| America is Running Out of Electricity     The provision of electrical power nationwide has become the chosen 
    battleground for environmental groups laboring night and day to insure there 
    will not be enough of it to meet our needs.
 The U.S. Department of Energy predicts that overall energy demand will grow 
    by 45% between now and 2030.
 
 The effort to insure Americans will not have enough electricity is deadly 
    serious. Take, for example, the exultant news release (Jan 17) from the 
    Rainforest Action Network, “Proposed Coal Plants Losing Steam” celebrating 
    “59 coal plants cancelled or shelved in 2007.”
 
 Since coal-fired utilities provide over 50 percent of the electricity 
    generated in America, the need for additional plants would seem obvious. A 
    May 2007 Business Week article about coal noted that, “Today, making 
    electricity from coal can cost half as much as using cleaner-burning natural 
    gas.” Half as much at the plant translates to half as much in the monthly 
    energy bill to homeowners and others.
 
 The Greens, however, using the utterly bogus “global warming” hoax and 
    asserting the false notion that carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions will 
    transform the climate of the earth, are successfully denying Americans 
    electrical power.
 
 There is no global warming and CO2 constitutes about 0.038% of the earth’s 
    atmosphere. In past eras there was a lot more CO2 and the result was the 
    lush vegetation that kept a lot of dinosaurs munching away for several 
    million years.
 
 The brownouts in California are testimony to what happens when there are an 
    insufficient number of plants to generate electricity, whether it comes from 
    coal, nuclear, or hydroelectric power.
 
 Right now the population of America is just over 300 million. The rate of 
    population growth is 3 to 4 million a year—a number equal to the population 
    of California today. All will want and need electricity. Where will it come 
    from if the Greens are successful in thwarting the building of power 
    generation plants?
 
 “Coal-fired power plants are the wrong investment for our climate, our 
    health, and our economy,” said Becky Tarbotton, director of Rainforest 
    Action Network’s Global Finance Campaign. (1) Such plants do not affect the 
    climate. (2) Americans now have the longest life expectancy ever, so our 
    health is not an issue. (3) Our economy is entirely based on the 
    availability and provision of electrical and other forms of energy.
 
 The Greens opposed nuclear energy so successfully we haven’t seen a new 
    plant built in thirty years. If you want to increase the amount of 
    electricity and, at the same time, reduce the cost of electricity, build a 
    few and watch what happens.
 
 Dr. Arthur Robinson of the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine points 
    out that, “The construction of just one nuclear power station like Palo 
    Verde (CA) in each of the 50 states, with a full complement of 10 reactors, 
    would supply all of the energy that the United States currently 
    imports—with, in addition and at current prices, $300 billion per year worth 
    of excess energy to export.”
 
 If we can’t get nuclear facilities built and we can’t get any new coal-fired 
    plants, what does RAN propose? The same thing as the other Greens do. 
    So-called “renewable energy.” And “efficiency.”
 
 Neither solar, nor wind energy is EVER going to be able to produce the 
    amount of energy Americans use and need. The laws of physics eliminate these 
    “solutions” to our energy needs.
 
 Energy is measured in British Thermal Units, BTUs. One BTU is the amount of 
    energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree 
    Fahrenheit. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, in 2006 
    the United States used 99.5 quadrillion BTUs of energy for electrical energy 
    and for our transportation needs.
 
 What energy sources were used to generate the power? Fully 40% came from 
    oil, 23% came from coal, 22% came from natural gas, 8% came from nuclear 
    plants, 2.9% came from biomass, including ethanol, 2.8% came from 
    conventional hydroelectric dams, and less than 1% came from all other 
    alternatives combined, geothermal, wind and solar power.
 
 Along with the efforts to stop any means to provide the power America needs 
    for its present and future energy, the U.S. government heavily taxes energy 
    industries and has placed so many restrictions on new nuclear and 
    hydrocarbon power production that there has been very little development for 
    two generations. On top of this, it has mandated that a large portion of the 
    nation’s corn crop, an essential element of our food supply, be liquefied 
    and burned for fuel!
 
 The most recent “energy bill” passed by Congress and signed by the President 
    actually bans Thomas Edison’s most famous invention, the incandescent light 
    bulb!
 
 If this keeps up, we are going to run out of energy in America for 
    electricity and for transportation. The vast oil tar deposits in Canada are 
    a target of the Natural Resources Defense Council that has challenged the 
    granting of permits required to expand refineries and pipelines on both 
    sides of the U.S. and Canadian border.
 
 A recently proposed billion-dollar project by ExxonMobil to construct a 
    storage facility and pipeline for liquefied natural gas off shore of New 
    Jersey immediately drew criticism by environmental groups seeking to thwart 
    access to this energy source. Meanwhile the State’s largest daily reported 
    on February 9th that New Jersey ratepayers “will see double-digit increases 
    in their electric bills.”
 
 Whether it’s coal, gas or oil, the Greens are doing everything they can to 
    return the United States to the same conditions that existed from before the 
    Revolution to fifty years after the Civil War. The use and expansion of 
    electrical energy did not really begin until the last century.
 
 An energy catastrophe is looming for the nation and Americans cannot even 
    look to Congress to avert it.
 Comments: Ferdinand E. Banks--Renewable energy and greater efficiency - that 
    certainly sounds good to me Alan, assuming that there is also a big piece of 
    nuclear in the picture. Otherwise it's just a delusion. Remember what the 
    French say when they are questioned about their nuclear commitment: no oil, 
    no gas, no coal, no choice. In due course the same will apply to one extent 
    or another almost everywhere, to include the U.S.Bob Amorosi--One thing you have right this time Alan is that there is indeed 
    a looming electricity supply crisis, and combined with the looming world oil 
    supply crisis, the future or our economies in North America are bleak 
    without massive changes and soon. The greens have indeed have had a lot do with bringing us to this point. 
    Years of chronic underinvestment in the system's maintenance and new 
    generation capacity has resulted in the system reaching its capacity limits 
    in many jurisdictions. This threatens to drive us into a third-world society 
    with its characteristic poor electricity supply reliability.  To make matters worse there is a political desire to migrate the US to a 
    state of independence from imported oil, among other things by replacing 
    oil-based vehicle transportation with electric vehicle technology over time. 
    Can you just imagine the huge demand impact on our electricity industry this 
    would have.  The answer lies in what Fred says - a combined push for much more 
    efficiency and much more generation capacity consisting of nuclear and lots 
    of distributed local generation from renewable sources. And if the 
    renewables eventually become widespread enough on a large scale, we wont 
    need to build as many big expensive central stations either.    
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