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Reason's Len Gilroy Talks TVA Privatization, Annual Privatization Report on Heartland Institute Podcast

Earlier this week, I had the pleasure of sitting down with the Heartland Institute's Steve Stanek for an episode of their Heartland Daily Podcast, where we discussed President Obama's recent budget proposal to study a potential privatization of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). From Heartland's Somewhat Reasonable blog:

President Barack Obama has proposed studying the possibility of privatizing the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation’s largest government-owned utility. Privatization expert Leonard Gilroy of The Reason Foundation tells Heartland's Steve Stanek why the president has a good idea, and why area politicians in both major political parties oppose it.

An iTunes link for this podcast is available here. Beyond the proposed TVA privatization, we also discussed several highlights from Reason Foundation's Annual Privatization Report 2013.

Speaking of the TVA, I was also quoted in a Budget and Tax News article last week on the privatization proposal. Here's an excerpt:

The Chattanooga Times Free Press newspaper declared in an editorial that opposing TVA privatization is a mistake and noted the disconnect between some Tennessee politicians who declare they favor free enterprise and limited government yet oppose privatization.

“The only real argument for keeping the TVA's assets in government hands are weak arguments like, ‘people like the TVA how it is’ and ‘that's how we've always done it.’ Sadly, that stale mindset has overtaken area Republican lawmakers who claim to oppose government control and socialist programs,” the newspaper’s editors wrote. [...]

Privatization expert Leonard Gilroy of Reason Foundation said he sees lots of institutional opposition to privatization.

"Despite being an utterly nonessential federal asset, there appears to be no political will in Congress whatsoever to authorize a TVA privatization," he said. "Senator Alexander, Senator [Bob] Corker (R) and other Tennessee congressmen of both political parties have already condemned the proposal to merely study privatization, which is all the President has proposed. This just goes to show how difficult it is in real life to shut down government agencies and enterprises once they spring to life and build constituencies."

Nonetheless, he said privatization ought to be studied.

"There's nothing inherently governmental about running a power business, so privatization could provide an opportunity to bring in a businesslike approach and more efficient operations and management compared to what's seen today as a government-owned enterprise," he said. "However, there would be some very thorny implementation issues to work out, not the least of which being how to handle the divestiture of the TVA land and power assets that were originally seized from private hands to begin with."

For a more detailed analysis of the merits and challenges associated with privatizing the TVA, check out this recent Reason Foundation article by Steve Esposito. 

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Like Obama said, Privatize the TVA!

Steve Esposito has some thoughts on President Obama's proposal to privatize the Tennessee Valley Authority, a massive bureaucracy of electricity generation, flood control, jobs for cousins, patronage and waste. And some cautions about the idea's prospects. 

Republicans in Congress, who you might think would love the idea of privatizing a big federal agency that benefits few while costing many, was quick to oppose Obama's proposal. Esposito breaks down and answers some of the objections to privatization.

Read it all here.

 

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The Facts Behind EPA's Greenhouse Gas Regulations

After the defeat of his carbon dioxide cap-and-trade legislation in 2009, President Obama told a room of reporters that there was “more than one way to skin a cat.” And in the new political era of regulation without legislation, the President’s EPA has released standards on carbon dioxide that do just that.

In perhaps its most sweeping regulatory approach to date, the EPA under Lisa Jackson recently released New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) for carbon dioxide, which aim to cut greenhouse gases emitted by the U.S.

In today’s post, I will look at the logic behind the rule and its fundamental flaws. In later posts I will look at what’s next for carbon dioxide regulations and an examination of the very idea of regulating carbon.

How EPA Skins a Cat

The NSPS requires all newly constructed power plants to meet an emissions standard of 1,000 pounds of CO2 per megawatt-hour (MWh) regardless of the type of fuel. The average coal-fired power plant puts out 2,000 pounds of CO2 per MWh and newer, more efficient models emit about 1,800 pounds per MWh. Simple math shows that the future of coal-fired electricity in the U.S. looks bleak, even for the industry’s best facilities.

Advocates for the new rules (who apparently must portray themselves as pro-coal) say that the new rules will not hurt the coal industry. That is because the rule only calls for 1,000 pounds of CO2 per MWh over a 30 year average. So in theory, a coal plant could emit 1,800lbs of CO2 for the first 10 years of operation, so long as it implemented yet-to-exist technologies to cut its emissions to 600 pounds per MWh by year 11.

If only it were that simple.

EPA’s rationale for the feasibility of the regulation is two-fold: (1) technologies will be available in the next decade that allow the capture and storage of CO2 emissions from coal and (2) the abundance of cheap natural gas that has flooded the market in the past few years.

