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Why We Fight (Part I: AEA Is “Big Liberty,” Not “Big Oil”)

Why We Fight (Part I: AEA Is “Big Liberty,” Not “Big Oil”)

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IER [and AEA] would like to work itself out of a job by depoliticizing energy so that lobbying monies can be retained by individuals, foundations, and corporations for nonpolitical purposes, thank you. With the help of the New York Times, we can do so and get the saved money to other uses.”

[Editor’s Note: Ad Hominem attacks on free-market organizations espousing industry positions are a regular occurrence, even though the same organizations oppose the same companies when they seek special government favors. This repost from five years ago remains as relevant today as then. Part II tomorrow, also a repost from April 2012explains the philosophy behind the Institute for Energy Research/American Energy Alliance.]

The New York Times is upset with “Big Oil,” including the advocacy group American Energy Alliance (AEA). This is evident in their Saturday opinion-page editorial, Big Oil’s Bogus Campaign, subtitled “Industry spends heavily to preserve tax breaks and blame Mr. Obama for rising gas prices.”

What is the philosophy behind AEA, what are the Times’s complaints, and what is a free-market response?

American Energy Alliance

The American Energy Alliance is the C4 (advocacy) arm of the C3 (educational) Institute for Energy Research. I am founder and CEO of IER.

AEA’s “About” section on its website reads as follows:

Founded in May, 2008, The American Energy Alliance (“AEA”) is a not-for-profit organization that engages in grassroots public policy advocacy and debate concerning energy and environmental policies.

AEA believes that freely-functioning energy markets provide the most efficient and effective solutions to today’s global energy and environmental challenges and, as such, are critical to the well-being of individuals and society. AEA believes that government policies should be predictable, simple and technology neutral.

AEA’s mission statement is as follows:

The American Energy Alliance (AEA) is the independent grassroots affiliate of the Institute for Energy Research (IER). AEA’s mission is to enlist and empower energy consumers to encourage policymakers to support free market policies. These policies lead to abundant, affordable, and reliable energy for all Americans.

In fulfilling its mission, AEA will enlist the support of Americans in every state and conduct targeted, non-partisan national and local energy education campaigns. Outcomes will create a climate that encourages the advancement of free market energy policies.

Free markets will provide the United States with affordable, plentiful, and reliable energy. Energy consumers, not bureaucrats, should decide the mix between various sources of energy. The tax code should not be used to pick energy winners and losers. Lastly, markets not mandates result in lower energy prices and more abundant energy for all Americans.

AEA will also help fulfill the mission of the Institute for Energy Research, which is to establish itself as the premier source of accurate, substantive and timely energy information for policymakers, the media and the public. By communicating IER’s decades of scholarly research to AEA grassroots activists, AEA will empower citizens with the facts.

Political Capitalism, Duh

The Times opinionists express angst at an industry whose “profits are being continuously recycled to win the support of pliable legislators.” Well, welcome to the world of political capitalism, whereby activist  government shapes profits in addition to underlying market consumer demand.

Some advice. If the Times wants to get the industry to stop spending money on politics, then get the politics out of energy as much as possible.

Advocate a flat tax or tax reform that eliminates tax preferences for all energies, not just oil and gas. End the Production Tax Credit and accelerated depreciation for wind and solar power. Eliminate the ethanol requirement. Let’s truly level the energy playing field and see what consumers choose and which energy sources fail.

The editorial then takes on a new ad campaign of the American Energy Alliance (my comments are interspersed):

“Money has always talked in Congress. Now industry allies are aiming at voters. The American Energy Alliance, a Washington-based group that does not disclose its financial sources, on Thursday began an ad campaign in eight states with competitive Congressional races.”

Comment: “Industry allies …”? Free market groups such as AEA often find themselves fighting “the industry.” Ken Lay of Enron … James Rogers of Duke Energy … T. Boone Pickens and Aubrey McClendon of Big Gas … Jeff Immelt of GE ….  We need a new free-market ethic Principled Entrepreneurship™  rather than get-what-you-can from Washington, DC (and state capitals).

