WSJ Editorial: High School Physics

Monday September 19, 2011

That's how Al Gore described the science of climate change this week, by which we suppose he meant it's elementary and unchallengeable. Well, Mr. Vice President, meet Ivar Giaever, a 1973 physics Nobel Laureate who resigned last week from the American Physical Society in protest over the group's insistence that evidence of man-made global warming is "incontrovertible."

In an email to the society, Mr. Giaever-who works at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute-wrote that "The claim (how can you measure the average temperature of the whole earth for a whole year?) is that the temperature has changed from ~288.0 to ~288.8 degree Kelvin in about 150 years, which (if true) means to me . . . that the temperature has been amazingly stable, and both human health and happiness have definitely improved in this 'warming' period."

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate gave final congressional approval Thursday to a stopgap measure on aviation and highway programs after Sen. Jim Inhofe helped broker a deal involving fellow Oklahoma Republican Tom Coburn.

Approved by a 92-6 vote, the bill now headed for President Barack Obama's signature averts another partial shutdown for Federal Aviation Administration workers.

The FAA faces that deadline on Friday.

"Righteousness prevailed,'' Inhofe said after voting for passage. "This extension will ensure that no FAA workers will be furloughed tomorrow in Oklahoma or anywhere in the nation.''

Inhofe, the state's senior senator and a top player on transportation issues in Congress, announced the deal allowing the vote on the bill but shared credit with Coburn.

"This is a team effort between Coburn and myself, and it was successful,'' he said.

Inhofe said the agreement covers an opt-out provision to be inserted into the next transportation bill allowing states to avoid spending federal dollars on so-called enhancement projects such as bike paths. Instead, he said, states could use that money on environmental mitigation.

Coburn had targeted the spending on enhancement projects and was threatening to hold up the bill, which already had been passed by the House.

The global warming theory left him out in the cold. Dr. Ivar Giaever, a former professor with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the 1973 winner of the Nobel Prize in physics, abruptly announced his resignation Tuesday, Sept. 13, from the premier physics society in disgust over its officially stated policy that "global warming is occurring." The official position of the American Physical Society (APS) supports the theory that man's actions have inexorably led to the warming of the planet, through increased emissions of carbon dioxide. Giaever does not agree -- and put it bluntly and succinctly in the subject line of his email, reprinted at Climate Depot, a website devoted to debunking the theory of man-made climate change.
A $38.6 billion loan guarantee program that the Obama administration promised would create or save 65,000 jobs has created just a few thousand jobs two years after it began, government records show. The program — designed to jump-start the nation’s clean technology industry by giving energy companies access to low-cost, government-backed loans — has directly created 3,545 new, permanent jobs after giving out almost half the allocated amount, according to Energy Department tallies. President Obama has made “green jobs” a showcase of his recovery plan, vowing to foster new jobs, new technologies and more competitive American industries. But the loan guarantee program came under scrutiny Wednesday from Republicans and Democrats at a House oversight committee hearing about the collapse of Solyndra, a solar-panel maker whose closure could leave taxpayers on the hook for as much as $527 million. The GOP lawmakers accused the administration of rushing approval of a guarantee of the firm’s project and failing to adequately vet it. “My goodness. We should be reviewing every one of these loan guarantee” projects, said Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.).
(Reuters) - The Environmental Protection Agency will miss an end-of-month target for proposing greenhouse gas regulations for power plants, the head of the EPA said on Wednesday.

The administration of President Barack Obama is under pressure from business to cut environmental regulation that critics say is hurting the economy, and last week Obama backtracked on smog plans.

The EPA is working on plans to limit greenhouse gases from power plants and oil refineries, and it had been targeting releasing some utility-focused proposals on September 30.

"Greenhouse gases for power plants is first on the docket," EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said on the sidelines of an event in San Francisco. "Although we are not going to make the date at the end of the month, we are still working and will be shortly announcing a new schedule."

The EPA also is working on the Mercury Air and Toxics Standards, the first national standards for mercury and acid gases from power plants. "We are still intending to finalize that ruling in November," she said.

A separate set of standards for boiler emissions, called Maximum Achievable Control Technology, have been stayed and the agency plans to announce next steps in October, an agency spokeswoman said.

