Carbon Bill Could Cost US Refiners $100 billion/Year
As reported in the Oil and Gas Journal, proposed legislation (Waxman-Markey climate bill HR 2454) on carbon capture and sequestration potentially could cost US refiners $100 billion/year, threatening the sustainability of the domestic refining industry and giving undue favor to non-US refiners. Carbon capture is a means of mitigating the contribution of fossil fuel emissions to global warming, based on capturing carbon dioxide (CO2) from power plants. Carbon sequestration is a technique for the long-term storage of carbon dioxide or other forms of carbon by injecting the CO2 below the surface of the earth. The proposed Senate climate change and energy legislation has even more stringent emissions targets than the hotly debated Waxman-Markey bill.
Commentary – Currently carbon capture and sequestration technology is being developed and not commercially viable. If this legislation is passed, these costs will be passed on to consumers, otherwise US refiners will be out of business and we will be importing all of our gasoline needs. Either way get ready for $4.00/gallon prices or higher. In my opinion, “cap and trade” is a convoluted form of tax increase and may not even reduce emissions. If the government really wanted to save all this legislation and bureaucracy, all they needed to do is pass a carbon tax on gasoline, except that wouldn’t provide the politicians and administration with cover. They want you to blame private industry for high prices because they are causing global warming.
No comments yet.
Leave a comment
-
Recent
- United States Own Climategate at the EPA
- China’s Appetite For Natural Resources
- Carbon Bill Could Cost US Refiners $100 billion/Year
- 2008 Report On Proved Reserves Of Natural Gas and Crude Oil
- Dallas Going Green With Natural Gas
- What’s Happening With Ethanol?
- Are Gasoline Prices Going Higher?
- Big Investments Needed in Natural Gas Infrastructure
- New Poll On Global Warming
- El Paso Reenters Natural Gas Gathering & Processing Business
- US Natural Gas Potential (Updated Study)
- Canadian Oil Sands and the US Economy
-
Links
-
Archives
- December 2009 (1)
- November 2009 (3)
- October 2009 (16)
- September 2009 (6)
- June 2009 (2)
- January 2009 (3)
- December 2008 (2)
- November 2008 (9)
- October 2008 (11)
- September 2008 (12)
- August 2008 (20)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