“Voters … will hear a 30-second spot peddling the industry’s misleading arguments against the Obama administration’s energy policies — including the fiction that those policies have led to higher gas prices: ‘Since Obama became president,’ it says in part, ‘gas prices have nearly doubled. Obama opposed exploring for energy in Alaska. He gave millions of dollars to Solyndra, which then went bankrupt. And he blocked the Keystone pipeline, so we will all pay more at the pump.’

Four sentences, four misrepresentations. Gas prices, tied to the world market, would have gone up no matter who was president. Mr. Obama has not ruled out further leasing in Alaskan waters. Solyndra, a solar panel maker, is the only big failure in a broader program aimed at encouraging nascent energy technologies. The Keystone XL oil pipeline has nothing to do with gas prices now and, even if built, would have only a marginal effect.”

Comment: The premise of the AEA advertisement is that Obama doesn’t like oil, and the recent Administration actions are purely political to get to a second term when the president can get back to his underlying anti-oil philosophy. (Remember Al Gore?)

A challenge: Can the Times find a seasoned quotation from Obama, Biden, Browner, Holdren, Jackson, Salazar, or anyone else associated with the White House that is pro-oil supply for a better future for consumers and/or society?

The neo-Malthusian philosophy, premised on fossil-fuel unsustainability, permeates the entire Obama Administration. They want higher fossil fuels prices, whether for gasoline and diesel in transportation or coal- and gas-fired electricity, to increase conservation and to hasten the transition to “green” energies.

The AEA ad calls out Secretary Chu for wanting U.S. pump prices to be at the level of Europe’s. And remember what Obama’s science advisor John Holdren once said: “More energy for its own sake (or for profit’s sake) can no longer serve as the goal of national energy policy, and it is apparent that much tighter control over the energy industry by government is the minimum prescription for steering away from this outmoded view.” [1]

The Obama Administration, in short, is changing its colors on oil because they find themselves in an election pickle, but a pro-supply policy is a philosophy and continuing effort from Day One. There was no Day One for Obama.

“The message war has really just begun. The oil industry has the money, but Mr. Obama has a formidable megaphone. He must continue to use it.”

Comment: The far bigger money is Big Environmentalism that spends a multiple of that spent by free-market groups such as the American Energy Alliance.

IER would like to ‘work itself out of a job’ by depoliticizing energy so that lobbying monies can be retained by individuals, foundations, and corporations for nonpolitical purposes, thank you. With the help of the New York Times, we can do so and get the saved money to other uses.

————–

[1]  Paul Ehrlich, Anne Ehrlich, and John Holdren, Ecoscience: Population, Resources, and Environment (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1977), p. 860.

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June 20, 2017 at 01:32AM

Join the Fight for Skepticism in Schools

Join the Fight for Skepticism in Schools

via The SPPI Blog
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Source: Heartland

by David Wojick

Let the fight begin

In March the Heartland Institute fired a big broadside right into the teaching of climate change alarmism in America’s schools. They began sending Why Scientists Disagree About Global Warming directly to many of the Nation’s science teachers. Of course the alarmists went nuts, especially Sen. Sheldon “jail the skeptics” Whitehouse, who denounced Heartland’s bold move in a series of letters to various education groups.

My group is now taking the next skeptical step. We are crowd funding the Climate Change Debate Education (CCDE) project. While Heartland’s effort explains skepticism to teachers, our goal is to explain it to the students. You can make donations here.

Our project will establish a website portal that collects and distributes materials to teach about the climate debate. Once established and given sufficient funding we will also produce new teaching materials. The long term goal is to build a collection that systematically addresses all of the important climate science issues at the appropriate grade levels. Our target audience is not just teachers, but parents, friends of students and the students themselves.

There are presently a lot of alarmist websites offering one-sided classroom materials teaching the false dogma of dangerous human induced climate change. That this alarmism is highly debatable is nowhere to be seen on these websites. So we want to counter these alarmist websites with one that teaches about the real debate, between alarmism and realistic skepticism.

Both the Federal government and many advocacy groups maintain websites that distribute alarmist climate teaching materials. These materials teach that dangerous human induced climate change is settled science, which is far from true.

