Posts Tagged ‘Canadian crude oil’

CEA to State, National Policymakers: Follow Wisconsin, Reject LCFS Proposals

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Last week Wisconsin media reported that a Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) provision was dropped from a comprehensive energy and environment bill being considered in the legislature. In a statement following this victory for Wisconsin consumers, David Holt, Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) president, says this:

“The removal of the economy-killing LCFS is good news for consumers in the Badger State and we are pleased that Wisconsin’s legislators have woken up to the harsh realities associated with this dangerous proposal. By discriminating against Canadian fuels, an LCFS would restrict Wisconsin fuel supplies, raise gas and diesel prices at the pump and expand our dependence on energy from some of the most unfriendly regions of the world.

 “Unfortunately, the threat of an LCFS still exists in many other parts of the country, including those states that comprise the Midwestern Governors Association (MGA), of which Wisconsin’s governor is a member. CEA encourages the members of the MGA to understand that discriminating against Canadian fuel supplies is bad energy policy.”

However, Wisconsin consumers are not out of the woods yet. The Badger State remains an active member of the MGA, which is currently engaged in promoting an LCFS. In fact, MGA is expected to issue comments on its draft LCFS framework soon — releasing its final draft recommendations by June, and rendering its final recommendations to MGA member states by the end of 2010.

This issue is crucial to the Badger State since nearly half of Wisconsin’s oil comes from Canada, some through the Lakehead Pipeline System, and some via Illinois and Minnesota – two other mid-western states that rely heavily on secure, Canadian energy to keep their economies running. You see, under an LCFS regime, these stable supplies of Canadian crude would find themselves on the chopping block in the Midwest, casting serious doubt as to how states like Wisconsin would make up the difference in displaced supply.

Worse yet, Wisconsin isn’t the only state that is currently considering an LCFS. There are also efforts in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic to pass a one-size-fits-all LCFS.

In Pennsylvania, former Illinois congressman Thomas Corcoran of the Center for North American Energy Security recently took to the pages of the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader to highlight the devastating effects that an LCFS could have on the Keystone State. In a column entitled, “Low-carbon pact will only lead to higher energy prices,” Corcoran writes:

 It’s ironic that LCFS advocates cite the imperative of combating greenhouse gases and curbing energy costs as reasons to support such a program. Not only are both assertions untrue, but they represent the direct inverse of what the program will actually achieve. Independent studies have determined that gas and diesel prices would increase, as would overall global greenhouse gas emissions because nations like China – our chief competitor in the global economy – are already working to secure Canadian supplies in the event that we block imports to the United States.

The former U.S. congressman and energy experts adds this in this column:

Pennsylvanians cannot afford higher energy prices. With gas prices steadily climbing toward $3 a gallon and home-heating costs on the rise, Gov. Rendell and leaders in Harrisburg should be working day and night to develop policies that will reduce energy prices rather than supporting an LCFS that will prohibit imports of abundant and secure North American energy resources, drive fuel prices even higher and increase worldwide carbon emissions.

CEA is encouraged by the decision in Wisconsin to drop the LCFS provisions and hopes that more state and national policymakers will take notice and follow Wisconsin’s lead by rejecting these misguided proposals. CEA will continue to educate the public about the dangers of an LCFS, and tirelessly advocate for commonsense policies that aim to keep energy prices stable and affordable by promoting more energy of all forms, and using what we have more wisely at the same time.

Now We’re (Finally) Talking – Part II

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

We are pleased to be able to engage in a thoughtful conversation about the consequences associated with the Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) – especially because, until now, there really hasn’t been enough discussion about an issue that will impact so many.

That’s been true even as LCFS supporters continue to lead aggressive campaigns in more than 20 separate states – each aimed at imposing this mandate on a state or regional basis, and then drawing on that momentum to demand its implementation nationwide. All the while, there has been very little substantive discussion on how this “energy” initiative will affect fuel prices, the lives of consumers and the consequences it will have on our ability to import secure, affordable energy from Canada.

As we wrote on our blog this month, NRDC’s engagement on this issue is a welcome development – and one we hope will lead to a more constructive debate (or at least: some debate at all) on the real-world consequences associated with an LCFS. Some LCFS proponents continue to mistakenly claim that an LCFS will actually produce a chemical change in the carbon content of the fuels we use. To its credit, and as point on which we can agree, NRDC doesn’t seem to support this notion. That said, some of NRDC’s statements indicate a misunderstanding of the basic mechanics of how an LCFS would actually work. And who would be forced to pick up the bill for the increased fuel costs that will accompany their implementation.

On these issues, though, CEA can provide some meaningful assistance. Below we take a look at NRDC’s most recent posting on the LCFS and the Canadian oil sands, and humbly offer a few key corrections where needed.

NRDC says: “[T]he reality is that the LCFS starts to wean us from the choke-hold that oil has on today’s transportation and will help us gradually transition to more diverse, cleaner choices for fueling our mobility.”

