The newly-passed Great American Outdoors Act will use oil and gas energy taxes to fund the purchase and maintenance of our public lands, but those sources are not as reliable as they once were, say writers from PERC (the Property and Environment Research Center). Tate Watkins and Jack Smith warn against the unreliability of such…
Search Results for: energy
Oops! Maybe Biden Can’t Cut Back on Oil and Gas Drilling, After All
Sweeping election promises are easy, especially when the media don’t examine them. But once the election is over (or nearly over), the truth starts coming out. Juliet Eilperin and Dino Grandoni write in the Washington Post that, yes, last February Biden told a New Hampshire town hall: “And by the way, no more drilling on…
The Coming Green Disaster
With Trump out of the way, the green movement may be unstoppable. Joel Kotkin explains in Real Clear Energy. “The real power of the environmental movement derives from those who occupy ‘the commanding heights’ of our society—at the corporate, media, and academic realms. Though arguably not holding views as economically ludicrous as AOC’s, mainstream corporate…
Biden May Reinstate Regulations Trump Got Rid Of
David Blackmon at Forbes describes likely impacts on the oil and gas industry. He writes: “Those likely executive order reversals include: Re-entry of the United States into the Paris Climate Accords; Re-entry of the United States into the Obama-era Iran deal, which would free up Iran to dramatically increase its exports and potentially impact crude prices;…
When the Wind Doesn’t Blow . . . Coal Steps In
The United Kingdom’s growing reliance on renewable energy may be setting it up for electricity shortages. For two days (Nov. 4 and 5), the UK ‘s margin of electricity was dangerously low, says John Constable of the Global Warming Policy Forum. The National Grid (which manages supply) had to bring in one of the country’s…
Latino Activists in California Call Out the Sierra Club
IMPORTANT LINKS: Latino activists in California tell Sierra Club its policies are hurting low- and middle-income families, says Robert Bryce in Forbes. . . The troubling subject of children mining cobalt, a growing business because of electric vehicles. At Steve Milloy’s JunkScience.com. HT: Myron Ebell . . . What Covid-19 and climate change have in…