schwinner.
A plane built by the government mid-flight, with an official policy that states "Flying is Wrong".
"Flying is Wrong" except for those with sufficient importance on missions of vital interests.
IOW, those who dictate do not have to live by their edicts, nor suffer any consequences thereof.
They are serious. They seriously want your life to be worse. Environmentalism has been about forcing Americans to live artificially impoverished lives since the 1980s.
Your life is worse. They’re celebrating their success.
This. Eco-types have always included those who generally hate humans, especially the great unwashed, and make Luddites look like early adopters.
"Since taking office, he has suspended new drilling permits on federal lands, revoked significant existing leases in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska that were already paid for, canceled a strategic pipeline that would have imported secure Canadian heavy oil more safely than rail or trucks, and stayed cozy with the environmental activists who use lawsuits and protests to impede new development."
Promises kept. And we pay the price.
The only way I can even begin to make sense of what the government is doing is to look at it like a religion. It doesn't matter what the outcomes are, but adherence to the faith is what counts. Just as the Soviet Union imposed starvation and costs millions their lives, it was ideological purity empowered by dictatorial authoritarianism that drove them. And right now we are being royally fucked by the highest office in the land. Believe it.
And fuck Joe Biden.
I agree. But at the mundane level, perpetual campaigning means that people do not have time to forget the promises and slogans that worked last time--but induce negative reactions during the current cycle.
Well I can be glad for that.
Midterms are 4 months away; the standard MSM is rife with articles as to how the Democrats can "turn it around" and maintain control of Congress.
If this country decides to do that, and chooses to vote over a constitutional right to abortion rather than economics, then we are far more fucked than I've wanted to admit.
It doesn't what the people want it matters what the people counting the votes want.
Saying that people should vote for their pocket books over personal freedom illustrates a certain brand of ignorance. It's easy for single men who have no idea how capitalism works, but for men w/daughters & women, it's a no brainer...freedom is more important than an economy where US corps are making record profits & that continues to add jobs month after month.
Like Francisco d'Anconia said: "You asked for it!" Religious Hitlerites attacked the individual rights of half the population. They wrecked the economy by passing laws making production and trade a crime, then enforcing them with asset forfeiture! This always makes the commies popular enough to easily infiltrate the Dems. CP membership surged 300% when beer was banned, then 700% after the GOP made beer a felony and completely wrecked the economy. For the first time in years, voting Dem is no worse than voting Fascist or Anschluss LP.
Rush Limbaugh said it best:
Environmentalists are like watermelons. Green on the outside, red in the middle.
Limbaugh was quoting either Petr Beckmann or Warren T Brookes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr_Beckmann
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_T._Brookes
But if we don't end greenhouse gas emissions, we'll all be dead by 2035. Just ask any Progressive.
Meh. We have already died at least 3 or 4 times from apocalyptic heat.
According to "them", I was killed six times by the Communist Chinese Virus.
And now you're a walker.
I've seen little, if any, evidence that renewables ever can replace fossil fuel. That's an important point. Because it means the misery and suffering being imposed by the regime isn't just a one-time "transition cost". It means the misery and suffering is permanent.
Feature, not bug.
Welcome to The New Normal
I've seen little, if any, evidence that renewables ever can replace fossil fuel.
https://www.energy.gov/articles/top-6-things-you-didnt-know-about-solar-energy
Solar energy is the most abundant energy resource on earth -- 173,000 terawatts of solar energy strikes the Earth continuously. That's more than 10,000 times the world's total energy use.
Lovely.
Now harvest it with an efficiency greater than zero (lifetime total cost, including construction, operation and eventual demolition. You can do it, but the useful output is pretty lousy.
Ok, now do power delivery. Sigh.
Are you really that dumb?
Unless you have plans in your shed for constructing a Dyson Sphere, the overwhelming majority of that is non-recoverable. And you run out of rare earth metals for solar panels long before you ever get your Dyson Sphere completed. Oh, and did I mention the maximum efficiency ever achieved by a solar panel was 47.1%? And total energy consumption is currently estimated at 23,900 terawatt hours. I'm not sure at all where they're getting that 10,000 times figure. But, I guess tossing out trash to satisfy the feebleminded is good enough for the government.
"Are you really that dumb?"
All signs point to "yes".
