Via yet another decree (Executive Order 14008), President Biden has ordered government agencies to “permanently protect” at least 30 percent of all US lands and waters by 2030.
This “30 X 30 Plan” appears to presume that any areas not designated as park, refuge, or wilderness are not “protected,” even though the vast majority of federal lands are already effectively off-limits to mining, drilling, timber harvesting, and even grazing, by virtue of policies heavily tilted toward preservation and against any development.
Federal land management agencies include the Defense Department: 9 million acres; National Park Service: 80 million; Fish and Wildlife Service: 89 million; Forest Service: 193 million; and Bureau of Land Management: 244 million acres. That’s 615 million acres, six times California, 28% of the USA.
NPS lands are managed solely for scenic wildlife protection, and recreational purposes. Some FWS lands allow limited farming and energy development.
BLM and FS areas are supposedly “multiple uses,” with some natural resource development allowed, but all are increasingly managed primarily for preservation.
Of this total – 109 million acres – Washington plus Oregon – are already designated “wilderness,” where little more than hiking is permitted. Team Biden thinks that even more should be off-limits.
There is presumably no plan to buy up millions of acres of state and private land in states where the federal government now owns almost no land: such as 0.3 percent federal in Connecticut or 2.4 percent in Delaware.
Instead, it’s likely the order envisions even more restrictive federal control in Alaska and 11 states west of the Dakotas, where the feds own from 29 percent of all land in Montana to 81 percent in Nevada – but effectively control even more acreage, because federal lands surround or affect access to state and private holdings.
Fresh and ocean waters of the United States would likely come under similar new restrictions – managed to protect rare, threatened, and endangered species, or with wildlife used to justify restricting or banning drilling, fracking, mining, farming, and other “undesirable” activities, in or near those species and waters.
Anti-development actions obviously harm local and state economies. But matters get truly interesting when we examine Team Biden’s plans to eradicate the 80 percent of US energy that now comes from fossil fuels and replace it with pseudo-renewable wind, solar, and battery power.
And we don’t even have to ponder the already shaky energy systems and economies, the frequent and prolonged blackouts, the scramble to find adequate electricity in states that are increasingly and inadvisably reliant on wind and solar power.
Even more eye-popping, President Biden wants 80 percent hydrocarbon-free electricity generation by 2030, 100 percent by 2035, and zero fossil fuels anywhere in the US economy by 2050.
But replacing America’s fossil fuel energy with wind and solar electricity would require tens of thousands of offshore wind turbines, millions of somewhat smaller onshore turbines, and/or billions of solar panels – plus thousands of miles of new transmission lines, plus over a billion half-ton backup battery modules for just one week of windless, sunless days.
It could also mean turning entire US forests into wood pellets, to be burned in place of coal and gas to generate “zero-carbon” electricity in Britain and elsewhere – and growing corn, soybean, canola, and other biofuel crops on millions of US acres that are now food crop, fallow, scenic and wildlife habitat lands. (See here, here, and here for details.)
How does this square with plans to have federal overseers “protect” 30 percent of the nation’s lands and waters – while safeguarding bald and golden eagles, falcons, white-nosed bats, lesser prairie chickens, snail darters, and hundreds of other rare, threatened, and endangered species?
How will land managers and courts ensure that critical land, water, wildlife, and scenic issues are fully vetted before they grant permits for massive “clean, green, renewable” energy installations – under the same years-long review process they demand for drilling, fracking, mining, and pipelines?
Obviously, it doesn’t. And they won’t. It’s just another eco con job.
They’ll have to ignore laws, cut corners, and fast-track installation projects. They’ll destroy America’s habitats, wildlife, and scenic vistas to save them … from “catastrophic man-made climate change.”
Liberal Green/Blue cities and states won’t want bird-and-bat-chopping wind turbines or habitat-blanketing solar panels in their backyards or off their shores.
They certainly won’t want battery factories and mega-warehouses anywhere near them – especially considering the fire and explosion hazards they could pose.
They’ll want these facilities installed in western states and other parts of “flyover country.” And they may have the votes, Big Media, Big Tech, and Big Government power to dictate these terms.
That means communities will have to be vigilant – and prepared to file lawsuits and take other actions to ensure that project, programmatic and cumulative environmental impact studies are conducted, that other human health issues (such as light flicker and infrasound from wind turbines) are addressed in detail, and that massive installations are blocked before they wreak havoc.
There are other threats. Europe is already pondering “carbon tariffs” that would slap climate taxes on products imported from countries that don’t honor their Paris climate treaty obligations and continue to burn coal, oil, and natural gas.
Will that include wind turbines, solar panels, electric vehicles, and backup battery modules from China? Will Mr. Biden, Congress and/or Blue State legislators do likewise?
And don’t forget the often toxic trash. Solar panels, EV and backup batteries, and 350-foot wind turbine blades can’t be recycled. In whose backyards do they plan to put the monster landfills to dump the billions of tons of non-renewable trash? At whose expense?
It’s incredible how far they’ve gotten by blaming every heatwave and weather event on fossil fuel use – and insisting that natural climate changes that have blessed and pummeled the planet and people throughout history have suddenly been replaced purely by man-made (and always cataclysmic) climate change.
It’s equally incomprehensible that Team Biden can claim the US and EU can “save the planet” by eradicating fossil fuels – while China, India, and a hundred other countries vastly expand their energy needs to (a) meet their own economic development goals; and (b) conduct the mining, processing, and manufacturing needed to support our governing classes’ wind, solar and battery ambitions.
While the United States significantly reduced its emissions of plant-fertilizing carbon dioxide (the “miracle molecule” that makes life on Earth possible) by replacing coal-fired power with natural gas, Asian and other countries opened hundreds of new coal-fired power plants.
China alone put 38.4 gigawatts (38,400 megawatts)of coal plants into operation in 2020; its annual GHG emissions already exceed those of all developed countries combined. Beijing is also building, planning, or financing more than 300 coal plants in Turkey, Vietnam, Indonesia, Egypt, and other nations.
African countries are planning to build more than1,250 new coal and gas-fired generating units by 2030, many financed by Chinese banks and built by Chinese companies.
Coal still supplies more than 70% of annual electricity consumption in India, the world’s second-largest coal user. India and Russia plan to mine much more coal and build hundreds more new coal-fired generating units in the next few years.
Any American “energy transformation” would simply transfer emissions from the United States to these and other countries.
Worldwide fossil-fuel use and CO2/greenhouse gas emissions would actually increase significantly. Even assuming those emissions are now the primary factor controlling Earth’s climate, there would be no climate benefits even from completely eliminating fossil fuel use in the United States – and attempting to replace that energy with wind, solar, battery, and biofuel power – at enormous economic, environmental, social and human cost.
Yet this is the insane, authoritarian world we now live in. It’s time to end the “woke” cancel culture, debate these issues in every public forum, and restore common sense before the costs soar any higher.
Paul Driessen is a senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power, Black Death, and other books and articles on energy, environment, climate, and human rights issues.
From DDT to Over Population and now Global Warming/Climate Change the whole modern enviromental movement has been a big time Con-Job