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Date: Sat, 09 Jun 2001 21:47:10 -0700
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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To: SNET NEWS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SNET: The Idiot's Guide to Energy

->  SNETNEWS  Mailing List



http://www.townhall.com/columnists/donfeder/df20010606.shtml

Don Feder

June 6, 2001

The Idiot's Guide to Energy


Energy isn't a complicated issue. But since certain people -- Democrats,
bureaucrats, enviros -- have spent decades avoiding a rendezvous with
reality, they require a road map. Presented for their edification is an
Idiot's Guide to Energy.

1) If you want more energy, build more power plants and refineries, and
drill, drill, drill.

For 30 years, we've done the opposite. It hasn't worked.

America consumes more energy than any other nation. In the next two
decades, demand is expected to grow by 25 percent.

But we haven't built a new large refinery in 25 years. (Since 1992,
we've closed 37.) Those still functioning are operating at 97 percent
capacity. Domestic oil production has declined from 9.6 million barrels
a day in 1970 to 5.8 million last year. In the words of the Johnny
Mercer song, "Something's gotta give."

2) Price caps work well -- if your goal is increased consumption and
decreased production.

Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham says price controls "make a problem a
disaster, and a disaster a catastrophe."

Since 1996, California's political establishment has artificially held
down the cost of electricity by capping consumer prices. (Utilities were
allowed some increases this spring.) As a result, California ranks dead
last among the states in power production per capita. Now Gov. Gray
Davis wants caps on what utilities pay for energy, which should be a big
incentive to companies that generate power. Why settle for a barge
mishap when you can have the Titanic?

3) Conservation won't solve the problem.

Consumers can use their air conditioners less in the summer and turn
thermostats down in winter. But you can't meet the increased energy
needs of a population expected to grow by 50 million in the next 20
years by unscrewing light bulbs.

As for alternative energy sources (wind, solar, ethanol), by 2020 they
will supply a whopping 3 percent of U.S. electricity.

4) Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge isn't environmental
rape. It doesn't even constitute an indiscrete glance at Mother Nature.

There are at least 11 billion barrels of oil there, the equivalent of 30
years of imports from Saudi Arabia. President George Bush is proposing
to use a flyspeck of the refuge's 19 million acres. Since oil operations
began in Prudhoe Bay, the area's caribou herds have increased fivefold.
As the resource would be developed only during the Artic winter, the
environmental impact would be negligible.

5) Nuclear is a crucial component of our energy mix.

Though it's been 20 years since an order was placed for a nuclear power
plant, the 103 plants in operation supply 20 percent of our electricity.
Without them, in 1999, other forms of power generation would have
resulted in carbon dioxide emissions equal to that released by half the
nation's cars and light trucks.

In 1999, the cost of generating a kilowatt hour was 3.52 cents for a
natural-gas fired plant, 3.24 cents for oil, 2.07 cents for coal and
1.83 cents for nuclear. There's a greater chance of Ralph Nader
spontaneously combusting than a nuclear reactor experiencing a meltdown.

6) Dependence on foreign imports makes us vulnerable to embargoes and
blackmail.

Our dependence on foreign oil has increased from 36 percent in the '70s
to 56 percent today. The friendly nation of Iraq is our fastest growing
supplier -- at 613,000 barrels a day under the oil for food program. On
Monday, Saddam Hussein suspended all exports because the United Nations
is considering a new sanctions plan. If other oil-exporting states, most
in volatile regions, decide to start shutting off the tap, we'll be up
to our necks in something other than crude.

7) Energy shortages lead to lost jobs and economic slowdowns.

Small- to medium-size businesses, which employ over half the workforce,
are particularly vulnerable to increased energy costs. Large
corporations, whose work could be done overseas, demand a reliable
energy source. Intel says it won't expand operations in California until
the state solves its power problems.

The Sierra Club may think the move to a smaller America is beautiful.
The average worker, consumer and businessman will like it a lot less.

Policy-makers and opinion-shapers are urged to meditate on the above,
before the unemployment lines begin to form and the lights start to dim.

�2001 Creators Syndicate, Inc.



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