The (Un)available Best Technology

The section of the Clean Air Act (CAA) that details the NSPS directives requires EPA to create regulations based on the “best system of emission reduction” that “has been adequately demonstrated,” taking into account costs, environmental impacts, and energy requirements.

The technology EPA points to with this regulation is called "carbon capture and sequestration" (CCS). CCS involves the capture of carbon dioxide from power plants before it is emitted and then the storage of the captured gas underground. The problem with using CCS as a “best available technology” is that it is not in use anywhere in the U.S., and is only in use in experimental, highly expensive sites in a handful of sites in Europe. It is nowhere near the point of viability technologically or financially.

EPA’s own, typically bullish analysts themselves admit that CCS viability is at least a decade away. To make this pass muster, EPA applied the 30-year average requirement. In doing so, EPA is saying “yes, the technology is not available today, therefore, apply the best technology available and in a decade apply CCS when it is viable.” Government agencies are prone to the conceit that they can predict the future, but this is a stretch even by EPA standards.

Aside from the technological and financial problems involved with CCS, there is also the problem with citing plants in places that can eventually store CO2 underground. This leads to even larger permitting headaches. How can you predict permitting requirements for a technology that is not yet in use and thus has not been subject to federal, state, or local permitting requirements? It is not merely a matter of building a new, modern plant and hoping you chose a site that is adequate for CCS.

Gas, Naturally!

The second, seemingly more logical, rationale for the rule’s approach is the abundance of cheap natural gas that is making coal less economically appealing.

It is true that in the near term, low natural gas prices are already making coal uneconomical, with utilities rushing to refurbish or build new natural gas plants to take advantage of its record low prices. As I mentioned in a post two weeks ago:

A gold rush of shale gas plus the ability to get eight-times the amount of energy from one well has caused gas supplies to skyrocket, driving down prices. With low prices, companies are fleeing the historically inexpensive and dirty coal-fired plants and maximizing natural gas plants, which emit roughly half the greenhouse gases. According to the study, the U.S. emitted nearly 9% less CO2 (the chief greenhouse gas) in 2009 than it did in 2008, mostly because gas prices dropped from $12 per million British thermal units in June 2008 to less than $4 per MMBtu in September 2009. During that time, the cost of generating electricity from natural gas plants fell an average of about 4 cents per kilowatt. With average natural gas prices at $2.30 MMBtu today, it is safe to say this trend will continue. Utilities are shutting down coal-fired plants at record pace and replacing them with new or expanded gas-fired plants.

On average, coal supplies roughly 40 percent of U.S. electricity. But according to the Energy Information Agency (EIA), coal-fired electricity dropped below the 40 percent mark last December for the first time in over 30 years. Coal consumption will likely drop another 5 percent this year according to the EIA. The agency expects natural gas to pick up the slack, with a 9 percent increase this year, or a record high of 22.7 billion cubic feet a day.

However, it’s important to note that these have all been the economics of a struggling economy with a drop in electricity demand. But, as we know, energy needs fluctuate. During last summer’s heat wave, every single unit scheduled for retirement was running to meet increased demand, including coal. Had these facilities been taken off-line there would have been sweeping brown outs across the warmest areas of the U.S.

So, according to EPA’s own analysis, natural gas’s affordability makes NSPS rule unnecessary. Economic factors – not environmental concerns – are already giving utilities more than enough incentive to switch from coal to gas. As noted in my earlier post, this leads to cheaper energy and a cleaner environment. But the Agency is following its usual path of imagining what the future will look like today. With natural gas prices and energy demands locked at 2011 levels, an emissions standard of 1,000 pounds per MWh makes sense. But they refuse to note that maybe, just maybe, market conditions will change. If natural gas prices and electricity demand rise simultaneously, this rule will be enormously costly and may have an effect on keeping the lights on in certain regions.

A New Type of Regulation

From a regulatory standpoint, this is a first for EPA.

As noted above, NSPS requirements in the Clean Air Act require the Agency to create regulations based on the “best system of emission reduction” that “has been adequately demonstrated,” taking into account costs, environmental impacts, and energy requirements. The statute does not allow EPA to prescribe specific technologies, only an emissions level for the source to meet.

For 40 years, the EPA has regulated NSPS based on specific fuel types (oil, gas, coal, etc.), as laid out in statute. For this regulation, however, EPA has chosen not to distinguish between fuel types. Instead, it requires coal to meet the emissions level of natural gas, which can easily meet the requirement. In other words, it implicitly asks coal to meet the emissions levels of gas with a technology that has not been demonstrated as technically or financially viable. If you asked natural gas to reach the emission levels of nuclear, you would also effectively ban natural gas plants. This is not a game EPA has played before, and it is a dangerous precident to set without legislation to point to.

