Posts Tagged ‘Low Carbon Fuel Standard’

LCFS in KGL: Prescription for Higher Fuel Costs and Increased Imports from Unstable Regions of the World

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

With the recent news that Senators Kerry, Graham and Lieberman are aiming to release their draft climate change legislation sometime in the next month, many policymakers and key stakeholders in Washington, D.C. are speculating about what that bill will actually look like, and what its potential effects may be. While it’s still too early to tell if a national, one-size-fits-all Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) will be included in the legislation, Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) is working tirelessly to educate the public and lawmakers about the harmful economic and national security implications associated with this job-killing proposal.

Thomas Pyle, president of the Institute for Energy Research (IER), writes this in a recent Daily Caller column entitled ”Energy and climate, March Madness-style” about pending Senate legislation, including LCFS provisions:

H.R. 1787 (Inslee LCFS bill): Perhaps not as well known to a broader national audience, the Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) bill authored by Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) is seen by many as a dark horse candidate for advancement—assuming early upsets of stiffer competition. Having toiled this past year in the obscurity that comes with being a mid-major, the Inslee LCFS bill has nonetheless pulled together an impressive resume of support, with more than 20 states currently considering a version of the Inslee plan that seeks to creatively (if not entirely effectively) achieve its emissions reductions by putting the kibosh on energy derived from Canada’s oil sands.

States often serve as indicators – or incubators – for federal policy. In the case of an LCFS, American consumers can only hope that Congress doesn’t take their cues from California – the first state to implement such a mandate. This from a recent Climatewire article about efforts underway in the Golden State to move forward with an LCFS:

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) sent a letter to California Air Resources Board (CARB) Chairman Mary Nichols on Wednesday arguing that the state should give most allowances away in the early years of a cap-and-trade program and allow generous use of offsets…”As we have discussed many times, California’s goal is to implement A.B. 32 in such a way as to mesh our program as seamlessly as possible into a comprehensive national strategy,” [Schwarzenegger said.]…CARB spokesman Stanley Young echoed Schwarzenegger. “The crucial determining factor here is what’s happening in Washington, because our goal is to develop a program that will meld seamlessly into a federal program,” he said. “This is about considering the future in terms of how California can become part of a comprehensive national program.”

But do American consumers really want California’s LCFS mandate – which effectively bans stable and reliable forms of North American energy – to be the law of the land from coast to coast? We can’t say for sure.

But what we do know is that the American people oppose higher fuel costs and increased imports from unstable regions of the world. Unfortunately, that is the prescription laid out by an LCFS.

CEA Asks Gov. Gregoire to Consider All the Facts Associated with LCFS

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

CEA president: LCFS will not reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but may lead to severe economic and security consequences for citizens of Washington

HOUSTON – As Washington governor Christine Gregoire continues to weigh the prospect of imposing a Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) on her state, Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) president David Holt sent a letter to the governor yesterday laying out several specific facts and figures related to the potential impact of an LCFS on Washington – facts the governor should consider before taking another step forward on the initiative.

Holt’s letter is in response to the governor’s May 2009 executive order instructing her administration to assess the merits of enacting California’s LCFS or a similar proposal to help meet the state’s greenhouse gas emission reduction targets.

The full text of the letter below:

April 5, 2010

Dear Gov. Gregoire,

With your administration’s July deadline quickly approaching for assessing the relative merit of implementing a Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), I write today in my capacity as president of Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) to ask that you carefully weigh the unintended economic, security and environmental consequences this action would have for the state of Washington.

Although proponents of an LCFS believe its adoption would reduce transportation-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it will actually lead to increased fuel prices and greater dependence on foreign, unstable nations without reducing GHG emissions from your state’s vehicles. Some studies have even suggested that an LCFS may actually increase the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, every gallon of gasoline combusted in our vehicles emits a chemically consistent 19.4 pounds of carbon dioxide (CO2), regardless of octane or vehicle type. Given that the agency charged with promulgating standards to protect America’s air quality openly shares this fact about fuel emissions, moving forward with an LCFS is simply not logical if the intended goal is to reduce a state’s GHG emissions.

CEA is a non-partisan, not-for-profit organization actively working to reduce America’s reliance on foreign energy imports, maintain affordable energy prices for consumers and covert our nation’s abundant energy resources into jobs, revenue and opportunity for all Americans. While CEA generally supports the goals typically associated with proposals to enact an LCFS – such as lowering GHG emissions from the transportation sector, increasing the use of natural gas and commercially developing the production of cellulosic ethanol – we are strongly opposed to the implementation of an LCFS that fundamentally discriminates against fuels derived from unconventional sources of energy, including Canada’s oil sands.

