Obama’s green energy plans, kill jobs, hurt consumers, and cost taxpayers
Started by Robert M
by Marita Noon • June 21, 2016
http://www. stridentconservative.com/ obamas-green-energy-plans- kill-jobs-hurt-consumers-and- cost-taxpayers/
Proponents
of green energy like to point out how the costs have come down—and they
have. Though renewable energy, such as wind and solar, are not expected
to equal fossil fuel costs anytime
in the near future and recent growth has been propped up by mandates
and tax incentives. But there are other, more subtle aspects of the
Obama Administration’s efforts that have had negative impacts that are
not felt for years after the policies are implemented. By then, it will
be too late to do much about them.
We know that the push toward renewables has hurt the coal industry. As Hillary Clinton gleefully exclaimed: “we’re going to put a whole lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business.”We are already seeing this happen all over the country. Dozens of coal mining companies have gone bankruptsince President Obama took office and those that are still functioning are doing so with far fewer workers.
One
such mine is in the Four Corners region of New Mexico—the San Juan
Mine—which is one of the largest underground coal mines in the world. It
has been a “top employer” in the region. Westmoreland Coal Company
purchased the mine from BHP Billiton, with the sale completed on
February 1, 2016. At the time, the mine employed more than 400 people.
Shortly thereafter, 11 salaried staff lost their jobs and on June 16,
another 85 workers—both salaried and hourly—were laid off. Which, according to the Albuquerque Journal,
were “necessary because the San Juan Generating Station, which uses all
the mine’s coal, plans to retire two of its four units as part of a
negotiated agreement among plant operator Public Service Company of New
Mexico [PNM], the Environmental Protection Agency, the Navajo Nation,
and the state of New Mexico.”
The
“agreement” to shut down half the power plant—thereby cutting the
immediate need for coal—is the result of the EPA’s 2011 Regional Haze
Program that, according to a report from
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, “seeks to remedy visibility impairment at
federal National Parks and Wilderness Areas.” This, the report states,
“is an aesthetic regulation, and not a public health standard”—though
the results will be undetectable to the human eye. For this, nearly a
quarter of the mine’s workforce has been terminated.
The Albuquerque Journal cites
Westmoreland’s executive vice president, Joe Micheletti, as being
unwilling to “comment on whether he expected to see more layoffs in the
coming months.” It also states that PNM has promised “not to lay off any
employees at the stations as a result of the unit closures”—though
through attrition employment is down 20 percent from two years ago.
The
reality is, anti-fossil fuel groups like the Sierra Club, wanted the
entire plant shut down. In 2018, PNM will have to plead their case
before the Public Regulatory Commission to keep the San Juan Generating
Station functioning past 2022. PNM is currently considering a plan for
meeting its needs for electricity without it. If the plant closes, all
jobs, approximately 800, at both the mine and the generating station
will be gone—greatly impacting the local economy.
Obama’s
far-reaching green energy policies are insidious—hurting consumers in
ways we don’t even think of. On June 10, Stephen Yurek, president and
CEO of the Air-Conditioning, Heating and Refrigeration Institute (AHRI),
gave testimony before
the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Energy and Power. He
addressed the nearly 40-year old Energy Policy and Conservation Act
(EPCA)—which, he said, “has not been updated to reflect new technologies
and economic realities” and “has been misapplied by the Department of
Energy [DOE].” The Obama Administration has run amuck in its application
of EPCA—issuing regulation after regulation. Yurek backs this up by
pointing out the difference in the Clinton and Obama administrations:
“While the Clinton Administration’s DOE issued just six major efficiency
rules during his eight years in office, the Obama Administration’s DOE
issued eight major efficiency rules in 2014 alone—a record according to
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. And DOE’s Unified
Agenda indicate that between 2015 and the end of the administration, 11
additional major efficiency rules can be expected to be issued.”
These
rules, Yurek explained, “use unrealistic assumptions” to create “higher
efficiency levels than are economically justified for consumers.” He
encourages Congress to force the DOE to “consider the real-world
cumulative impact of product efficiency standards among agencies,
businesses, and consumers” and suggests that “as DOE promulgates rules
according to an accelerated regulatory schedule, necessary constructive
dialogue falls by the wayside.”
Yurek
summarizes: “An endless cycle of efficiency remakings continues to have
an adverse impact on our global competitiveness and the American jobs
we create.” This practice hurts consumers as “When new products and
equipment cost more than consumers can afford, they find alternatives,
some of which compromise their comfort and safety, while saving less
energy or none at all or in some cases using more energy.”
In
the name of energy efficiency, on December 6, 2013, Obama issued a
memorandum ordering federal buildings to triple renewable energy use.
He declared: “Today I am establishing new goals for renewable energy as well as new energy-management practices.” Now, more than three years later, we get a taste of what his federal building initiative is costing taxpayers.
On June 16, 2016, the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) Office of Inspector General released a report—precipitated
by an anonymous hotline complaint—on the 53 percent cost escalation at
Fannie Mae’s extravagant new downtown DC building. As a result of the
financial crisis, mortgage giant Fannie Mae received a bailout of $116.1
billion in taxpayer funds and FHFA now serves as the conservator over
Fannie Mae. The Inspector General found that no one in the FHFA Division
of Conservatorship “was aware of the 53% increase in the estimated
build-out costs for Fannie Mae’s new office space.”
“Because
Fannie Mae is an entity in the conservatorship of the U.S. government,”
the report states: “FHFA, as conservator, will need to assess the
anticipated efficiencies of specific proposed features against estimated
costs of those features and determine whether the efficiencies warrant
the costs.” The watchdog report found the ballooning costs created
“significant financial and reputational risks.”
Addressing the excessive cost, Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ), chairman of the House subcommittee with oversight over Fannie Mae, said:
“Like a child with a credit card in a toy store, the bureaucrats at
Fannie Mae just couldn’t help themselves. After being forced to bail out
the GSE’s [Government-Sponsored Enterprises] to the tune of nearly $200
billion [which includes Freddie Mac], American taxpayers now get the
news that they are underwriting lavish spending at Fannie Mae’s new
downtown Washington, D.C. headquarters. So while Americans around the
country are living paycheck to paycheck, Washington insiders are blowing
through budgets by designing glass enclosed bridges and rooftop decks.”
In
response to the call for “immediate, sustained comprehensive oversight
from FHFA,” Melvin L. Watt, FHFA director, defended himself. In the face
of the Inspector General’s caustic criticism, he claimed that many of
the upfront investments would save money over time. Watt’s memorandum
only offers two such examples and one is more efficient lighting. He
claims: “upfitting space with more expensive LED lighting instead of
less expensive fluorescent lighting would result in significantly
cheaper operating costs.” The other example he provided was window
shades.
These
are just three recent examples of Obama Administration policies that
were put in place years before the resulting job losses and costs to
consumers and taxpayers are felt. Gratefully, for now, the Supreme Court
put a stay on one of his most intrusive and expensive programs—the
Clean Power Plan. But there are plenty of little rulemakings, programs,
and memorandums that will still be impacting jobs and increasing costs
long after he is out of office.
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