Monday, August 11, 2008

Myth Busting: The Cleaner Fuel, Safer At Home and Energy Independence

”See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda.”

~George W. Bush, Greece, N.Y. May 24, 2005
Audio


Chesapeake Energy pays their public relations firm, Ackerman McQueen, millions to craft messaging with just the right amount of manipulation and truthiness. It was recently revealed that Chesapeake considers the media an extension of their paid public relations firm. They repeat a carefully crafted message over and over and over until the public accepts the truthiness as common knowledge. We should not help them out by repeating their lies for free!

I enjoyed the clever opinion piece, “Marketing of Texas’ Barnett Shale fouling the airwaves”, in Saturday’s Star-Telegram, but Steve Stockdale repeated the clean energy myth about natural gas. He did qualify it by stating statistics that show natural gas is only a slightly cleaner burning fuel, but those statistics do not consider the HIGH IMPACT drilling methods that include hydraulic fracture, flaring and venting, used to produce the natural gas.

MYTH: Natural gas is the clean fuel

FACT: Measuring pollution from the beginning of exploration and production to consumption—Cradle to Gravenatural gas causes devastation to our environment.

MYTH: Barnett Shale gas will make us safer.

This is a lie perpetuated by fear.

FACT: We do not import any natural gas from any of the so-called “axis of evil” countries.

Natural Gas Imports by Country

Canada is the largest importer of natural gas to the United States.

MYTH: Barnett Shale gas will make us energy independent.

This is an emotional appeal based on fear not fact. Only 11 percent of our oil in 2005 came from the Persian Gulf and NONE of our natural gas came from there.

FACT: There is almost no chance that we will ever be energy independent as long as we use hydrocarbons.

Council on Foreign Relations, National Security Consequences of U.S. Oil Dependency

“The voices that espouse ‘energy independence’ are doing the nation a disservice by focusing on a goal that is unachievable over the foreseeable future and that encourages the adoption of inefficient and counterproductive policies.”

...

"The Task Force goes on to argue that U.S. energy policy has been plagued by myths, such as the feasibility of achieving “energy independence” through increased drilling or anything else. For the next few decades, the challenge facing the United States is to become better equipped to manage its dependencies rather than pursue the chimera of independence."

We import 60% of our oil, but the following are other essential commodities we import:

  • 91% of our platinum

  • 80% of our semiconductors

  • 100% of bauxite, alumina, manganese, strontium, yttrium, (full list at link above)

    I call for Manganese Independence!


  • 88% of tin

  • 76% of cobalt


Domestic Drilling cannot produce enough hydrocarbons to keep up with American consumption. As soon as the gas price dropped just a little bit, sales on hybrid cars dropped too.



MYTH: I’m not against drilling.

This is the worst kind of NIMBY (Not in my backyard), a passive aggressive NIMBY who thinks they’re not a NIMBY.

FACT: Unless you are willing to have a drilling rig, gas well, compressor station and high pressure pipeline in your yard, you are against drilling.

CORRECT RESPONSE: I am against drilling until new technology and better regulation allows drilling without devastating pollution or public endangerment.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

You forgot neodymium, needed to make magnets for guidance systems for missiles. China is now the only producer, thanks to GW Bush & Co.

Anonymous said...

The only way to achieve energy independence is to find a clean renewable source.

TXsharon said...

I call for neodymium independence!

Actually, that's kind of scary!

It might be listed at the link above. There were too many and I was too lazy to list them all.

Anonymous said...

Excellent post. I agree that Natural Gas is NOT a clean fuel!!!
Go live next to a stinking Amine Sweetening Gas Plant and learn the truth!!

Anonymous said...

this is a spectacular post in it's scope, for the position it takes throughout and the perspective it offers!
a vital education for everyone living on top of gas in shale!
BRAVO AND THANKS FOR ALL YOU DO!!!

Anonymous said...

If you live near an amine sweetening plant and have an odor issue, contact the operator or producer. The smell can be remedied.