Adopting a California-style LCFS, aimed at restricting the state’s use of Canadian oil, makes no sense for the state of Washington. Unlike California, Washington receives more than 25 percent of its crude from Canada. An LCFS would not only inhibit the state from obtaining and using that crude, but it would also restrict your state’s access to more than 10 percent of its current gasoline supply, which is refined in Montana and derived from Canada’s oil sands.

Indeed, to replace the supply lost under an LCFS, Washington will likely need to increase crude shipments from the Middle East, leading to additional energy security concerns. And as mentioned, as it relates to the imperative of reducing GHGs, several prominent studies have found that an LCFS may actually generate greater net emissions compared to the reference case (no LCFS) by requiring imports from distant, unstable countries instead of relying on crude from our North American neighbors such as Canada and Mexico. Under this scenario, not only would an LCFS increase our nation’s dependence on foreign energy sources, but it would also add significantly to global GHG concentrations.

The repercussions of an LCFS go beyond unrealized environmental benefits and diminished energy security. With five refineries, your state serves as a principal refining hub for the Pacific Northwest. According to the Energy Information Administration, the refining capacity in Washington is about 627,850 barrels/day. Currently, these refineries receive most of their oil from Alaska, but declining production there means that Washington’s refineries will become increasingly dependent on crude imports from Canada and elsewhere in the near future.

Without additional sources of oil, the more than 2,000 direct and 20,000 indirect workers supported by Washington’s refiners would find themselves at risk of losing their jobs. According to a report from the Washington Resource Council, these refiners paid more than $400 million in wages and almost paid the same amount to the state through sales, excise, occupation and various other taxes in 2007. Without these facilities and their associated jobs, your state would lose a significant revenue source, leaving a large budget gap to be filled by increased taxes or cuts in taxpayers’ services.

During this time of economic uncertainty, Washington cannot afford to lose more jobs or turn its back on more state revenue. Given the substantial economic and energy security costs of this proposal, and the absence of any quantifiable GHG reductions, CEA asks you to consider rejecting the adoption of an LCFS policy in Washington.

Thank you in advance for your consideration. I look forward to hearing from you soon.

Sincerely,

David Holt

President

Consumer Energy Alliance

Student Becomes Teacher: How the U.S. May Develop Its Own Oil Sands, And Face Denial By An LCFS

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Here at Secure Our Fuels, we talk a lot about how America’s relationship with our friends in Canada helps further key national priorities related energy, security, and the economy. Few examples better illustrate this phenomenon than our continued partnership on the oil sands, a secure and abundant source of energy that policy initiatives such as the Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) seek to destroy.

But Canada’s oil sands isn’t the only stuff that an LCFS is setup to demolish. It’s also no friend of energy resources produced and developed here. Turns out, Canada’s not the only country in the world blessed with the promise and potential of oil sands. Turns out we’ve got some of the stuff right here in America as well.

Here’s how the Salt Lake Tribune handled the story:

Utah is more willing to lease its state lands, and Earth Energy joins a neighbor on state lands, Salt Lake City-based Red Leaf Resources Inc., which is working on a small scale to develop the region’s oil-shale reserves. Red Leaf also is looking for investors to ramp up production.

Wringing oil from hard rock or oil sands is technically possible, but nobody has proven it economical on a large scale yet … Earth Energy Resources “wants to be the first to do it.”

There you go – that’s the spirit. Used to be a time when nations of the world commissioned the work of these explorers, financed it, hailed it, and held up those who proved successful at doing it as heroes. Today? Let’s just say that times have changed – the evidence of which can be seen with each new state embarking down the dangerous path of the LCFS. 

The good news, if there’s any of which to speak, is that an oil sands project in the United States may prove tougher to defeat than an oil sands project in Canada. But make no mistake: The LCFS doesn’t discriminate. And as we work together to advance the imperative of secure and affordable energy supply for American consumers, neither should we.

We Hear Ya: Top Alberta Energy Official Says “We Need to Keep up the Campaign” For Secure, North American Energy

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Let’s face it, the U.S. and global economy are experiencing challenging and difficult times. With nearly 1 out of every 10 Americans still without work, and gas prices on the rise, glimmers of economic hope are too few. Many economists don’t expect the U.S. economy to grow substantially anytime soon, either.

