Llewellyn
King
Read Llewellyn's bio and previous columns
September 17, 2007
Energy Mythology of
The Democrats
There is a general assumption in Washington D.C. (where assumptions are
often wrong), that the Democrats will sweep the board next year. If so,
they will come to power with ideas about immigration, the Iraq war,
health insurance and energy. They will have ideas about all of these
that show some flexibility – except energy. Here, the Democrats are
slaved to certain dangerous orthodoxies that may be their Achilles' heel
– myth-based beliefs and ideological rigidities that we may all come to
rue.
Since the Carter administration, the Democrats have absorbed and taken
as their own the views of the environmental activists – people who are
clear-headed about what they are against and fuzzy about what they are
for.
Though noble in purpose, the environmental movement is structured to
oppose, never to implement. It can afford to be irresponsible and
sometimes downright silly. Sadly, the Democrats have absorbed the views
of environmentalism and convinced themselves they are the basis for an
implementable policy, a course of action, a road map.
Ideology in government is dangerous because it presumes that
right-thinking (thinking that accords with a belief system) must produce
a good result. Hence the failure of socialism and the failure of the
Bush administration in Iraq.
Yet the Democrats are at their ideological worst in pronouncing energy
policy. This ideology, adopted from the environmental movement, posits
that there are untapped resources that have been bottled up by bad
government policy and corporate greed. These resources are wind, solar,
geothermal, wave power, and biomass. In the wacky world of environmental
thinking, they are going to supplant nuclear, coal and natural gas in
producing electricity. The only one that is deployed on a measurable
scale is wind, and its deployment depends on ideal geographic location –
plenty of land, lots of wind and few migratory birds.
To bring about this change from major to minor, from big central station
to diverse remote generating, the energy bill now before Congress seeks
to impose “renewable portfolio standards” on utilities, whereby they are
obliged to buy or generate 15 percent of their power from “renewables”
Some states have their own laws which take into account local factors.
The Democrats want a national standard with penalties for
non-compliance.
When it comes to transportation, the Democrats are also sure of what
they will not do. They will not allow oil drilling off parts of
California's coast nor in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. And they
are reluctant about the Bush administration's opening up of
environmentally sensitive areas in the inter-mountain West. Yet they
talk about energy independence – talk that has been around since the
Nixon administration. Since that time oil imports have doubled from 30
percent of consumption to over 60 percent, and natural gas imports have
begun.
Not to worry. There is hydrogen on the way and ethanol is taking off.
Trouble is hydrogen has to be released from water or reformed from
natural gas. Natural gas is already in short supply and cracking water
will require great quantities of electricity, at a time when coal is
seen as environmentally unacceptable and there is a pathological
left-wing antipathy to nuclear power.
The other savior fuel, ethanol, uses nearly as much energy to produce as
it yields and requires subsidies which have already reached billions of
dollars. Ethanol is now pushing up the price of food.
Certainly, the Democrats are right to talk about conservation. But the
last Democratic administration fought to lower the price of oil when it
spiked because that was politically popular.
Dear Democrats, we have coal and nuclear. The rest is idealism. Get
real.
© 2007 North Star
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