A consistently intelligent voice on energy, Mark Mills writes a
column for Forbes. Though he did write for AmSpec during the Gilder years, I actually met him at
Cornell, and even had him debate an environmentalist professor.
His
column today has the classic Nostradamus quality that is so
good, it will obviously be ignored by those hoping to just slap
more regulations on our problems.
Forget oil.
Electricity prices are going to start climbing:
Coal is
cheap, but it has no friends. Anticoal activists brag that 59
coal-fired plants were canceled in 2007. Nearly 50 more in 29
states are being contested. Recall how the private equity buyers of
Texas utility txu agreed last year to cancel eight power plants to
defuse environmental opposition. It takes years to plan and at
least six years to build a large power plant.
Also
playing into this is the possibility of a carbon penalty. Whether
taking the form of a visible tax or imposed through a cap-and-trade
scheme, a $30-per-ton tax on carbon dioxide could propel a 60% to
150% rise in the cost of electricity, even without further price
hikes in raw fuel, according to the Department of
Energy.
topics:
Trade, Environment, Energy, Oil