
Searching through articles and data over the last couple of weeks I've found that the energy transition is much more complex and intertwined than most people could imagine. It would make for a rather lengthy post so because of the complexities involved I decided I will focus on various topics that hopefully will explain how we've come to be in the position that we are in in a two to three part series on the subject. There are some subject material that still leaves me a bit bewildered as I am not totally convinced the answer I found on whose behind the drive is really behind it. The explanation makes logical sense but how it's come to be the driving force into other countries doesn't quite mesh. In other words Germany isn't generally thought of as a world super power player wielding that kind of influence. Which will bring me to focus in this part on how it was exactly that the United States, well, basically asked who died and made you the boss.
It probably wouldn't take long to figure out who threw a wrench into their party but here's the paragraph that sums it up:
The Paris Agreement handicaps the United States economy […]. [O]ur withdrawal from the agreement represents a reassertion of America’s sovereignty […]. Staying in the agreement could also pose serious obstacles for the United States as we begin the process of unlocking the restrictions on America’s abundant energy reserves, which we have started very strongly.
– Donald Trump, Statement on the Paris Climate Accord, Washington, DC, June 2017
I've quite often said the last several weeks that to see the real Donald Trump people need to go back and read what he has said without all the media distractions that were present when he said it. When you start to look back over the things that have transpired you can see the message for what it really was. The article has a paragraph that articulates it quite well:
Despite the Trump administration’s focus on promoting fossil fuels, a closer look at foreign policy instruments thus reveals that the U.S. and Germany still have a common interest in promoting sustainable energy abroad—albeit for different reasons. Having a common interest among the transatlantic partners does not, of course, translate automatically into cooperation and common policy approaches. In many cases, the complexity of coordinating, especially when it comes to development policy, may simply be too high.
Simply put the differences are Germany having built into their economy the statistical logistics, manufacturing support and partnerships abroad to become a major player in green energy whereas when Obama signed the Paris Agreement the US wasn't a major player or contributor in the actual transition phase except monetarily. Trump didn't have a problem with the Paris Accord per se, he wanted the United States to have a bigger piece of the transition pie.
There's no arguing it had the potential to handicap our economy in regards to the green energy transition or the loss of sovereignty when it came to it's status as a super power, what confuses those behind believing he's making America Great Again is that he's out to protect America and those who reside within, that is not necessarily a truth. Becoming a major distributor in the transition means exporting our resources as dictated to countries who need to transition from carbons that create the most pollution to carbons that don't. That doesn't mean the US, in the long run, gets to keep it's oil and natural gas. The US will still be expected themselves to transition to a cleaner alternative. Otherwise you can't be part of the transatlantic partnerships, who have been busy bees underpinning countries transitional phases, some which don't make much sense, but more about that in another post. When Trump said this part:
Staying in the agreement could also pose serious obstacles for the United States as we begin the process of unlocking the restrictions on America’s abundant energy reserves, which we have started very strongly.
