Month: September 2024

Alaska Energy Policy: An Exchange (RPS in the balance)

“There is no management-of-change transition plan that shows how we can effectively move from one energy source to another responsibility. Is it green? Is it ethical? What is the risk? What is the benefit?  What is the cost? What are the metrics of success? Is it even achievable? Will forcing Alaskans to pay the price for all of this have any [climate] effect whatsoever?”

Ky Holland is running for Alaska State House in District 9, Anchorage (South Anchorage), Girdwood, Whittier.  Running as an Independent, he supports a Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS). With RPS legislation imminent in the upcoming session, I wanted to know where Holland stood on this bill of goods specifically.

Be warned: the green lobby is working overtime to mandate unreliable and expensive sources of energy on Alaskans. While Ky’s opponent, Republican Lucy Bauer, has stated she will oppose an RPS “as it is currently being proposed,” my exchange with Hollard unmasks why he believes mandates are needed. It is certainly not economics or the self-interest of the state. It is Green Ideology, the climate agenda above all.

Here is the exchange to follow the lines of reasoning.

Andrews to Holland (Sept. 13, 2024)

I’m curious about your stance on energy, specifically on whether or not you would support a bill for Renewable Portfolio Standards. 

Holland to Andrews (Sept. 15, 2024)
Re: Energy – yes I support the RPS. I understand some are concerned about the mandates and costly penalties and whether we will fund the investments needed to get to the standards avoid the penalties. Those concerns are reasonable, but my understanding is that there are plenty, perhaps too many, ways to get around the standards and avoid ever paying any penalties. 

Personally, I support the conclusions from the NREL studies and recommendations for achieving the lowest cost and highest reliability for our energy needs based on a significant shift to renewable energy with a gas-powered base load capability. I’ve attached one of the reports. Perhaps one day not needing gas will be achievable, but the NREL path seems like a solid next step in avoiding other decisions that commit us to higher energy costs, and delay reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 

Andrews to Holland (Sept. 17, 2024)
I have major concerns with a Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS).  It is my understanding that the primary reason for the “energy transition” is to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.  This is the first assumption that needs to be questioned.  If the overall goal is to abate CO2, RPS policies have proven to be ineffective. There seems to be no known budget tied to any metric for the ever-changing social cost of carbon, which is another topic in itself.

One estimate I have read is on the order of $128B to transition Alaska to a renewable energy future by 2050. [Link]  This transition can only be accomplished through government subsidies and a mandate to do so.  Mandates exist for one reason only and that is to “fix” the market by allowing the government to step in and override economics decision-making.

The needs of the co op members are represented by elected boards. We are seeing a shift in the priority of these boards for reliable and affordable energy taking a back seat to the priorities of “decarbonization”.  I am looking for a representative to ask why boards are negating their fiduciary duty by relying on the state to create a demand for something via heavy-handed regulation, but I cannot seem to find anyone who cares.  Overall, is this about “saving the planet” or something else? 

The forecasted increase in the cost of natural gas as shown in the NREL report you provided are self-inflicted wounds due to the lack of sound energy policy.  Our co-ops and the NGOs have colluded over the past 15 years or longer by prioritizing “decarbonization” above all. How does a co-op justify extensions or new gas contracts when they’ve committed to aggressive decarbonization targets?  They can’t. 

The report claims “growing challenges due to the declining supply of natural gas.”  The decline is manufactured by errant public policy and not the result of geology or economics.  We do not have a gas shortage, we have a surplus of gas regulation and thus a contract shortage.

The study does not include experts in the field(s), the producers that currently provide two thirds of the Railbelt electricity demand.  This report and plan for a mandate in our electricity is one side of the story as it relates to something so important for Alaskans: firm, reliable, best-cost energy. Government intervention in this case is the complete opposite of this. 

Where is the cost analysis between energy transition to 100% renewables as stated and dropping royalties to allow Cook Inlet development? Nowhere does this study assess natural gas availability. It just assumes a cost savings from not buying fuel and buying renewable energy power at a rate better than the utilities can get because the power purchase agreement is an outcome given to the RCA vs. a rate case settled by the RCA. 