The reality is: Under an LCFS regime, the amount of energy imported each day that’s needed to fuel our cars, trucks and minivans wouldn’t necessarily change – but the places from which those resources come (and the amounts provided by each) would certainly see a dramatic shift.

Implementing a policy that has a direct consequence of preventing Canadian and Mexican energy from crossing the U.S. border will create a significant short-term vacuum, to be sure – but one that suppliers from the Middle East, Africa and the Far East will be more than happy to fill. You see, under the accounting methodology of the LCFS, oil originating from unstable regions half-a-word away generally receives a better carbon score than energy resources produced in Canada, Mexico and even the U.S. Intermountain West – even though these resources bear carbon profiles that are chemically identical to crudes from far-away lands.

Maybe that’s why study after study has shown that an LCFS may actually increase global emissions of carbon dioxide, not reduce them. Remember: Foreign crude doesn’t arrive in U.S. refining centers via teleportation. It has to travel more than 12,000 miles before it gets here. Remarkably, the LCFS scoring mechanism doesn’t seem to account for those emissions – but those who know the issue best certainly do.

A more direct approach calling for the long-term diversification of our transportation fuel mixture must be considered and would be a better approach than an LCFS.  We will simply not be able to convert enough vehicles in the near-term to alternatives to meaningfully reduce imports.  The infrastructure, technical know-how and alternative fuel availability simply do not exist today. Hoping that alternative energy can make a significant difference today does not make it a reality.  We need to diversify our energy resources and we need to start now so that in 40 or 50 years alternative energy will actually make a meaningful contribution.

NRDC says: “The low carbon fuel standard is expected to reduce our fuel costs by making America more fuel efficient and by providing alternatives to our oil dependency.” (emphasis theirs)

The reality is: The truth is, an LCFS is not designed to improve fuel economy or efficiency – precisely because it has nothing to do with the fuel in your gas tank. But that’s not to say it won’t actually raise our fuel costs.

How is that so? For starters, it’s important to understand first what an LCFS actually seeks to regulate. It regulates the production of oil. It regulates the transportation of it. It regulates the refining of it. And it regulates the distribution. The only thing it doesn’t regulate, in fact, is the combustion of that fuel in your gas tank – which, incidentally, happens to account for 80 percent of CO2 emissions that come from the transportation sector.

We’ll repeat that: The LCFS doesn’t even attempt to address the source of more than 80 percent of carbon emissions that arise from the transportation sector. But that doesn’t mean that an LCFS would let American consumers off cheap. Far-away oil may receive a better score under the LCFS accounting regime, but it also happens to be a lot more expensive to buy than the secure, affordable energy resources available to us closer to home. According to one study published recently in the American Economic Journal, the price you pay at the pump could jump $0.60 a gallon under the best case scenario.

NRDC says: “The low carbon fuel standard will … help us protect our precious North American environment, improve the health of communities already living with too much pollution, and reduce the need to commit U.S. troops in unstable, oil rich areas of the world.”

The reality is: An LCFS regime would actually prevent sources of secure, reliable energy from crossing the border, thereby creating the circumstances that will allow sources of far-away, unstable, and expensive energy to increase its share of the U.S. market. In other words, the clear, direct consequence of an LCFS is to reduce Canadian and Mexican imports, as well as production of crude in many parts of the United States.

As far as NRDC’s suggestion that an LCFS would “protect our precious North American environment,” here we have another assertion that simply isn’t grounded in the facts. The truth is, Canada’s oil sands are found beneath 140,000 square kilometers of land in Canada – part of a forest that’s more than 3.2 million square kilometers in size.

Here’s the kicker: Of those 3.2 million square kilometers, only 4,802 of them are actually mined – and every square inch of that is required by the government to be fully reclaimed, returning the land to a sustainable landscape equal to its condition prior to development. Preventing imports of fuel derived from the Canadian oil sands into the US will not prevent development of these resources – they will simply be developed and sold into other overseas markets.

NRDC says: “Policies like the LCFS will help make the U.S. more competitive by encouraging the use of more sustainable resources and complement the creation of millions of clean energy jobs under new climate policies.”

The reality is: It may indeed be true that an LCFS will someday help create new jobs – but no one can credibly claim that those jobs would be based in the United States. More realistically, an LCFS will spur job creation and economic development in the regions of the producing world that stand to win under the system (the Middle East), and achieve roughly the same effect for regions of the consuming world that stand to claim secure and affordable energy resources from Canada that, without an LCFS, would have been sent to the United States instead (Asia).

But what would happen to this country? Fuel prices would be rendered prohibitively expensive. Our dependence on foreign, unstable oil would go even higher. And thousands of jobs would likely be lost all sectors of the U.S. economy – or, at least, all sectors that require affordable and reliable sources of fuel to remain in operation.

NRDC says: “While CEA claims that Wall Street will be enriched at the expense of Main Street, we don’t expect Wall Street to be involved in [the LCFS] credit market.”