Posted by Katie Brown Katie_Brown@epw.senate.gov

  EPW Policy Beat: Obama's Plan: More Games, All Politics, and Further Delays

Strong Bipartisan Majority Already Rejected Key Aspects of President's Latest Stimulus

As the details of President Obama's latest stimulus plan begin to come to light, we are struck by how familiar it is - and how many pieces of the proposal are just more of the same ideas that have already been rejected by overwhelming bipartisan opposition.

While the President is correct to recognize that infrastructure funding is one of the best ways to create jobs, his newest plan, as many in the press are pointing out, is just the same proposal he laid out last Labor Day, which failed even to gain the support of his fellow Democrats. After the announcement of his proposal last year, Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO) said, "I will not support additional spending in a second stimulus package," and then-Representative John Salazar (D-CO) said that he was "skeptical of new spending." An editorial in the Denver Post even called it a "lousy idea." Part of the problem is that the President's record on infrastructure has been abysmal. His 'no-stimulus' plan allocated only 3% of the bill's funding for highway infrastructure projects, while dedicating a majority of the funds to wasteful spending, which utterly failed to stimulate the economy.

Then there's his proposal to increase taxes on oil and gas companies - a plan that has already been rejected by overwhelming opposition in the Senate. The Sanders amendment (SA. 4318) to the Tax Extenders Bill, which mirrors the President's latest proposal, was defeated by a vote of 35 to 61, despite having the Senate's largest Democrat majority in over 30 years.  Both sides of the aisle clearly recognized that such tax increases would only raise gas prices, destroy thousands of American oil and gas jobs, and make the United States even more dependent on foreign oil.

No wonder President Obama is insisting that Congress pass the bill immediately. He doesn't want anyone to realize that it contains the same tired ideas that have consistently faced bipartisan rejection.

Instead of injecting large amounts of spending into a one-time stimulus, as President Obama has proposed, a better plan is to work with Congress to pass a bipartisan highway bill. And if the President is truly serious about job creation he will cease his needless war on domestic energy jobs and instead work to provide an environment where they can thrive.  As a recent CRS report reveals, the United States has the largest recoverable resources of oil, gas, and coal of any country in the world.  Unleashing these resources will give our economy a much-needed boost, while Obama's tax increases will do just the opposite.

President Obama should immediately recognize that his tax and spend policies have failed and allow true bipartisan ideas, that are proven to create jobs, take us on the road to recovery. 

EPW Press Roundup

Key moments in Obama's failed infrastructure proposals -numerous Democrats opposed the plan.

 - An additional $60 billion in transportation infrastructure spending is a centerpiece of President Obama's jobs package, although many of the administration's proposals appear to be borrowed from previous initiatives that went nowhere in Congress... But the administration's proposed quick infusion of spending for transportation projects sounds broadly similar to the $50 billion program Obama proposed in a Labor Day speech last year as an immediate down payment on a multi-year surface transportation bill. That idea fell flat in Congress, with many lawmakers expressing concern that it was strangely constructed and vaguely defined. (CQ, Obama's Jobs Proposal Includes $60 Billion in Transportation Spending, 9/9/11) 

 - President Obama sent the legislative language of his jobs bill to Congress Sept. 12 along with $467 billion in tax code changes he proposes to use to pay for the measure, even though those proposed tax changes have been rejected by lawmakers in the past. (BNA, Obama Sends Jobs Bill To Congress,GOP Immediately Shoots Down Old Offsets 9/13) 

 - The other major transportation aspect of the $447 billion jobs package is the creation of a national infrastructure bank, but that issue also is unlikely to be adopted by Congress. The proposal would establish an American Infrastructure Financing Authority, to be capitalized with $10 billion, that would provide credit and attract private capital for infrastructure projects. President Obama has proposed a variant of the bank in each of his first three budget requests, but Congress has yet to authorize it. Lawmakers' main arguments against the bank are that it would not fund enough rural projects and that it would give a federal entity power over additional transportation money. (BNA, Prospects Dim for White House Jobs Bill's Spending On Transportation Infrastructure, 9/13)

