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Entries in BP Oil Spill (47)

Saturday
Jan152011

Cooler Heads Digest 14 January 2011

In the News

Peak Oilers Blind to Economic Reality
Iain Murray, Washington Examiner, 14 January 2011

New Mexico Governor Martinez Means Business
Paul Chesser, American Spectator, 13 January 2011

Utilities Lobbying To Raise Your Electricity Bills
Chris Horner, AmSpecBlog, 12 January 2011

Our Resilient Earth
Marlo Lewis, GlobalWarming.org, 12 January 2011

T. Boone Pickens Has Big Plans for Our Money
Larry Bell, Forbes, 12 January 2011

The Government Auto Show
Henry Parne, Planet Gore, 12 January 2011

For the EPA, the Climate Is Tough in the Senate
Robin Bravender, Politico, 12 January 2011

China and Wind: What a Waste
Kent Hawkins, MasterResource.org, 11 January 2011

Oil Spil Antidote: More Red Tape
Washington Examiner
editorial, 11 January 2011

For Upton, It’s Game-on
Steven Mufson, Washington Post, 9 January 2011

More Data Refusals—Nothing Changes
Steven McIntyre, Climate Audit, 6 January 2011

News You Can Use
Snow in 49 States

In June 2007, at a global warming “summit” in New Hampshire, Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) warned, “If we don’t cut global warming pollution now, the White Mountains will become the ‘Once Upon A Time White Mountains’, because there may be no snow.” This week, snow fell in 49 of 50 states, and covered 70% of the U.S.

Inside the Beltway
Myron Ebell

Three events this week demonstrated that the EPA’s new regulation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from large stationary emitters such as power plants is not the only tool being employed to strangle the economy.  There’s also the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act, and Corporate Average Fuel Economy or CAFÉ standards.

First, the Clean Water Act 

The EPA on Thursday announced that they were going to force the Corps of Engineers to revoke an already granted Section 404 permit to Arch Coal’s Spruce Fork Mine, which is an operating surface coal mine in West Virginia.  The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal articles repeated the EPA’s ludicrous claim that new scientific research since the permit was granted in 2007 shows that surface mining will have much more detrimental environmental and health effects than previously thought.  My CEI colleague William Yeatman has written about this issue here, and CEI sent out a press release criticizing the decision.  EPA’s revocation of a permit that has already been granted for a mine that is already in operation is outrageous.  The consequences could be catastrophic if this precedent scares away investors in future energy projects because of the risk that their investment could be lost by the retroactive revocation of an operating permit.   

Second, the Endangered Species Act

The polar bear was listed as a threatened species by President George W. Bush’s Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne in 2008.  Last month, President Obama’s Interior Department designated 187,000 square miles in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas off Alaska’s north coast as critical habitat. Interior also explained that the designation of critical habitat would require more environmental scrutiny of offshore oil and gas exploration and production, but that it would not be used to ban drilling.  The Center for Biological Diversity on Thursday announced that they would file suit in federal court to force Interior to ban all oil and gas drilling within the critical habitat designation.  This is a game that has often been played by environmental pressure groups working with their allies in the executive branch (and often those allies were formerly employed by environmental pressure groups).  Interior Secretary Ken Salazar can claim that he is trying to be reasonable and to balance environmental and economic interests, but will then probably reach a settlement with the Center for Biological Diversity to ban some or all drilling in the designated critical habitat.  Once the court approves, the settlement will have the force of law and will be nearly impossible to overturn.   

Third, CAFE standards

In 2009, the Obama Administration did a deal with the State of California and the auto industry.  The auto industry thought they were getting some mythical beast called “regulatory certainty” in return for agreeing to a CAFE standard of 35.5 miles per gallon for cars and light trucks by 2016.  First, EPA said last fall that they were considering raising that to up to 62 miles per gallon by 2025.  Now, the California Air Resources Board is making sounds that it wants to control the process by setting its own higher standards beginning in 2017, which would precipitate the same mess that the auto industry assumed they had alleviated with their 2009 deal over the California Waiver.  So this week the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers sent a letter to Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), the new Chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), the new Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, asking for help

I don’t have much sympathy for the automakers because they were warned that this is what would happen (I know because I and my colleagues at CEI were among those warning them publicly), but it needs to be kept in mind that the ultimate victims will be consumers who want to buy cars.