The reality is: One of the least talked-about elements of the LCFS is the credit trading scheme that the implementation of such a policy would necessarily create. NRDC’s suggestion that it doesn’t “expect” LCFS credits to be bought and sold on the open trading market shows a lack of full understanding of LCFS regimes in the best case, and is downright disingenuous in the worst – especially when considered in the context of the effort’s broader (and stated) goal, which is to force an LCFS to be imposed nationwide.

So there you have it: For those interested in having a genuine, substantive debate on the LCFS and its potential impact on American energy consumers, U.S. energy security and efforts to rejuvenate U.S. job creation, consider this an invitation to join an open, honest debate.

ICYMI – SD State Rep. in Sioux Falls Paper: “LCFS will make fuel more scarce, expensive”

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

SD State Rep. in State’s Largest Paper on What an LCFS Means: Higher prices at the pump, fewer good-paying jobs for Americans and expanded dependence on energy from unstable regions of the world

  • The low-carbon fuel standard isn’t at all interested in making the fuel in your car today better, cleaner or more affordable. It’s only interested in making those fuels scarcer, more expensive and less available. Achieve that, the logic goes, and newer, lower-carbon fuel options will be forced to come online in the future since the American people won’t be able to afford the fuels on the market right now.”

Policy will make fuel more scarce, expensive
Sioux Falls Argus Leader
By Rep. Val Rausch
October 1, 2009

On Aug. 20, the South Dakota Department of Environment and Natural Resources made the historic decision to grant a critical and hard-fought air permit for the Hyperion oil refining project in Elk Point. By now I’m sure you’ve heard plenty about the project: the 1,800 new jobs it will create, the $13.7 billion in local economic activity, the $50 million in annual state tax receipts.

But while everyone’s attention is rightly focused on which series of state, local and federal permits we need next – and when these new jobs actually might start to be created – legislation currently making its way through Congress and supported in full by the White House might render those considerations moot.

The policy is called the low-carbon fuel standard. And if it becomes law, no permit in the world will be able to save the Hyperion project from the proverbial scrap heap.

What is the low-carbon fuel standard? The way its proponents describe it, it doesn’t actually sound half-bad. Who could be against a policy that promises to deliver fuel that’s high in energy and low in price – all while emitting less carbon dioxide from our tailpipes?

Do a little digging, however, and you quickly find out that the low-carbon fuel standard isn’t at all interested in making the fuel in your car today better, cleaner or more affordable. It’s only interested in making those fuels scarcer, more expensive and less available. Achieve that, the logic goes, and newer, lower-carbon fuel options will be forced to come online in the future since the American people won’t be able to afford the fuels on the market right now.

If the devil is in the details, the mechanics of how a low-carbon fuel standard would work in practice could’ve been cribbed straight from Dante. First, bureaucrats gather up samples of crude oil. Each sample is then assigned a carbon score, not based on how much carbon is in the oil (that’s constant) but on how much estimated energy was used to bring that oil to market.

Heavy crudes require more energy to produce than light crudes and therefore receive a higher (read “worse”) life-cycle carbon score. Oil sands from Canada and oil shale from the American Intermountain West are treated even more harshly under this system.

And corn-based ethanol? The way the bureaucrats see it, ethanol is even worse than the rest since farmers in developing countries likely will have to cut down more of their trees to grow corn since Americans are using so much of theirs for fuel. Follow all that?

Of course, the success of the Hyperion project is predicated on steady access to affordable, secure supplies of Canadian crude oil. But under a low-carbon fuel standard, Canada intentionally is singled out for exclusion.

Why is that? Do Canada’s heavier crudes contain more carbon? No. Do they emit more carbon dioxide from the tailpipe? No. Do they at least weigh more than other lighter crudes? Not really.

But thanks to their density and relatively remote point of origination, these sources of oil require a bit more energy to bring to market than other forms of Jed Clampett crude – you know, the kind that springs from the ground via a single, haphazardly discharged shotgun shell.

For supporters of the low-carbon fuel standard, though, production of heavy crude is an original sin. And although the program might not intend to affect the future of South Dakota’s economy for the worse, that’s precisely what it will do – $13.7 billion a year worse.

But wait a minute. Who’s got all the light crude? The kind that the low-carbon fuel-standard scheme is rigged to benefit? Would you believe it if I told you the vast majority of the world’s lightest, sweetest crudes is controlled by some of the world’s least reliable, most dictatorial regimes? Because it is. And a low-carbon fuel standard would be an absolute gift to a region of the world that, in case you haven’t read, doesn’t like the United States all that much.

The vast majority of Americans never has heard of the low-carbon fuel standard, just as its proponents prefer. Now you know: The low-carbon fuel standard means higher prices at the pump, fewer good-paying jobs for Americans and expanded dependence on energy from unstable regions of the world.

Let’s get the permits we need first. And then let’s make sure a nationwide low-carbon fuel standard imposed on us from Washington doesn’t render them useless.

Val Rausch represents South Dakota’s 4th legislative district in the state House. He holds the position of speaker pro tempore.

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