This happens when you allow independent power producers to be wholesalers direct to the new state entity (legislation enabling this passed last session).  This puts the utility on the hook for the reliability of the IPP, which means you will have to buy more contingency to avoid paying for unmet generation, this is just one way members will see increased costs which our co-op boards will then be able to point to the new laws as justification rather than incompetence or negligence.  

The NREL study appears to favor wind and solar as the preferred option, stating as much in the executive summary.  Wind and solar are completely dependent on the weather, meaning they are 100% unreliable.  To your point, the gas-powered base load would be the backup for this.  The IPPs should pay for this backup, not the members.  This mandate will prematurely displace base load generation, which is another example of how members will see increased costs.  Eventually, our co-ops will be nothing more than a beat down billing function unable to meet operation and maintenance budgets due to loss of revenues from the IPPs.

An assumption in the report is estimated population growth of 4.5% from 2021-2040.  This is counter to current trends.  What happens if the population shrinks by this amount?  How much population shrinkage can exist before it is decided traditional generations is the most effective?

I would like to get your thoughts on energy sprawl, the environmental impacts of wind and solar, and what happens when this stuff wears out at the same time.  Absent in the NREL report are estimates of material to achieve this goal, x amount of steel, concrete etc. Where is all of this material going to come from, and how much will it cost if these industries also require “decarbonization”?  Will we soon hear the terms Peak Minerals, Peak Metals and Peak Money?  Can this be replicated again given current known reserves of required materials?

I’d also like to know your thoughts about the reality that Alaska is and can continue to be self-sufficient for decades, if not centuries with our own coal, natural gas and oil resources based on proven reserves.  We do not have to be beholden to anyone for our energy security; however, nearly all of the materials required for the transition will be imported from countries like China, who are completely exempt from committing industrial and economic sabotage on themselves. 

I say this because I do not see energy transition enthusiasts clamoring for the production of these resources in our own country and state.  The insult-to-injury here is how these materials are sold to us – China exploits other countries, the environment and commits human rights abuses in horrific fashion to make this happen, negating any and all perceived benefits of the transition.

On your focus, under the RPS conditions to achieve the transition, the only end result is spending too much public money and endless increases in rates for members.  Is reliability at reasonable cost not primary?  Logically and responsibly, the preferred model to be adopted here in Alaska would be a Reliable, Affordable Portfolio Standard.

Let us not adopt the failing model of the Renewable Portfolio Standard.  We should immediately transition to a Reliable Portfolio Standard.  Alaska’s residents and businesses absolutely expect and depend on the latter.  A Reliable Portfolio Standard is the lifeblood of our state; a Renewable Portfolio Standard is the lifeblood of the special interest rent-seeking profiteers (aka crony capitalists).  

The only stakeholder to a representative is their constituents.  In the run-up to all of this, I’ve witnessed NGOs included as stakeholders, but they are not.  As your prospective constituent, I would greatly appreciate equal consideration as the activist NGOs that are not your constituents such as NREL, REAP, Pacific Environment, Earthjustice etc.  It has been my experience that these have been the only voices in consideration as they’ve been invited to write legislation and support damaging legislation against Alaskan’s wishes.

This is not time for partisan politics as usual; this is a turning point where I and many others I know can support you.  We need you to protect all Alaskan’s energy infrastructure.  This gravely concerns me.  I am asking you to include me in the conversation.  How can I help?

Holland to Andrews (Sept. 17, 2024)

You’ve given me a lot to think about. I’m preparing this morning for a candidates’ forum at the Chugach electric Association with their employees. Your thoughts are very helpful as I consider the different sides of this issue, but I don’t pretend to be an expert on all of the many different facets of this problem, though I’m interested in learning more, and one of the benefits of being a legislator is the access to information and feedback like what you’ve provided, debates and discussion, and additional information and resources that I look forward to if I win the election. But even if I don’t win, I look forward to being a more informed citizen and continue the community development and economic development work I’ve been doing.

