Biden’s Inept Climate Policies Driving Soaring Energy Prices

cancel2 2022

Canceled
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If Democrats lose next week’s election, one reason will be soaring energy prices.

The lesson that an electoral defeat should drive home is that this is the result of their policies.

Consider President Biden’s outrage Friday over last week’s robust earnings reports for oil and gas companies. Six of the largest “made $70 billion in profit in one quarter,” he said at a fundraiser. [bold, links added]


These “excess profits are going back to their shareholders and their executives instead of going to lower prices at the pump.” The President who has done everything in his power to limit U.S. oil investment is now furious that he succeeded.

Mr. Biden doesn’t seem to believe oil companies should be allowed to make a profit or even cover marginal costs.

“We need to keep making progress by having energy companies bring down the cost of a gallon of gas to reflect what they pay for a barrel of oil,” he said. Anything more is “excess” profit.

Keep in mind that oil majors’ current profits follow steep losses in the pandemic. As oil prices plunged amid lockdowns, companies and OPEC nations pared investment and shut wells.

Demand for oil then bounced back much quicker than supply, which has driven up prices—and profits. That’s Econ 101.

Mr. Biden is miffed in particular that companies are returning cash to shareholders rather than increasing supply.

“You should be using these record-breaking profits to increase production and refining,” he said this month. But the progressive climate lobby and his Administration’s climate policies have been urging the opposite.

Exxon Mobil lost a board proxy fight in 2021 after large public pension funds and asset managers criticized it for investing too much in oil and generating too little profit.

Exxon and its board need to assess “the possibility that demand for fossil fuels may decline rapidly in the coming decades,” BlackRock said.

The International Energy Agency warned only last week that “no one should imagine that Russia’s invasion can justify a wave of new oil and gas infrastructure in a world that wants to reach net zero [greenhouse-gas] emissions by 2050.”

It added that “any new projects would face major commercial risks” that may result in failing “to recover their upfront cost.”

No wonder oil companies are returning cash to shareholders rather than making investments in production, which takes decades to pay off. U.S. shale drilling can produce returns more quickly.

But rather than drilling more wells, many producers are shrinking their inventory of “drilled but uncompleted” wells.

The Energy Information Administration reported last week that the number of these wells fell to the lowest since December 2013, which means production will eventually taper off even in the prolific Permian Basin.

Permitting challenges impede new drilling, as does limited pipeline capacity to move natural gas produced alongside oil.

Large asset managers are also pressuring oil giants to maintain “capital discipline”—i.e., spend less on production.

Private U.S. oil companies added 47 drilling rigs in the third quarter while public firms added only one.

Climate lobbyists want companies to return profits to shareholders or invest in green energy.

Continental Resources founder Harold Hamm said this month he is taking his company private to have the “freedom to explore.”

“We have all felt the limits of being publicly held over the last few years, and in such a time as this, when the world desperately needs what we produce, I have never been more optimistic,” Mr. Hamm wrote to employees.

Mr. Biden and fellow Democrats simply refuse to understand the economic consequences of their assault on American fossil fuels. They have come to believe that climate is a crisis and that banishing oil and gas is urgent.

But that means higher prices, which they now blame on the very companies they want to go out of business. Economic logic won’t persuade them, but maybe a rout at the ballot box will.


https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/an...rmitting-inflation-midterms-biden-11667155465
 
Yes, Solar And Wind Really Do Increase Electricity Prices -- And For Inherently Physical Reasons
https://www.forbes.com/sites/michae...-inherently-physical-reasons/?sh=b31a9d517e84

The solar surcharge was the biggest reason that the amount the average German household spent on electricity rose to 1,060 euros in 2016 ($1,102), up 50% from 2007. That was an annual compounded increase of 4.6%. Over the same period of time, the U.S. electricity price rose 1.3%, or only 28% of the German electricity price increase.
https://energycentral.com/c/cp/affo... 28% of the German electricity price increase.

Solar, followed by wind, has made German electricity some of the most expensive per KW in the world. California, with their push to Greentard energy is experiencing the exact same thing.

In fact, because solar production is erratic, California is often now, even with their low percentage overall of solar experiencing periods where they have to pay other states to take their excess production.

California has paid as much as $25 per megawatt-hour for other states to take the excess power.

“Negative pricing” typically occurs for relatively short periods of time at midday when solar production is highest. In March, however, the periods of “negative pricing” lasted longer—often for six hours at a time, and once for eight hours. During the summer when electricity demand in California is 50 percent higher than in the winter, less curtailments are needed. But, if solar production continues to grow, curtailments and “negative pricing” are likely to occur more often, unless action is taken to better manage the excess electricity.
https://www.instituteforenergyresea...s $25 per,at a time, and once for eight hours.

How stupid is that? You pay other people to take your electricity because you made too much. That's friggin' retarded!

Of course, the other half the time (more or less) California can't generate enough power to meet demand and gets ass fucked that way too.

Solar and wind are total bullshit and should be abandoned entirely.
 
Oil prices and inflation are a result of Putin's war. He has interrupted the oil and food supply giving the Saudis a chance to gouge. Corporate profits have gone up 58 percent. There are lots of directions to look at.
 
https://www.forbes.com/sites/michae...-inherently-physical-reasons/?sh=b31a9d517e84


https://energycentral.com/c/cp/affo... 28% of the German electricity price increase.

Solar, followed by wind, has made German electricity some of the most expensive per KW in the world. California, with their push to Greentard energy is experiencing the exact same thing.

In fact, because solar production is erratic, California is often now, even with their low percentage overall of solar experiencing periods where they have to pay other states to take their excess production.


https://www.instituteforenergyresea...s $25 per,at a time, and once for eight hours.

How stupid is that? You pay other people to take your electricity because you made too much. That's friggin' retarded!