There is your evidence that there is enough *potential* energy from renewables to replace fossil fuels. That is what you asked for, right?
Of course we can't do that now. But the *potential* is there.
And total energy consumption is currently estimated at 23,900 terawatt hours.
Actually, this source says that it is about 160,000 terawatt hours per year.
https://ourworldindata.org/energy-production-consumption
So, a quick back of the envelope calculation:
If 173,000 TW strike the Earth from the Sun, then that means over the course of one year, the total energy striking the Earth is:
173,000 TW * 8760 hours (in one year) = 1,515,480,000 TWh
So after considering the amount of that energy that is captured on solar cells, and considering the solar cell conversion efficiency, and considering the power grid distribution efficiency, if only 0.01% of the total energy of the Sun is transformed into usable energy, then that means:
1,515,480,000 TWh * 0.0001 = 151,548 TWh
which is within striking distance of the amount of energy consumed in one year. So it is definitely feasible.
God, you are an idiot.
So if capture all the capturable solar energy, what happens to plant life? What happens to the atmosphere and the Earth’s surface temperature?
The only problem is that we don't currently have technology to make that energy useful and portable like fossil fuels.
By the way, what are fossil fuels? Aren't they solar energy in a concentrated form?
This guy is classic Dunning-Krueger effect.
Last time I mentioned that I was subjected to pages and pages over a week or two of quotes saying that the effect is bunk.
Biden has called for increasing refining capacity, but his administration makes it nearly impossible to permit a new refinery and refuses to budge on easing environmental regulations that could extend the operational lives of old refineries.
What's the possibility of building refineries in northern Mexico?
State graft and PEMEX incompetency?
I was thinking more along the lines of US companies building refineries there, not PEMEX.
Whoever pays the cartels the most.
Hire Hunter.
refineries *and* golf resorts
Come to Mexico and enjoy a stay at Los Zeta's luxury beach and golf resort!
It should be built in Southern Mexico. It's government would then have reason to lock down their border.
If Biden were serious about...well, anything, he would not be Joe Biden, nor would he be a Democrat. What Biden is doing is carrying out the Democrat's party platform.
There should be violence
Who do you want to kill first? Registered Democrats? Prius owners? Anyone who goes to Starbucks?
That Venn diagram is a perfect circle.
With crosshairs?
I see what you did there.
Just making it easier for Nardz.
"We have a chance here to make a fundamental turn toward renewable energy."
This is the flaw in all "green" thinking! The chance to make a change is when things are going well, energy, supplies and capital are plentiful. It is out of plenty that we make progress. As my 10th grade social studies teacher phrased it "If necessity were the mother of invention, then every starving man would simply invent a ham sandwich."
There is no "chance to make a change."
People will continue to make sources of energy that are not related to fossil fuels. While these alternatives are more expensive than fossil fuels, most people will use the latter. At some point some other form of portable energy will be cheaper, and people will naturally transition over to it. Human action but not human design. Nobody will say "Let's change over now!" It will just happen when alternatives cost less.
And that will happen. At some point the cost of digging stuff out of the ground will be more expensive than some other technology that may or may not have been invented yet. There will still be plenty of fossil fuels left. It's not like we're going to run out. We're just going to use something else and leave the stuff underground.
Perhaps my words could have been better chosen, but I was starting with Pres. Biteme's own words.
You're actually right, the time of prosperity is not when we make the change, but when we figure out and develop the ability to do new things. Then, when the SHTF, we're ready.
Even now, if the Greens were serious about climate, and the "progressives" loved people as much as they claim, we'd by approving nuclear plants like crazy.
But this is not about climate, or people, it's about control. The only power they want is power over us, not electric power.
There are people who are really serious about the environment, and there are politicians.
Politicians want power and control. Doesn't matter which bunch of chumps they can convince to vote them into office.
Shit. Reading this here board one might think that true libertarians are chumps who vote for Republicans, while fake libertarians are chumps who vote for Democrats. Being that both Republicans and Democrats want to increase their power, it would be reasonable to conclude that libertarians want to have power over others.
Hey....
There are a few of us here who really just want to be left alone.
And that is the problem with libertarianism, those who truly are interested in just being left alone are the ones who are most Unlikely to get into politics and fix the damned mess.
Exactly. The libertarian conundrum is that those who don't want to have power over others don't seek positions of power.
