Fossil Economics 101
By Mark P. Mills
Even with bombs falling in Iraq in December 1998, oil prices remained stubbornly low,
staying as they have for months in the low teens and even dipping into single digits in
the spot market.
Oil today is cheaper than it was before the Arab OPEC embargo of 1973 (in real
inflation-adjusted dollars) which comes as a real shock to environmentalists who
forecast, nay wished for, the $100 barrel two decades ago.
They may well be wishing still. After all, low oil prices are bad for Kyoto-based goals
because they inspire (horrors!) economic growth and thus greater energy use.
Low oil prices might also require journalists and policymakers to take a closer look at
the benefits of cheap energy, which has the unintended consequence of protecting
Americas greatest energy asset its carbon-filled coal fields.
The oil price collapse has been big news in the energy business for months and has
seeped into the popular press because of its profound implications for the economy. (One
early December Wall Street Journal headline trumpeted "As Energy Prices
Continue to Plunge, U.S. Sees a Benefit in Lower Inflation.") But the media have yet
to gush.
There are two remarkable things about all the press coverage in recent months, one
perhaps obvious, the other less so.
Blatant Disregard
First, it is a rare article (come to think of it, I havent actually seen one)
that, while breathlessly citing the economic value of low-cost oil and energy, even
remarks in passing on the obvious linkage to the Clinton-Gore Administrations
climate warming policies, whose stated goal is to raise oil prices.
It doesnt take an econometrician (a fancier fellow than an economist) to realize
that if $12 per barrel is wonderful ("falling oil costs are aiding growth
the
biggest boon is lower inflation," as the Wall Street Journal correctly notes),
then a high-priced $30-plus per barrel would be terrible economically.
But when writing about the energy implications of global warming policies, most
journalists can only manage to skeptically acknowledge "industry" studies that
point to the economic punishment from raising energy prices in a Kyoto-inspired world.
Conversely though, journalists do not seem compelled to point to experts or skeptically
refer to "industry studies" when making their own observations that cheap
oil is great for the economy and consumers.
Cheap oil is self-evidently good for the economy. Yet the media hem and haw: Not
that we dont love the earth, but maybe Kyoto-style policies that will make oil
expensive could be, perhaps, well, um, according to the "industry," costly.
Such is the nature of the debate.
Subtle Disregard
The second issue is a little more subtle, but it really shouldnt be. U.S.
businesses, consumers, and industry collectively buy slightly more than $200 billion per
year of petroleum products (roughly 50 percent of it gasoline). If lowering the cost of
oil is very good, and conversely raising the cost is very bad, then doesnt it
logically follow that the same economic calculus would apply to another energy commodity
on which the U.S. spends $230 billion a year_
And further, if demand for the former energy commodity (oil) has remained essentially
constant for two decades, but the demand for the latter commodity has risen 70 percent in
the same time, then surely the price for the second mystery energy commodity should be
considered even more critical for controlling inflation and spurring economic growth.
In case you hadnt realized, that mystery commodity is electricity.
Yet I cannot recall a single instance of a news article comparing the relative economic
importance of oil and electricity.
Ignorance Is No Excuse
More important in these Kyoto-inspired times is that neither have any journalists made
their own independent leap of economic faith (as they have in the oil arena) regarding the
importance to the U.S. economy of cheap electricity, and derivatively, of coal.
This perhaps (and here I am speculating) arises from the possibility that journalists
have about the same level of knowledge as the general public when it comes to electricity.
Here I refer to an annual national survey that has shown each year that:
Fewer than one-third of the U.S. population knows that most electricity comes
from coal-fired power plants.
More than half of those surveyed volunteer hydroelectric power as the largest
source of electricity. (Hydro provides the United States market with less than 10 percent,
whereas coal supplies us with 55 percent.)
Indeed, most non-energy folks, and even many ostensible energy pundits, are unaware
that our own natural gas-biased Department of Energy forecasts that coal will not only
continue to supply 50 percent of all electricity two decades from now, but will make up
more than one-half of all the growth in electric supply for the next 20 years. (It is
worth noting that even this apparently bullish coal outlook rests on the assumption that
natural gas electric supply will grow 550 percent during those 20 years.)
Dial I for Impossible
All of these cold coal facts must be held against the backdrop of Kyoto-inspired
policies, and many other environmental policies specifically directed at the goal to
"dial coal out of the energy equation."
Imagine stating explicitly that we need to "dial oil out of the energy
equation." Or, more to the point, imagine any journalist reporting this postulate
without soliciting and reporting any economic criticism to put the notion into context.
The U.S. economy has grown by more than $3 trillion in two decades, roughly paralleling
the growth rate in (cheap, predominantly coal-fired) electricity use.
During that 20 years the absolute use of oil (and, by the way, natural gas) has not
changed significantly. Meanwhile, the use of electricity has risen close to 70 percent.
So overall, total energy usage is up, but total energy expenditures have
remained essentially flat at about $520 billion per year.
What does this mean_ Much more economic bang for the buck.
Two decades ago, $1 spent on energy supported $9.50 of the gross domestic product
(GDP); today that same $1 can support $14 of GDP an economic gain of 56 percent.
The net effect: more dollars for new jobs, new technologies, health care, leisure and,
yes, even environmental goals (real ones). We can have our cake and eat it too as long as
energy stays cheap and, most important, gets cheaper yet.
We are talking about both oil and coal-fired electricity, the two energy forms that
anchor the entire economy.
There is no conceivable Kyoto-inspired strategy to dial fossil fuels out of our economy
yet still continue the economic trends we have so highly praised and collectively enjoyed
in recent years.
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