 - President Obama's new $50 billion infrastructure initiative --- part of his $447 billion American Jobs Act (AJA)---offers no surprises. It's almost an exact replica of his FY 2012 budget request which included a sum of $50 billion for transportation to "jump start" a proposed $556 billion six-year surface transportation reauthorization. The rhetoric may have changed --- Obama avoided using the terms "stimulus" and "infrastructure" in presenting his ALA initiative to Congress---but the substance of the two initiatives is remarkably similar. Both proposals would fund the same mix of programs (highways, transit, Amtrak, high-speed rail, aviation and the TIFIA credit program) and both would establish a National Infrastructure Bank... The same reasons that led Congress to ignore the Administration's FY 2012 transportation budget request willlikely causethe lawmakers to rejectthe new transportation initiative.Theyare skeptical thata fresh infusion of fundswill succeeed where the firststimulusfailed.Doing the same thing overand over again and expecting different results may not be exacly insanity but it does suggest a certain unwillingness to face up to reality.(Innovation News Briefs, Obama's New $50 Billion Infrastructure Stimulus --- Old Wine in New Bottles 9/12)

Obama Attacks on Oil and Gas Already Rejected Overwhelmingly by Democratic Senate in 2010

 - President Barack Obama detailed a familiar list of oil and gas industry incentives he wants to scale back to help pay for the $450 billion jobs plan he sent to Congress on Monday. Obama included virtually the same list of tax breaks to repeal as he had in his fiscal year 2012 budget proposal and previous budgets....But the politics remains much the same as in past efforts to repeal the incentives, with many Republicans and oil-state Democrats largely opposed to such efforts to single out one industry, especially without broader tax reform. (Politico Pro, Obama's jobs plan repeats past attacks on oil tax breaks 9/13)

 - OBAMA GOES AFTER OIL AND GAS TAXES ... AGAIN - Obama's $450 billion jobs plan would be paid for in part by scaling back a list of tax incentives for the oil and gas industry if the president had his way. The thing is, on this point, the president likely won't. Obama included virtually the same wish list in his 2012 budget proposal and his proposals from years past, but the plans have been nonstarters in Republican- and Democrat-controlled Congresses alike. (Politico Pro Morning Energy http://politico.pro/nqvc7U%209/13)

 - With his new proposal, Obama seems poised to reignite the oil and gas tax break debate that dominated Capitol Hill energy discussions this spring. It was a discussion that died over the summer after the Senate voted down a measure that would have repealed several tax breaks for the largest oil companies in order to pay down the deficit by $21 billion over the next decade. At an address at the White House today, Obama seemed willing to dive into that debate again. (E&E News, Obama proposal slashes industry tax breaks to fund jobs program, 9/12)

 - President Obama on Monday asked Congress to end subsidies for all oil and gas companies, which could save the government more than $4 billion a year, to help pay for his jobs bill. It's a shift from recent Democratic efforts to end tax breaks for just the five major oil companies... But the president's proposal goes beyond what many congressional Democrats are seeking. Earlier this year, they introduced legislation to repeal oil and gas subsidies, but their measures focused on just the nation's five biggest oil companies-Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips.

 - Oil-state Democrats like Sen. Mark Begich of Alaska effectively argued that smaller and independent companies would be pushed out of drilling in the Gulf of Mexico if they lost those tax breaks. That, Begich and others argued, could lead to job losses in smaller oil and gas companies and allow the big oil companies to monopolize drilling in the Gulf. Obama had at one point been behind the effort to limit the repeal to just the five largest companies as well. (National Journal, Reigniting Subsidy Debate, Obama Takes on Oil, Gas 9/12) 

 - Barring that, the measures outlined by the administration include several measures previously rejected by Congress under both Republican and Democratic control. These include putting a 28 percent cap on deductions and exclusions claimed by taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes above $250,000 for married couples and $200,000 for individual taxpayers. That would take effect Jan. 1, 2013. Also, the administration wants to close loopholes affecting corporate jets, drilling for gas and oil, depletion on oil and gas wells, and modification of foreign tax credits. (National Journal, Obama Gets Specific in His Jobs Bill, 9/12)

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Oklahomans applauded Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe for coming to their state this week to hear concerns over a potential federal listing of the lesser prairie chicken, an iconic species that roams five states in the region.

But Jim Reese, the state's secretary of agriculture, yesterday had a wry warning: "I pray this isn't the kiss on the cheek before you stab us in the gut," he told the Oklahoma Farm Report.

Ashe's visit yesterday to Woodward and today to Edmond fulfils a promise he made to Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) during his spring confirmation, which was delayed for more than a half-year by holds from three Republican senators. Two of those holds were for reasons unrelated to the role of FWS.