For example, the CLEAN website is funded jointly by NOAA, NSF and DOE. CLEAN stands for Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness Network. In fact “climate literacy” is code for the false belief that humans are causing dangerous climate change. CLEAN says it has over 600 free, ready to use resources suitable for use in secondary and higher education classrooms. They also boast that they are the core of the “Teaching Climate” part of the federal Climate.gov website. This is Government bias targeting children.

All of CLEAN’s teaching materials are biased and based on this false premise. The reality is that dangerous human influence on climate is completely unproven and the subject of intense scientific debate. That only the scary side is being presented as settled science is a severe lack of balance.

Creating balance in climate science education

The first step toward creating balance in climate education is to provide teaching materials that properly present the scientific debate as it actually is. We propose a phased approach to this effort. First an implementation phase then, if funding is available, a production phase. Here the goal is to recruit and guide volunteers who will produce highly targeted teaching materials. In particular, there is a need for simple, yet well designed, lesson plans that teach a specific scientific issue to a specific grade level.

These lesson plans need to be tailored to the state standards, which typically dictate what topics are taught in which grades. There are numerous specific scientific issues that need to be taught at different grade levels. Each potential lesson needs to be simple and compact, designed to fit into the mandated curriculum. Moreover, each lesson must stand alone, because teaching time is limited.

Getting around the gatekeepers

We will also develop short, handout types of materials as a way to get around what we call the gatekeepers. Gatekeepers are doctrinaire people who make it hard to get balance into the classroom. It may be the principal, the teacher’s supervisor or even the teacher.

Our handouts will be something that a parent or student can bring to class. It is normal for students to bring supplementary materials to class, especially when the topic is controversial. In the case of climate change, surveys have also shown that parents often become involved. As with the lesson plans, these handouts will be highly focused, nonpolitical, and tailored to a specific grade level. Since they will be online they can easily be emailed as well. Thus the gatekeepers cannot prevent their distribution.

Target audiences

There are three distinct target audiences — teachers, parents and students. Teachers need lesson plans, which are relatively specialized documents. Students need materials written at their grade level. Parents need non-technical information that they can explain to their children or use to confront a gatekeeper. Of course teachers and non-parents can use this information as well. The website will be organized in such a way that each group can find what they need.

It is important to keep in mind that many K-12 science teachers do not have science degrees, nor do most parents. K-12 is not the place to go into the technical details of climate science. Simplicity is the key.

via The SPPI Blog http://sppiblog.org

June 20, 2017 at 01:04AM

RECENT UK FLOODING NOT UNPRECEDENTED SAYS NEW STUDY

RECENT UK FLOODING NOT UNPRECEDENTED SAYS NEW STUDY

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This report puts the recent spate of floods in the UK into context over a much longer period. That is the only way to assess weather or climate.  The study proves that though the past decade was wetter than many recent decades it was no wetter than many other periods going further back. The trouble is that we humans have relatively short lives and even shorter memories. The only reliable thing is data.

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June 20, 2017 at 01:00AM

Stupid Nation: Australians crave cheap energy, yet think “low cost” renewables need support

Stupid Nation: Australians crave cheap energy, yet think “low cost” renewables need support

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It’s like an Easter Island moment for an advanced economy: somehow “cheap” energy can’t compete in a free market without government subsidy. A Nation of Serfs have forgotten what a free market is. Will cheap desirable stuff sell itself, or not?

The contradictions mount. Electricity and gas prices are hitting escape velocity:

The wholesale electricity spot prices was about $35 a megawatt hour during 2011, rose to $58 after the carbon tax was introduced and is now about $130 as gas prices push up energy generator costs.

Not surprisingly 70% of Australians want cheaper, more reliable electricity. Only one person in four would rather cut emissions than cut the bill. Yet the agitprop telling people that renewables are “cheap” has been so pervasive that fully 38% of Australians think the government should raise the renewable energy target, and 23% think it should stay the same. It follows that around 4 in 10 Australians apparently hold the bizarre idea that wind and solar are cheap and yet in need of government support, as if there are no investors willing to put money into supplying something that 100% of people want at a price cheaper than what they currently pay. So […]

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June 20, 2017 at 12:17AM