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Kathleen Parker

A Crude Reality

Kathleen Parker
WASHINGTON -- What's in a name? A bit of deception when it comes to the American Clean Energy and Security Act.

A more accurate title might be: the American Clean Energy and Less Security Act.

To get to the bottom of what's wrong with the 1,400-page energy bill passed by the House of Representatives, you have to dig deeper than Canada's tar sands. And what you find there is just as sludgy -- and taxing to process.

Crudely refined: The greener we are, the less secure we're likely to be.

Meaning, we either can be green or we can be less dependent on oil from terrorist-sponsoring states. But under the current energy bill, we can't be both.

Put another way: The more we cap our carbon, the happier the Saudis are. That's because most Middle Eastern crude is more easily accessible and requires less processing than what we and our friendlier neighbors can produce.

If you don't know this, it's because beer summits are more fun than math. Herewith, a short course for word people.

Basically, the energy bill focuses primarily on stationary sources of CO2 emissions (power and manufacturing plants) and would do little to address mobile sources of emissions, i.e. transportation.

Since virtually all U.S. stationary sources use domestic energy -- coal, natural gas, nuclear, wind, solar, biomass, etc. -- the energy bill would do almost nothing about reducing oil or gasoline imports. Foreign sources provide about 70 percent of the oil used in refining gasoline and diesel.

In fact, new restrictions and associated costs would likely mean that we'd be going to foreign suppliers for oil more often rather than less.

The only way to be less dependent, obviously, is to produce as much domestic oil as possible. But even if drilling were allowed in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, for example, the cost of retrieving and processing the oil could be prohibitive under new cap-and-trade restrictions.

The Waxman-Markey bill, as the legislation is more commonly known, would require the U.S. to reduce carbon emissions to 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 and 83 percent below by 2050. As a Prius-driving, pro-seal, recycling, organic vegetarian, I'm heavily tilted toward saving the planet. But we probably ought not to pretend that this bill would make us more secure by reducing dependence on foreign sources.

Even Canada's crude creates problems under the new proposed restrictions while seeming to solve others. As Matt Schlapp, a veteran of energy policy debates and former White House political director, describes it, Canada's oil is a sludge that borders on solid, which makes it difficult to refine:

"Let's just say, the days of Jed Clampett are gone. You don't just stumble across oil anymore. The easy stuff is gone."

To refine Canadian muck to a usable form that would meet new emissions standards would require extensive processing that carries its own CO2 freight. Because Saudi crude is easier to get to, it's more attractive in a world where carbon is expensive.

"We're giving the Saudis an advantage, in other words," says Schlapp. "Why would we want to do that?"

Meanwhile, the transportation issues remain largely unaddressed. The extent to which oil and gasoline imports do decline in coming years wouldn't be a function of the Waxman-Markey bill, but will be thanks to initiatives begun by George W. Bush and implemented by Barack Obama, according to C. Boyden Gray, former ambassador to the European Union and pro-ethanol "green" Republican, who served under Bush 41 as special envoy for Eurasian energy.

One, the so-called CAFE (corporate average fuel economy) legislation, raised auto mileage standards by about 30 percent. Bush 43 also pushed through energy legislation in 2005 and 2007 that requires the blending of 36 billion gallons of biofuels in the transport sector -- or about 20 percent of total liquid fuel consumption.

"These measures should significantly reduce oil imports," says Gray. "But both CAFE and the biofuel legislation predate Waxman-Markey and would achieve much of the import-reduction security goals publicly associated with Waxman-Markey."

Although the bill would put refined gasoline consumption under the cap along with coal, natural gas, etc., the baseline for counting reductions is 2003. The reductions in oil consumption already required by the CAFE and biofuels bills may exceed for many years the requirements of Waxman-Markey.

In other words, it's not clear what more the oil industry would have to do under Waxman-Markey than is already happening. Waxman-Markey has many commendable elements, but increased energy security can't legitimately be counted as one of them.

