Fueled by Pork
by Edward H Crane and Carl Pope  
Carl Pope is executive director of the Sierra Club. Ed Crane  is president of 
the Cato Institute. 
As members of the House and Senate wrangle over how to hitch  together their 
versions of an energy plan, the two of us -- one a committed  conservationist, 
the other an advocate of free-market principles -- find  ourselves in a rare 
moment of harmony. We both agree that the energy bill now in  conference 
committee ought to be stopped. Whether you're a liberal or a  conservative, one 
thing is clear: It's time to derail this legislative train.  
The Senate has already killed the big items on the agendas of  both the 
environmentalists (higher auto-mileage standards) and the oil industry  
(drilling 
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge). Some Washington insiders  smugly say 
that since now no one is happy with this bill, it must be a good one.  Wrong.  
The legislation does nothing to improve the efficiency of energy  markets or 
to remedy any market failures. In fact, it makes matters worse by  further 
distorting these markets with billions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies  and 
other handouts to well-connected energy industries.  
This shouldn't come as any surprise. When politicians lack the  courage or 
wherewithal to solve problems, they reflexively subsidize politically  potent 
industries that supposedly offer solutions. So let's start at the top:  What's 
the problem that the House and Senate bills supposedly solve?  
It's not energy supply or price. There is no national energy  shortage, and 
prices are moderate in constant dollars. In fact, the House and  Senate bills 
will almost certainly raise gasoline prices by ramming down  consumers' throats 
a poorly conceived, environmentally damaging and expensive  ethanol mandate.  
It's not oil dependence. For those to whom this is important,  the 
legislation would have only a trivial effect on domestic oil production or  
consumption. 
 
It's not gasoline refining capacity. Even those in the oil  industry 
acknowledge that when new capacity is needed, they'll add it; profit  
opportunities, 
or the lack of them, are the only real barrier -- and the ethanol  mandate 
might actually create spot shortages on the coasts.  
It's not consumer protection in electricity markets. The bill  gives the 
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission a green light to continue  restructuring 
the 
industry in an experiment that looks more dubious by the  minute, especially 
for consumer interests.  
The bill passed by the Republican House last August boils down  to little 
other than $33 billion in tax breaks and subsidies, the great majority  of 
which 
are awarded to the coal, oil and nuclear industries. It has dozens of  new 
federal studies and other benefits for virtually every energy technology  
represented by a lobbyist. Since when did conservatives believe in picking  
winners 
and losers in the marketplace?  
The Senate bill crafted by the Democrats, with a price tag of  merely $14.5 
billion, isn't much better. It, too, has a hurricane of subsidies,  tax breaks 
and regulatory preferences for every energy industry you can imagine.  And 
despite Democrats' green rhetoric, the Senate bill rains roughly the same  
level 
of subsidies on the fossil fuel and nuclear power industries as it does on  
"green" energy technologies such as solar and wind.  
Conservative legislators have conveniently forgotten the  economists' 
admonition that if a technology is economically competitive, no  public 
subsidies are 
necessary, and if a technology is not economically  competitive, no amount of 
public subsidy or special favors will make it so.  Liberal legislators, on 
the other hand, are so hypnotized by the handouts to  their favorite industries 
that they overlook the far greater sacks of largess  bestowed on their 
economic competitors.  
We would hope it's not too late for something better. Devotees  of Adam Smith 
and Rachel Carson should join together to propose an alternative  bill, one 
that would simply strip away all energy subsidies and preferences from  the 
budget and the federal tax code.  
Environmentalists would be happy if renewable energy sources and  
energy-efficient technologies were just allowed to compete with the fossil 
fuels  
industry on a level playing field. The only way to level it is to end the  
ever-escalating arms race of corporate subsidies that guarantee green  
technologies will 
never win, no matter which party is in power. Likewise, many  economic 
conservatives are more interested in freeing energy markets than in  rigging 
them, 
but they've lacked the ability to fight the pork-barrel crowd in  Washington.  
Not only would energy markets operate more fairly and  efficiently but 
taxpayers could realize billions of dollars of savings by saying  "no" to this 
grotesque bipartisan avalanche of welfare for the well-connected.  If it is too 
late for something better, then let's just kill these bills and  call it a day. 
This article originally appeared in the Washington  Post.


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