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Practically Speaking

Kyle and her husband moved to Brookfield in 1986. She became active in local politics and started blogging in 2004. Her focus is primarily on local issues but often includes state and national topics, too. Kyle looks at things from the taxpayers’ perspective in a creative, yet down to earth way, addressing them from a practical point of view.

House of Reps started talking about DRILLING because of you!

By Kyle Prast
Wednesday, Sep 10 2008, 11:35 AM

Have you noticed that the mood of the country has changed regarding energy?

Last year, THE solution was all about growing our own energy by using ethanol. The emphasis was on reducing our carbon footprint and dependence on foreign oil, regardless of the cost.

But rising food prices and the fact that ethanol was a boondoggle (using as much energy as it supplied) caused ethanol's reign to slip from political popularity.

Then came Newt with his Drill Here.Drill Now.Pay Less. campaign. While I am surprised that he never did get those 3 million petition signers, he certainly started the conversation that we must start producing more oil domestically.

It was a conversation the President and House Republicans were willing to listen to. Nancy Pelosi and the House Democrats, however, were not. In fact, she shut down the House for 5 weeks!

During that 5 weeks off, around 130 House Republicans kept the heat on the discussion in the House. See YouTube

Also during the summer, the polls started showing that 67% of Americans favored domestic drilling.

John McCain responded to that fact by embracing offshore drilling. Certainly his picking Palin indicates he is looking at domestic oil and increasing natural gas. The Republican ticket has an "All of the above" approach. (Oil, clean coal, natural gas, tidal, hydro, hydrogen, geo-thermal, nuclear, wind, solar, etc.)

Barack Obama wouldn't go that far, but did promote getting off foreign oil dependence by increasing clean coal, natural gas, and safe nuclear as additions to the usual wind, solar, etc.

But while all this new domestic energy posturing was going on, Pelosi and the House Democrats were not available until this week. On Monday:

"House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said Monday morning that the newest Democratic energy bill will be brought to the floor under normal rules and will be subject to a vote on a Republican alternative that is likely to call for even more drilling than Democrats are prepared to swallow.

So finally, she and the House Democrats are willing to allow a vote on drilling!

"Pelosi miscalculated in her heavy-handed tactics before the recess.  She attempted to push through her own plan under suspension of the rules, a tactic she decried in 2006, which kept Republicans from offering an alternative.  When it failed, she adjourned Congress, hoping to put off the debate until after the conventions … and her book tour.

"Instead of regrouping, the Democrats found themselves routed by an angry electorate and motivated Republicans.  The House Oil Party kept the issue in the media eye, at least to an extent, but high gas prices kept it on the minds of voters while Democrats took their summer vacation.  It was as poor a political calculation seen in recent years, and the sudden shift in generic Congressional ballots and in party identification has been the result.

"Pelosi and Harry Reid may have finally figured out that they could lose this election on energy policy.  Will this be enough to stanch the bleeding? (My emphasis)

This vote would have never happened without public pressure. We tend to forget that fact. But don't jump for joy just yet.

The next hurdle will be, what kind of energy bill gets passed? Will it be a real energy bill that truly increases drilling opportunities and new energy sources? Or will it be just all show and no go? as a token attempt by Democrat Congressmen and Senators up for reelection to appear sympathetic to energy prices?

But House Republicans called the Democrats' proposals "gimmicks," and instead have insisted on a stand-alone vote on oil drilling.

"Speaker Pelosi's so-called 'energy' bill will do nothing to help our energy crisis," said Rep. Michele Bachmann, Minnesota Republican. "It will multiply red tape and make it almost impossible to lower already skyrocketing oil costs." (My emphasis)

 

Stay tuned! 


Please, comment content should relate to the subject of the post.

Links: 

 

counter hit xanga

Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin,  Vicki Mckenna

 


Comments

contrarian   

While brevity is important, we shouldn't miss why "Drill here, drill now" is a dangerous oversimplification of a complex problem.

In 1970, we imported 24% of our oil.  We currently import 70%. Attempts to build on that meager 30% fail on a statistical truth:  A big increase in a small number is still small.  For example, if we increase our oil production by 20% (a very ambitious number that won't happen soon, if at all), we could get back to 36% domestic oil, a small change.  We can have 5% or more THIS MONTH if we make conservation a priority:  check your tire pressure, tell every governor to enforce existing speed limits, for example.  Likewise, a 1% shift to an alternative source is equal to a 3% offset in domestic production.  Simply stated, the numbers aren't there.

But won't the psychology of drill here, drill now affect the oil markets?  Dream on.  These markets set prices on a month to month rolling basis.  They don't care in new oil is coming in 5 or 10 years.  Also, it is fantasy to believe in free market forces in a near monopoly market.  OPEC can open or close the tap at will (as they did this week).

Why not an "all of the above" approach?  Two problems.  First, drill here drill now pretends that this is a problem of access and political will.  Wrong.  World oil production peaked in 2005, and has fallen in three years.  Tapping every known source will not change the fact that oil is becoming scarce. Americans aren't into change or sacrifice, so we need to find politicians that look us in the eye and say, "things must change."   Second, if we delay on alternatives, we will fail to ramp up fast enough to meet our needs.  The year 2020 problem will not be how much oil can we extract (we know that the amount will be falling) but how much infrastructure in alternatives have we built.

In sum, we must lead the west to a new energy equation.  We should build and export the best technology.  We have frittered away the last 30 years by telling ourselves that this in not a problem.  Reliance on the old technology leaves us too vulnerable.

I will agree with you on two points.  Ethanol doesn't get us there (it does get votes in Iowa and surrounding states, as both party primaries showed us.)  Also, the political weight of the simplistic "drill here, drill now" will force the Democratic congressional leadership to do the wrong thing in order to get over a roadblock to do the right thing.  Some expanded drilling is coming, the more interesting point comes when we see how much support for alternative energy comes out of the rest of this congressional term.

Last note:  I skipped over the 600 lb gorilla of global warming.  Drill here, drill now  is no solution for the long term survival of our planet.  

Kyle's reply: Brevity? Your comment took 492 words!

All of the above also includes some energy sources that Obama mentioned in his convention speech. I would be delighted if we drilled for more natural gas--something both parties say they want. it is available and clean. We need to do everything we can in the US to keep our dollars here. We cannot afford to keep hemmorraging dollars to foreign countries.

I do find it odd that the price of oil speculation has gone down significantly lately because of reduced demand and also a change in mood in the US. But you say drilling and adding more oil to the supply won't help reduce price. 

I won't comment on the rest except to say, we don't agree on much. (I need to go weed my garden now.)

September 11, 2008 10:25 AM

contrarian   

"Brevity" refers to the four word slogan, "Drill here, drill now."  Nice slogan, bad policy.

Kyle's reply: Of course I understood that. I just found it humorous when juxtaposed with the length of your comment. 

September 11, 2008 11:01 AM

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