| on Apr 28, 2008, 02:05 PM E.S.T.
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With gas prices now yon-side of $3.50 per gallon, wouldn’t it be great to have an extra million barrels of domestic oil flowing daily into the American pipeline? Blame William Jefferson Clinton, who vetoed a bill in 1995 that would have opened the Alaska reserves that could have been producing much needed domestic energy today.
Blame the green environmental extremists who block every effort to expand domestic energy supply, whether in off-shore oil reserves, expansion of clean coal production, or the construction of new nuclear energy facilities. It’s just plain dumb to allow the shortage of readily available energy to drive prices so high that the entire economy and food supply are in jeopardy.
The fear-mongering extremists bring up the “global warming” hobgoblin every time a new initiative is introduced to increase the energy supply. Atmospheric carbon dioxide from human activity makes little or no difference to the climate.
The one thing on which scientists agree is that atmospheric
carbon dioxide is currently about 375 parts-per-million. Eighty
percent of this carbon is naturally occurring, and would be in the
atmosphere had oil never been discovered. The remaining 20 percent, or
about 75ppm, is generally attributed to all the smoke-stacks and
automobiles and lawn mowers that humans have created.
Could all
man-made carbon dioxide produced by humans be eliminated from the
atmosphere, the difference would be undetectable. Visualize an
Olympic-size swimming pool containing the standard 660,253.9 gallons of
water. The average depth would be 7.480 feet. Remove the percentage
of water equal to man-made carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and the
new average depth of the pool would be 7.452 feet. Undetectable!
A
reduction of 75ppm of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would make no
difference on any thermometer. And it would take total elimination of
all man-made carbon dioxide to achieve this number. The Kyoto
Protocol, had it been fully implemented, would have reduced carbon
dioxide by only about 1ppm.
These results are simply not worth banning the use of fossil fuels.
Environmental
extremists prefer to mandate the expanded use of ethanol, rather than
using abundant oil supplies. This alternative produces less energy per
gallon of fuel than gasoline, while driving the price of food upward,
causing riots, and forcing the cultivation of more land where wildlife
can no longer flourish.
Environmental extremists wring their
hands and cry crocodile tears at the thought of “ruining” the Alaska
National Wildlife Refuge by using only 2000 of the 18 million acres for
oil production. But they seem to have no problems with the idea of
covering millions of acres in the southwest with solar panels.
Environmental
extremists celebrate their victory in banning DDT to save birds. But
they have no problem with miles and miles of wind turbines that
slaughter millions of birds every year. Nor do they seem to have any
sympathy for the millions of people who have died from malaria as a
direct result of the ban on DDT.
Big oil is not to blame for the
high price of gasoline; the blame must fall squarely in the lap of the
environmental extremists who use propaganda and fear-mongering to block
the increases in the production of readily available fossil fuels.
There are sufficient reserves of coal to last about 200 years. Despite
Jimmy Carter’s 1970s declaration that the world would be out of oil by
2000, and considering the anticipated increase in demand, there are
enough known oil reserves to last at least 60 years. This energy
should be available now.
Of course, research should continue to
find abundant, affordable energy supplies for the future. But forcing
technology to advance by arbitrarily and unnecessarily prohibiting the
use of currently-available energy supplies makes no sense. The price
of both existing supplies and alternative technology is artificially
increased. To write this foolishness into law is even worse.
Every
time government sticks its nose into the market place and attempts to
manage it, government makes a mess. The ethanol mandate, for example,
inevitably results in price increases for food – for everyone. The
arbitrary increase in fuel efficiency standards inevitably results in
smaller, lighter automobiles – and more crash-related deaths. The much
touted cap-and-trade program for carbon emissions will inevitably
result in taking money out of the pockets of wage-earners, and transfer
it to the pockets of people like Al Gore, who created the “hot-air”
store, and sells his goods only because government forces people to buy
them.
Every time a person fills up at the pump, he should
visualize the billions of barrels of oil that are waiting in Alaska,
and the billions of barrels of oil that are waiting in the Dakotas and
Montana, and the billions of barrels of oil that are waiting just off
shore – and curse the environmental extremists who are forcing him to
pay far more for his transportation than is necessary. Source
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