***

Unlike most EPA regulations, NSPS are binding once it is printed in the federal register. This is problematic for two reasons. First, it has effectively put a ban on the construction of new coal plants. Second, any legislative action to deal with this issue is hamstrung by the fact that the rules are not officially “final,” and thus could get around being subject to legislative review. It could easily be more than a year until EPA addresses all the comments and proposes a final rule.

Luckily for the coal industry, there is still a global market for coal. Metallurgic coal is in high demand in China where is used for steel making. Energy-dense bituminous coal is highly valued in places like India where it is burnt for power and heat. In fact, if you look at the countries across the globe who have growing economies, just about all of them are building new, state-of-the-art coal plants.

Electricity demand is flat thanks to a struggling economy, so the results may not be immediate. The question is its effects long term once the economy rebounds.

A big part of this will be whether or not EPA releases regulations on current coal facilities, as they have said they would do. Most observers believe that Obama will issue such regulations if he earns a second term in office.

My next post will look at the implications of a similar regulation on existing sources.

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Americans Remain Supportive of Natural Gas

Despite attempts by environmental activists like Josh Fox and his movie Gasland, American support for natural gas slightly rose in 2012, according to a new Harris poll.

Sixty-six percent of Americans think that the benefits derived from natural gas outweigh the risks, compared to only 17% thinking the risks outweigh the benefits (17% unsure). This is a slight increase from 2011, when 64% of Americans supported natural gas.

A majority of Americans from every age, regional and political group thought the advantages of natural gas outweighed risk. Support came from all political affiliations, with 74% of Republicans in support, 62% of Democrats, and 69% of independents.

Without a doubt, the newest, most-affordable, game-changing innovation in the energy field is the adaptation of hydraulic fracturing (fracking) and horizontal drilling in natural gas extraction. In the past decade we have developed technology that allows drillers to extract the same amount of natural gas from one well as they used to be able to get from eight wells. That is an eight-fold increase in efficiency, and does not even begin to discuss how the technology has allowed us to open up vast deposits that were once too difficult to reach.

Not only do these advances make energy cheaper, it cleans up the environment. As I noted in a recent blog:

A gold rush of shale gas plus the ability to get eight-times the amount of energy from one well has caused gas supplies to skyrocket, driving down prices. With low prices, companies are fleeing the historically inexpensive and dirty coal-fired plants and maximizing natural gas plants, which emit roughly half the greenhouse gases. According to the study, the U.S. emitted nearly 9% less CO2 (the chief greenhouse gas) in 2009 than it did in 2008, mostly because gas prices dropped from $12 per million British thermal units in June 2008 to less than $4 per MMBtu in September 2009. During that time, the cost of generating electricity from natural gas plants fell an average of about 4 cents per kilowatt. With avarage natural gas prices at $2.30 MMBtu today, it is safe to say this trend will continue. Utilities are shutting down coal-fired plants at record pace and replacing them with new or expanded gas-fired plants.

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Evergreen Solar Follows Solyndra's Lead

Evergreen Solar, a green energy company that that went bankrupt last year after receiving millions in state subsidies, will abandon its Massachusetts plant which cost $450 million to build just five years ago. Much like Solyndra, Evergreen cannot find any interested private buyers during their bankruptcy procedure. The Wall Street Journal reports:

Evergreen Solar Inc. said it has failed to find a buyer for its Devens, Mass., plant and plans to walk away from the facility, which was launched with some $50 million in state aid.

The company asked a bankruptcy judge for permission to abandon the property before a $543,000 property tax bill comes due.

Evergreen has a deal with its landlord, Massachusetts Development Finance Agency, to get out of the ground lease for the facility, according to papers filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del. The plant was shut down last year and 800 jobs were cut as Evergreen struggled to survive.

Evergreen was once the heartthrob of the green energy crowd, which was odd since it was never profitable – even after a Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick enticed the company into the state with a $76 million business incentive.

Here is how the company’s final days played out, according to WSJ:

Evergreen filed for bankruptcy in August and eventually sold its technology to a Hong Kong joint venture. A claim for payment in the Lehman Bros. bankruptcy case proved to be worth more than the technology that powered the Evergreen Solar story.

Bondholders "credit bid" $21.5 million for the Lehman claim, meaning they offered to cancel that much of the debt Evergreen owed them. Evergreen's solar-power technology sold for less than $10 million. Others bits and pieces are still being sold, including equipment at the Devens plant. But the plant itself hasn't sold despite more than a year of marketing.