But there is a rare economic bright spot up in Canada: Alberta’s oil sands. In fact, the Edmonton Journal reports that, according to the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters (CME), the total value of economic activity expected over the next 10 years from the oil sands in Alberta is more than $1 trillion. That’s nearly 75 percent of Canada’s GDP! This is good news for the U.S., too, since more than 2.5 million barrels of oil derived from Canada’s sands are directed to American consumers each and every day in the form of secure and stable North American energy supplies.

This from the article:

In 2009 alone, energy companies poured $30 billion into the oilsands. About 60 per cent of that went into maintenance and supplies, the rest into new project development. Even that’s a hefty sum. CME president Jayson Myers says $30 billion exceeds the value of any government stimulus package for any given year in any state or province in North America.

“As Canadian companies look at new business opportunities and at reducing the risks they’re seeing in the U.S. market, and in their traditional supply chains, the oilsands remain a very attractive business opportunity — even more so as we see project investments begin to increase again,” he says.

And while the U.S. is unquestionably Canada’s strongest and most strategic trading partner, other nations from around the globe also understand the economic benefits associated with access to stable and reliable energy reserves. So it’s no wonder why Petrochina – the Chinese government-owned energy firm – has aggressively invested in Canada’s oil sands. In fact, Bloomberg reports this:

“PetroChina Co. Chairman Jiang Jiemin plans to step up overseas oil and gas acquisitions after teaming up with Royal Dutch Shell Plc to buy Australia’s Arrow Energy Ltd. for $3.2 billion this week. “We will take advantage of opportunities in developing oil, gas and energy sources in all areas of the world,” Jiang said at a media briefing in Hong Kong yesterday, after the Beijing- based company reported a 9.7 percent decline in full-year profit. The Arrow deal followed at least $5 billion of purchases in Canada, Kazakhstan and Singapore in 2009 to meet demand in the fastest-growing major economy. PetroChina last year purchased a stake in a Canadian oil sands project for $1.7 billion, a refinery in Singapore and spent about $1.4 billion on a stake in an oil venture in Kazakhstan.”

So as China – a top competitor in the global economy – continues to secure steady streams of affordable energy, like those produced from Canada’s sands, leaders in the United States are pushing for a one-size-fits-all Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), which would effectively ban these secure, affordable, North American energy resources from reaching American consumers, middle-class families and senior citizens.

But not every nation – or groups of nations – share the belief that Canada’s oils sands can and must play a critical role in providing stable energy to those who need it most. Under the headline “Minister says EU was behind oil sands opposition,” Reuters gets Alberta’s energy minister, Ron Liepert, on the record in response to efforts from the European Union to erect trade barriers aimed at Canada’s oil sands:

The European Union is the organization he referred to when he asserted that some international groups were using the environment as a guise to erect trade barriers. … Canada has warned that draft EU standards to promote greener fuels are too unwieldy and would harm the market for oil sands crude.

The EU apparently noticed his warning, since they have now dropped references to oil sands. And just today, under the headline “E.U. may remove oil sands restrictions from environmental standards”, Climatewire reports this:

The European Union may weaken proposed environmental standards for fuel, responding to the Canadian government’s efforts to protect Canada’s oil sands. … Alberta Energy Minister Ron Liepert said he was pleased that the government’s efforts were having an impact. “We’ve managed to convince the New Democrats to quit calling it tar sands and start calling it oil sands. We’ve got the European Union starting to look at the need to reassess some of the initiatives they’ve taken, based on, I would say, not the best information, so we need to keep up the campaign.”

Canada’s not alone in working to get the facts out about its vast oil sands, and how essential these job-creating resources are to American consumers. Consumer Energy Alliance will continue to educate the public about the dangers of an LCFS, and tirelessly advocate for commonsense energy policies that aim to keep prices stable and affordable by promoting more energy of all forms, and using what we have more wisely at the same time.

Unfortunately, discriminating against Canada’s abundant and secure energy – the very core of an LCFS – would only deepen our energy dependence on unfriendly regions of world and hit struggling consumers in their pocketbooks at a time when they can afford it least.

