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Tag Archives: Gasoline

Paying for Carbon

Posted on November 23, 2012 by Donn Dears

It’s fashionable in some circles to promote placing a price on carbon. For example, Mayor Bloomberg, of New York City, and Al Gore, are two prominent politicians who believe CO2 emissions should be cut – the UN says 80% by Continue reading Paying for Carbon→

Posted in Energy, Freedom, Government, Politics | Tagged AEP, Bloomberg, CO2, electricity, energy, Gasoline, GHG, global warming, Gore, Obama, Southern Company

Misbegotten Ethanol Policy

Posted on September 11, 2012 by Donn Dears

This year’s drought should highlight the importance of ending the corn-ethanol program. The USDA originally forecast a record crop of 14.8 billion bushels for 2012. They have been cutting the forecast since the effects of the drought have become apparent. Continue reading Misbegotten Ethanol Policy→

Posted in Energy | Tagged Cellulosic Ethanol, China, energy, EPA, Ethanol, Gasoline

Another Failed Mandate

Posted on June 26, 2012 by Donn Dears

The government mandate requiring the use of ethanol is failing. Why is producing nearly 14 billion gallons of corn ethanol in 2011 a failure? Because it requires tax payer subsidies and forces tax payers to use a product that isn’t Continue reading Another Failed Mandate→

Posted in Energy | Tagged energy, EPA, Ethanol, Gasoline

CO2 Fool’s Errand, Part II

Posted on May 25, 2012 by Donn Dears

CO2 emissions from gasoline used in our cars accounts for approximately 20% of all CO2 emissions. Population is forecast to increase to around 420 million by 2050, which is approximately a 35% increase. There’s little reason to believe that the Continue reading CO2 Fool’s Errand, Part II→

Posted in Energy | Tagged CO2, energy, Gasoline, global warming

Strategic Petroleum Reserve Size

Posted on April 24, 2012 by Donn Dears

An op-ed in the Wall Street Journal by Austan Goolsbee, Council of Economic Advisers from 2010 to 2011, claimed we needed to follow Linda’s rule, which was the supply of toilet paper kept in the home by the op-ed writer’s Continue reading Strategic Petroleum Reserve Size→

Posted in Energy | Tagged Abqaiq, Fracking, Gasoline, Goolsbee, Iran, Saudi Arabia, SPR, Strait of Hormuz, WSJ

Biofuel Shooting Stars

Posted on March 27, 2012 by Donn Dears

Last month, ethanol from algae was the shooting star that lit up the media and enthralled the public. Unfortunately, at $15 to $25 per gallon, ethanol from algae has a long way to go before being competitive with gasoline. Earlier, Continue reading Biofuel Shooting Stars→

Posted in Energy | Tagged Biofuel, energy, Ethanol, Gasoline, Seaweed

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Table of Contents

Introduction

When we flip the switch, the lights come on without anyone thinking about it. This has only been true for the last hundred years in metropolitan areas, and for only approximately eighty years in rural areas with the enactment of the Rural Electrification Act of 1936.

In 1935, only 25 percent of rural homes in the United States had electricity, and there are people alive today who grew up without electricity. Today, few people are even aware of the monolithic system that generates, distributes, and controls the electricity that flows with seeming effortlessness across the United States. This system is referred to as the grid, which is actually three grids covering the entire lower forty-eight states.

Over the past one hundred years, there have been only two area-wide blackouts affecting over 30 million people caused by a failure of the transmission system. There have been other blackouts—mostly caused by storms—affecting smaller groups, perhaps as many as several million people. Overall, the grid has worked remarkably well. Reliability can still be improved upon, but this is primarily a question of placing transmission and distribution lines underground to minimize weather-induced outages.

Suddenly, we are faced with a threat to the grid we haven’t seen before. It is a threat that can dramatically increase blackouts and the suffering that accompanies them. Some in leadership positions have viewed climate change as an existential threat to mankind and have implemented actions to eliminate fossil fuels from the generation of electricity. Some have claimed that wind and solar and other renew- ables can replace all the coal-fired, natural gas, and nuclear power plants in the United States. It can be argued that the actions these people are taking are making electricity more costly and less reliable, and placing Americans at risk for little or no reason. They are willing to gamble the safety and lives of Americans, as well as the American economy, on an ideology.

Our nation has suffered through a medical war fighting COVID-19 in which thousands died. As my neighbor said,

“The inability of our country to anticipate the corona- virus pandemic and put in place adequate reserves of all of the things we needed—PPE, ventilators, masks, tests, hospital beds, etc.—speaks loudly and directly to the need for reliable on-demand electricity and the need to plan for it right now.”

Imagine if Americans had to suffer through rolling blackouts while quarantined at home during a future pandemic. How would newly erected emergency hospitals operate without electricity, let alone our existing hospitals without diesel fuel or natural gas to power emergency generators?

This was brought home by an oped in the Washington Post. Quoting from the op-ed:

Residential use is up as workers and school children stay home.

[Demand is down] in locked up restaurants, offices and factories.

Hospitals are a different story: They consume twice as much per square foot as hotels . . . lead schools and office buildings by an even greater margin. And their work couldn’t be more vital as they confront the novel coronavirus.

A grid operator, sequestered in his dispatch center in East Greenbush, New York, said it all, “Keeping the lights on. . . . It’s so critical.”3

There is little doubt there will be another pandemic. The only question is when. We must do what is needed to guarantee adequate and reliable supplies of electricity in preparation for the next pandemic.

President Trump recognized the vital importance of the grid when he issued an executive order on May 1, 2020, to protect the grid from foreign adversaries. He said the grid, “provides the electricity that sup- ports our national defense, vital emergency services, critical infrastruc- ture, economy, and way of life.”

There is also an ideology that threatens the grid. This book will examine how federal regulators, state governments, utility companies, and the operators of the grid themselves are imposing their beliefs about climate change on all Americans and placing the grid in great jeopardy. Unelected bureaucrats and self-imposed intelligentsia are making decisions that place all Americans in danger.

Looming Energy Crisis will show you why we must continue to use fossil fuels and why we must protect the grid from the actions of those who are imposing their personal beliefs on the rest of us. Our objective should be low-cost reliable electricity available for everyone.

Reliability is a national security issue.