Search Results for: "Trump"
Relevance | DateCommon Sense on Climate Change: It’s Official Federal Policy
By Robert Bradley Jr. -- August 23, 2017 3 Comments“For proponents of fuel-neutral, consumer friendly, pro-taxpayer energy policy, the new administration has done an excellent job of staying focused and not trying to compromise in a game where compromise is really not possible…. The Trump Administration can only help itself by staying on message, not compromising, and playing offense in the climate science debate.”
“Compared to Rio Treaty George H. W. Bush, as well as “America is addicted to oil” George W. Bush, this Republican is following a free market energy course not seen in modern times.”
The climate-alarmist media can only report on the opposition’s effective strategy and messaging. “The nominees for the Department of Energy’s undersecretary positions are singing the same tune with their views on climate change,” reported a recent feature in ClimateWire, a news publication of Energy and Environment News.…
Continue ReadingEnergy & Environmental Newsletter: August 14, 2017
By John Droz, Jr. -- August 14, 2017 2 CommentsThe Alliance for Wise Energy Decisions (AWED) is an informal coalition of individuals and organizations interested in improving national, state, and local energy and environmental policies. Our premise is that technical matters like these should be addressed by using Real Science (please consult WiseEnergy.org for more information).
A key element of AWED’s efforts is public education. Towards that end, every three weeks we put together a newsletter to balance what is found in the mainstream media about energy and the environment. We appreciate MasterResource for their assistance in publishing this information.
Some of the more important articles in this issue are:
Property and Wind Turbines: a Missing Point in the Discussion
Scientific Critique of Wind Project Bird & Bat Study
Military Officials Explain Concerns with Wind Turbines (w good pix)
NC & NYS Dealing with Military-Wind Energy conflicts
Scientists who question solar are silenced
Green Delusions and the Wind Bully
The Climate Alarmists’ Gross Perversion of the Word “Clean”
Climate Models Over-Estimated Warming
Moving the Goalposts in the Climate Change Debate
Climate Science Comes Up Short
The totalitarianism of the environmentalists
“Science” journals stung again
Al Gore’s Climate Sequel Misses a Few Inconvenient Facts
Simplified Explanations of the Falsified Claims of Human Caused Global Warming
NYT guilty of large screw-up on climate-change story
Expose on Bill McKibben (a key energy and environmental player)
Lindzen: On the ‘Death of Skepticism’ Concerning Climate Hysteria
Continue ReadingRFF Goes NRDC (“Social Cost of Carbon” Study Ahead)
By Robert Bradley Jr. -- August 11, 2017 5 Comments“On the climate issue, RFF has become the intellectual arm of the Natural Resource Defense Council (NRDC), just as RFF board member David Hawkins (of NRDC) desires.”
Resources for the Future (RFF) was once a much more scholarly think tank than it is today. It did not assume but evaluated and debated energy economics and related environmental issues.
On climate change, in particular, RFF has gone into the tank of alarmism–and is now a full-fledged foe of the free-market-oriented energy policies underway in the Trump Administration. In fact, RFF has become the intellectual arm of the Natural Resource Defense Council (NRDC), just as RFF board member David Hawkins (of NRDC) desires.
Sad, sad. From its glorious beginning in the 1950s and 1960s–publishing treatises and shorter studies on resource availability–RFF went Malthusian in the 1970s, a story recounted by the late mineral economist Richard Gordon and myself elsewhere.…
Continue ReadingCalifornia Needs a “Spec” Water Market, Not Contrived Markets
By Wayne Lusvardi -- July 25, 2017 1 Comment“The most obvious function that people overlook when criticizing speculators is their ability to head off shortages”
— Andrew Beattie, “Market Speculators: More Help Than Harm,” Investopedia.com
Imagine a recessionary market for housing or land where no one is selling, a periodic event here in California. At such times, a group of speculators is always ready, willing, and able to buy in this thin or virtually nonexistent market.
The situation is similar during water droughts (which occur in four of five years on average), when few if any farmers or cities want to sell water at wholesale.
Nonetheless, economist Matthew Fienup of California Lutheran University proclaims that the first so-called groundwater “market” has been established in the agricultural groundwater basin of the Oxnard Plain in Ventura County (“How California Got Its First Groundwater Market,” Water Deeply, June 27, 2017).…
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