People hear this: drill baby drill because they actually thought he was unlocking those abundant energy reserves for them. That was furthest from the truth. He was unlocking our abundant reserves so the US could play in the transition game. In my prior post I described how he made it appear the US was energy independent Independent enough we'd have plenty of oil to ship off across the Atlantic. When he said "abundant energy reserves" he wasn't talking about added pipelines, drilling, fracking or anything of that nature he meant our actual strategic stockpile reserves which he drained sixty million plus barrels from. The Keystone, expanded drilling and fracking permits were as much a mirage as his saving taxpayers on having new presidential planes built or the three plus one med east pipeline agreement, Boeing admits they took the hit to make it appear he was a great negotiator and the med east, in the long run, was a boondoggle, which is why it got cancelled. You can't claim something that is yet unfinished as having had an effect on bringing down oil prices but if you saturate the market, which he did by taking from our reserves while maintaining Saudi imports. This very misconception is why we are in the predicament we are in. Demand slowed so prices plummeted, demand goes back up and you can't keep up with the amount of oil being exported off to Europe without also having to take more oil from the reserves. It's just logical sense. So in another gut wrenching display of his mischievousness let me display to you exactly where our problems started:
US Exports Of Crude Oil  (Thousands of Barrels A Day)
Year    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1920  15  29  29  23  25  21  23  18  26  25  27  27
1921  24  28  24  25  28  20  17  29  29  24  29  17
1922  23  21  26  31  25  28  29  25  38  24  29  36
1923  25  24  33  50  43  87  50  50  53  42  47  68
1924  49  58  50  52  60  51  45  40  63  48  48  34
1925  37  40  34  27  44  42  42  47  31  42  25  28
1926  38  37  31  44  59  41  56  35  46  33  45  41
1927  39  42  39  39  45  47  35  45  43  50  43  55
1928  40  43  49  43  48  63  54  61  50  65  56  49
1929  64  60  52  58  62  87  101 72  66  93  86  67
1930  58  62  63  63  71  84  64  78  65  70  59  43
1931  62  61  51  61  73  85  85  92  77  77  82  35
1932  51  65  67  96  95  93  73  92  70  82  44  69
1933  62  67  69  98  86  145 146 101 106 125 110 85
1934  74  90  83  131 120 126 133 119 136 106 156 79
1935  76  100 106 126 149 186 188 160 166 155 143 132
1936  99  120 102 125 142 160 144 179 168 152 138 118
1937  116 135 103 163 219 206 205 239 220 216 222 165
1938  192 190 197 252 252 247 234 226 186 219 187 158
1939  144 172 160 207 279 194 236 193 231 224 177 150
1940  66  61  84  96  142 129 148 125 115 109 114 67
1941  54  48  64  83  140 131 118 106 97  82  85  82
1942  49  48  61  99  120 120 109 131 108 105 94  66
1943  65  86  80  139 152 144 159 129 115 109 114 67
1944  80  66  68  96  101 121 113 109 112 96  100 59
1945  42  57  64  89  103 97  114 107 106 116 113 75
1946  62  71  88  121 117 111 138 141 138 137 111 102
1947  80  92  105 133 154 125 167 134 136 120 128 146
1948  97  91  101 118 108 114 118 128 112 110 106 99
1949  69  69  60  122 93  102 92  110 87  94  100 88
1950  69  83  69  99  95  103 106 100 88  130 108 94
1951  94  88  85  121 58  78  75  76  73  63  62  69
1952  74  76  95  111 55  80  61  63  55  49  60  95
1953  71  72  70  94  52  61  40  43  37  38  35  44
1954  51  28  28  47  41  46  35  44  17  49  35  26
1955  12  35  27  48  38  35  29  38  29  28  29  34
1956  32  17  37  20  40  29  24  38  27  47  285 340
1957  244 282 455 308 119 58  39  33  25  32  31  35
1958  14  8   27  21  16  7   10  11  6   11  10  2
1959  11  3   6   8   9   6   6   8   5   8   4   8
1960  9   10  8   9   4   15  8   3   8   11  0   17
1961  4   11  11  11  7   15  6   10  4   6   13  9
1962  3   5   7   3   11  1   6   6   3   0   9   5
1963  6   4   3   6   5   4   5   6   3   6   4   5
1964  4   3   8   3   6   5   3   4   2   3   0   4
1965  3   2   0   6   0   2   14  0   0   6   3   0
1966  4   0   3   10  0   4   8   6   3   3   3   4
1967  1   0   3   8   0   61  275 264 201 46  4   2
1968  8   10  1   5   3   8   0   3   3   4   13  3
1969  0   8   6   3   7   0   0   5   3   5   8   3
1970  3   0   2   3   0   10  3   0   0   63  54  24
1971  0   0   0   10  0   0   0   0   5   1   0   0
