A Free-Market Energy Blog

Demand-Side Planning: Utility Rent-Seeking Meets Ecostatism

By Jim Clarkson -- January 29, 2015

Economic conservation of energy consists of voluntary actions and investments that make sense to the decision-maker in a free-market setting. Political conservation is  government-directed energy reduction measures. The later, conservationism, is energy savings for its own sake through monopolistic coercion or special favor (tax beak, crony regulation, or public check).

Demand-Side Management (DSM) programs by electric utilities are a major element of conservationism. Those who support reasonable efficiency and the elimination of waste should let the energy-efficiency politicos have the DSM term and use other words to describe what is favored.

DSM rose to regulatory prominence during the late 1980’s following the disastrous nuclear generation construction programs of the electric utilities. The confidence of the utility industry and its regulators in high-cost building programs shaken, they listened to new other approaches to meet future energy demand.…

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In Defense of Price ‘Gouging’ (lines and shortages are uneconomic, discriminatory)

By Michael Giberson -- January 28, 2015

“Higher prices would discourage over-buying and help ensure that useful consumer goods get distributed to more households, not just the households best able to rush to the store. Consumer sentiment against higher prices during emergencies, by discouraging a price response and encouraging shortages, tends to put the burden of the shortages on those consumers least able to run to the stores in emergencies.”

When consumer demand shoots  up and supplies are limited, either prices must increase or shortages will result. Consumer sentiment leans strongly against such price increases, and sometimes that sentiment is enshrined in anti-price gouging laws. It is this sentiment and such laws that unintentionally put a burden on less-able consumers.

As a heavy winter storm was projected to slam into Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern states earlier this week, a familiar scenario emerged:  state officials urged citizens to stay safe and to report suspected price gouging.…

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Snow & Global Warming in the Big Apple: Knappenberger in 2011

By Chip Knappenberger -- January 27, 2015

[Editor Note: Chip Knappenberger, a leading data-driven climate scientist, kindly consented to let MasterResource reprint his post from January 13, 2011, at this site, Global Warming Means More Big New York City Snowstorms? Not So Fast!, for its relevance to the current winter storm in the Northeast.  He is currently updating his analysis from five years ago.]

New Yorkers are digging out from another major snowfall [this mid-January 2011]. The 10 inches or so they got on Wednesday came less than 3 weeks after some 20 inches fell the day after Christmas.

And, odd as it may seem, some folks are linking big snows and big cold in the Big Apple to anthropogenic global warming.

But, a look back through more than 140 years of weather observations from New York’s Central Park shows little evidence to support such a contention.…

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AWED Energy & Environmental Newsletter: January 26, 2015

By -- January 26, 2015
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Unintended Consequences of the Climate Crusade

By Andrew Montford -- January 23, 2015
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The Costly, False, Futile Climate Crusade

By William Happer -- January 22, 2015
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Highway Taxes vs. Road Expenditure (Diversion) by State

By Randal O'Toole -- January 21, 2015
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Keystone XL and Climate: 0.0001 C/yr (one ten thousandths of a degree Celsius)

By Chip Knappenberger -- January 20, 2015
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Climate Alarmists Turn Back the Clock

By Viv Forbes -- January 19, 2015
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The Stunningly Beautiful Price of Gasoline

By Jeffrey Tucker -- January 15, 2015
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