Et tu, LCFS? DE’s Caesar Rodney Think Tank Comes Out Swinging Against LCFS

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Back in his day, Caesar Rodney knew a thing or two about declarations of independence. On July 2, 1776, with the Delaware delegation deadlocked on whether to approve a resolution spurring a final vote on the famous text, Rodney saddled up his horse and rode 80 miles through a torrential downpour to cast the decisive vote in Philadelphia. Two days later, the Continental Congress formally approved the Declaration of Independence. And away we went.

More than 235 years later, Caesar’s mad dash to Philly is memorialized on the back of the Delaware quarter. And the think tank in Dover that bears his name is committed to ensuring that legacy of independence continues – coming out this morning in the pages of the Delaware News Journal with a tremendous op-ed blasting apart the Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS). As we’ve written here before, the LCFS is engineered to make our country more, not less, dependent on overseas, unstable sources of energy. Clearly not a plan that someone like Caesar Rodney would have ever abided.

Penned by Shaun Fink, the think tank’s executive director, the piece thoughtfully identifies the myriad ways in which an LCFS would visit harm on residents of the First State. To wit: “Since Delaware doesn’t produce crude oil and relies on petroleum products being supplied through ports in Wilmington and along the Delaware River, an LCFS could cause the First State to become an isolated fuel island — causing significant cost increases for gasoline, diesel and home heating fuels.”

Among the points Fink makes throughout the piece:

  • One-fifth of Delawareans rely on home heating oil during the winter months, a supply that would be jeopardized under an LCFS
  • DE required almost $19 million last year from the Low Income Heating Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), all without an established LCFS
  • With 8 percent of DE residents currently unemployed, “now is the time to make sure that energy is available, affordable and reliable”

State LCFS Profile: Vermont

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

State of Play: LCFS in Vermont

In December, Vermont governor Jim Douglas joined several other states in signing a Memorandum of Understanding laying out a timetable for the future implementation of an LCFS. In committing Vermont to the agreement, Gov. Douglas declared his state “a leader in limiting greenhouse gas emissions,” and suggested the imposition of an LCFS would help both “meet our environmental challenges and encourage the creation of green jobs.”

Unfortunately, the only way an LCFS can “work” as engineered is by rendering secure, affordable sources of energy off limits – thereby having the effect of significantly expanding our nation’s dependence on foreign, LCFS-favored energy to meet its daily needs and costing thousands of jobs in the process. Ironically, studies show that an LCFS may actually contribute to an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere – bringing into question the governor’s notion of using an LCFS as a means to “meet our environmental challenges.”

Production and Distribution: How/Where Does Vermont Get Its Energy?

Vermont produces no petroleum of its own, refines none, and remarkably receives none via petroleum pipelines – rendering it completely dependent on others (and their trucks) for the energy resources necessary to fuel and heat the state.

While Vermont does receive occasional fuel imports from neighboring states, the vast majority of its refined petroleum comes directly from Canada – and nowhere else. Unfortunately, under the bizarre accounting methodology of the LCFS, secure and affordable energy resources from Canada could be denied entry into U.S. markets, creating serious doubt as to where the energy resources essential to Vermont residents would come from.

Every month, nearly 150,000 barrels of heating oil cross the border from Canada into Vermont – a number that shoots past 200,000 barrels a day during the winter months. As the graph below demonstrates, home heating oil isn’t the only refined product that Vermonters receive from their northern neighbors – they also rely on Canada for diesel fuel, propane, kerosene and even asphalt.

LCFS Impact on Vermont

Vermont, according to the federal Energy Information Administration, is “vulnerable to distillate fuel oil shortages and price spikes during the winter months” in particular – a function of the fact that more than 60 percent (three-fifths) of households in the state rely on fuel oil for space heating.

Regrettably, under a system envisioned by supporters of the LCFS, home heating oil – especially supplies from Canada, from where all Vermont heating oil originates – will be rendered more expensive to purchase and more difficult to access. In Vermont’s case, it’s not entirely clear where substitute supplies could even possibly come from, given the lack of ports and pipeline infrastructure.

In 2009, Vermont secured over $36.2 million from the federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) to help subsidize the purchase of these fuel resources for those in need – nearly 30 percent of that sum in the form of an emergency “contingency” payment above and beyond the original budget request. Unfortunately, under the LCFS, a large portion of this fuel oil may be targeted for elimination, adding additional strain to an already over-extended LIHEAP budget.

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.

