Archive for ‘Environmental’

March 9, 2019

Climate Change Guilt Trip

by Steve Dana

It’s hard to comment about things related to climate change these days because some people de-compensate at the mention.  Having said that, I am willing to spin a few minds into a tizzy.

Let me say from the beginning that I am not a climatologist or a meteorologist, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express the other night.

Here’s what I think I know.  The weather is changing all the time.  Climate is a reflection of weather changes over time.  Climate is changing all the time.

We are growing grapes in the state of Washington where we couldn’t fifty years ago.  Climate changes in California are affecting the crops they can grow today that were staples fifty years ago.  Over that time, farmers have adapted their practices to take into consideration the changes.

For me and most other people, I don’t understand what all the fuss is about.  Al Gore is like Chicken Little warning us that the sky will fall.  Our own Jay Inslee characterized his Presidential campaign as a “War against Climate Change”.  As far as I can tell, the people he intends to wage war against are you and me.

From a scientific perspective the climatologists study the evolving climate, but they don’t ever suggest we can manage it.  The current craze is to reduce Green House gases and the movement is to identify those man-made sources of Green House gases and slash them.

The thing I don’t hear from reputable scientists is that efforts in the US will have a measurable impact on the problem.

The countries producing the most pollution contributing to the problem have no intention to slash production of Green House gases if the cost of doing so trashes their economy.  China and India are by far the largest populations on the planet and they produce the most pollution.  Unless we can twist their arm to get them to play ball, we accomplish nothing by trashing our own economy.

I’m not suggesting that we don’t undertake an effort to reduce environmental impacts that contribute to climate change, but we must keep in mind that everything comes with a cost.  For the Al Gores and the Jay Inslees of the world, they don’t mind that you bear the burden of a Climate Change War even knowing up front there will be no victory.

The thing that pushes their zealotry is guilt for America’s past abuses.  American excesses over the past sixty years coming from a very successful economy create an appearance to the rest of the world that Americans are selfish squanderers of the world’s resources.  Creating a Climate Change movement focusing on American behavior only, contributes nothing to measurable change in the climate but a catastrophic impact to the American economy.

When Obama talked about fundamental change to America, this is the tool that will make it happen.  Inslee’s war will be a war of ideas to convince us that we are bad people who should be ashamed of our success and as a result we should beat our selves to death for penance.

If the environment on the planet changes, our best strategy is to be adaptive.  If we have huge population centers located on low elevation seacoast areas subject to flooding if the oceans rise, then maybe we should be talking about moving to higher ground. Just look at New Orleans if you think you can hold back the sea.  That city is sinking and the government is spending a fortune to prevent the relentless flood.  Move away from the low land, quit building homes in flood prone areas, quit putting people’s lives in danger by allowing residences in “future flood” designated areas.

We’ve learned that mankind is fairly insignificant to mother nature.  It is only in our feeble minds that we think we can alter the weather.

I know I always advise my clients to buy property at least fifty feet above sea level.  Who knows, at some time that property might be on the beach.

Adopting modest changes to our behavior at modest prices is probably a good thing, but taxes to change your behavior has nothing to do with the environment and everything to do with power over you.  Think about that.

October 13, 2012

Green Energy Costs YOUR Green

by Steve Dana

I saw another headline this morning for a failing Green Energy company backed by federal loan guarantees.  Like the now famous (and defunct) Solyndra solar panel manufacturer that soaked the Department of Energy for $500 million, Abound Solar only actually got $70 million of the $400 million in their guarantee before they went TU.

My question is this, “Are there any Green Energy manufacturing jobs that pencil out?”  The President seems to be batting a thousand with his Green Energy failures and that can’t be good for the industry.  I have to believe that there are businesses actually developing products that make sense while also meeting Green Energy standards but I’m having difficulty finding them.

In order to quiet his critics on this Green Energy problem, the President and his Department of Energy maven, Steven Chu should release a list of the successful businesses they’ve funded so the naysayers will go away.

I didn’t turn over too many rocks in my search, but Googling “Green Energy Success Stories” didn’t turn up any.  It seems that all the news is bad.

Alternative energy sources that qualify under the Green Energy guidelines are generally thought of as solar, wind and maybe geothermal with a little dabbling in tidal energy potential and ocean wave energy.

There is no doubt that the sun shines a lot and the wind blows a lot but when you compare the cost of extracting that energy on a BTU basis there is no way they can compete with conventional sources of energy.

