The Energy Factor

Barney Quick

Barney Quick writes for various magazines and website, plays jazz guitar in various configurations, and teaches jazz history and rock and roll history at Indiana University. He blogs at Late in the Day and writes longer essays at Precipice, his Substack newsletter.

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12 Responses

  1. pillsy says:

    A Democrat need not sign on to the Green New Deal to make plain his or her basic concurrence with the underlying belief of the preponderance of his or her fellows – namely, that the planet is undergoing a climate crisis that requires an abrupt abandonment of the fuels that have catalyzed human advancement over the last 150 years.

    Well, um, yeah, that’s because this appears to be actually true.Report

  2. Philip H says:

    Interesting first piece. Welcome aboard.

    A few counter thoughts:

    1) On a good day, Biden and most of the Democratic Party politicians at the federal level are classic centerists, and the economic and energy policies they pursue (based on enacted legislation) are center to center right, in that they still prize corporate welfare and outcomes over labor. I am deeply thankful that the Progressive wing has gained traction, and continues to grow, but it is nowhere near in control yet.

    2) The fact that we as a nation still talk about energy independence in regards to oil imports is a significant part of why we aren’t yet there. The Keystone XL pipeline is a prime example – increasing oil shale pumping capacity in the US doesn’t make us independent because we are still pumping that crude into the US from Canada. We would be a lot closer to actual energy independence if we were more invested in solar, wind and hydro as energy generation methods, and we could bridge the gap with small scale nuclear. Requiring us to pump all the crude oil we consume (while trying to drive ever higher consumption of petroleum products) will never make us energy independent.

    3. Most Americans don’t see climate change as a crisis and aren’t savvy enough about how the energy sector of the economy actually works to connect oil prices to global warming. They just know that gas pump prices are going up, they hear narratives in the media (even the allegedly left leaning MSM) that connect that increase to Biden’s policies, and they secretly think they are one good decision away from joining the oil CEO’s as millionaires. So when oil companies price gouge in the name of short term profits – as their recent round of earnings calls quotes seems to indicate they are, it flies right by people primed by those same companies to ignore that news factoid. so Senator Schumer is, albeit ham handedly, trying to refocus them. It doesn’t take any focus off the global climate crisis however.

    4. It would be great to see Putin sanctioned heavily in the energy sector, but the banking sanctions in place may well achieve the same effect as the banks are needed to transact oil sales. Plus a lot of folks not named the USA buy his oil, and so American sanctions would be of little use.Report

    • Michael Cain in reply to Philip H says:

      It would be great to see Putin sanctioned heavily in the energy sector…

      That’s a decision that Biden is wisely leaving to the Europeans. Also, the banks that have been sanctioned seem to have been carefully chosen so that Gazprom is still getting paid promptly for the delivered natural gas. Cutting off Russia would be an inconvenience for us. In Western Europe the only question is how big a disaster it would be. Worst case, Germany’s chemical industry shuts down, with all the knock-on effects from that (eg, no ammonia-based fertilizer for the farmers in the spring, no plastics, etc).Report

      • Oscar Gordon in reply to Michael Cain says:

        Yeah, Europe has to be hating the position they’ve allowed themselves to get into.Report

      • Elliot Small in reply to Michael Cain says:

        They’ve already turned the greenhouses dark. Gas has been so high that industries that produce food are shutting down.

        Famine is inevitable, in the usual places, now that the Ukraine is almost guaranteed a poor harvest. Bets on another Arab Spring?

        Biden gets to blame Putin for our lack of fertilizer-at-reasonable prices. It was four times last year before Putin took one step into the Ukraine.

        Get your food locked in now, it’s gonna cost a lot more later. Maybe buy a freezer.Report

        • Chip Daniels in reply to Elliot Small says:

          Todays installment of “Respectable Republican, or crazed internet rando?”

          Meat in the freezer.
          Baby in the cradle.
          Gun at the ready.
          Bitcoin in cold storage.

          They hate this.

          Get your answer in now!Report

        • Dark Matter in reply to Elliot Small says:

          Famine in the US? We produce so much food that we toss half in the garbage and that’s not even including the farmers we’re paying to not grow.

          Individual foods will increase in price and our overall mix will change. This happens every year because of fashion and the weather.Report

      • James K in reply to Michael Cain says:

        It shows that relying on petroleum as heavily as we do is not just an environmental risk, its a geopolitical one. Now of course some thing are easier to electrify than others (you can’t electrify the Haber process, and some industrial process heating is very inefficient with electric heating), but domestic heating is low-hanging fruit, and I understand there’s a lot of domestic gas heating in Germany.Report

        • Michael Cain in reply to James K says:

          Haber, and lots of other things, depend on millions of tons of hydrogen produced by steam-reforming methane. Plus process heat, as you say. ~10% of the electricity supply in total from Russian gas, more or less than that depending on the country. Turning off the gas spigot would be very painful for Europe.Report

  3. Brent F says:

    As an Albertan who is annoyed with you about the approval and then cancelling of Keystone let me make this painfully clear.

    Keystone has zero to do with American or North American energy independence. Its a bad faith talking point. At best, it aids North American oil exports, which is an entirely different concept. Keystone XL is a inland to Gulf Coast refineries and export ports project, its not intended to fuel America’s need for oil because there’s plenty of that already. Its mainly meant to provide to the Asian market. Increasing Canadian or American oil production is not a big priority for “energy independence” because North America is already a self-sufficient market in hydrocarbon energy.

    The oil pipeline fuckery that may be a North American problem is what Michigan is doing on the Great Lakes.

    Also, Europe doesn’t face much fundamental difficulty in doing without Russian oil exports, its sold on a global market and they can import it from elsewhere just fine. Nat gas is the finicky bit.

    The other thing is that running totally roughshod over native objections to projects is a bad practice that will bite you in the butt going forward. They live out in remote areas and can do a heck of a lot of blockage if you keep pissing them off and they’re learning to use this leverage.Report

    • Michael Cain in reply to Brent F says:

      TransCanada could have built the XL inside the right-of-way for the existing Keystone pipeline and been up and running without any problems. But they wanted to “cut the corner” and build across tribal lands and the Nebraska Sandhills, for which Nebraskans have a peculiar attachment (I visited the Sandhills enough when I lived there to understand why).Report

    • Philip H in reply to Brent F says:

      Keystone has zero to do with American or North American energy independence. Its a bad faith talking point. At best, it aids North American oil exports, which is an entirely different concept. Keystone XL is a inland to Gulf Coast refineries and export ports project, its not intended to fuel America’s need for oil because there’s plenty of that already.

      I’ve been saying this for a LONG time . . . .Report