National Commission Spill Report: Too Anti-Drilling Instead of Anti-Spilling
Ben Lieberman

The BP Deepwater Horizon Spill Commission report is out and its recommendations would spell bad news both for energy industry jobs and the future price at the pump.   The administration-selected panel, dominated by anti-drilling activists but devoid of anyone with actual experience producing energy, proposes to pile new layers of red tape onto a process that already leaves much domestic energy off-limits and creates years of delays for rest.    It even includes measures that would virtually shut down new oil drilling in Alaska, though the spill occurred thousands of miles away and under very different conditions in the Gulf of Mexico.

But buried in the report is an important truth - the spill occurred because of a series of blunders by BP and its contractors and was far from inevitable.   This contrasts sharply with the recommendations suggesting systemic problems to be fixed by an industry-wide crackdown.  

There is ample reason to believe – along with the powerful circumstantial argument that the deadly April 20th explosion and subsequent oil spill is unique amidst the thousands of offshore wells drilled in Gulf – that this incident was due to gross mismanagement and is not a justification for closing the door further on domestic drilling.

The American public is more worried about a repeat of $4.00 gas than a repeat of Deepwater Horizon – and rightly so as the former is vastly more likely than the latter.  Reasonable changes to improve safety are warranted, but should occur in the context of a policy that ensures expanded offshore drilling.   To do this, Congress should not adopt the report’s recommendations or allow Obama regulators to impose them.

Across the States
New Mexico

As the Cooler Heads Digest reported last week, New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez’s (R) first order of business upon taking office was to overturn outgoing Governor Bill Richardson’s (D) attempt to impose a cap-and-trade program. Predictably, environmentalists filed a lawsuit to block Governor Martinez’s move against energy rationing, and this week the state Supreme Court agreed to take the case. The environmentalists allege that Governor Martinez did not have the authority to block the cap-and-trade scheme, which is interesting in light of the fact that ex-Governor Richardson imposed it without approval from the state legislature.

Around the World
Spain

President Barack Obama frequently has cited the supposed success of the Spanish solar power market in order to justify the scores of billions of dollars of taxpayer money that his administration has given to the U.S. renewable energy industry. The President might want to rethink this allusion. A new report this week estimates that the Spanish solar industry has lost more than 30,000 jobs since 2008, due to the rollback of solar subsidies.

The Cooler Heads Digest is the weekly e-mail publication of the Cooler Heads Coalition. For the latest news and commentary, check out the Coalition’s website, www.GlobalWarming.org



Saturday
Nov062010

Drilling Ban Leaves Gulf Business Owner With 50% Loss

WASHINGTON, D.C.—In anticipation of next week’s D.C. meeting of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, Louisiana small business owner Thomas Clement plans to discuss the ways in which BP’s catastrophe and the ensuing federal response wreaked havoc on his livelihood and those of thousands of other Gulf region entrepreneurs. Despite lifting the official deepwater drilling moratorium, the administration continues to suffocate the region by backlogging new drilling permits. Clements Oilfield CNC Machining LLC has already suffered a 50% decline in business since from this time last year.

WHO

Thomas Clements, Co-owner of Oilfield CNC Machining LLC, Broussard, LA

Thomas Pyle, President of the American Energy Alliance

WHAT

Save U.S. Energy Jobs Media Teleconference

WHERE

Dial In Information Available Upon RSVP

WHEN

Monday, November 8, 2010

1:00pm ET

To RSVP for this event, please contact me at bmurphy561@gmail.com for call in number and passcode.

Friday
Oct152010

CEI Daily - The End of the Moratorium, McDonald's 6-Month-Old Burger, and the Regulation of the Day

 

End of the Moratorium

 

The Obama Administration has lifted the moratorium on oil drilling.