I won’t be able to do justice to all of your thoughts this morning however I want to acknowledge three key assumptions that I currently hold approaching these issues. 

  1. The cost impacts of climate and weather related damage to people and our infrastructure in Alaska and across the country is the more important and significant cost compared to the development of renewable power. Saying that I acknowledge that that’s an assumption that I perhaps need to explore in more detail to back that up, but it is based on my assumption that the climate is changing, creating more frequent and more severe weather events, and threatens the lives and the economy of future generations and we have an obligation to do what we can now to reduce the cost on the future generations. https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/12/05/benefits-of-accelerating-the-climate-transition-outweigh-the-costs
  2. The cost of energy to consumers and to business owners is an equal factor to reliability, and of course unreliable energy is going to be more expensive. (That’s why I think the NREL recommendation of about 80% transition to renewables is more realistic than other states that have had an RPS goal of 100%.) Particularly in Alaska, the cost of energy is an essential aspect to the affordability and success of our economy. I do acknowledge that the contribution of subsidies to the infrastructure cost make the true cost of the power less clear, but at this point, it’s clear that any of the future fossil fuel solutions have the same set of assumptions of buying down the infrastructure cost, such as the possible gas pipeline that is only economical with significant subsidies, or the drilling additional of wells in Cook inlet that are also only going to happen with additional subsidies and tax credits. Personally, if I have to subsidize projects, I’d rather subsidize projects that have a lower Add more stable operating cost long-term and have a benefit to reducing greenhouse gas admissions, with the result of making some contribution to offsetting future cost paid by Alaskans in the future.
  3. The population of Alaska and even the Anchorage metropolitan area has been going down in a trend that is opposite from forecast made only eight years ago. It’s my goal and the purpose of my running as a legislator is to develop the economic opportunities for the next generational Alaskans, that result in our population returning to a growth trajectory, and to consider the possibility that climate changes in the rest of the country will put significant pressure on northern regions, including Alaska to accommodate greater growth as people are driven north to areas that are more hospitable, have access to supplies of clean water, and are not at risk of more frequent severe weather events, and their costs. 

I’m will have to get back to the prep work for the events today, but I’ll continue reflecting on your thoughts and come back and reread it later after the candidate form when I may have some new perspectives and insights from the questions that I get there. It’s been very helpful to get the information you’ve sent. You’ve given me some good issues to consider for the meeting today with your pushback on the RPS and focus on the importance of reliability.

I think it’s also important for me to note that I do support oil and gas and have no plans to take action that hurts those industries. I see them as essential to our state and I also believe that there are many business development and economic opportunities that can be created from these industries. 

Andrews to Holland (Sept. 17, 2024)

On your first bullet point on the cost impacts of climate and weather-related damage being more important and significant cost compared to the development of renewable power:  I think we most certainly agree on this.  We were much too close to catastrophe than I think most people realize this last January during the cold snap.  It is hard to imagine the destruction of a blackout of length during subzero temperatures.  If not for the firm, clean and reliable power of Eklutna Hydro, it is possible we would have had a much different outcome.  The importance of reliability in cases like this past winter cannot be understated.

Looking back on the historic cold snap (coldest prolonged weather in over a decade) vs. the performance of Fire Island Wind at that time gives us a glimpse into the very risk to be avoided.

During the 7-day coldest duration period from January 28th to February 3 (Anchorage Airport), the average capacity factor of Fire Island Wind was 20.3%.  100% unreliable, when we needed it most.

