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May 6, 2019

Once the GOP Rolls out Climate Policies, It Endorses All the Assumptions of the Left

You can’t beat something with nothing, according to ancient Beltway wisdom, an outlook guaranteed to yield an inexorable increase in the size, cost, and destructiveness of government, even as it forces the opponents of “something” gradually to adopt the assumptions of the proponents, and to descend into a process of negotiating with themselves. The latest…

April 30, 2019

Nigeria and the US: A Tale of Two Energy Economies

When last we visited the topic of Nigerian energy markets and happenings, the reason that Nigeria simultaneously is energy-rich and energy-poor was illustrated by the ongoing tug of war between the Nigerian government and Process and Industrial Developments Limited (P&ID). This was over a prior agreement for P&ID to build a state-of-the-art natural gas processing plant along…

April 29, 2019

The Paris Agreement and the Costly Pursuit of the Trivial

President Donald Trump on June 1, 2017, announced that the US would exit from the international agreement on the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reached at the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), held in Paris in December 2015. A final exit cannot take place…

April 10, 2019

Only Approved Climate Change Views Need Apply

Let us behold the “debate” over climate policy now unfolding at the European Union Parliament. Its most prominent feature is a serious effort to deny ExxonMobil (EM) the ability to lobby on climate policy and other related matters with members of the parliament. This effort to redefine debate as non-debate will be voted upon by the parliament at the…

March 25, 2019

The Metastasizing Distortions of Electricity Favoritism

Oh, what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to meddle in energy markets. The latest tangle began when the federal government and a large number of state governments implemented policies subsidizing and guaranteeing substantial market shares for “renewable” electricity, wind and solar power in particular — technologies that are wildly uneconomic, notwithstanding ubiquitous assertions to…

February 28, 2019

USMCA Will Help Us Make the Most of Our Energy Resources

Natural resources are an important component of national wealth, and the efficient allocation and use of those resources is an economic process yielding enormous benefits for ordinary people. Also axiomatic is the reality that international trade — the movement of resources, intermediate inputs and goods and services across international boundaries in response to market signals…

January 23, 2019

The Brownsville U-turn Redux: Cartelization of the Alberta Oil Sector

The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade promises to continue the large economic benefits of the earlier North American Free Trade Agreement, but one threat to those benefits has emerged in the form of mandated production cuts in the Alberta oil sector. For U.S. firms operating in Alberta, this policy in effect can confiscate the value of…

December 17, 2018

Other People’s Money: ESG Investing and the Conflicts of the Consultant Class

Unintended consequences are a longstanding effect of public policies, an eternal truth seemingly invisible to one generation after another of policymakers eager to improve upon the economic arrangements emerging from market competition and individual choices. Witness, for example, a regulation implemented by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 2003, intended to reduce the scope of supposed…

November 29, 2018

Observations on Volume 2 of the Fourth National Climate Assessment

Over the Thanksgiving weekend the Trump administration released Volume 2 of the Fourth National Climate Assessment, eliciting the usual array of apocalyptic predictions from the media about the fate of mankind should we fail to impose sharp limits on the emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG). Herewith, a few observations on this report. The report assumes one particular scenario for…

November 9, 2018

Environmental Policy: Benjamin Zycher Responds to His Critics

I thank Jonathan H. Adler, Patrick Allitt, and William Dennis for their thoughtful and informative commentaries on my Liberty Forum essay on reforming U.S. environmental policy, in particular with respect to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Chevron doctrine of judicial deference to executive agency statutory interpretations in the face of legal ambiguities. I learned much from their observations, to each…