President Barack Obama will soon give a speech at Georgetown University focused on Energy Security. Based on a press teleconference Tuesday afternoon with White House staff, the appropriate way to characterize what we heard is that the speech will promote energy dumb policy that is politically tone deaf to the need for real leadership and real information from the Oval Office.
While holding out hope that the President’s actual words will communicate something different, the information provided in that White House teleconference makes it quite clear that this “package” merits dismay about prospects that this White House will fight the anti-science syndrome suffering factions in Congress for meaningful solutions to America's economic, energy, and environmental challenges.
The President’s Energy Security speech will highlight that we ‘see this movie every few years’ with an energy (oil) crisis (spiking of prices) that incentivizes politicians to come up with solutions for the politics of the moment when what we need to be is serious in the search for meaningful policy. Sadly, the four elements outlined by White House staff along with the overly limited target to reduce oil imports by one-third over a decade don’t meet this energy analyst’s definition of serious and meaningful policy.
The four policy mechanisms to reduce oil imports are:
1. Increased domestic oil and gas production
2. Natural gas vehicles
3. Biofuels
4. Efficiency
In addition to these measures to "address" America's oil dependency, the President will recommit to the "clean energy standard" including renewables (wind, solar, hydro, etc ...), natural gas, "clean coal", and nuclear power.
Embracing Drill Here, Drill Now?
The teleconference opened (and, it seems that the speech will open) with a call to accelerate and increase the production of U.S. oil and natural gas (from existing leases that are not being exploited) sadly reminiscent of the 2008 Republican National Convention’s “Drill, Baby, Drill” chant. In the face of our nation's challenges, it is as baseless as a core element of policy now as it was then. Simply put, the United States represents over 20 percent of world oil demand (without even counting the oil attributable to U.S. imports from China and elsewhere) while domestic reserves are in the range of two percent of global reserves. Accelerating production from that two percent increases future vulnerability as America’s share of global reserves falls even faster.
The oil industry holds tens of millions of leases not producing. Massive supplies of american energy just waiting to be tapped.
Yes, that is a quote from a senior Obama White House official and not something from a Sarah Palin tweet.
Simply put, there is no credible study that concludes that domestic supply increases can make a significant dent in the global price of oil. With that in mind, as David Roberts of Grist put it in the first question of the call, “Why bring drilling forward as the top solution?”
There's no evidence domestic supply from US could make a substantial dent in world oil prices or US imports. I understand the political imperative to open drilling. But why is this being framed as the number one solution for energy security?
Response: "It's not the only solution. It's an important piece of the puzzle
Natural Gas Vehicles
T Boone Picken’s snake oil salesmanship has clearly paid off. From Senator Reid to Republicans to Nancy Pelosi to President Obama, the economically, energy, and environmentally unsound concept of committing significant resources to creating another fossil foolish dependency in our transportation sector is among the most bipartisan of policy concepts outside, well, perhaps support to the military and a drive to cut the Federal government's budgetary expenditures no matter the economic impacts on the nation. Analysis shows that there are far more cost effective paths to cut U.S. oil demand, faster with much lower pollution impacts and with lower risk. (For examples, see T. Boone’s Shell Game — one look at the numbers …)
Biofuels
Corn ethanol has been a fiscal boondoggle with limited (at best) energy benefits and poorly accounted for environmental (and other) costs). Cellolosic ethanol is a carrot at the end of the stick promising to turn this around, creating a biofuel path forward to provide significant fuel while not competing with food resources. The President will seek to give substance to that promise, with an announcement of four (proposed?) cellulosic ethanol refineries.
Energy Efficiency
Let us be clear, demand destruction mainly through various forms of efficiency and substitution are the most viable path for making a serious dent in America's oil dependency in a short period of time. (Yes, we should Drill, Baby, Drill ... the near bottomless well of negagallons.) Sensible policy choices driven by serious leadership could put America on a path to cut oil demand five (+) percent per yeareven while growing the economy.
That sort of meaningfully aggressive path forward doesn't seem to be on the agenda. (For now?) Instead, it looks likely that President Obama will call for a commitment to continue from the new CAFE standards to continuing tightening of mileage performance requirements through the end of the decade.
Seemingly absent from the discussion
The President’s speech might (hopefully) provide greater reason for enthusiasm (even for grumbling acquiescence) than what was outlined by the White House staff or the just released backgrounder from the WH.
Think about something for a moment, isn’t it astounding that electric vehicles – which were so prominent in the State of the Union address and other Obama initiatives – didn’t merit a mention by White House staff? (EVs did make the background material just released by the WH. Note that the President will, after this speech, visit a site on with hybrid vehicles which could provide a venue for emphasizing the value of electric vehicles. That visit will occur Friday ... April Fool's Day.)
Also absent as pathways for reducing America’s dependence on oil:
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- A Steel Interstate of Electrified Rail (with moving significant cargo off trucks onto electrified rail), high-speed rail, and various electrified public transit (subways, trams, etc);
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- Greenways (and bicycles) and other 'local' individual transportation options;
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- ‘Location efficiency’ in mortgage financing and other 'smart growth' paths forward;
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- Home heating oil efficiency;
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- Requirement for a flex-fuel standard for all future light-duty vehicles;
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- Telecommuting, alternative work schedules, and other paths to enhance the work eperience for a good portion of Americans while cutting oil demand.
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- Etc ...
What does this outline suggest?
The White House senior staff's outline of the policy proposals suggest a very serious underpinning principle: that this speech addressing "Energy Security" and making a pretense of offer solutions to our challenges will offer nothing that has even the hint of any threat to "America's Way of Life" of driving long distances, alone, in cars.
We've had the continued embracing of "clean coal". We had the enthusiastic embracing of offshore drilling followed by a minor little BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico. There is the unending embrace of natural gas even as "fracking" challenges and risksare coming into cleaner focus. And, an earthquake and tsunami seems to have driven a doubling-down on nuclear power even as Americans' support for nuclear power is rapidly dwindling. And, now, in the face of mounting oil prices amid ever-more substantive agreement that we face Peak Oil, we have an "Energy Security" set of proposals that double-down our dependence on liquid fuels rather than provide real solutions.
This speech offers up a Republican-lite "all of the above" under the rubric of "Energy Security" rather than serious policies that will drive down America's fossil-foolish dependencies and reduce our national security / economic / other risks in the face of Peak Oil. This seems to be a pre-capitulation moment in the "let's seek bipartisanship" above the advocacy of policies in the nation's best interests.
NOTE: This was written after the telecon and I planned an 0601 (right after end of embargo) posting. The President's speech has nuances that are (slightly) better than what yesterday's call suggested and nuances/inferences that are as bad / worse. For another perspective -- paralleling this one -- see TheGreenMiles with Obama Compromising with Himself on Energy, Again. I have posted the full speech, as sent out, below in the comments without any direct commentary.