Fire Island Wind (17.6 MW)
Date MWh Daily Capacity Factor
28-Jan                       72 17.0%
29-Jan                       41 9.6%
30-Jan                       27 6.5%
31-Jan                       68 16.0%
1-Feb                         –   0.0%
2-Feb                    129 30.4%
3-Feb                    264 62.5%

On emissions concerns, Alaska’s total of 41 million metric tons of CO2 released in 2022 compared to the US total of 6,343 mm tons, or less than one tenth of one percent (0.00650.  Globally, Alaska represents about one hundred of one percent of the total (36,100 mm tons).  This is equivalent to a mosquito’s fart in a hurricane.  Reduction in Alaska’s emissions is not going to change the climate.  Under plans to reduce emissions, it is a double whammy for Alaskans where we will pay a particularly high price because of transport, industry and energy use requirements.

I would like to see protective legislation put forward for Alaskans from what I view as a threat to our way of life.  The reality is that for the foreseeable future, a high carbon future is a way of life for Alaskans.  I do not think that we should be apologizing for it or sacrificing our industry, our economy, liberty, prosperity, or freedom to achieve it either. 

As I touched on in my first email, given known reserves, the transition from fossil fuels is impossible.  This is an effort in futility, to no known effect to the climate but what we do know is that it will come at great cost and risk.  My concern is not about propping up or the protecting of particular industries, however I must say that the petrochemical industry is critical to all sectors.  We can point to countries like Germany as an example of what happens when gas supplies are compromised.  Exporting our energy to the primary emitters is celebrated meanwhile we are expected to absorb the cost to offset their emissions?

Energy is not all that is at stake here.  Economy of scale and security of supply chain of the petrochemical industry and defense is essential and non-negotiable.  We must look at the totality of all of this.  There is no management-of-change transition plan that shows how we can effectively move from one energy source to another responsibility.  Is it green?  Is it ethical?  What is the risk?  What is the benefit?  What is the cost?  What are the metrics of success?  Is it even achievable?  Will forcing Alaskans to pay the price for all of this have any effect whatsoever?

—————–

Kassie Andrews is a Principal at MasterResource who regularly comments on Alaska energy policy.

The post Alaska Energy Policy: An Exchange (RPS in the balance) appeared first on Master Resource.

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September 26, 2024 at 01:05AM

Biden-Harris Admin Launches ‘Environmental Justice’ Jobs Training Program

From THE DAILY CALLER

Nick Pope
Contributor

The Biden-Harris administration announced on Wednesday that it is establishing a taxpayer-funded “environmental justice” jobs training program.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), in conjunction with AmeriCorps, is creating the “Environmental Justice Climate Corps,” a $25 million program designed to “open doors” for people seeking careers in “environmental justice,” which is essentially the combination of left-wing social justice ideology and environmentalism. The initiative announced Wednesday is part of the administration’s American Climate Corps program, which the White House established via executive action after it failed to make it into what eventually became the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), President Joe Biden’s signature climate law.

The Environmental Justice Climate Corps “will put more than 250 American Climate Corps members to work over the next three years providing technical assistance to community-based organizations in environmental justice communities – helping them access resources to carry out locally driven projects that reduce pollution, increase community climate resilience, improve public health and safety, and build community capacity to address environmental and climate justice challenges,” according to the White House. Participants will receive an allowance that equates to a wage of roughly $25 per hour, and they will also be reimbursed for some living expenses. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: GOP Lawmakers Demand Answers From Biden Admin On Massive Grants For ‘Environmental Justice’ Program)

“Our partnership is a first-of-its-kind effort within the federal government to expand pathways into environmental justice careers,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said of the new program. “This program will create opportunities for young people through President Biden’s American Climate Corps that will help folks in overburdened communities access and benefit from historic funding secured under the President’s Investing in America agenda.”

Regan and AmeriCorps CEO Michael Smith will talk about the new program during an upcoming panel discussion at Climate Week New York City, a week-long summit attended by numerous other political and business elites, according to the White House.

An earlier iteration of the American Climate Corps did not make it into what became the IRA, largely because Republicans opposed it over concerns about its price tag, according to The Associated Press. Some House Democrats requested $132 billion for the program in the IRA before its removal from the legislation, and Biden’s initial plan budgeted $10 billion for the initiative.

