Month: July 2025

Biden’s Green Dream of EV Postal Truck Fleet Is a $10 Billion Failure

From Legal Insurrection

When kicking off the boondoggle “Green New Deal” project, one Biden climate advisor described it as “the Biden climate strategy on wheels.” True, that.

Posted by Leslie Eastman 

Using the 2022 “Inflation Reduction Act” as cover for the progressive “Green New Deal,” the Biden administration funded a plan that aimed to eliminate gasoline-powered delivery trucks and deploy tens of thousands of battery-electric mail trucks by 2028.

And, like so many initiatives linked to Biden, it ended in complete failure. Republicans in Congress are working to claw-back the remaining monies.

The nearly $10 billion project — which called for more than 35,000 battery-powered US Postal Service (USPS) vehicles to be completed by September 2028 — was funded in part by $3 billion in funding from former President Joe Biden’s 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

As of this month, the project is well behind schedule despite taxpayers forking over $1.7 billion — prompting Capitol Hill Republicans to try to rescind the remaining nearly $1.3 billion earmarked from the IRA.

“Biden’s multi-billion-dollar EV fleet for the USPS is lost in the mail and more than $1 billion is postmarked to order more,” Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) told The Post.

“I am working to cancel the order and return the money to the sender, the American people. The rescissions package is a great start, but Congress must keep its foot on the pedal and make DOGE a lifestyle by stamping out waste like this on a regular basis.”

When kicking off the project that was supposed to generate a fleet of over 60,000 electric delivery trucks, one Biden climate advisor described it as “the Biden climate strategy on wheels.”

The post office said it is spending nearly $10 billion to electrify its aging fleet, including installing modern charging infrastructure at hundreds of postal facilities nationwide and purchasing at least 66,000 electric delivery trucks in the next five years. The spending includes $3 billion in funding approved under a landmark climate and health policy adopted by Congress last year.

The White House hailed the announcement as a way to sustain reliable mail service to Americans while modernizing the fleet, reducing operating costs and clearing the air in neighborhoods across the country.

“This is the Biden climate strategy on wheels and the U.S. Postal Service delivering for the American people,” said White House climate adviser Ali Zaidi.

Truer words were never spoken by a Biden official.

The only thing that worked well in Biden’s Oval Office was the auto-pen.


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July 22, 2025 at 08:04AM

BP Replaces Pro-Net Zero Chairman Amid Return to Oil and Gas

From THE DAILY SCEPTIC

BP has replaced its pro-Net Zero chairman as it faces pressure from shareholders to switch its focus away from renewables after its disastrous 2020 commitment to cut hydrocarbon output by 40%. The Telegraph has the story.

Albert Manifold, who was chief executive of the building materials company CRH for a decade, will take over from Helge Lund, who announced his departure three months ago.

Mr Manifold will take charge in October at a crucial time for the FTSE 100 oil giant, which is struggling with a debt mountain, poor share performance and a reputation tarnished by its disastrous 2020 commitment to cut fossil fuel output by 40%.

Mr Lund had strongly backed the drive towards renewables led by disgraced former chief executive Bernard Looney, who abruptly resigned in September 2023 after failing to disclose relationships with employees.

Mr Lund has been under increasing pressure over that debacle, announcing plans to step down in April but remaining in place pending the appointment.

Dame Amanda Blanc, an independent director at BP, said incoming chairman Mr Manifold had shown as “impressive track record of shareholder value creation at CRH”.

She said: “Albert has a relentless focus on performance which is well suited to BP’s needs now and into the future. He transformed and refocused CRH into a global leader by building on its rich heritage to deliver superior growth, cash generation and returns.”

Mr Manifold said the job would give him the “the opportunity to help the company reach its full potential”. Mr Manifold is currently a Non-Executive Director at chemicals producer LyondellBasell Industries and at consultant Mercury Engineering.

Worth reading in full.


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July 22, 2025 at 04:08AM

The hypocrisy of Labour’s attacks on Reform’s net zero plans–Ross Clark

By Paul Homewood

 

A good piece by Ross Clark in the Spectator:

 

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The net zero lobby just gets sillier and sillier. According to energy minister Michael Shanks, Reform’s policy of abandoning net zero targets is an ‘anti-growth ideology’ which would cost nearly a million jobs. Coming in a week when the Office of National Statistics (ONS) reported that the number of payrolled employees across the UK fell by 135,000 during Labour’s first year in power – with 25,000 lost in May alone (the month after the higher rates of employers’ national Insurance came into effect) – you might think that government ministers would want to avoid talking about job losses just at the moment, but no matter.

Shanks’ ‘evidence’ for his claim is a report by the CBI and the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) claiming that the ‘net zero sector’ provides jobs for 951,000 people in Britain – 273,000 directly and 679,000 in the supply chain. It consists of 22,800 companies, who employees are apparently 38 per cent more productive than UK employees as a whole.

That, of course, all sounds fantastic. But the problem comes, as with so many of these things, when you start to look up the methodology. Who are these 22,800 companies who are counted as part of the net zero economy and whose existence is supposedly threatened by Reform’s climate policy? I did ask the ECIU when it published its report back in February for a list of these companies, but was told I couldn’t have it – as it is ‘proprietary data’ provided by an organisation called the Data City. Just try using that argument when trying to get a paper in scientific journal.

But it did provide the following definitions. The count includes ‘organisations dedicated to energy management and energy infrastructure development’, ‘companies focusing on landfill management’, ‘companies providing services and technology for the mitigation of pollution’, ‘companies dedicated to solid waste removal, management and processing’, ‘companies focusing on the technology and development of electric vehicles’ and ‘companies providing services for increased energy efficiency in buildings’. The first category could well include everyone who works for the National Grid, the second and fourth every waste management company in Britain, the fifth anyone who works for, say, Nissan, and the sixth any company that manufactures loft insulation or any builder who fits it.

Full story here.

As Ross Clark points out, the CBI analysis was a deliberate attempt to deflect attention away from the utter failure to produce all the green jobs we have been promised over the years:

The 951,000 net zero jobs claim seems to me little more than crude propaganda to cover up the fact that Britain has failed miserably to capture more than a token share of global jobs in renewable energy. According to the International Renewable Energy Agency, Britain has a total of 57,000 in renewable energy – 0.3 per cent of 16.2 million jobs worldwide.”

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July 22, 2025 at 03:44AM

CFACT takes stage, delivers important message to ALEC atendees

CFACT sponsored four model bills.

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July 22, 2025 at 03:27AM