When President Obama was a candidate in 2008 he told us about his plan and how it would affect us all.  He said “by necessity, energy costs will have to rise.”  I doubt you would have expected gasoline prices to double or triple in four years or to see the market price for electricity increase to twelve or fifteen cents per KWH when we’ve customarily paid six cents.

Most of us would be happy if a source of energy were available that heated our homes, operated our businesses and fueled our cars cheaply while meeting ever increasingly stringent government regulations but with the technology available today, that is just not possible.

As consumers, we need to decide what our priority is; affordable energy supplied by American coal, American hydro-electric, American nuclear and American oil or expensive “alternative” energy driven up by mindless government regulation.

This consumer is in favor of a “best management practices” approach.  If we agree we want to pursue all options but in order to keep prices lower to minimize financial impacts to families we favor coal, oil, nuclear and hydro as the preferred sources and apply cost/benefit analysis to regulations to see if the benefits justify the cost increase then we can move ahead sensibly.

The government regulators today give no consideration to fiscal impacts when they propose new regulation.

When I was an elected official many years ago, I proposed to my city council that along with all the normal mumbo jumbo fed to us in agenda bills there be a modest fiscal impact analysis so as we contemplated the merits of a piece of legislation we could also understand if it created a financial burden upon one party or another.  Staff was not in favor and ended up defeating my proposal because it created too much of a burden on what was said to be an already over-worked staff.

Regardless of what we are told, every piece of legislation passed by every government body carries with it a financial burden.  In the case of my proposal, the burden would be borne by city staff to the benefit of the public.  Shot down!  In cases where the burden is shifted to non-voters or numerically small impact group members, all the better since they can’t kick me out of office.  In cases where the burden ends up being just another layer of government regulation creating taxes or fees paid by everyday citizens, the message sold is that it’s for the “greater good.”  It had to be done!

Elected officials like to pass legislation but they don’t like to take responsibility for the financial impacts to their constituents.  If there is a compelling reason to pass a new law, at least determine who will be expected to pay for it and whether it’s fair for them to be hung with the bill.

The alternative energy supporters would have us believe that if we don’t do something radical right now the world will come to an end.  Level headed thinkers agree that we should be making efforts to minimize environmental impacts of existing energy sources but not at the expense of the industry.  When the government prevents the private sector from mining coal at all, the country suffers a catastrophic increase in the cost of energy and the loss of jobs.  When the government prevents the drilling for oil or building of refineries the country suffers a catastrophic increase in the cost of energy and the loss of jobs.

If the government gave you the choice between the electric power rates of 5 cents per kilowatt hour or 12 cents per kilowatt hour which one would you choose?

Or if the choice was gasoline for $2.00 per gallon or $5.00 per gallon which one would you choose?

Those are choices that have already been made for you by your elected officials and a lot more unelected bureaucrats/regulators.  They have chosen the more expensive options because someone decided it was okay for all of us to get hammered to benefit narrowly defined interest groups.

If you were given the choice of saving the spotted owl or having less expensive building materials which one would you prefer?

Alternatives always come at a cost and the government needs to take into consideration the hidden taxes they levy when they drive up the cost of commodities by implementing marginally effective government regulations.

The President and the Green Movement are so desperate for their agenda they are taxing our whole country to death to achieve it.

The reason the Green Energy companies fail is because they don’t produce a competitive product.  The demand for their product is driven by government mandate and not the fact that it makes sense to the average consumer.

Develop a fuel cell that can replace the gasoline engine in my car for the same selling price and competitive fuel rates and I’m there.  Until then, throwing government money at a loser of an idea is a loser of an idea.

February 24, 2012

Does Gas Really Have to Sell for $5 a gallon

by Steve Dana

So I’m watching the O’Reily Factor from LA on Wednesday February 22nd, and Bill is talking to this oil industry guy; asking him about the available inventory of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel and the guy admits that there is no shortage of product. Quite the contrary, they are exporting product.

Bill is trying to pin down the guy about price at the pump and whether the oil companies are manipulating the price.

It turns out that available oil in the pipeline (so to speak) is more than adequate to handle our domestic needs but the market price of oil doesn’t directly dictate the value of refined products.  Fluctuations in the market price for oil have a general impact on gasoline price but world demand for refined products like jet fuel, diesel and gasoline allow additional profits to be generated by refiners jacking up the price and selling it to the highest bidder; some of whom are foreign.

So, the oil we refine in this country does not just supply the American market.  Both the foreign sourced oil and the Native American oil comes to the American refiners and they refine it here and send it back over seas.  I wasn’t aware of that.  I guess I assumed that we consumed the entire output of refined product here. 