Now about that beer summit.

========

Kathleen Parker's e-mail address is kathleenparker(at)washpost.com

(c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group

This news arrived on: 08/02/2009
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Posted Comments:

08-05-2009 19:46
Catharyne Stauffer wrote:



Hiya Texas Katie and thank you again for your generous and kind words :)
It does irk me though that some people use misinformation about Canada to further their own agenda and with all cases of the perpetuation of misinformation it robs the reader or listener of the true picture in which to base a well informed opinion on.
I guess in this day and age it is always wise to do ones OWN research and rely less on those that have political agendas or ambitions.



08-05-2009 00:56
Catharyne Stauffer wrote:



To Kathleen Parker , I reallly wish you would do your homework when it comes to Canada . These half truths and obvious regurgitation of false information concerning the Tar Sands in my province of Alberta or the Canadian muck as you so insultingly put it.
Here are some facts , first there are a few ways of extracting that oil that are being looked at but it is costly and so depending what the price of a barrel of oil is will depend if much cleaner extraction technology gets used .
Canada with the development of the Tar Sands will be one of the largest oil resources in the world even surpassing Kuwait.
Put people with your attitude always like to pooh pooh anything good about Canada and God forbid if we should have something that the US doesn't .
I truly find that attitude unbecoming and very tiresome , Kathleen you need an attitude adjustment. In the words of your President "Canada is an amazing country , one which we could learn a lot from ."



08-04-2009 17:35
JCE wrote:



What the idiots refuse to see is that unless the cost of energy goes up, and the people force reform, we will continue to be at the mercy of the big energy, who makes the money on how much it sells, so it wants waste and pollution. And when the government regulates them, as it has to do, they will punish the people, and try to force the people to back off on reform. And when they back off on reform, they support the terribly wasteful and corrupt system that we have, that is destroying our freedom and our economy. The stupid voter has become like the citizens of Rome. Bread and circuses, keep the common fools distracted while the elite live it up. Those Romans tried to legislate morality by legalizing and taxing prostitution, in order to stop the wealthy from committing adultery. It did slow down the adultery, and made the government a lot of money. And it sure did distract the people, with its free food, games, and such, until the rich ran out of energy (slaves), and land to conquer, and had a military it couldn't support, and welfare it couldn't support, and it all fell apart. And we are doing exactly the same thing. Stupid voters.



08-04-2009 17:28
JCE wrote:



Redneck Then why do you keep supporting the republican and democrat system that does this? As long as you vote republican, and your left counterparts vote democrat, nothing will change for the better. As long as you fight other citizens over silly sh*t, they win.
Renee As long as enough people think like you, HHJ, and Redneck, and think like the NWO people want you to think, complete loss of freedom, and a very quick takeover by the NWO is guaranteed.
Dick from Chaska We need more who accept and tell the truth like you do. First, it was the telecom industry, under Bush, that got us. Then the big guys, like Haliburton. Then the big energy, the big banks, the fed and Wall St., and then the car companies, under Bush. Now, under Obama, it is the medical industry, and the insurance industry. The telecom industry got away with it, we lost a lot of our rights. The big corporations over in Iraq are making a ton of taxpayer money, while making the military less secure. Big oil took us to the bank, and left with our money. Then the fed and the rest of the banks took what was left of our money. Now, it is the medical and insurance companies. And it doesn't matter if congress or the oval office has democrats or republicans, old white men or young black men. The big corporations come on without stop, like Hitlers juggernaut, and the only defense, the voter, is of playing with itself. How the extremist buy into the propaganda BS that the NWO and special interest groups keeping paying billions for just amazes me. Those few of us non racists and non partisans who don't buy the BS are helpless against the juggernaut. And it uses the right and left extremists as cannon fodder. Idiots. This is our country going down as you worship Rush, Hannity, Beck, Palin, and hate Obama.



08-04-2009 16:20
wrote:

Renee

Thanks for the truth!!




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