Of course, the other half the time (more or less) California can't generate enough power to meet demand and gets ass fucked that way too.

Solar and wind are total bullshit and should be abandoned entirely.

They shouldn't be used for grid power but for making green hydrogen instead.
 
Oil prices and inflation are a result of Putin's war. He has interrupted the oil and food supply giving the Saudis a chance to gouge. Corporate profits have gone up 58 percent. There are lots of directions to look at.

Nuttinburger is back and appears to have learnt nothing whilst away. The WSJ tops any opinion you might hold by a country mile, go away.

Mr. Biden and fellow Democrats simply refuse to understand the economic consequences of their assault on American fossil fuels. They have come to believe that climate is a crisis and that banishing oil and gas is urgent.

But that means higher prices, which they now blame on the very companies they want to go out of business. Economic logic won’t persuade them, but maybe a rout at the ballot box will.
 
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They shouldn't be used for grid power but for making green hydrogen instead.

Any use that isn't persistent and consistent is fine. For example, using solar for desalination of seawater is a great application. You make all the fresh water sunlight will let you make.
 
Oil prices and inflation are a result of Putin's war. He has interrupted the oil and food supply giving the Saudis a chance to gouge. Corporate profits have gone up 58 percent. There are lots of directions to look at.

Wrong! Biden has sent the price of oil skyrocketing first by limiting futures on it. That is, if the market believes there will be less in the future, they drive the price up on speculation and we see that now.

For example, I own a 10% mineral right in an potential oil field in Texas next to another producing field that I sold my 10% share in. I am getting offers now that are ten times what they were two years ago to purchase those rights. Since it is private property, Biden doesn't have shit to say about whether it gets drilled or not. That happened since Joke came into office. The mineral rights companies are speculating on the future value of those rights.

As for the Saudis, Joke publicly declared the Saudi royal family terrorists, then he insulted them to their face, then he begged them to produce more oil. They responded by cutting production and all but telling Joke "Fuck you!" in return.

Joke and his Minions of Ignorance have ass raped energy production and in doing so are ass fucking the average American on energy prices. His push for greentard policies is the single most stupid, ignorant, anti-scientific, bullshit, arrogant, economically disastrous thing he's done since coming to office.
 
.
If Democrats lose next week’s election, one reason will be soaring energy prices.

The lesson that an electoral defeat should drive home is that this is the result of their policies.

Consider President Biden’s outrage Friday over last week’s robust earnings reports for oil and gas companies. Six of the largest “made $70 billion in profit in one quarter,” he said at a fundraiser. [bold, links added]


These “excess profits are going back to their shareholders and their executives instead of going to lower prices at the pump.” The President who has done everything in his power to limit U.S. oil investment is now furious that he succeeded.

Mr. Biden doesn’t seem to believe oil companies should be allowed to make a profit or even cover marginal costs.

“We need to keep making progress by having energy companies bring down the cost of a gallon of gas to reflect what they pay for a barrel of oil,” he said. Anything more is “excess” profit.

Keep in mind that oil majors’ current profits follow steep losses in the pandemic. As oil prices plunged amid lockdowns, companies and OPEC nations pared investment and shut wells.

Demand for oil then bounced back much quicker than supply, which has driven up prices—and profits. That’s Econ 101.

Mr. Biden is miffed in particular that companies are returning cash to shareholders rather than increasing supply.

“You should be using these record-breaking profits to increase production and refining,” he said this month. But the progressive climate lobby and his Administration’s climate policies have been urging the opposite.

Exxon Mobil lost a board proxy fight in 2021 after large public pension funds and asset managers criticized it for investing too much in oil and generating too little profit.

Exxon and its board need to assess “the possibility that demand for fossil fuels may decline rapidly in the coming decades,” BlackRock said.

The International Energy Agency warned only last week that “no one should imagine that Russia’s invasion can justify a wave of new oil and gas infrastructure in a world that wants to reach net zero [greenhouse-gas] emissions by 2050.”

It added that “any new projects would face major commercial risks” that may result in failing “to recover their upfront cost.”

No wonder oil companies are returning cash to shareholders rather than making investments in production, which takes decades to pay off. U.S. shale drilling can produce returns more quickly.

But rather than drilling more wells, many producers are shrinking their inventory of “drilled but uncompleted” wells.

The Energy Information Administration reported last week that the number of these wells fell to the lowest since December 2013, which means production will eventually taper off even in the prolific Permian Basin.

Permitting challenges impede new drilling, as does limited pipeline capacity to move natural gas produced alongside oil.

Large asset managers are also pressuring oil giants to maintain “capital discipline”—i.e., spend less on production.

Private U.S. oil companies added 47 drilling rigs in the third quarter while public firms added only one.

Climate lobbyists want companies to return profits to shareholders or invest in green energy.

Continental Resources founder Harold Hamm said this month he is taking his company private to have the “freedom to explore.”

“We have all felt the limits of being publicly held over the last few years, and in such a time as this, when the world desperately needs what we produce, I have never been more optimistic,” Mr. Hamm wrote to employees.

Mr. Biden and fellow Democrats simply refuse to understand the economic consequences of their assault on American fossil fuels. They have come to believe that climate is a crisis and that banishing oil and gas is urgent.

But that means higher prices, which they now blame on the very companies they want to go out of business. Economic logic won’t persuade them, but maybe a rout at the ballot box will.


https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/an...rmitting-inflation-midterms-biden-11667155465
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Oil prices and inflation are a result of Putin's war. He has interrupted the oil and food supply giving the Saudis a chance to gouge. Corporate profits have gone up 58 percent. There are lots of directions to look at.

You fucking idiot. Gasoline prices were up 30% BEFORE RUSSIA INVADED UKRAINE.
 
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