It’s no surprise that the company (and others like it) went bankrupt. Global production of solar products jumped 139 percent shortly before it announced bankruptcy last year. A bigger blow to the company was the drop in silicon prices. Evergreen’s claim to fame was a patented technology that produced solar panels with less silicon, and when silicon prices dropped ten-fold they were left with a technology with little value.

And that's fine. Most businesses don't succeed. Most great ideas fail because of changes in demand, technology improvements, or just bad luck. But taxpayers should never be on the hook for a $56 million mistake.

Evergreen’s demise is similar to Solyndra and other green energy companies that government has chosen over the past few years: get a boatload of government cash, blame your business woes on “global competitors” even though you’ve never shown the capacity to create a profit, fire the workers you promised to employ, shut down your plant, file for bankruptcy, and show the fruits of taxpayer dollars as you abandon your factory and sell your holdings for pennies on the dollar.

Maybe the government should leave the investing to the experts.

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EPA's Fuzzy Math

In my opinion piece yesterday I argued that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is using fuzzy math to justify massive regulations:

MATS claims to target one pollutant but draws all of its benefits from another pollutant that is already below EPA-approved safe levels. The air is cleaner than it's ever been, but at $10 billion a year, MATS will be the most expensive EPA air regulation ever. Last week, the closure of nine power plants in four states was announced directly because of the regulation, and more are looming. Affordable energy is key to a recovering economy and when the costs and benefits are weighed, it's clear that this regulation's costs are enormous and the benefits to society are minimal at best.

MATS is supposed to target reductions of mercury and other toxic emissions. But by EPA's own calculations, benefits from reductions in mercury will result in between $500,000 and $6 million in benefts. As I noted, EPA is able to justify a regulation costing $10 billion a year by inflating the benefits that come from reductions in a pollutant that is already below levels that the EPA considers safe.

The Economist has more commentary on this today:

The minutiae of how regulators calculate benefits may seem arcane, but matters a lot. When businesses complain that Mr Obama has burdened them with costly new rules, his advisers respond that those costs are more than justified by even higher benefits. His Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), which vets the red tape spewing out of the federal apparatus, reckons the “net benefit” of the rules passed in 2009-10 is greater than in the first two years of the administrations of either George Bush junior or Bill Clinton.

But those calculations have been criticised for resting on assumptions that yield higher benefits and lower costs. One of these assumptions is the generous use of ancillary benefits, or “co-benefits”, such as reductions in fine particles as a result of a rule targeting mercury.

For more information on EPA's latest $10 billion regulation, see my commentary here.

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Deregulation of Nuclear Power Saves Money and Reduces Pollution

“Deregulation, Consolidation, and Efficiency: Evidence from U.S. Nuclear Power,” a working paper out of Berkeley’s Energy Institute at Haas, finds that the deregulation of the nuclear industry in the ‘90s created a 10% increase in efficiency, which led to approximately $2.5 billion in savings annually and a decrease of 40 million tons of carbon emissions in the atmosphere each year.

The efficiencies that resulted from deregulation are impressive. It’s even more impressive when you consider that this was entirely from gains in efficiencies, not increases in the number of plants or transmission lines.

Our results imply a substantial increase in electricity production. In 2009 U.S. nuclear reactors produced 800 billion kilowatt hours of electricity, about 20% of total U.S. electricity generation. We estimate that the increase in electricity production due to deregulation and consolidation exceeds 40 billion kilowatt hours annually. At current average wholesale prices, the value of the increased electricity production is approximately $2.5 billion annually.


Granted, economic improvements associated with deregulation may not impress those who are in favor of regulation. Well how about environmental improvements?

In addition, because the increased electricity production displaces mostly coal‐ and natural‐gas‐ fired power, these gains in efficiency also have substantial implications for the environment, implying an annual decrease of 38 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions. Using a conservative estimate for the social cost of carbon dioxide ($20 per ton) this is an additional $760 million in benefits annually. To put this into perspective, this is more carbon abatement than was achieved by all the U.S. wind and solar generation combined during the same period. Whereas there are explicit programs directed at promoting low‐carbon energy in the case of wind and solar, this decrease in carbon emissions is noteworthy because deregulation is not usually envisioned as a means for achieving environmental goals.


The study of the nuclear power industry is especially useful for discussions of energy deregulation because, unlike other industries, nuclear power is always used as a “baseload” generation. In other words, they are constantly running and do not respond to fluctuations in demand.

Another reason to study nuclear deregulation is that there is a very clear sample – of the 103 reactors in the U.S., 48 of them were sold by states to independent companies at a very rapid pace during the ‘90s.