Thus, the North woods look better every day, or as they said in Fiddler on the Roof "May the good Lord bless and keep the Czar (far away from us)".
Same thing applies to all government functionaries.
(In "We Took the the Woods", Ralph Rich was suggested as the perfect health officer for the town, since he lived so far back in the woods that he would never have the occasion to inadvertently note that someone's privy was not properly limed, or something to that effect.)
No Conundrum. (https://bit.ly/3AunUfM)
But you have to understand how bleeding off spoiler votes causes the bloodsucking looter parties to throw some of their special interest groups under the wheels and repeal bad laws. In 1932, even Herbert Hooverville understood that the Dems were sure to win after adopting the Liberal Party repeal plank. Yet his fascist buddies insisted on murdering people over beer and handing the election to FDR. The result was evolution in action. But a good platform is key.
It only takes a good platform, which we lost in 1980, and about 2 to 3% of the vote to gradually repeal a bunch of parasitical and cruel laws. The truth is that spoiler votes face looter kleptocracy parties with the conundrum of keeping bad laws and being thrown out or trying to peel away some of those LP votes. The Human Rights party and Buffalo party 70s platforms called for legalizing drugs and abortion and ending the draft. The LP has delivered on all three. The Fascist Court reversed one of our gains and the Austrian Anschluss blocks our restoring that plank.
That's exactly how I would frame it if I were a girl-bullying bigot or pansy-left parasite struggling to divert LP votes into one of the shrivelling, bankrupt Kleptocracy parties. Observe that none of their sockpuppets offers to compare their platform planks against ours.
Invention needs a father too.
Over half of all farmers were still utilizing horse power to farm in 1940. The internal combustion engine had been around for 8 decades, steam power for over a century and a half. Hitching rails remained a common feature in many rural communities up to the 1960s. Even with innovation the changeover to new technology remains a slow process. It isn't cheap and can never be done overnight.
Even at the height of the Little Ice age, French farmers refused to diversify, and consolidate agricultural land, despite the success of these policies in England and the Netherlands. As a result, famine was a constant feature of French life in the 18th century, and the French economy was stagnated compared to England and the Netherlands (Spain also had similar problems to France, but their environment was somewhat better and less impacted by the scourges of the colder weather). While not directly causing the French Revolution, and the reign of terror, these policies did contribute greatly to the conditions of the French Revolution. The point is, despite the vast need to convert their farming practices, France didn't, even as other countries successfully did so. In other words, even when a technology will benefit people are slow to adopt it, often for illogical reasons. Nuclear comes to mind.
Another data point to keep in mind, it takes ten years on average to replace 50% of the vehicle fleet. So if auto manufacturers offered nothing but electric vehicles for sale next year, we wouldn't replace half of the vehicles currently being driven until 2033. In 2043, it would be down to 25%, etc. And this is only possible if the offer electric vehicles capable of replacing all gas vehicles, i.e. all heavy trucks and heavy equipment etc would have to be electric and nearly as efficient as their gas/diesel powered versions. Currently they only offer half ton trucks, in the truck market, with a pay load nearly half of that of the gas powered versions.
Mathematician Alfred North Whitehead: 'Necessity is the mother of invention is a silly proverb. Necessity is the mother of futile dodges is much nearer the truth.'
He was wrong.
"If Biden Were Serious About Energy Policy, Here's What He'd Propose..."
I am resigning effective immediately.
Did I miss what Biden should propose in the article? All I read were a bunch of things he shouldnt do.
I noted that also. Lots of complaints, little in suggestions.
Sometimes "stop fucking everything up" is all that's really needed.
How about "nuclear"? That should be the top thing.
Well, not doing what he has been doing is the first major step to unfucking the energy sector and the economy as a whole. "stop making things worse and let people innovate" is the libertarian solution here.
Well, what he should do is nothing. Including stopping most of what he's already doing.
#1 thing the federal government can do to improve energy in the US: Get Out Of The Fucking Way!
I disagree. Energy production & distribution should be under governmental control as it is vital to our national security. The TX grid failure or the all but forgotten Colonial pipeline hack, which was the initial basis for rising gas prices are perfect examples of the private sector's behavior, profits over accountability.
Why include "renewable" alongside nuclear? All we need is nuclear, with natural gas as a bridge. Simple.
