By Alan
Caruba
On
Saturday, Greens around the world will turn off their lights in a symbolic
“Earth Hour” gesture against climate change, the term they adapted in the face
of the fact that the Earth has been cooling for seventeen years and is on the
cusp of a mini-ice age that will ensure cold weather for many years to
come.
Earth
Hour is a protest against the use of electricity—energy—to light our lives in
countless ways. Anyone who has gone through an outage as I did in the wake of
Hurricane Sandy will tell you that life without electricity is an immediate
return to primitive times. Mine lasted a week and included the loss of access to
the Internet and the ability to use my computer and every other piece of
equipment in the apartment. It was not fun.
We
derive electricity from burning coal, from natural gas, from nuclear fission,
and from hydroelectricity generated by huge dams. The least amount of
electricity we use comes from oil and, in particular from wind and solar, a bare
two percent or so. These latter two sources exist only because of government
subsidies and mandates. Without these they could not compete against far more
affordable and effective sources. Oil, of course, fuels all our vehicles.
What
Americans generally have not absorbed is the fact that the large, multi-million
dollar funded environmental organizations oppose every form of energy we use.
Here is a week’s schedule of events planned to lead up to and follow Earth Hour
in New Jersey by the Sierra Club chapter.
# On
Thursday, March 21, they sponsored a “Fracking Waste Ban Lobby Day” in the state
capital of Trenton.
# On
Saturday they will sponsor an “adventure aquarium trip” devoted to sea turtles
and a lecture on “how our plastic addiction impacts them.” We are no more
“addicted” to plastic than to oil from which it is produced and found in
virtually everything we use. Energy is not the enemy. It is the lifeblood of a
successful economy and society.
# On
Sunday there will be a town hall meeting about “clean energy solutions” in
concert with Climate Mama, 350.org and the Sierra Club with a panel that will
discuss how clean energy, solar and wind, “can dramatically reduce our use of
fossil fuels and move our state forward without the pollution.” It will also
discuss how “climate change has impacted you.” Americans are not going to reduce
the use of fossil fuels, oil, coal, and natural gas. We already enjoy the
cleanest air and, more importantly, the Earth in general and America in
particular has enormous reserves of these energy
reserves.
# On
Wednesday, March 27, another panel will engage in “pipeline education”, ignoring
the fact that America has 170,000 miles of pipelines that transport oil and
natural gas throughout the nation. They are safe and secure, but none carry
ethanol, a chemical that erodes not only pipelines, but damages the engines of
millions of cars and trucks. The pipeline panel will likely take note of the
Keystone XL pipeline from Canada that has been delayed for five years now and
cleared of any charges of environmental harm.
The
Competitive Enterprise Institute suggests that Earth Hour is a good time to
celebrate “Human Achievement Hour”, a way to debunk the global warming hoax and
the nonsense surrounding “climate change”, a process that has gone on for
billions of years on the planet. The notion that people can do anything about
the climate is so absurd it defies the imagination.
Earth
Hour is just one more way for the Greens to continue spreading their lies about
fossil fuels, plastic, and chemicals they want to demonize despite the advances
in health and longevity, the manufacture of products we use, and the
extraordinary lifestyle we enjoy with abundant food and protection against the
multitude of insect and rodent pests that afflict us, along with the many
species of weeds that affect crops.
Not
that long ago, Greens were spreading nonsense about “peak oil”, saying that the
Earth was running out of this energy source, but new reserves of oil are being
found all the time. Between 1945 and 2010, the United States alone produced 167
billion barrels of oil, more than eight times more oil than the amount of proven
oil reserves it had in 1944. Oil doesn’t merely fuel our cars and trucks, but as
fracking techniques have been developed, more and more of it is available.
Between 1980 and 2010, the U.S. produced 77.8 billion barrels of oil and still
had 20.7 billion barrels of oil reserves left.
What
Americans should keep in mind during Earth Hour is that we have a White House
that has done everything in its power to deprive us of the coal, oil and natural
gas that we have at our disposal. It has restricted the exploration and
extraction of billions of barrels of oil from offshore of our east and west
coasts, and in Alaska. It has generated regulations that have already shut down
coal-fired plants and is seeking to impose greater restrictions despite the fact
that we have enough coal to keep them operating for hundreds of years.
With
more than 1.7 trillion barrels of recoverable oil under our soil, we have enough
oil to fuel our present needs for the next 250 years. Delaying the Keystone XL
pipeline has deprived the nation of thousands of jobs and will result in $5
billion being spent annually to import oil. Meanwhile, the Obama administration
has wasted billions on “clean energy investments.”
Americans know their energy bills are
increasing as the result of anti-energy policies, know that the energy sector,
if allowed to flourish, would provide thousands of jobs, and should know that
every drop of oil and cubic foot of natural gas we secure from our own reserves
would reduce the cost to everyone in every way.
Turn on
your lights at 8:30 PM on Saturday. Turn them all on. Send a message to the
White House and to the world that energy is the heartbeat of life and economic
growth for America and the world.
Hating
energy is another form of hating humanity.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
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