Deregulation is certainly not one of the methods environmentalists and enviro-bureaucracies look to when trying to limit greenhouse gases in the U.S.  But, by opening up the industry to competition, states across the country provided incentives for firms to do what companies are created to do: increase efficiency and cut costs to create value for the consumer and increase their own profits.

That is what is seen.

What are often missed by those who favor of regulation are the unseen benefits of the competitive market.  In this case: profit-inspired efficiencies that reduced emissions more than the entire “green” energy industry in the country without a single government subsidy, political battle, or increased cost to the consumer. That’s a policy environmentalist, industries, and politicians should all get behind.

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Remember Electricity Deregulation? In Texas, it is Still Working.

A new report out from Texas Public Policy Foundation shows that 14 years into the restructuring of the Texas electricity, consumers have come out smelling like roses.

  • Average competitive prices (11.1 cents per kWh) today are 9.46% below average 2001 regulated prices; the lowest average price (8.52) is 30.51% lower.
  • Most New Yorkers (19.17), Californians (14.08), and Floridians (12.31) pay higher prices than Texans; Texas prices are competitive with surrounding states.
  • Texans can choose from 138 residential plans offered by 29 providers.

It still amazes me how absurd the media, blind the public, and cowardly the politicians were around the US in the wake of California and Texas deregulating electricity.  Texas was a major success, California a colossal failure. But try to find that perspective in the discussion.  No, the failure in CA was given 1000 times the weight of the success in TX.

Obviously success and failure had to do with design, not whether or not deregulation could work. It worked so well in Texas, it is clearly possible.   (See our analysis of what went wrong in CA here, and what went right in Texas and other places here)

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The Real Climate Change Deniers

The U.S. House is a cat's whisker away from passing a cap-and-trade climate change bill tomorrow that will effectively impose a $1,600 carbon tax on an average household in the name of fighting global warming. (For context, consider this: A typical family of four earning $50,000 a year pays $3,000 in income taxes).

But the irony is that the bill comes precisely when the rest of the world is experiencing fresh doubts about the science of manmade global warming. Wall Street Journal editorial writer Kimberly Strassel reports that New Zealand's new government last year immediately suspended the country's weeks-old cap-and-trade program. In France, President Nicolas Sarkozy wants to tap Claude Allegre to lead the country's new ministry of industry and innovation. Twenty years ago Mr. Allegre was among the first to trill about man-made global warming, but the geochemist has since recanted.

"The number of skeptics, far from shrinking, is swelling. Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe now counts more than 700 scientists who disagree with the U.N. -- 13 times the number who authored the U.N.'s 2007 climate summary for policymakers. Joanne Simpson, the world's first woman to receive a Ph.D. in meteorology, expressed relief upon her retirement last year that she was finally free to speak 'frankly' of her nonbelief. Dr. Kiminori Itoh, a Japanese environmental physical chemist who contributed to a U.N. climate report, dubs man-made warming 'the worst scientific scandal in history.' Norway's Ivar Giaever, Nobel Prize winner for physics, decries it as the 'new religion.' A group of 54 noted physicists, led by Princeton's Will Happer, is demanding the American Physical Society revise its position that the science is settled. (Both Nature and Science magazines have refused to run the physicists' open letter.)," writes Strassel.

Why this turn around? Because for the last 10 years, the earth's temperatures have remained essentially flat. And over the next 10, some credible studies have actually predicted a cooling.

One does not have to believe that global warming is a total hoax to concede that its claims need further investigation before action. Denying dissenters a voice never serves the cause of science. Ask Galilelio.

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First They Came For The Light Bulbs

Now, if you live in California, they are coming for your big screen TV.

In a move that is so wrong-headed on so many levels, the California Energy Commission wants to ban large-screen TVs because they allegedly contribute to (alleged) global warming.The wording is parsed to suggest "complaint" models will still be permitted, but it's unclear what the requirements will be.

The OC Register reckons that the CEC proposal would likely remove most models over 40 inches from the market. The agency wants to put the new rules into affect by 2011.

Here we have more enviro-puritanism running amok. After all, people like watching big screen high-def TV, especially when the current economy makes home entertainment an economic option. There’s indication how this might be enforced. You can mail-order big screen TVs from Amazon.com (like I did) and other outlets. Californians can also drive to Arizona, Nevada or Oregon to buy one.

Let’s also mention the cockamamie idea of taking products off the shelves during a recession in a state where a good chunk of the population makes a living producing TV and movies and video games – you know, the stuff that plays well on big screen TVs.

The CEC itself says its goal is to avoid the necessity of building more power plants—a questionable priority to say the least. Instead it has declared of war on plug-in appliances and anyone who dares to use them.

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