Diversity of supply is good. If some "renewable" energy source becomes economically viable without subsidy, that's great.
The problem isn't that Biden is doing all this crazy shit on his own, Biden doesn't have a principled bone in his body. The problem is that Biden is doing this crazy shit because that's what the Deep State demands. There are millions of bureaucrats who see no problem with paying a little extra for gas to speed the transition to wind and solar without realizing that petroleum products mean a lot more than gasoline and that wind and solar are not a drop-in replacement for fossil fuels but are instead unicorn farts.
The recent E-Volvo commercials are entertaining:
"0% leather"
The upholstery is 100% petroleum products, except perhaps the dyes; they might be also.
Likely are. Petroleum drives almost every aspect of production today. Fertilizer, pesticides, plastics, medications, etc. You can find very few products that are produced without some input from petroleum, even if we discount energy production. Petroleum, and to a lesser extent coal, are the very fabric of our society (which brings me to another petroleum product, many fabrics, especially advanced fabrics). Without petroleum many people would literally starve, be naked, and homeless. Petroleum allows our population to be 8 billion with a far better living standard than 100 years ago.
They understand perfectly that renewable can't replace fossil fuels. They also understand perfectly the government micromanaging energy - and every other activity with economic impact - means promotions for them and jobs for their kids.
Something I read a while ago about renewables:
"What happens on those warm and muggy summer nights when everybody is using their A/C and the wind isn't blowing?"
This seems like a really good question to ask John Kerry.
In the worst case, he could simply charter a private jet to Sweden and enjoy the cool climate until the heat wave passed. Just take earplugs to block the sound of entitled teenagers screaming “how dare you?!!!”
The wind is pretty much always blowing somewhere. As the article indicates, part of what's missing is the grid to take power from where it's produced to where it's needed. Studies have shown this as a significant solution, but been somewhat ignored by the press in favor of local storage by glitzy new technologies. Except, of course, over time, the grids have become more able to carry more power further, but it's a quieter, longer term thing than gathers headlines. (And old tech pumped storage and hydro-as-peaker have been in large scale commercial use for many, many decades.)
The technology to store energy for more than a few hours of demand has been in large scale commercial use for several decades. The article makes some very good points, but using bits of a usual lazy narrative/meme undercuts it.
No, no it hasn’t. It doesn’t exist
Russia, Russia, Russia. Biden, Biden, Biden.
the article neglects that oil prices have increased globally.
Fuck. That's stupid. The US is the leading oil producer in the world, our production is still lower than in 2019. If we aren't producing oil, and our government policies strangle oil production, it impacts the whole fucking globe. That was probably the dumbest retort I have seen today.
Never understand how incredibly stupid folks are. I'm surprised the retort wasn't "greedy corporations"
What do you expect would happen to a global commodity when you artificially limit production in the number one producing country and embargo the number two producing country? Both happened thanks to Biden. Even if the embargo against Russia was necessary and would actually hurt Russia (doesn't appear that it has) continuing to limit our production is a huge strategic mistake.
Hasn't the actual worth of paper legal tender evaporated as quickly as collectivized "rights" can be printed?
Does the oil industry receive subsidies from the U.S. government? This is taxpayer (working people) money. WHY ? Media should be putting this on the front page. Most people are unaware !
It doesn't receive subsidies, it does receive tax breaks the same as other companies (and far less than the renewable industry, which actually does receive direct subsidies and huge tax breaks). Man, the dishonesty in your post is mind boggling.
Only if you consider deducting the costs of doing business from Gross profits and paying taxes on Net profits a “tax break”
You and I know that, but I dumbed it down for the idiot who thinks these are subsidies.
it does receive tax breaks the same as other companies
If the same tax rules apply to everyone they aren't "breaks".
True but idiots who call them subsidies are too stupid to even understand that.
Mock them for it, don't adopt their propagandistic language.
Eat lead
What a fvcking moron. O&G companies pay more in taxes than any entities in existence
"Blaming oil companies and Vladimir Putin for our current energy woes is dishonest..."
No shit Sherlock! Of course he's dishonest, we've known that for decades! He had to withdraw from the 1988 presidential election when it was revealed he had lied about going to college on a full scholarship, received 3 degrees, and graduated top of his class.