Despite the program’s omission from the IRA, several Democrats, including New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey, called on Biden to set up the American Climate Corps via executive action, according to the AP.

The EPA and AmeriCorps did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

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September 26, 2024 at 12:06AM

Maine’s massive “floating wind” folly — my report

By David Wojick

My research report — Maine’s Massive “Floating Wind” Folly — is up on the Net Zero Reality Coalition’s webpage hosted by CFACT which sponsored the research. See https://www.cfact.org/netzerorealitycoalition/, which has a lot of other research reports as well.

Below is my Executive Summary, followed by the latest bad news on this ongoing silly saga.

“Executive Summary

This report examines several fundamental aspects of the State of Maine’s offshore wind development plan. It is divided into two parts. Part 1 examines certain economic issues, such as feasibility, cost, and progress to date. Part 2 explores the proposed development as it relates to the entire Gulf of Maine, namely because the project has not advanced to the point where the State of Maine’s responsibilities have been defined.

The offshore wind plan calls for development of 3,000 MW of generating capacity, an amount that is roughly double Maine’s average electricity usage. The viability of Maine’s offshore wind plan depends entirely on the massive transformation of the state’s grid from fossil fuel use to electrification. It is clear that the citizens of Maine have not been informed of this vast transformation requirement. They have certainly not approved it.

The offshore wind facilities will consist of great numbers of “floating turbines” operating at a scale and degree of reliability that hasn’t been verified to work in the real world. Such an assumption makes the entire plan not only technologically speculative but also enormously risky.

Extrapolating today’s small-scale facility cost would make the price tag for this project around $100 billion. That could rise significantly once large scale, hurricane-proof technology is developed and adopted, if it ever is. It is important the citizens of Maine be made aware of such great costs, as well as the far greater cost of the required electrification to place them into operation.

The state of Maine has initiated development of a facility to manufacture the floating wind turbines. This effort appears to depend entirely on getting a nearly half-billion-dollar grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation. But this grant is likely illegal as the program is for funding highway projects, not offshore wind development. We will explore that in this report.

On the environmental impact side of the equation, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is in the process of leasing 15,000 MW of offshore wind development sites in the Gulf of Maine. The State of Maine’s proposed 3,000 MW development would come from some of these sites.

BOEM’s Environmental Assessment of this leasing program does not include the impact of building and operating the 15,000 MW generating capacity. They say that impact will only be assessed for individual leaseholds. This approach is mistaken as the full life cycle impact needs to be assessed prior to leasing, including the combined impact of all the leases taken together. A cumulative impact assessment is vital because it might affect the viability and nature of the leases.

The crucial need for a “cumulative impact” is also especially needed to assess the project’s impact on endangered whales, notably the endangered North Atlantic Right Whale. The Gulf of Maine is designated as critical habitat for Right Whales under the Endangered Species Act.

The Environmental Assessment does include the leasehold sonar surveys prior to construction. Recent analysis has determined such surveys are likely responsible for numerous whale deaths along the Atlantic Coast. It is therefore imperative the BOEM and NOAA carefully assess the potentially lethal impact of leasehold surveys on whales before any surveys are approved.”

End of Executive Summary. Now for the bad news.

BOEM has scheduled the Gulf of Maine lease sale for October 29, 2024, just before the elections. They are trying to beat the clock since President Trump has promised to kill offshore wind if elected. Of course, they may also try to award leases before the inauguration because the development of awarded leases is much harder to stop.

Note that at the end of the Executive Summary above, I discuss BOEM, including the leasehold sonar surveys in the Environmental Assessment (EA). That was promised in the draft EA, but in the final EA, just published to make way for the quick sale, that assessment was completely dropped. No doubt, this was to avoid the new findings that sonar surveys can cause whale deaths in large numbers.

If Trump wins, I would like to see a separate Transition Team for BOEM handing out resignation letters. BOEM’s blatant disregard for whale deaths is despicable.

