Bill Lear writes:


Thomas, that is, not the late and unlamented Milton.

He wants a carbon tax instead of cap-n-trade and cites a draft bill
from John B. Larson, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus that
sounds reasonably straightforward and potentially effective.

I have doubts about his E.T./I.T. hopes, and his notion that the person
to sell this is Gen. James Jones (former Marine Corps head) is
laughable romance, but it is a hopeful sign that the carbon tax
may soon become a real prospect.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/opinion/08friedman.html?_r=1

=======================================
Today's Times also reports:

April 8, 2009
Oil Giants Loath to Follow Obama’s Green Lead
By JAD MOUAWAD

The Obama administration wants to reduce oil consumption, increase renewable
energy supplies and cut carbon dioxide emissions in the most ambitious
transformation of energy policy in a generation.

But the world’s oil giants are not convinced that it will work. Even as
Washington goes into a frenzy over energy, many of the oil companies are
staying on the sidelines, balking at investing in new technologies favored
by the president, or even straying from commitments they had already made.

Royal Dutch Shell said last month that it would freeze its research and
investments in wind, solar and hydrogen power, and focus its alternative
energy efforts on biofuels. The company had already sold much of its solar
business and pulled out of a project last year to build the largest offshore
wind farm, near London.

BP, a company that has spent nine years saying it was moving “beyond
petroleum,” has been getting back to petroleum since 2007, paring back its
renewable program. And American oil companies, which all along have been
more skeptical of alternative energy than their European counterparts, are
studiously ignoring the new messages coming from Washington.

“In my view, nothing has really changed,” Rex W. Tillerson, the chief
executive of Exxon Mobil, said after the election of President Obama.

“We don’t oppose alternative energy sources and the development of those.
But to hang the future of the country’s energy on those alternatives alone
belies reality of their size and scale.”

The administration wants to spend $150 billion over the next decade to
create what it calls “a clean energy future.” Its plan would aim to
diversify the nation’s energy sources by encouraging more renewables, and it
would reduce oil consumption and cut carbon emissions from fossil fuels.

The oil companies have frequently run advertisements expressing their
interest in new forms of energy, but their actual investments have belied
the marketing claims. The great bulk of their investments goes to
traditional petroleum resources, including carbon-intensive energy sources
like tar sands and natural gas from shale, while alternative investments
account for a tiny fraction of their spending. So far, that has changed
little under the Obama administration.

“The scale of their alternative investments is so mind-numbingly small that
it’s hard to find them,” said Nathanael Greene, a senior policy analyst at
the Natural Resources Defense Council. “These companies don’t feel they have
to be on the leading edge of this stuff.”

Perhaps not surprisingly, most investments in alternative sources of energy
are coming from pockets other than those of the oil companies.

In the last 15 years, the top five oil companies have spent around $5
billion to develop sources of renewable energy, according to Michael
Eckhart, president of the American Council on Renewable Energy, an industry
trade group. This represents only 10 percent of the roughly $50 billion
funneled into the clean-energy sector by venture capital funds and corporate
investors during that period, he said.

“Big Oil does not consider renewable energy to be a mainstream business,”
Mr. Eckhart said. “It’s a side business for them.”

Shell, for example, said it spent $1.7 billion since 2004 on alternative
projects. That amount is dwarfed by the $87 billion it spent over the same
period on its oil and gas projects around the world. This year, the company’s
overall capital spending is set at $31 billion, most of it for the
development of fossil fuels.

Industry executives contend that comparing investments in oil and gas
projects with their research efforts in the renewable field is misleading.
They say that while renewable fuels are needed, they are still at an early
stage of development, and petroleum will remain the dominant source of
energy for decades.

In its long-term forecast, Exxon says that by 2050, hydrocarbons — including
oil, gas, and coal — will account for 80 percent of the world’s energy
supplies, about the same as today.

“Renewable energy is very real,” David J. O’Reilly, the chief executive of
Chevron, said in a speech in New York last November. “We need it. It will be
an essential part of the future I envision. But it’s not realistic to
suppose we can replace conventional energy in a timeframe that some
suggest.”

Chevron has spent about $3.2 billion since 2002 on “renewable and
alternative energy and energy efficiency services,” according to Alexander
Yelland, a spokesman. It plans to spend $2.7 billion in the three years
through 2011 on a variety of projects, including a business that helps
improve energy efficiency for companies and government agencies, he said.

Despite Washington’s newfound green enthusiasm, industry executives argue
that replacing any significant part of the fossil fuel business will take
decades, at best. Just to keep up with growth in demand for conventional
sources of energy, producers will need to invest more than $1 trillion each
year from now to 2030, according to the International Energy Agency.

“Many of these companies see the world is changing,” said Daniel Yergin, the
chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates and a historian of the
industry. “But the challenge for a very large company is to get critical
scale. People tend to forget the scale of the energy business.”

The world consumes about 85 million barrels of oil a day. The United States
alone would require six times its arable land — and 75 percent of the world’s
cultivated land — to supply its needs with ethanol made from corn, according
to calculations by Vaclav Smil, an energy expert at the University of
Manitoba.

More realistic, and modest, targets are proving tough to reach. Congress’s
ethanol mandate, which requires oil companies to use 36 billion gallons of
ethanol by 2020, cannot be achieved, experts say, without major
technological advances that are still years away.

To increase supplies, most companies are looking to tar sands in Canada or
converting coal or natural gas into liquid fuels, technologies that emit far
more carbon dioxide than conventional oil does.

Shell, a major investor in Alberta in Canada, says that traditional oil
supplies will not be enough to meet the growth in the world’s energy needs
over the next half-century. In 2007, BP invested in Canadian tar sands,
prompting criticism that it was “recarbonizing” itself.

John M. Deutch, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
a former director of central intelligence, said there was little point in
criticizing oil companies without first establishing federal rules that set
a price on carbon dioxide emissions. Once that happens, he said, companies
will adapt their strategies.

“What role will oil companies play in the future in alternatives to
conventional hydrocarbon? The correct answer is nobody knows,” Mr. Deutch
said. “The important thing is for the government to establish a carbon
policy. You can be absolutely confident that oil companies will pursue that,
as will any other companies.”

One area where companies are increasingly focused is the development of
liquid fuels from plants. BP said it would soon build a demonstration plant
in Florida for a type of ethanol made from plant material; Shell has worked
with several firms since 2002 to develop ethanol from nonfood crops. Last
year, it signed agreements with six companies, including one in Brazil, and
decided to drop its other renewable efforts to focus solely on biofuels.

“Biofuels feels closest to our core business,” said Darci Sinclair, a
company spokeswoman.

Other areas also hold significant promise for the industry, like
technologies to capture carbon dioxide emissions and store them underground,
and energy-efficiency programs, especially in the transportation sector.
Exxon, long the most skeptical of the oil companies toward alternative
energy investments, is working on long-term programs to improve fuel economy
and reduce emissions.

In the end, many analysts say they believe that oil companies are waiting
for a winning technology to emerge. Alan Shaw, the chief executive of
Codexis, a biotechnology company in Silicon Valley that works with Shell,
said oil companies were not blind to the new political reality but they were
also in the business of making a profit.

“Don’t lose heart with Big Oil,” Mr. Shaw said. “They aren’t at a point
where they are ready to invest yet, but they are getting there. I think in
the next 10 years, they will invest hundreds of times more than they have in
the past 10 years.”

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