And he's only gotten worse as his brain turned to mush.
I agree with the recommendation at the end. Support more nuclear while simultaneously supporting more renewables. I would add some kind of subsidy for average working class Americans to help with fuel costs and aggressively funding more science programs to help solve not just the energy problems but other modern day problems we face in society. I think having fuel costs stay this high long term will finally get us to stop kicking the bucket on supporting new energy technology. When prices have come down in the past we seem to just get complacent and wasteful with our resources.
Go fuck yourself.
Co2 proportion of atmosphere: 0.04%
Anthropogenic Co2 in atmosphere: 0.01%
Atmospheric Co2: 400 ppm
Minimum atmospheric Co2 needed for plant life to survive: 180 ppm
Atmospheric Co2 becomes inhospitable: 4,000 ppm
You don't seem to understand any of those numbers or their significance.
First of all, CO2 levels in the atmosphere aren't the whole story, the oceans are major absorbers of CO2, which, when it dissolves in water, becomes carbonic acid, and so the acidity of the ocean has increased by 30% in industrial times.
Second, just because CO2 levels in the atmosphere are low percentages doesn't mean an increase can't have a significant effect. Think of blood alcohol content - a concentration at or below 0.02% has no effect on you, but at 0.08%, you're legally impaired. At 0.01%, human-created CO2 still accounts for 25% of total atmospheric CO2 content, which means it raised CO2 content by 33% of what it was in pre-industrial times. If that 0.04% CO2 went down to 0.00% CO2, the earth would cool to an average surface temperature of -21 degrees Celsus, that's 21 degrees below zero, within 50 years. Small amounts of CO2 have big effects on the earth's temperature.
Biden would propose:
Horses for farming.
Bicycles for trips over 20 miles.
Walking for trips under 20 miles.
Private jets to travel the world and SUV limos to travel even one block for important Democrats to solve the energy problem and climate change.
Someone will have to point me to that sections of the Constitution which gives the Federal government the power to have an energy policy and to control energy production, types or anything else having to do with energy.
The Constitution is quite specific. The Federal government can only be involved in things we expressly give it power to be involved in. Energy? Same as abortion.
I think environmental protection is considered part of the "general good". That is you can't pee in the water supply you share with your neighbor.
That aside what the Extreme Greens are proposing is not that and is unconstitutional. SCOTUS slapping the EPA was appropriate.
Where does it say the feds can have a DEA, FDA or meddle in Communized Medicine in the first place? Then we can debate sockpuppets on whether women suddenly cease to be individuals under that same Constitution.
Well it's true the extreme New Green Dealers are nuts. But the lack of knowledge about how our power system works is astonishing.
And the general electorate is just really dumb sad to say. I can get as detailed as you wish but there is NO WAY a dominant solar/wind grid will be stable and reliable.
The grid has to produce power on demand (load) so when your A/C turns on because your house is hot there is power available.
Wind./solar are not demand driven they are weather driven. In fact the grid has to compensate for wind/solar fluctuating with the weather to maintain stability.
So you need you A/C when it's hot whether its windy or not.
Seems very hard for some to understand how stupid the all solar/wind push is.
It’s interesting that you accuse others of a lack of knowledge about how our power system works, but seem not to know that much yourself. Variable output from power plants is neither new to renewables nor particularly hard to manage. The purpose of a grid not just to distribute electricity according to demand, but to balance cyclical as well as intermittent loss of output from some plants with others, because no kind of power plant runs 24/7/365, not even fossil or nuclear, which tend to be down roughly 7 to 12 percent of the time. Plants have to be shut down for maintenance (and in the case of nuclear, for refueling as well), as well as things like disruption to fuel supply (as happened to Texas natural gas plants in February 2021). Wind and solar variations are pretty predictable, and can be backed up with other power sources, even other renewables, either of other kinds, or in other places, or both. Wind and solar aren’t the only renewables out there, you know. Biofuels, for example, except for being renewable and having a much lower carbon intensity than fossil fuels, fuel plants that are pretty much indistinguishable from fossil fuel plants in terms of when, and how long they can run. In fact, many plants can run on either biofuels or fossil fuels. A big part of the problem is anti-renewables people try to couch renewables as a competitor to fossil fuels, and thus feel they must defend fossil fuels by attacking renewables, and creating a straw man argument that renewables proponents are trying to create a grid that is run only by wind and solar. Wind and solar are part of a strategy of creating an electrical power supply that is diversified (including fossil and nuclear) to make it more reliable and flexible, and also less carbon-intense (and less SOx, NOx, As, Pb, and PM polluting), by allowing us to phase out the worst emitters like coal.