Now We’re Talking, Part 1

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Higher energy costs lead to higher utility and gasoline prices for consumers. Enacting a national Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) will divert affordable, previously U.S-bound energy supplies from Canada to our competitors, reduce access to critical energy products such as diesel and home heating fuel, and increase prices at the pump – all without doing a thing to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, greenhouse gas emissions will increase as we turn our back on North American sourced oil and begin importing increasing amounts of energy from other continents via long ocean voyages. We won’t use less energy because there is a LCFS; we’ll just obtain it elsewhere.

These conclusions are well documented. Please download the PowerPoint on LCFS presented by one of the top energy policy analysts at the U.S. Department of Energy at a transportation conference last summer – and be sure to take a look at slides 16 and 17. You might also scan an LCFS study published in the American Economic Journal by professors from North Carolina and California. According to their research, an “LCFS cannot be efficient…,” and,  “…contrary to the stated purpose, an LCFS can actually raise carbon emissions.”

Since it was founded in early 2006, Consumer Energy Alliance has worked to promote policies that ensure an adequate supply of energy. CEA is not opposed to using cleaner, more environmentally-friendly sources of energy and has embraced a “we need it all approach.” In light of this mission, we were surprised at the recent statement from Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) lawyer, Liz Barratt-Brown, who asserted in an environmental advocacy blog that CEA’s opposition to the LCFS must mean that our organization is “against shifting to cleaner fuels”. She alleged that CEA uses “deception” to represent ourselves.

While conducting its research project on CEA, it appears NRDC missed a recent post on our blog hailing the administration’s commitment to energy conservation programs, especially its efforts to promote and sustain a robust plan for home weatherization and re-insulation.  NRDC also missed CEA’s press release applauding the mayor of Houston for getting an important solar energy project across the finish line in that great city. And it must have missed CEA’s many public statements in support of wind power where  more needs to be done, and done now, to cut through the red tape and bring more of these installations online in parts of the country where wind generated electricity is both needed and efficient.

It’s true that CEA counts producers of conventional energy sources among its coalition, after all we are the Consumer Energy Alliance; a complete listing of our affiliates has always been available online. In her NRDC blog, Ms. Barratt-Brown finds it convenient to characterize our organization as an assemblage of “Big Oil” interests. Were her blog even handed, it would note that we represent an even larger number of energy consumers: a full 60 percent of our affiliates are energy consumers. While these consuming groups don’t see eye-to-eye with the producing groups on every issue all of them embrace and support CEA’s broad mission to advance a national energy policy that encourages us to conserve what we have, allows us to safely produce what we need, and invests in the kind of technology we believe will be critical in creating jobs, revenue and opportunity in the future.

It’s a big effort, to be sure, but it is one supported by a larger and more diverse group of interests than NRDC may realize. Among our more than 130 member companies, we’re proud to work with steel manufacturers, plumbing and heating contractors, community and neighborhood organizations, seafood producers, biodiesel producers, fertilizer groups, truckers, airlines, tourism officials, and many, many others. But the backbone of our organization isn’t found there. It’s made up of the more than 265,000 everyday Americans who have signed up over the years to support our cause, men and women who believe in a balanced, sensible energy strategy for this country, and understand the relationship between such a strategy and the creation of jobs, security and affordable energy.

Yes, we disagree with NRDC on some issues. However, there is reason to believe that we agree on a number of other matters. We know that NRDC is not anti-consumer just as we are not anti-environment.

I’m delighted to continue a dialogue in the future, and I’m also hopeful that we can dispense with the personal attacks and schoolyard insults, and get down to the serious business of crafting commonsense energy solutions for the American people.

The Big Chill: As Millions of Americans Turn to LIHEAP to Get Through Winter, NE Guvs Sign LCFS Pact Designed to Make Heating Oil More Expensive

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

WASHINGTON – Hours before the ball dropped on 2010 in Times Square, governors from 11 Northeast and mid-Atlantic states signed an agreement paving the way for the region-wide adoption of a California-style Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), a policy that will dramatically restrict consumers’ access to local and affordable supplies of home heating fuel without doing a thing to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.

By design, an LCFS is engineered to deliver higher prices at the pump, and sharp reductions in the availability of LCFS-targeted home heating oil – essential energy supplies that have become prohibitively expensive for many working-class families in New England. Remarkably, even at a time when more Americans are seeking assistance under the federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) than ever before, governors across the region are actively working to make those fuel resources more expensive – by actively working to impose a Low-Carbon Fuel Standard.

