Redstate...
President
Obama and the EPA’s War on
Jobs
Posted by Ben Howe
Thursday, September 15th
For
some time now, I and others have
been documenting the relentless assault on economic growth by the EPA
under
President Barack Obama. I
feel like a
broken record at times trying to beat this drum and get people to
realize that
while Obama doesn’t keep all of his campaign promises, destroying the
coal
industry is one that he has done everything he can to stay true to.
For
anyone that paid attention during
the 2008 presidential cycle, Obama made it clear that it was his
intention to
bankrupt the coal industry through regulation and legislation. Think it’s hyperbole? Listen to it from the
horse’s mouth.
Obama’s
dreams of green jobs have run
into some snags lately. The
bankruptcy
of solar panel company Solyndra, which received half a billion dollars
in loan
guarantees, is not good for the goal of greenifying our lives. Objectively speaking,
there is one simple
reason that companies like Solyndra just couldn’t make ends meet: the
prices
that they need to charge for their products are simply too high to
create true
market demand.
However,
market demand can also be
altered by a lack of choice. For
instance, if there was a cheaper form of liquid that could fuel my car,
I’d
most certainly gravitate towards it as opposed to the $3.50 per gallon
price
I’m currently paying for gasoline.
Unfortunately
for me, no alternative
liquid exists that is as cost effective as plain old gasoline, and
unfortunately
for the green industry, gasoline exists.
In
the world of energy and power
plants, the big kids on the block are coal and fossil fuels. They currently power the
overwhelming vast
majority of the country and despite rumors to the contrary, there’s
still
plenty of it to go around. This
poses a
problem for Obama’s green agenda and unfortunately for him, his Cap
& Trade
initiative fell flat in the Senate and in this political climate, no
one dares
bring it up again.
So
since that kills his ability to
approach this from a legislative standpoint, President Obama has moved
to his
old standby: Regulatory.
For
instance, the EPA’s Utility
Maximum Achievable Control Technology rule (MACT) requires all
coal-fired
plants to reduce emissions of specific toxic air pollutants like
mercury
emissions. The
problem with this is that
it would “require coal-fired power plants to install equipment that in
some
cases is too expensive to afford and in other cases does not currently
exist
commercially.”
So
essentially, borrowing a phrase
from President Obama, “If someone wants to build a coal-fired power
plant, they
can, it’s just that it will bankrupt them.”
This is not some reading between the lines to
figure this out, as noted
above, this is the actual words spoken by candidate Obama and the MACT
rule is
the perfect example of it in action.
The
requirements aren’t just onerous, they’re in some cases impossible to
meet
which of course results in massive fees levied against the company.
So
what is the result of this?
Well
this one rule could force enough
coal-fired power plant shutdowns to equal about 30-70 gigawatts of
electricity
across the country. That
means that
businesses and families will need to move towards more expensive
alternatives
for energy to keep the lights on.
This
explains why the administration was so intent on investing in solar
energy to
the point of ignoring due diligence in favor of “hurrying up.” This standard will lead to
double-digit
increases in rates in keeping with another famous quote from President
Obama
where he acknowledged that under his plan “power bills would
necessarily
skyrocket.” For
families that will mean
tightening their belts in an economy which they can ill afford to do so. For businesses, it will
also mean tightening
belts which means cutting corners and yes, cutting jobs.
But
MACT isn’t the only rule with
alarming implications. The
EPA’s
Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) will also target coal-fired
power
plants. This time
it’s to prevent polluted
air from crossing state lines. As
is the
case with MACT, it doesn’t accomplish this in a sensible way that
allows the
companies managing the plants to stay in business and continue
providing power
while implementing the changes. Again,
it’s overly stringent with unrealistic timelines that are designed to
be
virtually impossible to comply with.
Brian
Shaw of the Washington Examiner
notes:
This
rule will impose onerous new
costs on coal-fired power plants, causing many to shut down, and
threaten
electrical generation reserve capacity all over the country. These
reserve
margins are needed to avoid power disruption during times of peak
demand. Even
temporary loss of reserve capacity risks dangerous blackouts.
In
terms of job losses, CSAPR is ahead
of the game causing job losses even prior to its actual implementation. Luminant, a Texas energy
company, announced a
wave of shutdowns and layoffs as the rule’s compliance deadline moves
closer.
CEO
David Campbell said:
[M]eeting
this unrealistic deadline
also forces us to take steps that will idle facilities and result in
the loss
of jobs.
According
to Ken Blackwell of the
Cincinnati Ohio News, “various outside analysts seem to agree that, at
minimum,
the 10 major rules that the EPA issued in 2010 could cost the economy
at least
$23 billion and nearly one million jobs.”
These
regulations are onerous and
unneeded. The EPA
has studies which have
made clear that air pollutants they are trying to regulate pose no risk.
The
health benefits claimed by the EPA
for these proposed regulations are actually for pollutants that are
already
controlled through other existing regulations.
Even
more galling, the industry was in
fact doing quite well at dealing with pollutants in a way that didn’t
simultaneously cause blackouts, job losses and billion of dollars:
By
2015, the coal-fired power
generation industry will have invested $125 billion in coal utilization
technologies that burn coal cleaner and with more efficiency.
Power
plant emissions are already down
nearly 80 percent since 1970. A coal-fired power facility built today
is, on
average, 90 percent cleaner than the one it replaces, according to the
National
Energy Technology Laboratory. Ironically, the ability to build those
new plants
is next to impossible due to even more stringent EPA regulations.
Both
CSAPR and MACT made Eric Cantor’s
list of the top 10 job-killing regulations in the U.S.
I know he’s just a partisan right? How can
his word be trusted on this?
Well,
he’s not alone in this
conclusion. Both
rules were included in
a list of regulations that are projected to cost over $1 billion
dollars
annually (that’s each, not together).
Where’s this list come from?
None
other than President Obama himself.
Read
it with links at Redstate
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