There was a staggeringly important article on the front page of
the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday. Briefly, it said
that the immense run up in oil prices in 2008, from roughly $33 a
barrel to roughly $150 per barrel was not caused by an
oil shortage, was not caused by an immense upsurge in
demand from China and India and Brazil, not caused by
bandits in Nigeria.
This finding was from President Obama’s Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, hardly a mouthpiece of Big Oil.
The staggering 2008 run up in price, which beggared hundreds of
millions of people throughout the world, was caused by the
sinister machinations of a few dozen oil traders and speculators
in the commodity pits and lush offices of hedge funds and
investment banks. (Think Goldman, Sachs at its worst.) The
shortage, which terrified innocent people and literally killed
the U.S. automotive industry, made a few dozen or maybe a few
hundred people very rich. It also made the nation believe we
actually faced a major oil shortage. (I was briefly taken in
before I realized that nothing in the supply demand situation had
changed even remotely enough to justify the kind of price moon
shot we had been through. When I wrote that the spike was the
work of some oil speculators and I knew their names, one of them
sent me threatening e-mails.)
This belief — that we faced an impending end of the supply of
oil — was a huge part of the motivation to turn to “green power”
sources like wind and solar, to look for ways, even quite radical
ways, to control energy use. This totally fraudulent “fact” of
rapidly depleting oil resources helped Mr. Barack Obama get
elected and is now helping him get his radical cap and trade and
energy control bill through Congress. This bill, largely turning
U.S. energy production and use upside down and saddling the
nation with innumerable regulations — down to small details like
having federal regulators mark up or down every home up for
resale based on every usage — was based upon a fraud.
Now what? Will someone wake the heck up and say that Mr. Obama is
putting through his massive agenda of control in the energy
sector based on a hoax? Will Mr. Obama say he’s re-thinking the
whole scheme?
If there is no urgent or even semi-urgent need to control oil use
(or natural gas usage, since natural gas is now in staggering
oversupply), why reorganize an American energy industry that
works extremely well already?
Will anyone in the administration get up on his hind legs and
tell the truth: the Obama energy plan is based on a “fact” that
is now shown to be a fiction? And will anyone have the guts to
call the whole nightmare of regulation off?