Let's look at the claims this article makes a little closer:
"On June 21, Biden claimed he isn't impeding domestic oil production in the middle of an energy crisis, but his actions speak louder than his words. Since taking office, he has suspended new drilling permits on federal lands, revoked significant existing leases in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska that were already paid for, canceled a strategic pipeline that would have imported secure Canadian heavy oil more safely than rail or trucks,"
Key phrase is "impeding oil production in the middle of an energy crisis. Nothing this article talks about actually impedes oil production in the middle of an energy crisis, because everything the author is talking about is long term. New drilling permits take years before any oil gets to market, so suspending new permits on federal lands isn’t making it harder for us to get oil now during the crisis, and the “significant existing leases in the Gulf and Alaska” are only existing in to the extent the lease paperwork was signed, no actual production is currently taking place on those leases, nor would it take place for years, so canceling these leases doesn't suddenly turn off already-flowing oil. And Keystone XL was intended to move Canadian oil sands to Gulf refineries for export to international buyers, not for domestic consumption (the XL stands for Export Limited). TransCanada, the builder of the pipeline, acknowledged that the pipeline would have actually raised gas prices by 15 cents a gallon in the US Midwest.
"Biden has called for increasing refining capacity, but his administration makes it nearly impossible to permit a new refinery"
Building a new refinery takes years, even if one had broken ground on Biden’s inauguration, it wouldn’t be producing product until years after this crisis is over.
"and refuses to budge on easing environmental regulations that could extend the operational lives of old refineries."
The article makes it sound like this is an industry-wide issue, but the link it uses as a source only talks about one refinery in Colorado, and the link itself says "It’s really rare for the EPA to question state permitting approvals." And let’s look at that one refinery (from the link this article provided):
"Last year, the company exceeded pollution limits 15 times in a three-week period alone. Since 2012, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) has allowed the refinery to operate on expired permits based on renewal requests, enabling Suncor to skirt oversight for a decade."
"lack of monitoring around three flare sources that burn raw gases. It also found roughly 40 changes to Suncor’s permits since 2009 without a public vetting process."
This isn’t about the Biden administration “refusing to ease environmental regulations,” this is about one refinery repeatedly violating regulations. And it’s not “oh, the regulations are just too strict, some emissions limits aren’t practical to expect a refinery to meet,” it’s a matter of the refinery in many cases simply not doing paperwork, and not doing simple monitoring to know what emissions levels are in some cases.
Why not lower the income tax instead of the gas tax?
So a land-grabbing adventurer and greedy multinational oil companies aren't to blame for the global oil price spike? It's all on Biden to fix the world's energy problem with new leases on number 10 in the world's top 10 oil reserves in exchange for 15 cents on the dollar in royalties paid to US taxpayers?
At current rates of nuclear power generation, known reserves will last 200 years. If nuclear replaces all other electrical generation only in nuclear-capable nations, the uranium will last 30 years. That's not counting any non-nuclear nations, nor any future increase in demand, and it doesn't touch the majority of energy consumption that is centered on agriculture, industry, HVAC, and transportation.
I'm seeing a lot of corrupt corporate bluster in this article but no substance. Just come out and say it. You want more profit and you don't care if the planet burns making you wealthy.
Remember Jimmeh the nuclear engineer? The mawrul uhquivlent uv woah? That idiot took my vote and used it to interfere with oil companies and mug them for "wendfall prawfits" during the Nixon-spawned Depression. He then turned around and got all patronizing with
superstitious jihadistsArmy iv Sand-Ghawd whackos who kidnapped OUR diplomats because one of THEIR fanatics had hijacked Mecca. Biden could find a better role model.How about we just let the market decide what the best energy balance and path forward is. We don't need wise government seers to centrally plan our energy mixture.
When gas becomes too expensive due to scarcity people will start to demand electric cars, and the market will respond.
As for the energy grid the most reliable and most cost effective (cost includes people's pollution tolerance, as that is an external cost) balance will automatically be reached.