A story in yesterday’s USA Today sheds new light on just how severe the situation has become:

  • A record number of U.S. households are applying for help to pay home heating bills with 17 states fielding application requests that are up more than 20% from last year, the National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association says. Almost 9 million U.S. households are expected to need help paying winter energy bills. That’s up 15% from the record-setting 7.7 million last year, the association says.”

Fmr. NHL Goalie Takes Slap Shot Directly at U.S. Energy Security

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Remember the 1994 Stanley Cup finals? As you may recall, Mike Richter – the goalie then for the New York Rangers – played a significant role in securing Lord Stanley that year, bringing a close to the fabled “Curse of 1940.” In fact, in an action-packed, edge-of-your-seat Game 4 shoot-out, Richter famously shut down Pavel Bure – the Vancouver Canucks sharp-shooting, fast-flying forward.

And while Richter effectively handled the “Russian Rocket” in ’94, raining on the parade of Canadian hockey fans, the U.S. Hockey Hall of Famer is now working to undercut our nation’s energy security.

Taking to the pages of Minnesota’s largest newspaper, Richter – the outreach chair on the Sierra Club’s National Advancement Council – writes this in a recent Star Tribune column under the headline “Of Canada, the Olympics and dirty oil”:

If we allow Canada’s oil sands project to creep across our border, it will lock our nation into dependence on yet another foreign source of oil, just as our local clean-energy industry is beginning to thrive.

However, Canada currently helps meet nearly 17 percent of the total fuel demands that keeps the American economy running each day. In fact, Canada – not Middle Eastern oil, or oil derived from other unstable, unfriendly regions of the world – is our nation’s top oil provider. So how much of Minnesota’s oil comes from Canada’s sands? 83 percent. And why does Mr. Richter support denying Minnesota consumers, manufacturers, families and seniors living on fixed-incomes access to these affordable North American energy reserves? You should ask him.

Richter adds this in his column:

Right now, we are poised to become a leader in the global clean-energy economy. By taking the steps to ensure that we are the leader of the next industrial revolution, we can reignite our economy, bolster national security and improve the health of our people.

One of the most important things we can do to demonstrate that leadership is to say no to Canada’s oil sands. For now, the decision rests with the Obama administration. By denying permits for pipelines and refineries in the United States, President Obama can signal to the world that we are serious about fighting climate change and helping American clean-energy technologies thrive.

Everyone – including Mr. Richter – is entitled to their own opinion. However, no one is entitled to their own set of facts.

Consider this: If the federal government, or individual states, were to ban Canadian oil from reaching American consumers – as a Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) seeks to achieve – where would the fuel come from to meet our nation’s growing energy needs and to help drive economic activity and growth?

Lighter forms of crude are generally found and produced in some of the most hostile regions of the world. Understanding that the Energy Information Administration (EIA) – the U.S. Energy Department’s statistical and analytical agency – has determined that our nation will continue to rely on oil until at least 2035, is it responsible or commonsense policy to turn our backs on Canadian oil to meet these rising demands, and to favor oil from faraway, hostile regimes?

But assuming that the U.S. adopts the misguided policies that Richter is advocating for, what are the ultimate consequences? Who are the winners and losers?

American consumers – who will be forced to pay even higher prices at the pump – are the ultimate losers.

And if the U.S.  banned Canadian energy, does that mean global greenhouse gas (GHS) emissions will decrease? Absolutely not. China – our chief competitor in the global economy – is working aggressively to secure access to Canada’s oil sands. Some independent experts – and even a top advisor to President Obama – have determined that GHGs would actually increase under such a unilateral ban on these resources from the U.S.

The winners? Well, those who have an economic and financial interest in ensuring that our most affordable, reliable and secure forms of energy become prohibitively expensive. Say, for example, a venture capital firm that invests in alternative forms of energy that simply cannot compete with more affordable forms, such as Canada’s oil sands. That’s funny, because Mr. Richter is the founding partner of Environmental Capital Partners (ECP) — a firm that does just that. Coincidence? We’ll let the American consumers decide.

As U.S. consumers continue to weather these terribly difficult and challenging economic times and hardships, and more and more jobs continue to be lost, leaders in Washington and in state capitols must focus on advancing energy policies that aim to keep prices stable and affordable by promoting more energy of all forms, and using what we have more wisely at the same time. Regrettably, banning Canada’s oil – the core of a LCFS – would only deepen our dangerous dependence on oil from unfriendly regions of world, and severely hit struggling consumers in their pocketbooks at a time when they can afford it least.

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