We The People USA

Citizens Dedicated To Preserving Our Constitutional Republic

EPA WILL COST YOU AND YOUR JOBS AND MONEY

The EPA’s potentially lethal assault on your quality of life, while the EU vastly increases coal importation

New Rules and Old Plants May Strain Summer Energy Supplies
By MATTHEW L. WALD


WASHINGTON — As 58 million people across 13 states sweated through the third day of a heat wave last month, power demand in North America’s largest regional grid jurisdiction hit a record high. And yet there was no shortage, no rolling blackout and no brownout in an area that stretches from Maryland to Chicago.


But that may not be the case in the future as stricter air quality rules are put in place. Eastern utilities satisfied demand that day — July 21 — with hefty output from dozens of 1950s and 1960s coal-burning power plants that dump prodigious amounts of acid gases, soot, mercury and arsenic into the air. Because of new Environmental Protection Agency rules, and some yet to be written, many of those plants are expected to close in coming years.


 No one is sure yet how many or which ones will be shuttered or what the total lost output would be. And there is little agreement over how peak demand will be met in future summers.


The E.P.A. estimates that a rule on air toxins and mercury that it expects to complete in November will result in a loss of 10,000 megawatts — or almost 1 percent of the generating capacity in the United States. Electricity experts, however, say that rule, combined with forthcoming ones on coal ash and cooling water, will have a much greater effect — from 48,000 megawatts to 80,000 megawatts, or 3.5 to 7 percent. (NYT)


Obama’s War on Coal
Killing jobs, causing blackouts
By William Yeatman
Originally published in The New York Post


President Obama claims to see the need to create jobs at this time of endless 9-plus percent unemployment — yet his administration continues to relentlessly destroy jobs for ideological reasons. The best example may be the Obama Environmental Protection Agency’s “war on coal.”


The EPA’s regulatory crusade directly threatens hundreds of thousands of jobs — and “rolling blackouts” that threaten even more.


Start with a proposed regulation under the Clean Air Act that’s set to be finalized in November. The Utility MACT (“Maximum Achievable Control Technology”) rule seeks to cut US power plants’ emissions of mercury from 29 tons a year to just five. Yet EPA itself estimates that cutting even as much as 41 tons out of total emissions of 105 tons “is unlikely to substantially affect total risk.”


For zero benefit, the Utility MACT is one of the most expensive federal regulations ever. In comments submitted to the EPA, Unions for Jobs and the Environment, an alliance of unions representing more than 3.2 million workers, estimated that this needless regulation would jeopardize 251,000 jobs.


Then there’s EPA’s out-of-the-blue ruling last month, ordering Texas to cut emissions of sulfur dioxide by 47 percent. This, when the draft version of the Cross State Air Pollution Rule had exempted the state entirely. The excuse for the change? A supposed need to slightly reduce emissions as monitored 500 miles away in Madison County, Ill. — a locale that meets the EPA air-quality standards in question. (CEI)


U.S. Coal Exports To Europe Treble
Saturday, 13 August 2011 15:45 Ying Diao and Mathew Carr, Bloomberg


U.S. coal exports to the Netherlands jumped to 1.1 million tons from 334,628 tons. Shipments to Germany went to 899,009 tons from 166,314 tons. Trade to the U.K. rose to 852,159 tons from 159,280 tons.


The U.S. may increase coal exports, further boosting supply of the commodity in Europe, Macquarie Group Ltd. (MQG) said.


“A big push” to encourage natural-gas burning in the U.S. may drive up coal exports to Europe, China and India, said Hayden Atkins, an analyst in London at Macquarie’s commodities unit. The closing of Germany’s nuclear plants will increase demand in that nation, Atkins said.


U.S. steam-coal exports to Europe in the first quarter more than tripled from a year earlier to 4.9 million metric tons from 1.5 million tons, according to a report on the website of the U.S. Energy Information Administration. U.S. coal exports are at their highest level since 1992, it said.


Exports to the Netherlands jumped to 1.1 million tons from 334,628 tons. Shipments to Germany went to 899,009 tons from 166,314 tons. Trade to the U.K. rose to 852,159 tons from 159,280 tons. (GWPF)


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MADISON, Wisconsin — President Obama’s climate change crusade is expected to hit the Badger State’s manufacturing base and electricity ratepayers particularly hard.

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Oshkosh, has scheduled a field hearing Friday in Stevens Point to shine a light on the Environmental Protection Agency’s new rules, which could kill segments of the manufacturing sector.

“The Impact of Federal Regulations: A Case Study of Recently Issued Rules,” begins at 1 p.m. in the University of Wisconsin-Steven Point’s Dreyfus University Center, 230 Laird Room, 1015 Reserve St., in Stevens Point.

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AP file photo

REGULATION NATION: U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson conducts a field hearing Friday in Stevens Point on two controversial EPA rules driven by the Obama administration’s climate change crusade.

Among the expected witnesses: Delanie M. Breuer, Wisconsin assistant deputy attorney general; Lucas Vebber, director of environmental & energy policy for Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce; Jim Holte, president of the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation; Henry Schienebeck, executive director of the Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association; Bruce Ramme, vice president-environmental for Wisconsin Energy Corp.; and George Meyer, executive director of the Wisconsin Wildlife Federation.

The hearing will focus on the EPA’s so-called “waters of the United States” rule that could extend federal control over as much as 92 percent of Wisconsin, and the Obama administration’s proposed carbon dioxide limits on existing power plants. The administration’s latest foray in its war on coal has been branded the “Clean Power Plan.”

Earlier this month, Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel joined AG’s from 23 other states in filing a lawsuit against the section of the plan pushing the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions at existing power plants by 32 percent, on average, by 2030.

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The EPA has estimated implementing the Clean Power Plan will spur a wide-ranging $12 billion to $34 billion in health benefits by 2030, generating $20 billion in monetized climate benefits.

Under the rule, Wisconsin would have to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by at least 34 percent — the sixth-highest rate in the nation. The Badger State already has reduced its carbon output by 20 percent, but it’s not clear whether those reductions would be included in the expensively aggressive EPA rule.

In late October, Johnson expressed his disappointment in the EPA’s use of “executive overreach to harm Wisconsin families and businesses by putting at risk our ability to have affordable, dependable and reliable energy.”

“As he promised as a candidate, President Obama’s latest regulatory overreach from the EPA would certainly cause electricity prices to skyrocket in Wisconsin and across the country.  The best estimate right now is that his proposed plan would end up costing Americans $7,000 per person,” the senator said.

Earlier this year, the MacIver Institute conducted a study with The Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University that estimated the EPA plan would cost $920 million in Wisconsin by 2030. Disposable income would drop by nearly $2 billion as a result of significant increases in energy costs. Electricity rates would soar 14 percent, according to another study.

Last month, a federal appeals court stayed implementation of the waters of the United States rule, which would wrest regulatory authority of waterways from the states and turn the power over to the federal government.

Johnson has called the rule an “unconscionable power grab.”

“We can all agree on reasonable regulations that prevent the pollution of Lake Michigan or the rivers of our state, and we should all celebrate the Clean Water Act’s success in reducing pollution in lakes and streams,” the senator said in a statement earlier this month. “That success should not be used as an excuse for the EPA to unilaterally claim control over all land within 1,500 feet of any backyard puddle or former high-water mark.”

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