 

Associate Fellow Ben Lieberman explains why the end of the moratorium doesn't signal easy times for oil companies.

 

"The moratorium is gone, but all the pre-spill hurdles are still in force. In addition, Secretary of the Interior Salazar announced several tough new provisions and stated that only those operators who 'clear the higher bar can be allowed to resume.' Interior concedes that these new requirements “may delay development of some OCS oil and gas resources.” Additional delays piled onto a policy that had already ground drilling to a near halt is not good news for American energy production."

 

 

McDonald's 6-Month-Old Burger

 

A New York artist left a McDonald's happy meal out for six months and took pictures of it. After six months, the meal still looked fresh.

 

Policy Analyst Michelle Minton argues that media outlets should be celebrating--not deriding--how well-preserved the meal is.

 

"While it may seem 'unnatural,' food preservation is responsible for a substantial increase in the quality of life for human beings. Salting meats, dehydration, and canning have significantly contributed to the increase in the quality of food and the prevention of disease. That Sally’s burger and fries show no signs of mold or rot indicates that they resisted spores for the entire six months. That is an amazing achievement!"

 

 

Regulation of the Day

 

Bucks County, Pennsylvania is now fining people who forget to lock their cars.

 

Fellow in Regulatory Studies Ryan Young criticizes the county for this new nanny-state regulation.

 

"Bear in mind that enforcing this policy involves police systematically trying to break into peoples’ cars. First, that’s inherently creepy. Second, that’s a significant privacy violation. It’s also a Fourth Amendment issue. If an officer stumbles upon something illegal and decides to prosecute, he has performed a warrantless search."

 



Monday
Sep202010

Daily News from the Veterans Today Network 

September 11
Counter Insurgency
for the World

In an ideal society, those chosen to represent and lead the people would be chosen because they had shown 'leadership qualities' - honesty, integrity, intelligence (both emotional and intellectual) and, most importantly, a paternal or maternal protective instinct towards others.
In short, leaders would be those that could effectively lead the society in a way that secured the best interests of all. Ideal leaders would certainly not be 'war-like' but rather peace-makers. So why don't we have societies like this around the world today? Does power really corrupt? Is it inevitable that any human being elevated to a leadership role will succumb to the lure of power and control over others and ultimately turn bad and against the people? Do we conclude therefore that the very idea that one or a few should lead the many is simply a bad one?

Read More >>>


 Today's Featured Stories...

Friday
Aug272010

CEI Weekly: Post-Spill Moratorium Worse than the Spill

 

CEI Weekly

August 27, 2010 

 

>>Post-Spill, it's Still 'Drill, Baby, Drill!'

Gulf Coast residents are fed up with the politicization of the Deepwater Horizon spill. As Associate Fellow Ben Lieberman writes in The New York Post, it's quickly becoming apparent to those most affected by the spill that "the biggest threat to the Gulf region economy isn’t the spill itself but Washington's reaction to it." Read Lieberman's op-ed here.

 

 

>>[Video] Greg Conko Discusses Salmonella on Fox News

  

 

>>Shaping the Debate  

Seeking Food Safety, Getting Human Harm

Angela Logomasini's op-ed in The Washington Times

 

What They're Up Against

Chris Horner's op-ed in The American Spectator

 

Uncle Sam Wants to Cuddle

Iain Murray and Anne Sutherland's op-ed in The Washington Times

>>Best of the Blogs

Privacy Isn't Dead, It's Evolving

by Ryan Radia

Biofuels and Tax Expenditures

by Brian McGraw

National Security Risks of Biofuel Mandates

by Marlo Lewis 

>>CEI Podcast

August 23, 2010: The Salmonella Egg Scare

CEI Senior Fellow Greg Conko talks about the salmonella scare that has led to the recall of 550 million eggs 22 states. He believes that the hype is overblown, and that regulators should take an incentives-based approach to food safety issues. The current command-and-control model needs reform.

 >>Support CEI

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