> (a) The term “energy” or “energy resources” means crude oil, natural gas, lease condensates, natural gas liquids, refined petroleum products, uranium, coal, biofuels, geothermal heat, the kinetic movement of flowing water, and critical minerals, as defined by 30 U.S.C. 1606 (a)(3).
They hide the fun stuff at the bottom. Solar and wind don't count!
They've been falsely portraying their anti-renewbales moves as just a fair-minded desire to use "all of the above" for years but now the attempt to hold back cheaper, cleaner energy of the future is entering a desperate new phase.
i'm not an expert of energy, need some time to validate this
> The harsh reality is that natural gas plants, even relatively modern ones, are proving to have the worst failure rate when faced with extreme weather compared with other generation methods. During the massive Arctic Blast, gas units accounted for 63% of the failures while representing just 44% of the total installed capacity.
> But, as is usually the case, the biggest challenge remains funding: a Wood Mackenzie analysis has estimated it would cost a staggering *$4.5 trillion* for the U.S. to fully decarbonize, including constructing and operating new generation facilities
I was curious what's the production emergency. In practice https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/us-energy-facts/ US has been producing ~10% more energy than it was using. They had more production for years now.
Meanwhile the winter issues came from companies not maintaining their equipment, which was advised years ago to do, with a warning about power outages.
It comes out of think tanks like the Heritage Foundation.
But yeah, they get funding from Exxon-Mobil and the like, and their executives/lobbyists definitely helped craft the executive order. It gets shipped across the street to the White House, and they put it in place, possibly without even reading it.
(Actually, not across the street. Heritage Foundation is about a mile down Pennsylvania Avenue, about a half block from the Capitol. It's right next door to an amazing pizza place called "We the Pizza". Definitely stop in.)
As a warning to US citizens: this is similar to how state energy production and regulation was captured in my country, leading to massive corruption. A crisis was whipped up, and emergency powers were given to key individuals in the energy supply chain. These emergency powers were used to enrich certain companies and politicians, and exacerbate the energy shortage to perpetuate the need for emergency powers. We are still recovering from this, near a decade after the scandal was uncovered. Watch how this declaration of emergency will be used to enrich certain parties in the US, and possibly abroad (despite the emphasis on domestic energy).
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 56.8 ms ] threadWouldn't want to accidentally make it easier to greenlight a renewable energy project. Might risk saving the environment by mistake.
They hide the fun stuff at the bottom. Solar and wind don't count!
i'm not an expert of energy, need some time to validate this
> The harsh reality is that natural gas plants, even relatively modern ones, are proving to have the worst failure rate when faced with extreme weather compared with other generation methods. During the massive Arctic Blast, gas units accounted for 63% of the failures while representing just 44% of the total installed capacity.
> But, as is usually the case, the biggest challenge remains funding: a Wood Mackenzie analysis has estimated it would cost a staggering *$4.5 trillion* for the U.S. to fully decarbonize, including constructing and operating new generation facilities
Here's some data that shows that's not the case:
https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/14849552/
https://images.app.goo.gl/e5X6ZCyznCZWbYEV7
Meanwhile the winter issues came from companies not maintaining their equipment, which was advised years ago to do, with a warning about power outages.
So "emergency".
I would estimate it's whoever can expect to gain the most financially from this type action.
But yeah, they get funding from Exxon-Mobil and the like, and their executives/lobbyists definitely helped craft the executive order. It gets shipped across the street to the White House, and they put it in place, possibly without even reading it.
(Actually, not across the street. Heritage Foundation is about a mile down Pennsylvania Avenue, about a half block from the Capitol. It's right next door to an amazing pizza place called "We the Pizza". Definitely stop in.)
I admit I was 100% wrong.
It just looked like a document to me, but I was always a paperwork guy and I'm way out-of-date.
You're right, it is just a web page from some bogus charlatan on the internet.
Maybe repealing the Jones Act to allow shipment of cheaper domestic LNG to New England would be helpful