The Report is here: http://www.cfact.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Maines-massive-floating-wind-folly.pdf

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September 25, 2024 at 08:05PM

The New Campaign for Climate Patriotism

By Michael O’Sullivan

When I wrote last week on the clever (and misleading) statement from Vice President Harris linking the pursuit of diverse energy sources with freedom from foreign oil dependence, I suspected there was more to the story. I just hadn’t stumbled on the evidence—until I saw a headline referencing a recent study documented in a research article published by PNAS. For the uninitiated, PNAS is a well-known scientific journal trusted by many but not by all

The title of the research article is: Effects of system-sanctioned framing on climate awareness and environmental action in the United States and beyond. Sounds pretty heady, I know. But I bought it and read it so you don’t have to. 

The purpose of the study is to determine whether people are more likely to get on board with climate action if they are first exposed to “patriotic” and “system-sanctioned” messaging. My Spidey sense is already tingling, because there’s a hypothesis embedded in that purpose and it doesn’t feel right. 

They didn’t go into the study wondering whether people might be influenced by some sort of messaging (that would sound like objective science). They began with a specific message—which means someone wanted to know whether that particular message would have the desired effect. That sounds like an agenda.

So let’s consider the inciting incident for such a story. The authors note that planetary concern alone has failed to inspire enough people to make the sacrifices needed to avert an alleged disaster. It seems many of us, like the poor R2 unit, have a bad motivator. So we need something else. Something more visceral. Something that really moves us. 

That something, it turns out, is the status quo. Here in America we care deeply about preserving our way of life. And we should—it’s a good way. In fact, the authors suggest the status quo is what keeps many people from taking action. Their version of supposedly saving the planet requires changes that impact our way of life, and we naturally resist such changes—especially if we’re not convinced the cause is real. So someone hatched a plan to use our defense against us. And they tested their idea with this study.

Here’s how they did it. They presented participants with a series of statements and sentimental photos that connect environmental themes with happiness and life in America. It ends with Let’s keep the United States as it should be. Shrewd.

After looking at the “messaging,” the participants answered questions about the severity of climate change and what should be done about it—from raising taxes to government-mandated “sustainable” energy. The control group, who only read a random passage from Great Expectations, answered the same questions.

And now for the exciting conclusion: 

In a large, nationally representative U.S. sample, we found that the system-sanctioned change intervention successfully increased liberal-leftists’ as well as conservative-rightists’ belief in climate change; support for pro-environmental policies; and willingness to share climate information on social media.

Sounds Orwellian? I thought so too. 

It’s probably no coincidence this study was published on September 9 and the presidential debate was one day later. Kudos to the Harris team for picking it up and weaving it in so quickly—unless perhaps they had an advance copy, since it was accepted by PNAS in June.

There’s a lot I could say about the study itself and how the “messaging” is constructed using the principle rules of propaganda. But few of us are truly innocent of that charge, even for honorable purposes. Nonetheless, the mission for this sort of message is not to win on logical grounds. In the words of the research article:

We tested an experimental manipulation derived from system justification theory in which pro-environmental initiatives were framed as patriotic and necessary to maintain the American “way of life.”

From the text it is objectively clear that someone wants to manipulate us. Someone wants us to hear something that makes us go along with what they want.

If the intention were genuinely about protecting our way of life, then the environment is a consideration. But in today’s world the chief factor is affordable, reliable energy—without which everything stops. If we truly want to keep the United States as it should be, then it all starts with energy. And the only proven solution at this time comes from cheap, abundant oil and natural gas. We have plenty of that in America to maintain our way of life for a long time. At least until someone perfects dilithium crystals

This allegedly scientific study is not about preserving our way of life. But it certainly provides a base from which to launch a barrage of new messaging.

Coming soon to a campaign near you.

Michael O’Sullivan is Program Director and COO for Blue Energy Nation, a non-profit committed to educating young people on energy realities. He is also a popular podcast host and an advocate for smart energy choices.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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September 25, 2024 at 04:02PM