I Love the Smell of
Fossil Fuels in the Morning!
Chuck
Muth
May
28, 2015
Indeed,
the ONLY dependable sources of cheap energy remain oil, natural gas and coal. Yet all we hear are Chicken Little
environmentalists screaming about global warming – oh, excuse me, “climate
change” – while tax-addicted politicians in Washington are floating energy tax
hike trial balloons.
Make
no mistake; the cost of energy in Nevada will surely skyrocket if Congress tries
to reform our insane tax code on the back of the fossil fuel industry.
Frankly,
I’m tired of enviro-kooks constantly bad-mouthing affordable, dependable energy
– especially as we approach the 100-degree+ dog days of Nevada’s summer.
Can
you imagine sleeping at night if there was no affordable electricity to power
our air conditioners and swamp coolers?
Or
tourists taking horse-drawn carriages to and from Vegas or Reno instead of a
petro-fueled planes, trains and automobiles?
Indeed,
as the publisher of Alex Epstein’s new book, “The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels,”
points out on the jacket cover, fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal “don’t
take a naturally safe climate and make it dangerous; they take a naturally
dangerous climate and make it ever safer.”
Especially
the desert.
Those
of us in Nevada know how sky-high the ol’ electric bill can go thanks to the
scorching summer heat. But can you
imagine how high those bills would be if all of us were forced to pay the
higher costs for solar power?
Not
to mention the fact that solar can’t provide any of us with enough electricity
to recharge an iPhone at night when the sun don’t shine, let alone an air
conditioner!
“The
only way for solar and wind to be truly useful, reliable sources of energy
would be to combine them with some form of extremely inexpensive mass-storage
system,” Epstein writes. “No such mass
storage system exists…(w)hich is why, in the entire world there is not one real
or proposed independent, freestanding solar or wind power plant.”
For
that reason, Epstein argues that wind and solar are not so much power sources
as power “parasites that require a host.”
The
cost of abundant, on-demand energy that makes the Nevada desert not only
habitable for human beings, but desirable is high enough already. The last thing Nevadans need are higher taxes
on the very fossil fuels that make life here so livable and driving to Nevada
from California in the summer so bearable.
Thank
goodness for fossil fuels. Because life in
the desert would be h-e-double-hockey-sticks without them. Literally.
And
as for raising taxes on affordable energy, Congress should just chill.
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