Thursday, March 22, 2012

We Are the American People, Mr. President

Let’s talk about a fundamental difference of opinion on the key energy issue of the day.


We say crude oil supply matters – in the context of global-market pricing, which affects fuel prices because the cost of crude accounts for 76 percent of what Americans are paying at the pump. More supply alters the energy equation, exerting downward pressure on crude prices. Energy Economics 101.


The president seems to disagree, saying there’s no “silver bullet,” while suggesting there’s not much that can be done to affect global markets and offer hope to beleaguered consumers. At the same time he tacitly acknowledges market forces work – but only from the side of the equation that reduces demand through efficiency and other measures.


We’re all for greater efficiency, but the president is igno... more »


As the president hits the road to talk about energy, he should first listen to what the American people are saying, reflected in two new polls this week.


Start with a Harris Interactive survey that shows 76 percent of voters believe increasing taxes on oil and natural gas companies could cost them more at the fuel pump. For a president who continues to talk about hiking taxes on energy companies that should be a big red flag.


Americans who’re getting slammed by higher fuel costs appear to sense that increasing energy taxes would drive up energy producers’ costs, which – as the Congressional Research Service found last year – could decrease exploration, development and production while elevating prices.


Other details from the Harris poll of 1,009 respondents:


The more the president talks about energy, the more heat he creates for himself. Here’s the Washington Post’s Fact Checker, weighing his rhetoric about the U.S. consuming 20 percent of the world’s oil while having just 2 percent of its proven reserves:



“ … this is a good example of what we call ‘non sequitur facts’ — two bits of information that actually bear little relationship to each other. The president is trying to make the case that the world has finite oil resources, and the United States — the world’s biggest oil consumer — needs to use less oil in the future. But using ‘oil reserves’ as a key metric gives an incomplete picture of U.S. oil resources.”


The Fact Checker points out that “proven reserves” is a specific term. The oil must have been discovered, confirmed by dri... more »


The White House had a post up last week with some numbers on production of oil and natural gas on America’s public lands and offshore waters. They want the facts to “speak for themselves,” so let’s chart their numbers over the past six years:



The White House says:



"We know that production levels will fluctuate from year-to-year based on market conditions and industry decisions."


Of course the same is true for private lands where production levels are up.



"It also reflects the fact that the nation battled a major oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010."


An interesting point, given that 2010 production is the peak for oil. And it doesn’t explain the projected declines this year and next:




"Still, the overall trends show a clear picture of rising domestic produc... more »


Yesterday President Obama gave a campaign speech centered around energy policy.  In it he said:



“There’s a problem with a strategy that only relies on drilling and that is, America uses more than 20 percent of the world’s oil.  If we drilled every square inch of this country -- so we went to your house and we went to the National Mall and we put up those rigs everywhere -- we’d still have only 2 percent of the world’s known oil reserves.  Let’s say we miss something -- maybe it’s 3 percent instead of two.  We’re using 20; we have two.  Now, you don’t need to be getting an excellent education at Prince George’s Community College to know that we’ve got a math problem here.  I help out Sasha occasionally with her math homework and I know that if you’ve got two and you’ve got 20, there’... more »


View the original article here

0 comments:

Post a Comment