Every time there is a seasonal change-over they blame refinery capacity for the price increase and a supposed shortage of product to meet domestic demand.

I don’t know about you all, but that’s disappointing to me.  I think most of us thought there wasn’t enough refining capacity here to handle our domestic needs and so shortages and higher prices had to be the result.

I know that we live in a global economy so I understand how the market works but if we’re trying to reduce our dependence on foreign oil to keep prices down at the pump the global market will still increase the price for oil and so the price of gasoline, jet fuel and diesel but shifting the recipient of the windfall to American price gougers rather than Venezuelans, Saudis or Iraqis.  That is not comforting to me in the least.

Increasing oil production in this country will not reduce the price of gasoline at the pump if China offers to pay refiners here more than Americans will.

I guess we need a disincentive to export American oil or at least refined petroleum products so that Americans can benefit from having a plentiful supply of oil in the ground rather than any oil company willing to drill and pump it out.  Maybe it might come in the form of a tariff for refined products; or oil pumped from public land.  That part may require further discussion and analysis.

Bill O’Reily certainly gave me a lot to think about.  I wonder if anyone else was paying attention that can actually do something about it.

May 7, 2010

When is a Disaster a Federal Disaster?

by Steve Dana

Once again, tragedy along the gulf coast in general and Louisiana in particular captivate the news.  Whether it was an accident caused by fate or folly of man, the explosion on the floating oil drilling platform that resulted in a massive oil spill has changed that place forever.  Right wing news organizations criticize the Obama Administration for not acting more decisively at an earlier point in the time-line.

Hurricane Katrina devastated gulf coast communities from western Florida to upper Texas; Louisiana and New Orleans in particular.  Left wing news organizations sustained a prolonged attack on the Bush Administration for not acting more decisively at an earlier point in the time-line.

Citizens across our nation grieve for the losses sustained by our neighbors in that region for a second time in only a few short years.

While we grieve on the one hand, criticism has been levied against the federal government for failing to act proactively in a timely manner in both of these emergencies which begs the question “Is the federal government the agency of first resort or last resort in the case of disaster?”  What protocol should we employ to determine when federal assistance is needed as opposed to required?

Natural disasters such as hurricanes, tornadoes, floods and wild fires all are capable of wiping out a community or even a state.  We are learning that man-made disasters can be every bit as damaging.  In either case, what triggers a federal response to such a disaster?  Does the federal government do joint planning with every state to determine in advance a plan of action for all perils or does the planning fall to the states?

It has become commonplace to see elected officials flying over an area devastated by a disaster in helicopters then hear that the area had been declared a “federal disaster” which triggers financial assistance during a recover, but what has to happen before the federal government’s role changes to proactively managing a disaster on the ground?

During Katrina we learned that FEMA was waiting for Louisiana to ask for assistance.  Is a request for assistance part of the protocol?  Should FEMA and the federal government make an assessment on their own and act unilaterally or wait to be invited?

Is there any such thing as a routine “oil rig” fire?  When any oil rig explodes and burns, someone does an assessment at some level to determine the risk factors.  Was that done in this case and who did follow-up?  When did authorities decide this was an emergency of national significance?

Is there a process Americans can use to guide us when a disaster happens in knowing when the government will only watch and when they might mobilize and actually do something to help?

Flooding is a peril that we often see in the news and New Orleans got hit hard with Katrina, but I don’t recall the role the government played in helping all the other victims in all the other flood events that happened around the country that year or for that matter in any year.

Where are the left wing and right wing news organizations when the federal government chooses not to take an active part in a disaster?  When do they decide the federal government has not acted in a timely, decisive and proactive manner?

The risk associated with living in a flood plain is periodic flooding; with living along an ocean beach is the possibility of hurricanes; with living in the mid-west is the possibility of tornadoes.  Some of us live with the risk of volcanoes, earthquakes and wild fires as well.  What is the federal government’s role in protecting us from those perils and saving us from them after the fact?  What role should the government play in saving you if we all agree that choosing to live in a hazard zone might be perilous?

We cannot expect the federal government to swoop in to save our butts from all perils.  If we live where it floods we do so at our own risk.  If we opt to invest in protection from floods we need to do so at our own expense.  The federal government is not responsible for paying for our own poor judgment.

We need to have federal government policies that clarify the role the federal government will play in the case of major disasters. 

Press coverage should not dictate whether the government steps in or not.