Energy

energy

From the Floor: The Klamath Claptrap

By admin on September 22, 2011

This generation is facing spiraling electricity prices and increasingly scarce supplies.  Californians have had to cut back to the point that their per capita electricity consumption is now lower than that of Guam, Luxembourg and Aruba. 

What is the administration’s solution?

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Congressman McClintock's Opening Statement-Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public

By admin on September 22, 2011

Gifford Pinchot, the founder of the U.S. Forest Service, gave a series of lectures at the Yale School of Forestry from 1910 to 1915, in which he propounded maxims for the (quote) “Behavior of Foresters in Public Office.”  Among them: 

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From the Floor: Klamath Claptrap

By Tom McClintock on September 22, 2011

This generation is facing spiraling electricity prices and increasingly scarce supplies.  Californians have had to cut back to the point that their per capita electricity consumption is now lower than that of Guam, Luxembourg and Aruba. 

What is the administration’s solution?

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced yesterday that the administration is moving forward with a plan to destroy four perfectly good hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River capable of producing 155 megawatts of the cleanest and cheapest electricity on the planet – enough for 155,000 homes.

Why would the administration pursue such a ludicrous policy?

They say it’s is necessary to help increase the salmon population.  We did that a long time ago by building the Iron Gate Fish Hatchery.  The Iron Gate Fish Hatchery produces five million salmon smolts each year – 17,000 of which return annually as fully grown adults to spawn.  The problem is, they don’t include them in the population count!

And to add insult to insanity, when they tear down the Iron Gate Dam, we will lose the Iron Gate Fish Hatchery and the five million salmon smolts it produces every year.

Declining salmon runs are not unique to the Klamath.  We have seen them up and down the Northwest Pacific Coast over the last ten years as the result of the naturally occurring Pacific Decadal Oscillation – cold water currents that fluctuate over a ten year cycle between the Pacific Northwest and Alaska.  During the same decade that salmon runs have declined in the Pacific Northwest, they have exploded in Alaska.  We’re at the end of that cycle.

The cost of this madness is currently pegged at a staggering $290 million – all at the expense of ratepayers and taxpayers.  But that’s just the cost of removing the dams.  Consumers will face permanently higher prices for replacement power, which, we’re told, will be wind and solar.

Not only are wind and solar some three times more expensive, but wind and solar require equal amounts of reliable stand-by power – which is precisely what the dams provide.

We’re told that yes, this is expensive, but it will cost less than retro-fitting the dams to meet cost-prohibitive environmental requirements.  If that is the case, then maybe we should re-think those requirements, not squander more than a quarter billion dollars to destroy existing hydro-electric dams.  Or here’s a modest suggestion to address the salmon population: count the hatchery fish!

Requiring the sale of Strategic Petroleum Reserves to fund additional spending is a scandal

By admin on July 14, 2011

Congressman McClintock explains that under the proposed bill H.R. 2354, the Secretary of Energy would be required to sell $500 million worth of Strategic Petroleum Reserves oil and deposit any proceeds from such sales in the General Fund of the Treasury to fund additional spending, instead of replenishing the reserve.

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Getting the government out of energy subsidies

By admin on July 13, 2011

Congressman Tom McClintock explains that the proposed amendment to H.R 2354 would save roughly ten percent from this appropriations bill, or $3 ¼ billion, by getting the federal government out of the energy subsidy business

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Amendment to H.R. 2354 - Getting the government out of energy subsidies

By Tom McClintock on July 11, 2011

This amendment would save roughly ten percent from this appropriations bill, or $3 ¼ billion, by getting the federal government out of the energy subsidy business.

For more than 30 years, the Department of Energy has squandered billions of dollars subsidizing research and development that no private investor would touch – with the promise it would make our nation energy independent.  Every year we have spent untold billions on these programs and every year we’ve become more dependent on foreign oil.

We are now running a deficit that threatens to bankrupt our country, and this requires us to cast a critical eye on every expenditure that has failed to achieve its objectives.  And none has failed so spectacularly as the Department of Energy’s subsidy of energy research which has left us billions of dollars poorer and stuck with mediocre technologies that only survive on a lifeline of public subsidies.

The opposition will attempt to depict this amendment as a Luddite reaction to “green technology.”

It is exactly the opposite.  By stopping the government from doling out dollars to politically favored industries – by stopping it from picking winners and losers among emerging technologies competing for capital – we restore the natural flow of that capital toward those that are the most economically viable and technologically feasible.

Subsidizing Failure

By Tom McClintock on June 14, 2011

Since the mid-1970’s, Americans have been  promised that if only we throw enough tax dollars at renewable energy technologies like ethanol, wind and solar power, we could rid ourselves of dependence on foreign oil.  So we’ve shoveled untold billions of taxpayer dollars at these programs for decades while our dependence on foreign oil continues to grow.

Examining the Spending, Priorities and the Missions of the Bureau of Reclamation

By Jon Huey on March 3, 2011

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Subcommittee on Water and Power held an oversight hearing today to examine the FY 2012 budget request for the Bureau of Reclamation.  Subcommittee Chairman Tom McClintock made the following opening statement at the hearing:

Opening Statement
Congressman Tom McClintock
Chairman
House Water and Power Subcommittee

Oversight Hearing on “Examining the Spending, Priorities and the Missions of the Bureau of Reclamation and the U.S. Geological Survey’s Water Resources Program”

McClintock on Energy

By admin on September 25, 2008
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A clip on Sen. McClintock on energy during the KTKZ Eric Hogue Show impromptu debate with Charlie Brown.

"The Real Energy Crisis" TV Spot

By admin on September 9, 2008
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