Inhofe today thanked Ashe but reiterated his concerns that an Endangered Species Act listing for the bird could have devastating effects on Oklahoma's economy, including agriculture, highway infrastructure and wind farms.

"I call on Director Ashe to do the right thing and allow the voluntary efforts already underway in Oklahoma to produce positive results before going through with a listing that could be so detrimental to the state's well-being," he said in a statement.

Gary Sherrer, Oklahoma's secretary of environment, said conservation efforts in his state need more time to allow the bird's population to multiply.

Sen. Jim Inhofe, the ranking member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, not only supported the stop-gap measure but urged his fellow Republicans to help set the precedent for the House and avoid insisting on major changes in the program at this time. "It's a no-brainer,'' Inhofe said.

Still, the Oklahoma Republican used the committee's meeting to repeat his criticism of President Obama's past approach on transportation.

"Tonight, President Obama is going to call for another round of infrastructure spending,'' Inhofe said.

"His efforts are detrimental to getting a long-term highway bill done because it makes this issue a political one and his track record on infrastructure is abysmal.''

Contact:

Matt Dempsey Matt_Dempsey@epw.senate.gov (202) 224-9797

Katie Brown Katie_Brown@epw.senate.gov (202) 224-2160

 

VIDEO: Inhofe: Oklahoma ESA Forums with FWS Director Dan Ashe on Prairie Chicken Successful

 

 

 

 

“At one of our hearings, our recently confirmed Head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife, Dan Ashe, agreed that he would go out and look at some of the hardships that might come from some of the determinations that are made by Fish and Wildlife.

“I’m happy to report he’s on a two-day tour in Oklahoma on the listing – the proposed listing – of the lesser prairie chicken and the significant harm that would impose upon our agricultural community, people wanting to do wind farms and everything else. He actually was in Woodward out in western Oklahoma last night and Ron Hayes of the Oklahoma Farm Report reported this from last night:

“‘Several key themes emerged as the meeting unfolded Wednesday night, including agriculture wind farm interests and oil and gas companies agree listing the lesser prairie chicken would be devastating to the five-state region.’

“I think this is important because we asked him if he would do this at his confirmation hearing. He did this and it looks like this report is very favorable.”

 

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Oklahomans Tell Obama Administration Official: Listing May Endanger State Economy

Inhofe Hosts Forums in Oklahoma on Lesser Prairie Chicken

Thursday September 8, 2011

AP: Okla. senator hosting forum on prairie chickens - EDMOND, Okla. (AP) - U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe is to host a forum on whether the lesser prairie chicken should be categorized as an endangered or threatened species.Inhofe is the top Republican on the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works. The forum will be Thursday at the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond.

Woodward News: Listing may danger state economy - Woodward, Okla. - Several state leaders believe the listing of the lesser prairie chicken as an endangered species would endanger the state's economy as well. Some local landowners feel their rights as property owners may be threatened too. These state leaders, landowners as well as other political figures and businessmen shared their concerns during a public forum hosted by U. S. Sen. Jim Inhofe's office at High Plains Technology Center Wednesday evening. Understanding a desire to protect the birds, some landowners suggested less drastic measures to improve lesser prairie chicken populations other than a listing on the endangered species list, which would bring restrictions and regulations that would affect everyone from farmers to wind developers to construction crews repairing Oklahoma roads.

Oklahoma Farm Report: Public Forum Serves Up Lesser Prairie Chicken in Woodward - Several key themes emerged as the meeting unfolded on Wednesday night- including: Agriculture, wind farm interests and oil and gas companies agree- listing the Lesser Prairie Chicken would be devastating to the five state region. The Director of the Federal Govt agency involved- Dan Ashe with the Fish and Wildlife Service- downplayed the impact. Dan Ashe says he heard the fears of a listing in the room of a listing- believes conservation agreements will help alleviate those fears. He promises that the FWS will provide "clarity" as the process moves forward. The Forum proved there are a lot more questions about the process and who and what will be impacted than there are answers. The State of Oklahoma has a plan- and is asking the Feds for two years to give it a chance to work as efforts being made to get the tempermental little bird to multiply. In response, Ashe called the Oklahoma proposal a "good faith effort" but added that once the process gets underway- he has to follow a timeline that is mandated within the law or he and the FWS could face court action by environmental activists.