The EPA thinks cow flatulence is a serious problem |
The Obama administration’s attack on
America’s energy sector is insane. They might as well tell us what to eat. Oh,
wait, Michelle Obama is doing that. Or that the Islamic State is not Islamic.
Oh, wait, Barack Obama said that.
Or that the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is about protecting the environment. It used to be decades ago, but
not these days.
There was a time when the EPA was
devoted to cleaning up the nation’s air and water. It did a very good job and we
now all breathe cleaner air and have cleaner water. At some point, though, it
went from a science-based government agency to one for which science is whatever
they say it is and its agenda is the single minded reduction of all sources of
energy, coal, oil and natural gas, by telling huge lies, citing junk science,
and generating a
torrent of regulation.
Americans have been so blitzed with
global warming and climate change propaganda for so long one can understand why
many just assume that these pose a hazard even though there hasn’t been any
warming for 19 years and climate change is something that has been going on for
4.5 billion years. When the EPA says that it’s protecting everyone’s health, one
can understand why that is an assumption many automatically
accept.
The problem is that the so-called
“science” behind virtually all of the EPA pronouncements and regulations cannot
even be accessed by the public that paid for it. The problem is so bad that, in
November 2014, Rep. David Schweikert (R-AZ) introduced a bill, HR 4012, the
Secret Science Reform Act, to address it. It would force the EPA to disclose all
scientific and technical information before proposing or finalizing any
regulation.
As often as not, those conducting
taxpayer funded science studies refuse to release the raw data they obtained and
the methods they used to interpret it. Moreover, agency “science” isn’t always
about empirical data collection, but as Ron Arnold of the Center for the Defense
of Free Enterprise, noted in 2013, it is “a ‘literature search’ with researchers
in a library selecting papers and reports by others that merely summarize
results and give opinions of the actual scientists. These agency researchers
never even see the underlying data, much less collect it in the
field.”
The syndicated columnist, Larry
Bell, recently noted that “Such misleading and downright deceptive practices
openly violate the Information Quality Act, Executive Order 12688, and related
Office of Management and Budget guidelines requiring that regulatory agencies
provide for full, independent, peer review of all ‘influential scientific
information.’” It isn’t that there are laws to protect us from the use of junk
science. It’s more like they are not enforced.
These days the EPA is on a tear to
regulate mercury and methane. It claims that its mercury air and toxics rule
would produce $53 billion to $140 billion in annual health and environmental
benefits. That is so absurd it defies the imagination. It is based on the EPA’s
estimated benefits from reducing particulates that are—wait for it—already
covered by existing regulations!
Regarding the methane reduction
crusade the EPA has launched, Thomas Pyle, president of the Institute for Energy
Research, says “EPA’s methane regulation is redundant, costly, and
unnecessary. Energy producers are already reducing methane emissions because
methane is a valuable commodity. It would be like issuing regulations forcing ice
cream makers to spill less ice cream.”
“The Obama administration’s latest
attack on American energy,” said Pyle, “reaffirms that their agenda is not about
the climate at all—it’s about driving up the cost of producing and using natural
gas, oil, and coal in America. The proof is the EPA’s own research on methane
which shows that this rule will have no discernible impact on the
climate.”
S. Fred Singer, founder and Director
of the Science and Environmental Policy Project as well as a Senior Fellow with
The Heartland Institute says “Contrary
to radical environmentalists’ claims, methane is NOT an important greenhouse
gas; it has a totally negligible impact on climate. Attempts to control methane
emissions make little sense. A Heartland colleague, Research Fellow H. Sterling
Burnett, says “Obama is again avoiding Congress, relying on regulations to
effectively create new laws he couldn’t legally
pass.”
As Larry Bell noted, even by the EPA’s
own calculations and estimates, the methane emissions limits, along with other
limits on so called greenhouse gases “will prevent less than two-hundredths of a
degree Celsius of warming by the end of this
century.”
That’s a high price to pay for the
loss of countless plants that generate the electricity on which the entire
nation depends for its existence. That is where the EPA is taking
us.
Nothing the government does can have
any effect on the climate. You don’t need a PhD in meteorology or climatology to
know that.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment