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11.18.2010

ENERGY STAR saved at least $75 for every federal dollar spent.

Letter to the editor: Set politics aside on energy

Nov 16, 2010 Politico

Kateri Callahan

As an advocate of energy efficiency, I am appalled to see two important programs that drive this resource for our economy disparaged in political wrangling over budget deficits. Let's set politics aside for a moment and get the story straight.

Federal energy efficiency programs are highly cost-effective and have a proven track-record of benefitting U.S. taxpayers and our economy. Just as important, they enhance U.S. national security and help us meet growing energy demand without further environmental degradation.

ENERGY STAR stands as an exemplar. The program has earned the right to be praised, not maligned — as it was in Grover G. Norquist and Rep. Fred Upton's Nov. 15 Opinion article "Reduce out of control spending now."

ENERGY STAR is an effective, voluntary public-private consumer information program. It helps keep money in the pockets of American consumers – an especially valuable feature as we dig out of a recession – while also reducing our country's overall energy use and CO2 emissions.

In 2009 alone, ENERGY STAR saved U.S. taxpayers an estimated $17 billion in reduced energy bills, savings of at least $75 for every federal dollar spent.

The low income weatherization program has faced a series of challenges in ramping up, but it has helped lower the energy bills and improve the comfort of hundreds of thousands of families that need it most, while reducing their need for energy assistance from the government.

The most recent review found a benefit to cost ratio of 2.5 to one.

In short, ENERGY STAR and weatherization are effective programs that help American families. These programs deserve strong congressional support and should not be sacrificed in efforts to rein in the current budget deficit.

Kateri Callahan is the president of the Alliance to Save Energy.

 




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Scott's Contracting
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you want to stop sending your money to…terrorists?

By Joseph B. White

AFP/Getty Images
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council on Tuesday.

WASHINGTON — New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday that he's in favor of a carbon tax –- a view not shared by many political leaders of either party in Washington.

Bloomberg, speaking to a group of chief executives at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council, said the U.S. needs to reduce its dependence on foreign oil if "you want to stop sending your money to…terrorists."

The answer: "We need a carbon tax," he said.

Bloomberg, an independent, criticized the now-moribund Democratic proposal to develop a nationwide "cap and trade" system for limiting U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by requiring companies to buy tradeable permits for the right to emit greenhouse gases under a steadily declining economy wide cap.

"Cap and trade is filled with so many special interests," he said.

The mayor downplayed speculation that he may consider a run for president, saying he had a great job already. He more forcefully dismissed the idea of an independent candidacy.

"The Republicans and Democrats, no matter who their candidates are, no matter who," would have the advantage, he said. An independent couldn't get a majority, Bloomberg explained, and if the electoral collage produced no winner the election would go to the House of Representatives.

"And in the next election, the Republicans would pick the president," he said.



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Scott's Contracting
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Lame Duck Energy Bill=Money for Special Interests

Reid's Lame Duck Energy Bill: More Money for Special Interests, Higher Costs for the Rest of Us

Posted November 16th, 2010 at 12:00pm in Energy and Environment 

It's highly unlikely that we're going to see any large energy bills like a cap and trade or renewable electricity standard passed during the lame duck session, but that isn't stopping Senator Harry Reid (D–NV) from moving forward with bad energy policy.

Undeterred by an American electorate that shouted clearly that it was done with Washington-centric, special interest politics, the majority leader filed procedural motions to vote on S. 3815, the "Promoting Natural Gas and Electric Vehicles Act of 2010." The bill is laden with handouts to promote vehicles powered by natural gas and electric. And to pay for this corporate welfare, the bill would call for an increase to the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund tax from $.08 per barrel to $0.21 per barrel.

This means that everyday Americans would be paying more at the pump to subsidize industries that Washington has deemed politically correct. S. 3815 "would spend $4.5 billion over the next ten years on tax rebates for buyers of natural gas vehicles and subsidies for manufacturers of the vehicles. It also authorizes $1.5 billion over the next ten years for research and development effort related to plug-in hybrid electric vehicles."

