Today, 12/7, is the deadline you gave natural gas CEOs to respond to your letter blaming them for rising natural gas prices—which you are in fact to blame for.
Here’s how proud gas CEOs would answer you if they were not afraid of your political wrath.
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Dear Senator Warren,
In your letter you claim “concern about rising natural gas prices,” which you attribute to my and other “energy companies’ corporate greed.”
But if you want to avoid unnecessarily high gas prices, you must recognize that they are your fault, not ours.
There are three basic facts that explain unnecessarily high natural gas prices: 1. Prices are determined by supply and demand, not “greed.” 2. America has an effectively unlimited supply of gas. 3. You and other anti-gas politicians have artificially restricted the supply of gas.
Fact 1: Prices are determined by supply and demand, not “greed.”
If we could control natural gas prices in our favor, why didn’t we do so during unprofitable 2015-20?
Our profits are determined by a) the market price for our product and b) our efficiency.
When prices go up, it is crucial that companies can profit for two reasons. 1. We *earned* our profit through efficiency.
2: Profits motivate and make possible investment, which lowers long-term prices.
Your railing against our profits is unjust and shortsighted.
Fact 2: America has an effectively unlimited supply of gas
Thanks to the shale revolution, aka “fracking,” which you have tried to ban, the US has enough natural gas to supply us and other nations for decades just with current technology—and for centuries with future technology.
The only thing that can stop our industry from producing low-cost natural gas for America and the world—including the billions of poor people whose lives we improve—is politicians who coercively restrict our otherwise limitless ability to produce low-cost natural gas.
Fact 3: You and other anti-gas politicians have artificially restricted the supply of gas
When you and other anti-gas politicians place draconian restrictions on natural gas production and transport, and threaten to do far worse, supply goes down and prices go up.
The number one bottleneck to lower gas prices is a lack of pipelines and export facilities to transport natural gas from where it is drilled to markets throughout the US and around the world. You have contributed to this problem by avidly opposing pipelines and export facilities.
Another major cause of unnecessarily high gas prices is a lack of investment in natural gas, caused by political threats to the future of natural gas. No one has threatened the future of natural gas more than you. You have even talked about imprisoning executives of our industry!
The worst imaginable thing that could happen for natural gas prices is to ban fracking--which is a crucial technology for almost 80% of American natural gas. Yet you have advocated a policy of “ban fracking—everywhere.” Do you now see what a catastrophe this would be?
Senator Warren, I am deeply disappointed that rather than doing the right thing and addressing your role in unnecessarily high natural gas prices, you are instead denying it and advocating a policy that will make things far worse: further restricting natural gas transport.
I must also add that your call to prevent the export of natural gas during a global energy crisis is particularly harmful. The American natural gas industry is, for millions of poor people around the world, their greatest hope to be able to heat their homes this winter.
Senator Warren, you owe the American public and our industry an apology for 1) your numerous actions to drive up the price of natural gas, 2) your denial of responsibility, and 3) your unjust attack on an industry that sustains billions of lives.
Sincerely,
A Proud Gas Producer
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The "Build Back Better" legislation you are considering will be an unmitigated disaster for the West Virginia energy industry and economy.
No handful of compromises will change this.
Any vote other than no will do irreparable damage to your state.
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As an energy expert and concerned citizen, I am writing you because I believe you are our greatest hope of stopping the worst energy legislation in US history, which will especially harm your state of West Virginia: the “Build Back Better” reconciliation bill.
According to press reports and insiders, you are in active negotiations to change or remove several provisions of BBB that you are concerned will be particularly harmful to West Virginia. But no compromise is possible, because BBB is through-and-through destructive to your state.
Anti-fossil fuel politicians are in a bind: they want the *prestige* that comes with their decades of opposing the production/transport of fossil fuels, but they do not want the *results*: voters angry about rising rising fuel prices.
Do not forget their track record.
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Joe Biden, who now claims to be concerned about fossil fuel shortages and rising prices, in 2019 said: "I guarantee you. I guarantee you. We’re going to end fossil fuel.“
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, who now claims to be concerned about fossil fuel shortages and rising prices, in 2016 said in 2016: We ought to be doing everything we possible can to keep fossil fuel energy in the ground.”
I highly recommend the latest article by @DoombergT, which does an excellent job debunking "RethinkX"--one of the leading crackpot "plans" to replace fossil fuels with solar, wind, and batteries.
One great point in @Doomberg's debunking of "RethinkX" that applies to all solar fantasies is: "it is based on a fatally flawed assumption about why solar capital costs *had* been decreasing over much of the past decade (as we’ll see shortly, solar costs are going up in 2021"
China "leveraged cheap labor, had minimal environmental restrictions ...blatantly stole intellectual property...poured tens of billions of illegal subsides into the industry...used ready access to cheap coal None of this has anything to do with S-curves and innovation" @DoombergT
@Starbucks, an advocate of disastrous “net zero” and "100% renewable" policies, positions itself as proof that these policies can work.
In fact, Starbucks’ stores, supply chain, and rapid expansion in China are mostly powered by fossil fuels.🧵
Starbucks is a major supporter of “net zero” and “100% renewable” policies. They are a founding member of the “Transform to Net Zero Initiative,” which pushes businesses and government to rapidly eliminate the fossil fuels that today provide 80% of the world’s energy.
To help justify its support of “net zero” and “100% renewable,” Starbucks portrays itself as well on its way toward these goals, with stores that are already powered by solar and wind energy.
I had experience today that I believe showcases how universities can and should foster the open discussion of ideas.
I spoke to Prof @RogerPielkeJr’s “Energy, Policy and Society” class about the future of fossil fuels.
Here are 4 things that impressed me about Roger’s class.
🧵
1. Expressing strong challenges and disagreements with politeness.
I was impressed by the fact that whatever the level of a given student’s (or Roger’s) apparent agreement or disagreement with me, they expressed themselves with politeness and nothing resembling personal attacks.
2. Understanding someone’s views before challenging them.
I was impressed by the several students who challenged me *based on an accurate portrayal of my views*.
This is in wonderful contrast to the “straw-manning” of controversial views that often occurs on campuses.
We are in the middle of a mass-propaganda campaign to deny the obvious fact that Joe Biden and other anti-oil politicians have unnecessarily driven up oil and gasoline prices by reducing the *supply* of oil through massive restrictions on oil production and transport.
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President Biden and other anti-oil politicians around the world are in a bind: they want the *prestige* that comes with their decades of restricting the production and transport of oil, but they do not want the *results*: voters angry about rising oil and gasoline prices.
Since November 2020, crude oil spot prices have doubled--rising from about $40/barrel to over $80/barrel and the avg price for regular gasoline has risen from $2.10/gallon to $3.30/gallon. These skyrocketing prices are contributing to low Presidential approval ratings.