This week representatives from countries around the world
will be traveling to South Africa for the UN Summit on Climate Change. This Summit begins on Monday, November 28 and
continues through December 9. I have
several thoughts about climate change.
Climate Change – congratulations to the world for taking
this on, despite the nature of the data.
Corporations around the world and individuals are making adjustments to
their residential and commercial lives to reduce their carbon footprint. Corporations and other entities are attaining
positive results through a variety of means and technologies. They are employing solar, wind, geothermal,
better insulation, smarter architecture, energy efficient technology, etc. These
costs are being born by them with various subsidies to encourage the adoption
to the technology. The education by
these groups should be applauded.
However, I do not think that this should be mandated on an
international basis. Given the current
financial and economic environment, this would be a costly endeavor. Corporations and companies forced into
reduced carbon emissions, would pass the costs onto the consumers, who can ill
afford such pass-through costs at this time.
Environmental Protection Agency – again, congratulations to
another environmental group. The EPA
should be basking in their glory for their efforts in changing the behavior of
consumers and corporations in the US. While
the results are dated, smog levels around the country have dropped considerably
because of fuel regulations on NOx and Sox reductions. Rivers are significantly better. Acid rain has been greatly reduced. In fact, according to recent conversations
that I have had with a farming coop, acid rain reduction has been so successful
that the soil is now barren of sulfur.
Farmers must purchase sulfur and apply it with the fertilizers.
However, they should not be constraining job growth by
preventing the development of projects such as the Keystone XL oil pipeline,
shale gas development with associated pipeline infrastructure or oil
drilling. The success of drilling shale
gas, has been so successful that 6 years ago, we were importing 15 percent of
our natural gas needs. We had
constructed LNG regas facilities along the coasts to import natural gas from Qatar
and other Middle East countries. Now, we
are talking about building LNG trains to become an LNG exporter. Who would have thought? All of this shale gas
development has significantly dropped the price of natural gas that we have
returned to one of the low- cost countries for natural gas. Companies like Dow are talking about taking advantage
of that cost benefit, by restarting one of their mothballed ethylene
plants. This will allow the US to bring
back high paying chemical, fertilizer and petrochemical jobs that were lost
when we were natural gas importers. That
will lead to more industry, more revenues and more taxes. Many of the facilities are already built and
can be brought back on line with minimal capex.
All of this has a job multiplier effect, adding support industry
jobs. Allowing us to develop these
reserves provides us/US with cheaper energy, more jobs, more revenues (worth
repeating), more taxes (again worth repeating), and more security (less
revenues going to unfriendly countries).
This is a win-win for all of us/US.
Carbon Dioxide - lastly, DO NOT, I repeat DO NOT,
all the trading companies and investment banks to trade carbon credits. If you think that the banks and trading
companies make too much money now, give them carbon credits to trade. They will become rich beyond your wildest
imagination and the government would lose out on one of the biggest paydays in
history. I propose that we allow the
EPA to tax carbon dioxide emissions. It
could be pro-rated across the industries using a life-cycle apportionment. This means that we do not shut the coal
business down, because it is our greatest energy source and security of all the
energy types (for now). But the EPA
would apportion some of the carbon tax to them – this would encourage the
closing of high-sulfur mines, while keeping larger low-sulfur mines
operating. Utilities would then allocate
capital resources across their electricity-generating portfolio and eventually
close high-sulfur emitting coal-fired power plants. While both of these industries would shed
jobs, the revenues that the EPA take in from the carbon tax on emissions would
be used for incentives to build low or no carbon emission, electricity generating
capacity. This should create more jobs
than it eliminates.
Until next quatbtu.
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