Since the beginning of the Ukraine war and the sanctions it triggered, energy prices have skyrocketed.
Liz Truss has warned that soaring energy bills are a ‘price worth paying’ in order to stand up against Vladimir Putin. President Joe Biden has called this year’s rocketing bills ‘Putin’s price hike.’ [bold, links added]
Margrethe Vestager, vice president of the European Commission, has encouraged Europeans to take short, cold showers to conserve energy. ‘When you turn off the water, say ‘Take that, Putin!’’ she urged.
But are the high prices really Putin’s fault? He didn’t sanction himself, after all. It’s the West that chose to cut itself off from the Russian fossil fuels upon which it had come to rely.
Moreover, the sanctions haven’t been an unqualified success — Russia’s corporate profits leaped 25 percent between the imposition of the sanctions and the end of August.
So what are the origins of the current energy crisis? When did it really begin?
Let’s play a game. Guess which year these headlines are from: ‘Curtailed ammonia production in Antwerp and Ludwigshafen.’ ‘High natural gas prices lead to a shutdown of British fertilizer plants.’ ‘Diesel Shortage Amid Soaring Prices: Truck Stops Resort To Rationing.’ If you guessed 2022, you’d be wrong. Those are all from September 2021.
The truth is that the energy crisis began to take effect late last year. A combination of post-Covid demand rebound, a wind drought in Europe, and depleted fossil fuel storage on the continent all collided to put serious pressure on the world’s industrial systems.
Add the longstanding over-investment in unreliable renewables, nuclear plant closures across the world in the wake of the Fukushima disaster, and a global drop of more than 50 percent in oil and gas investment — from $700 billion (£635 billion) to $300 billion (£270 billion) — between 2014 and last year, and you have everything you need to kick off a global energy crunch.
Russian tank treads running from the Donbas to Kyiv just made it all worse.
When politicians point the finger at Putin, they’re deflecting from their own failures. It’s hard to blame them, especially if they’re European.
Aluminum smelters in the EU have had to shutter operations, as have fertilizer plants, glass factories, and various other manufacturers.
Germany, the continent’s largest economy, is about to lose much of its manufacturing base to high energy prices. Industry and union leaders have been sounding the alarm for months, warning that Germany’s manufacturing sector could collapse without sufficient energy.
And it’s not even clear Germany’s better-than-expected storage numbers are enough to get them through the winter without any flows from Russia.
Meanwhile, in the UK, the number of people behind on their utility bills mushroomed from three million to nearly 11 million between March and August.
Eleven percent of the British population — nearly six million people — are already forgoing food to pay their energy bills. Would you want to be on the hook for any of this? It’s way easier to blame the evil Russian guy.
Don’t be fooled into thinking America is immune from the crisis. Sure, the US has incredible domestic resources, but the country is also moving in the European direction.
Over the last few years, America has shut down nuclear plants before their time, including Palisades in Michigan and Indian Point in New York. The fossil-fuel industry isn’t interested in risking capital on expansion when the Democrats continue to saber-rattle about destroying it.
Not since Truman has a president leased so few federal lands to the oil and gas sector. To make matters worse, most of the new capacity being added to the grid is intermittent and unreliable wind and solar.
The result of all this? America’s energy and electricity sectors look anemic, fragile, and expensive. Over the summer, the National Energy Assistance Directors Association reported that about 20 million households in the United States — one out of six homes — are behind on their utility bills.
Some parts of the country have seen electricity prices increase by 233 percent since last year.
The North American Electricity Reliability Corporation has warned that a huge swath of the country is becoming increasingly vulnerable to blackouts.
In August, a heatwave pushed the Texas grid to new demand limits for a week straight. The next month, the California grid operator had to beg consumers to consume less juice to avoid rolling blackouts.
And don’t forget New England. Despite its proximity to the Marcellus Shale Formation in the mid-Atlantic states, the region lacks the pipeline infrastructure to import natural gas from it.
The Jones Act, which bars foreign-owned vessels from delivering goods between US ports, has also hamstrung the region.
New England’s liquefied natural gas, or LNG, import terminals cannot receive from the Gulf of Mexico’s LNG export terminals because while the United States produces the most LNG in the world, it does not make LNG tankers.
So New Englanders will have to compete with Europe and Asia for pricey LNG to light and heat their homes this winter. That’ll be painful: natural gas is 53 percent of the New England grid’s resource mix.
But America doesn’t have to follow in Europe’s footsteps. Rather than doubling down on the ‘energy transition,’ America should desensitize itself to the sobering truths of external events and commit to energy realism.
After all, energy is indispensable to maintaining the economy. So, what would a more realistic energy policy look like?
First, we need more hydrocarbons. Fossil fuels are the master resource, like it or not. Everything that could possibly move us away from fossil fuels, in the long run, will need cheap fossil fuels for their construction in the near and medium term: from nuclear power plants to battery storage.
We need to cut the red tape on permitting to fast-track more pipeline construction. We should also eliminate all carbon taxes, which increase our energy costs. And we must lease more federal land to the fossil-fuel industry.
Eliminating the Renewable Fuel Standard, which has turned into an expensive financial boondoggle the burden of which companies pass onto consumers, wouldn’t hurt either.
Second, we need to liberate the atom. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has adopted safety standards so extreme that no design offered since its inception in the mid-seventies has ever been completed.
Its chosen radiation safety standard — ‘As Low As Reasonably Achievable’ — relies on an incoherent measurement of radiation dosage and creates too much opportunity for regulatory activism.
And the NRC’s approval process takes too long. The agency needs to be reworked so that its standards are fewer and clearer and its approval processes faster and cheaper.
Third, we need to harden our grid. Wind and solar, when built in large amounts, have a free ride on reliable power plants that can be called on at will to ensure the grid keeps running.
They also tend to stop producing power when they’re needed most. According to the Energy Information Administration, when California was on the brink of blackouts, solar and wind production plummeted.
Natural gas stepped in to save the day, making up more than 50 percent of the resource mix after sundown. The fastest way to curb their growth and spare the grid more entropy would be to eliminate all production tax credits for wind and solar in perpetuity.
That removes the incentive for overbuilding and spares electricity markets the subsidised negative prices that push reliable power plants off the grid.
Of course, embarking on this plan will mean taking on the environmental establishment, which views anything outside of renewable energy as an existential threat to mankind. But the choice should be obvious: one road leads toward liberty and abundance, another leads toward tyranny and austerity.
Read rest at Spectator AU
Emmet, this is a brilliant article. I’m going to sent a copy to Australia’s energy minister, Chris Bowen.
Here are two dates you should remember. June 24, 1812 and June 22, 1941. Napoleon and Hitler invading Russia. Also the estimate is 27 million, repeat million Russian deaths in WW11.
Both France and Germany are pushing their virtuous sanctions over a Russian Ukraine fight that’s gone on for close to two centuries.
The Russians have a long memory – 27 million of them.
I vote for “liberty & abundance,” with resources properly managed & reasonably regulated!