1972  0   0   0   6   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0
1973  0   0   0   0   4   0   7   0   5   0   0   6
1974  17  10  0   1   6   1   0   0   0   0   0   0
1975  27  34  11  1   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0
1976  0   0   1   0   0   0   0   12  0   18  30  34
1977  13  59  32  17  89  10  53  37  91  85  45  69
1978  98  8   60  92  124 195 138 182 251 272 218 251
1979  177 288 370 260 171 235 244 245 175 179 264 215
1980  322 332 330 192 326 365 238 78  322 309 289 343
1981  339 198 210 198 312 123 257 204 194 226 278 189
1982  238 304 321 174 262 94  229 304 184 270 262 193
1983  117 262 174 88  280 144 145 172 177 140 186 95
1984  153 185 236 172 219 222 108 190 162 141 202 185
1985  144 221 189 236 250 226 154 241 188 123 286 197
1986  159 162 212 94  98  240 65  233 161 151 115 159
1987  84  284 150 247 69  116 149 141 116 84  164 220
1988  206 146 213 114 138 138 186 152 119 166 148 129
1989  137 208 156 139 131 243 69  162 32  61  120 247
1990  132 102 132 111 112 88  89  64  68  104 137 162
1991  50  152 137 162 165 78  139 55  109 92  126 133
1992  118 22  105 23  106 107 53  133 68  106 111 107
1993  129 166 139 73  112 150 62  55  107 62  67  63
1994  110 116 41  120 118 107 84  72  61  138 102 118
1995  113 95  68  155 73  101 103 61  74  50  118 127
1996  89  92  94  148 37  130 139 44  147 134 172 96
1997  141 229 136 92  26  57  70  110 122 152 32  131
1998  231 197 99  163 144 63  104 51  34  87  60  90
1999  107 119 95  332 88  123 120 132 27  56  83  133
2000  176 30  144 124 34  9   15  17  23  9   2   16
2001  18  24  37  5   64  15  11  28  8   11  9   12
2002  11  4   8   8   7   5   33  9   7   4   10  2
2003  10  5   10  12  15  45  7   4   3   14  21  4
2004  6   8   19  55  26  45  18  13  35  25  42  30
2005  40  19  36  45  55  21  34  17  24  17  48  24
2006  27  15  29  26  27  33  13  15  21  37  24  27
2007  9   25  34  19  36  52  27  42  34  11  20  20
2008  12  20  29  14  19  22  29  40  39  43  31  46
2009  36  30  30  27  53  57  31  35  42  72  46  65
2010  33  58  45  37  36  31  69  36  61  23  32  40
2011  72  30  36  41  37  36  73  34  35  51  64  53
2012  78  73  71  41  83  46  77  60  68  67  73  71
2013  109 132 107 138 130 124 104 71  105 119 253 220
2014  248 247 251 282 309 394 421 391 349 376 521 421
2015  495 442 438 599 527 445 546 461 410 500 320 392
2016  490 454 596 624 788 530 536 720 775 502 606 468
2017  711 1,146   930 1,128   1,098   865 956 817 1,463   1,720   1,544   1,522
2018  1,362   1,735   1,969   1,919   2,067   2,279   2,307   1,859   2,015   2,256   2,400   2,391
2019  2,643   2,915   2,673   2,911   2,959   3,100   2,706   2,755   3,093   3,412   3,080   3,537
2020  3,388   3,537   3,625   2,883   3,177   2,747   3,343   3,409   3,265   2,939   2,786   3,356
2021  3,165   2,703   2,685   3,283   2,736   3,349   2,700   2,996   2,667   2,900   3,110   3,452
2022  3,347   3,309   3,319
I printed the whole history because some people are just blind as a bat when it comes to Trump. Now you see what the problem is? He made us a top exporter to Europe as part of the agreement to be included in the energy transition. If they didn't keep sucking oil out of the reserve you'd be paying about what the residence of Europe are paying for a gallon of gas. It's going to get worse, way worse as I explain in another post to this series because they have no intention at the moment to increase refining capacity and some refining manufacturers have shuttered their doors. That's just your oil, wait till they get up and running with exporting your natural gas. While US refineries are shutting down refinery capacity, never to built another refinery in the US again , Africa is exploding with expansions of refineries, oil and gas and you are paying for it:
The Power Africa program, for instance, is a public-private partnership launched in 2013 during the Obama administration. It seeks to increase investment to improve energy security and economic growth and fight poverty in African countries. Its target is to create new generation capacity (mostly gas, solar, wind, and hydro) and improve transmission infrastructure. In 2018, the Trump administration added a Gas Roadmap to the program, which aims at adding 16,000 MW in gas-fired power generation in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030. USAID estimates that this could result in at least $5 billion in U.S. LNG exports by 2030.