The bill is symbolic of everything that is wrong with Washington when it comes to energy policy. The government spends money on proven technologies even though these decisions would be better left for the private sector. When the government selects political winners, it's usually a good indicator that the technology or energy source is a market loser. After all, if the venture was a profitable one, it wouldn't need privileged treatment from the government.

A study from J. D. Power and Associates says there will be very little demand for electric vehicles over the next decade, even with lucrative federal handouts. But that's not the only one. There are many studies pessimistic about the environmental and economic purposes of the electric vehicle, including ones by Deloitte Touche, Boston Consulting Group, Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, Professor Henry Lee of Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Energy Initiative.

Both natural gas vehicles and electric vehicles may be a part of America's vehicle fleet, but Congress should not wastefully spend money to prematurely rush them into the marketplace. The vehicles we drive today will most likely look very different from the ones we drive 20 years from now and may well run on alternative fuels as producers offer new products to meet consumers' needs. But the most productive and efficient way to achieve these changes is not through a predetermined evolution created by bureaucrats and central planners. Instead, Washington should step aside and allow the marketplace to guide innovation and technological advancement. As economist Friedrich Hayek said in The Fatal Conceit: "The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design."

To pay for the government's program, Reid insists on using the BP oil spill to pay for it, and—in what has become the most overused phrase in Washington—not let a crisis to go to waste.

If Congress wants to address issues surrounding the oil spill, instead of increasing taxes, it should implement actual reforms that would fix many of the problems that became apparent after the accident. For example, Congress could fix the offshore oil and gas liability cap. Instead of lifting the cap, raising it to another arbitrary number, or increasing the per-barrel tax, Congress should establish a liability and claims process that fully assigns risk of offshore oil and gas operations, allows victims to be fully compensated, and protects companies from frivolous lawsuits.

A better way to promote natural gas in the U.S. is to open off-limit areas for exploration and production and ensure that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) does not create new rules and regulations to crack down on hydraulic fracturing, a process to extract natural gas. Hydraulic fracturing has been safely done for decades, and former EPA Administrator Carol Browner wrote in defense of "fracking" 15 years ago:

There is no evidence that the hydraulic fracturing at issue has resulted in any contamination or endangerment of underground sources of drinking water (USDW). … Moreover, given the horizontal and vertical distance between the drinking water well and the closest methane production wells, the possibility of contamination of endangerment of USDWs in the area is extremely remote.

What's worse, Reid's lame duck energy policy could be a preview of the smaller energy bills mentioned by President Obama after the election on which Republicans and Democrats could agree. These are not conservative policy ideas, nor are they rooted in the free market. These policies benefit a concentrated interest group and spread the costs to the American consumer or taxpayer—depending on how the government chooses to fund its projects. Unfortunately, in many instances, it's both.

I was fine with the article until it started talking about Fracking for Natural Gas.  To make my case:--The chemicals used to remove the gas from the soil/rock leeches into water supplies.

Latest Hydrofracking Blog Posts:

Nov 12, 2010 · NEW YORK, NY — Alternative energy, the profitability of natural gas, green stocks and hydrofracking will be featured on NBC Universal stations during its annual .


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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

More Than $5 Fossil Fuel Subsidies for Every $1 of Support for Renewables |

The International Energy Agency's 2010 World Energy Outlook, released on the 9th, should finally stamp out the myth that renewable energies are dependent on subsidies.

"Fossil-fuel consumption subsidies amounted to $312 billion in 2009", says the IEA, while renewable energies in the same year received just $57 billion of "government support" according to the IEA. In other words, renewables got just $1 for every $5-6 given to fossil fuels last year.

The IEA goes on to forecast that government support for renewables will go up to $205 billion in 2035. That is still – a quarter of a century in the future – less than two-thirds of the sum being doled out to fossil fuels today.

In this time of budgetary constraints, governments would be wise to remove the billions of dollars spent in subsidising fossil fuels as well as  nuclear. That in turn would mean less subsidies would be needed to bring in new, smarter and cleaner energy technologies such as wind power.


By Christian Kjaer
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Scott's Contracting
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

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