May 26, 2013

Libs at 9th Circuit get smack down by SCOTUS

Last year I did an article about some environmental activists who had filed suit to force the EPA to follow their own rules and regulate run-off from the logging industry. In effect, that could even have led to mud puddles being regulated.

The liberal 9th Circuit judges ruled in the environmentalists favor.

The court said that the EPA has been misinterpreting its own rules for 35 years, and that, in fact, forest roads must be regulated in similar fashion to factories and power plants.

The Ninth Circuit decision, if upheld, would crush forestry in the Pacific Northwest. As Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon put it, “One court would shut down forestry on private, state and tribal lands by subjecting it to the same, endless cycle of litigation.”

The case headed to the U.S. Supreme Court and yesterday SCOTUS overturned the lower court’s decision:

In a 7-1 decision, the court reversed a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that said active logging roads need Clean Water Act permits, like those required of factories and feedlots, to better control muddy runoff into stream.

The logging industry is celebrating a major victory today as new regulatory burdens would have added chaos to the industry jeopardizing  jobs and increasing prices.

Hey 9th Circuit: this shows you CAN get smacked-down.

Crossposted at Unified Patriots and Grumpy Opinions

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Kerry may trade Keystone approval for nasty carbon tax

A recent National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) report on the impact of Barbara Boxer and Bernie Sanders’ proposed carbon tax bill, which the White House is playing coy about, is fueling suspicions that Obama may be preparing to back a carbon tax as political cover for approving the Keystone XL pipeline.

This is a bill Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) introduced two days after Obama’s 2013 State of the Union address. Even after driving stakes through Cap and Trade and other such schemes, the idea of a Carbon Tax in some format has never died and Boxer and Sanders have made the “Phoenix arise” again.

The bill would add a $20-per ton tax on carbon polluters which supposedly are driving climate change. Democrats, environmentalists and progressive actors have blamed the droughts, floods, high temperatures and even Hurricane Sandy on “climate change” which we all know has been debunked.

Greg Knox, of Knox Manufacturing in Dayton Ohio had this comment:

“I just think that it’s national suicide,” said Greg Knox, CEO of Franklin-based Knox Machinery. “In talking to my customers, we’re just appalled by the fact the government would choose to consider some of this legislation in light of how many problems we have now in our economy.”

One of the states hardest hit by this would be Ohio. According to the National Association of Manufacturers:

  • Natural gas cost to increase by over 40% in 2013
  • Gasoline prices to increase by over 20 cents per gallon in 2013
  • Electricity rates to increase an average of 13% in 2013
  • 55,000-69,000 jobs impacted in 2013, 99,000-123,000 by 2023
  • Coal loses 43.4-50.3% in economic output, energy-intensive manufacturing loses 2.1%, non-energy-intensive loses 0.6-1% by 2023

Where Obama stands in all this isn’t clear. Senator David Vitter (R-LA) wrote him a letter asking for his stance and apparently Jack Lew, Obama’s former Chief of Staff has said President Obama has no plans to support it, but we know how things change.

Anyone wishing to read the full study by NAM (National Association of Manufacturers) it can be found here. And they issued this salient remark: Click on the link at the left to get a list of states hardest hit, and click that state to get its study.

Any revenue raised by the carbon tax would be far outweighed by the negative impact to the overall economy. A carbon tax would lead to lower real wage rates because companies would have higher costs and lower labor productivity. Over time, workers’ incomes could decline relative to baseline levels by as much as 8.5 percent. The increased costs of coal, natural gas and petroleum products due to a carbon tax would ripple through the economy and result in higher production costs and less spending on non-energy goods.

If this backdoor “Cap and Trade” scheme becomes a reality the states hardest hit would be Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Montana, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

On March 1 the State Dept, which had originally nixed Keystone, came out with a new “study” saying we aren’t so sure it’s a bad thing after all, but all conclusions are premature. 

Rumors on the street are that Obama and Kerry may try a quid pro quo and trade the unions and oil companies the rights to Keystone but get their carbon tax in place to pacify the environmentalists who have gone wild over Keystone.

Let’s hope we get Keystone but not this nasty carbon tax which will destroy more jobs and raise prices for consumers.

Crossposted at Unified Patriots and Grumpy Opinions

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*Big Oil* tosses coal under the bus in favor of profits

We all know one of the few promises Obama kept in his 2008 campaign was he would bankrupt coal. We’ve all heard his words, but they should be ingrained in our minds so here is the video once more:

We all know about all the new regs from the EPA which has caused many coal plants to shut down, three in my area alone. We know about all the new coal plants which were planned years ago but plans have been scrapped because of the cost. We know about all the layoffs in the coal industry. We know the United Mine Workers did not endorse Obama for re-election. We know about all the miners in southeast Ohio who rallied in support of Romney’s pro-coal stance. We know that Murray Coal just threw up their hands and closed a mine in Ohio. We know Mike Bloomberg gave $50 million out of his own pocket to the Sierra Club in an effort to “dump coal.”  This is just the tip of the iceberg.

And we know that Obama and the Dept. of Interior is after not only coal, but natural gas and oil in favor of failed wind and solar energy. We are frustrated because Interior after the Gulf BP spill shut down the majority of drilling in federal offshore areas. We watched Shell Oil struggle to get a permit for drilling in Alaska’s Beaufort Sea and never got started this year because of equipment failure.

We were elated that cap and trade was never passed. But just as ACORN has rebranded itself and is still out there like cockroaches hiding from the daylight, so has cap and trade “rebranded itself” into a proposed “carbon tax.” From Bloomberg:

A carbon tax would force electricity producers, refiners and manufacturers to pay a fee for the greenhouse gases they emit. It is gaining interest as lawmakers and President Barack Obama pledge to simplify the corporate tax code and raise revenue to narrow the deficit. The devastation from superstorm Sandy following the wildfires and drought of this summer have also increased concern about global warming.

And guess who some of the major players are who have signed on to this proposal? None other than RoyalDutchShell, ExxonMobil and BP. And why?

The most obvious reason why big oil and gas companies would support a huge new tax on their own products is that it would kill coal first. Burning coal emits roughly twice as much carbon dioxide as producing the same amount of energy by burning natural gas. A $20 a ton of CO2 tax would roughly double the current price of coal used for producing electricity. That would provide a huge incentive for utilities to switch to natural gas. Exxon Mobil owns the world’s largest privately-owned reserves of natural gas. Shell and BP also own huge gas reserves.

Shell has it’s HQ in the Hague, BP in the UK, but even though Exxon is headquartered in the U.S. most of it’s drilling is done internationally. And it might surprise you who the “leader” is in this international effort to impose a *carbon tax*: none other than Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales:

You can scroll through all the signatories on his site, one other major player is Norway’s StatOil, and of course all the environmentalists.

“The source hit hardest is coal,” David Kreutzer, a research fellow in energy economics at the Heritage Foundation in Washington who opposes the tax, said in an interview. “The biggest substitution for coal is going to be natural gas.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) admits getting a carbon tax through Congress will be difficult, however we all know Obama’s propensity for back-door Executive Orders like amnesty and welfare DE-form.

So just like almost every other corporation, *Big Oil* is favoring “profits” over “principle.”

Crossposted at Unified Patriots and Grumpy Elder

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