In 2018, the Trump administration issued its Indo Pacific Strategy, a reaction to the ever-increasing activities of China in the region. One of the instruments to implement this strategy is Asia “EDGE” (Enhancing Development and Growth through Energy). Through this initiative, the U.S. government will invest some $50 million a year to support regional energy trade and integration, the deployment of advanced energy systems, and utility modernization. Various USAID programs support Asia EDGE. Among them are “Clean Power Asia,” an initiative to foster renewable energy in the ASEAN countries, and Greening the Grid, a USAID technical assistance initiative in cooperation with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). Asia EDGE also includes programs to promote the construction of LNG infrastructure and projects to supply LNG in the region.
The U.S. also offers assistance on clean energy policy through its Clean Energy Solutions Center in cooperation with the governments of Australia, Mexico, and Sweden under the framework of the Clean Energy Ministerial. The programs and policies aim to support the deployment of low-carbon technology.
In addition to its USAID programs, the U.S. development finance institution OPIC (Overseas Private Investment Corporation) spends almost half of its $29 billion budget in electricity projects. Most of this is spent in renewable energy with a current regional focus on Africa, Latin America, and the Indo-Pacific. In October 2019, the U.S. government will launch OPIC’s successor institution, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC). At $60 billion, its investment cap will be twice as high as OPIC’s. One of the focal points of DFC’s work will be on energy, as recent expert interviews in Washington, DC, suggested. In addition to new tools such as loans and loan guarantees, DFC will be able to make equity investments. It will further have the ability not only to support U.S. businesses, but also foreign companies. With its new development finance institution, the U.S. seeks to provide “financially-sound alternatives to state-led initiatives from countries like China.”
Look at that, billions upon billions of your money going overseas so investors can, well basically, invest in a way to process your natural resources cheaper while you pay through the nose at the increased demand. How I see it playing out is that the US will keep importing oil from the Saudi's that will be sold to Americans at a higher rate while they will simultaneously buy (your domestic) oil at a bulk rate to put into the reserves where it will be shipped off to be processed by cheap labor in Africa before being sent off to Europe. You may actually escape sticker shock on your natural gas bill this winter but come the next all bets are off once they have that fully functional. Don't let that last line throw you for a loop, they are all in this together, wait until I show you the partnership "analysis" on Ukraine, it should rock your socks off. You can't see the double speak going on here than you probably deserve five dollar a gallon gas:
Both aim to create local expertise, innovation, and capacity in their partner countries. What they are pursuing, however, is not only capacity building. They are competing over positive relationships with developing countries—with each other but, more importantly, also with countries like Russia and China. Their efforts thus have a normative and a power dimension beyond “just” enabling development. As Secretary of State Mike Pompeo puts it:
We’re not just exporting American energy, we’re exporting our commercial value system to our friends and to our partners. The more we can spread the United States model of free enterprise, of the rule of law, of diversity and stability, of transparency and transactions, the more successful the United States will be and the more successful and secure the American people will be.
– Mike Pompeo, Remarks at CERAWeek 2019
"We're not just exporting American energy, we're exporting our commercial value system".
I guess you are suppose to just keep repeating that to yourself every time you put that nozzle into your gas tank as some sort of feel good measure. This is undeniable that a few "Trump Tweaks" to the global green new deal put us smack into the position that we are in with our energy supplies, this isn't at the benefit of Americans but the benefit of the usual suspects, the globalist elites of the world.
I'm going to run my truck on firewood. Producer gas.
Thanks!
Yeah boy
I have two trucks presently, and am willing to sacrifice the VW if I fail utterly in my experiment to install the woodgas generator.